for "all" drives, published on the official IU site, as you read the list in the order the drives appear in the list, the game began with IU getting the ball through a punt, and scoring a touchdown after an 8 play drive.
The 4th quarter list indicates that Rutgers "first" drive in the 4th quarter - as you read the list in the order written - ended with them hitting a FG at 0:00.
It takes just a little bit of time and scanning to realize that our official site does not list the drives in the order they occurred in the game - they sort and list them in backwards order by time left on the clock in the quarter. Thus, the first drive listed in each quarter - instead of being the one that started at 15:00, when the quarter began, is the one that started with the least of amount of time on the clock, i.e, the last drive of the quarter.
Some might say I'm nit-picking about a meaningless error concerning meaningless details.
It's just one mistake that alone doesn't matter much.
Like a punt decision in the second quarter.
Or a dropped pass in the first.
Or a fumble any time.
Or a bad snap.
Or a band playing while another song plays out of the video board.
Or a parking attendant forcing folks to park where THEY say, instead of where the customer wants to park with a tailgating friend.
Excellence is in little details.
The 4th quarter list indicates that Rutgers "first" drive in the 4th quarter - as you read the list in the order written - ended with them hitting a FG at 0:00.
It takes just a little bit of time and scanning to realize that our official site does not list the drives in the order they occurred in the game - they sort and list them in backwards order by time left on the clock in the quarter. Thus, the first drive listed in each quarter - instead of being the one that started at 15:00, when the quarter began, is the one that started with the least of amount of time on the clock, i.e, the last drive of the quarter.
Some might say I'm nit-picking about a meaningless error concerning meaningless details.
It's just one mistake that alone doesn't matter much.
Like a punt decision in the second quarter.
Or a dropped pass in the first.
Or a fumble any time.
Or a bad snap.
Or a band playing while another song plays out of the video board.
Or a parking attendant forcing folks to park where THEY say, instead of where the customer wants to park with a tailgating friend.
Excellence is in little details.