hawkeyebob62
Well-Known Member
The problem was that there was no indisputable evidence to overturn the call on the field. So the call of a touchdown should have stood.
Exactly.
The problem was that there was no indisputable evidence to overturn the call on the field. So the call of a touchdown should have stood.
I saw the same thing the replay official saw. It was a fumble. He's gotta secure the ball better.
The problem was that there was no indisputable evidence to overturn the call on the field. So the call of a touchdown should have stood.
To me it appeared the ball came loose before crossing the goal line. I hated it and it pi$$ed me off but I believe it was the right call.
How in hell did you see that? NObody else did, at least to the point of "indisputable". If you can find the footage with the angle showing it, please post it here.
To me it appeared the ball came loose before crossing the goal line. I hated it and it pi$$ed me off but I believe it was the right call.
The thing is, it wasn't even the worst call/overturn of the game. The most egregious, IMO--and the Hawks were clearly the beneficiary--was the PI call on UNT on a ball that was CLEARLY tipped. How NO official saw that is beyond me. The fact that isn't "reviewable", but the "intent" of a targeting call IS "reviewable", is mind-numbing.
The thing is, it wasn't even the worst call/overturn of the game. The most egregious, IMO--and the Hawks were clearly the beneficiary--was the PI call on UNT on a ball that was CLEARLY tipped. How NO official saw that is beyond me. The fact that isn't "reviewable", but the "intent" of a targeting call IS "reviewable", is mind-numbing.
Rules can be changed if they're bad rules. That's different than saying don't enforce the current rule. This rule seems like a bad rule to me, and should be changed. The officials are only enforcing the rule, as dumb as it seems to be. Give them a different rule, and they'll enforce that one. It's make no sense that a ball that goes out 6 inches before the end zone stays with the offense, but a ball that goes out 6 inches past the end zone goes to the defense. Place the ball where the runner is down, easy.You beat me to it. If one is old enough you remember this play. Rule was changed exactly because of this. Believe Snake intentionally fumbled forward at end of game and was recovered by the Raiders in end zone for touchdown and the win. I disliked the Raiders but loved Stabler.
The problem was that there was no indisputable evidence to overturn the call on the field. So the call of a touchdown should have stood.
Rules can be changed if they're bad rules. That's different than saying don't enforce the current rule. This rule seems like a bad rule to me, and should be changed. The officials are only enforcing the rule, as dumb as it seems to be. Give them a different rule, and they'll enforce that one. It's make no sense that a ball that goes out 6 inches before the end zone stays with the offense, but a ball that goes out 6 inches past the end zone goes to the defense. Place the ball where the runner is down, easy.
The Holy Roller play is a different circumstance than this rule - that was designed to prevent a team from "fumbling" the ball forward so it ends up in the end zone and recovered by the team for a TD.
Not every official is watching the ball.The thing is, it wasn't even the worst call/overturn of the game. The most egregious, IMO--and the Hawks were clearly the beneficiary--was the PI call on UNT on a ball that was CLEARLY tipped. How NO official saw that is beyond me.
The problem was that there was no indisputable evidence to overturn the call on the field. So the call of a touchdown should have stood.
On replay you can see from a front view that he fumbled the ball AS SOON as second player hit him. Then from the side view you can see the second player hit him before he and the ball crossed the goal line. Yes it is very close.
Offense is supposed to take care of the football. If you possess the football and you run or kick it or fumble it, its yours to recover or if you dont or it goes ob...its no longer yours. Tis the way it is now, and the way it always has been....forward pass is the only exception. Hang onto it!Yet the defense is also capable of recovering the ball in these situations. Why do they get something as large as a change of possession for doing nothing?