{Professional Sports}
If you watched the Dallas Cowboys versus the Green Bay Packers last night on Sunday Night Football, you'll probably agree that the game last night seemed like it could have gone on well beyond the official sixty minutes of play, plus the ten-minute overtime. Seventy minutes and call it a draw!
So, are tie games good for us fans? Are tie games good for the morale of the teams?
Are tie games good for professional football?
Last night's 40–40 shootout between the Cowboys and Packers was pure chaos, both teams trading haymakers and field goals in overtime. It’s no wonder fans are asking whether the NFL should rethink its overtime rules.
Current Rule:
Regular-season OT is 10 minutes.
Each team gets a possession unless the first team scores a touchdown.
If the score is still tied after 10 minutes, the game ends in a draw.
Arguments for Change:
Fans want closure: A game that intense deserves a winner. A tie feels anticlimactic for the teams as well as for us fans!
Playoff implications: Ties can muddy standings and playoff seeding, making outcomes harder to predict.
Momentum matters: Teams like Dallas, who clawed back late, might feel robbed of a chance to finish the job.
Arguments against Change:
Player safety: Extending overtime increases injury risk, especially in a brutal sport like football.
Strategic depth: Ties force teams to play smarter during regulation, knowing they can’t rely on OT heroics.
Tradition and fairness: The current format ensures both teams get a shot, unlike the old sudden-death model.

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GE