B
Buster Bluth
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In gif format. SIAP.
Or it might have, if you didn't start straying over to the dark side ...
Stick to your guns, kmoose. Anyone who dares to suggest that anyone but ND's own players and coaches bears any responsibility for the loss lacks moral fiber. Tell them as haughtily, from as high a horse as you can find, how it was the right call and ND beat itself. Don't waver. By all means, condescend until everyone is ashamed to disagree with you.
My thought is that you mentioned the Tuitt incident. The play was reviewed and he still was ejected so I don't think you can put blame on Ryan for that.
Also, someone noted that you highlighted the umpire.
I didn't realize the helmet coming off was on THAT play, I thought it was on the play after... THAT hurts.
The play being upheld was simply another error... but an explicable one. There was helmet to helmet contact, and many times review is just to determine if the contact occurred, not to review the "judgement" aspect of whether the contact to the head/neck warranted targeting. Basically, the replay officials at the time were often instructed by their conference only to overturn the call if there was no contact to the "targeting area."
After the fact... and during the broadcast, too... they noted it was a bad call. And now they use it as an example of when the ball carrier lowers their head and there is incidental contact you're not supposed to call it.
Yeah, apparently I highlighted the wrong guy, so 80% of that article is moot. Need to retool it.
I'm very confused now actually on who threw the flag. It was definitely the back judge -- not the umpire --- correct? Anyone got a good link?
Yeah, apparently I highlighted the wrong guy, so 80% of that article is moot. Need to retool it.
I'm very confused now actually on who threw the flag. It was definitely the back judge -- not the umpire --- correct? Anyone got a good link?
kmoose, you have whatever is the opposite of a victim complex.
<iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/OAKIi6gONFA" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Watch from 1:10.
I don't agree with this particular analysis of the play, however.
I can't watch that video with sound, but it brings up an entirely different issue: had Rob stayed about a yard back before catching the ball could our guys just have blocked at will? Because if they could...this one has to stay in the playbook.
I can't watch that video with sound, but it brings up an entirely different issue: had Rob stayed about a yard back before catching the ball could our guys just have blocked at will? Because if they could...this one has to stay in the playbook.
Anyone notice FSU player taking his helmet off on the field after that play.....
Gary Danielson from CBS was on with Mad Dog today. He called the TAMU and Alabama game but watched our game after. He said that the penalty was a bad call. Said a couple things that he did not agree with:
1. Will Fuller was trying to turn around or he did turn around. Because of that, the referee should have been able to see that he was trying to make a play on the ball. The fact that he was late turning has nothing to do with Corey making the catch...has to do with him completing his route.
2. And this is the one that I agree with most...the referee that made the call was not in position to make the call. I know that has been discussed here. He argued, that from his position there was no way to know where Corey had caught the ball. Simply, if Corey had caught the ball behind the line of scrimmage, then the play was legal. From his position, there was no way for him to have known, at the time he threw the flag, if it was indeed PI.
Gary is one of the best analysts out there. I don't say that because I agree with him here, in fact, after we beat Stanford, he said, "well maybe Stanford isn't as good as we thought they were". He was candid and animated in talking about it...he was pretty adamant about being right.
https://m.facebook.com/Sportsbeat960?_rdr
Here's a link that a poster at BGI posted. Apparently the ACC has switched the call to Procise and admits to missin the unsportsmanlike conduct penalty. This is insanely convenient. Let the media watch the replay, decide which part of the play they view as the most agregious, and then decide that was what was called. Lastly I love that "aw shucks" we missed that other call. They are admitting that it should've been 1st and goal from the 9 with 13 seconds on the clock.
I am still trying to figure out the last play that no one is discussing. It was ruled an INT, I thought the guy was out of the back of the end zone. After he catches the ball I believe they assumed the game was over and he runs out of the end zone and chest butts a teammate at the 10 yard with ball in hand. The camera then moves away and you can no longer see the ball. Why is this not a live ball?
Holy fuck dude, I think you're right
Edit: Never mind. The white line is, in fact, the backstop to the endzone. Not sure why it was ruled a pick, I'm sure if anyone cared to review it it would have been overturned.
Edit again: but seriously, what was with Koyack's route? What's the point of having him stop running at the ten? There was some serious real estate towards the middle of the field there.
No, it's not. I have been saying for some time now (after seeing enough replays to change my initial impression) that I don't think there was any offensive foul on Prosise. What I think is a legitimate call is that Fuller tried to run through Darby, to continue his route. According to the rules, which state that the offensive player has the responsibility to avoid contact, I think there's a case to be made for the guy throwing the flag. A much better case, anyway (in my opinion) than the case for a corrupt crew trying to steal the game from ND. Again..... if Fuller had just pulled up a little, keeping himself between the defender and the receiver, I don't think that flag gets thrown.
Sorry if already discussed, but I will be very interested to see how refs call this play throughout the rest of our season. We had run it a number of times up to this point without it being called. I'm sure we will see it more this season, it will be interesting to see which refs call it and which don't and if they're consistent.
Jesus, I take back all my justifying of the call if it was on Prosise. He has every right to drive the guy for three yards from the LOS, which is just about as far as he did before Robinson caught the ball. Even if it was more than 3 yards, it sure as hell wasn't 4 yards.
It was 4th down anyways.
Koyacks job was to get the ball if everyone in the end zone was covered. Typically your TE is the one that can fight to the goal line on a pass short to the goal line.
As universally as these officials are getting bashed, no one in their right mind is going to call this. You can bet your rear that dip who threw the flag is either being berated behind closed doors (or high fived if ACC officials are corrupt from top to bottom). Publicly they have to defend the call.
Jesus, I take back all my justifying of the call if it was on Prosise. He has every right to drive the guy for three yards from the LOS, which is just about as far as he did before Robinson caught the ball. Even if it was more than 3 yards, it sure as hell wasn't 4 yards.
I concur with that. I think there is a case to be made for throwing the flag on Fuller, but there is no excuse for throwing it on Prosise.
Whats funny is that a lot of the media, specifically on CFB daily, yesterday was saying at how egregious the penalty on Procise was as he was blocking Ramsey into the end zone. No mention of him being held and no mention of the 3 yard rule. Insanely bad coverage of this play by big media for the most part.