I remember reading a hair-raising story involving a three-buddy team, all three divers of some renown, where one diver had one buddy breathing off of his long hose, while this same diver was buddy breathing with his second buddy using his short hose: both of this diver's buddies were out of air! This story has always led me to wonder why this 22" standard hasn't been revised to a longer length. Of course, even if diving in only a two-buddy team, if the donor's long hose reg fails, then he will need to buddy breathe his short hose.
I call either BS or stupidity (or a combo of both) in that if you needed to "buddy breath" in this situation and elected to have one diver hanging on to the 7' primary by himself while two others buddy-breathed on the short 22" hose... well then the donor is just as out of it as his two buddies who went OOA. Seems sort of silly.
Secondly, to change the standard to a longer secondary hose to cover the wholly implausible scenario that diver 1 will go OOA on the same dive where diver 2 experiences a catastrophic reg failure on his primary hose is just plain silly. How much longer would you need to make it in order to solve for this scenario? Somewhere around the standard 40" octo hose, right? Having done so, how do you propose to route a 40" backup hose while the second stage is bungied around your neck?
It's a solution to a problem that doesn't exist.