WHOA!!Just a complete lack of awareness and overstepping the intent of the rule. I’ll be livid if it costs Iowa a CFP birth.
WHOA!!Just a complete lack of awareness and overstepping the intent of the rule. I’ll be livid if it costs Iowa a CFP birth.
Don't really care about the loss. They played like crap and deserved to lose.Get over it. If you need a call or don’t get a call to beat that awful Minny team at home. You deserve to lose.
Don't really care about the loss. They played like crap and deserved to lose.
But, I'm not going to get over the call.
Good God, even when not answering the question you embarrassed yourselfI watched live on tv - everyone watching, broadcasters included, were under the impression they were checking to make sure he’d stayed in bounds. This is what Kirk said he was told as well. Which fair enough. Given the broadcast angle, the guys standing around him when he caught the ball and his initial spin move, I didn’t object to that, better safe than sorry.
why they then looked at entire play, and somehow decided to invoke the invalid fair catch rule, when it wasn’t called on the field, no one at field level thought that, and then to make that ruling via replay, is the controversial call here.
So, take away Nebraska's championship for the 5th down game they had that season?Get over it. If you need a call or don’t get a call to beat that awful Minny team at home. You deserve to lose.
Everyone was under the impression they were checking for out of bounds. Please explain how I embarrassed myself, I’m curious.Good God, even when not answering the question you embarrassed yourself
I asked what warranted the extra long look. There is no way they were looking for anything beyond o.b. There was zero reason beyond that. And that took half a second to see CDJ stayed inbounds. So no "longer" look was warranted.Everyone was under the impression they were checking for out of bounds. Please explain how I embarrassed myself, I’m curious.
Think you misunderstood me then. I understood looking at the out of bounds; them deciding to re-officiate the entire play is what will piss me off about this for years.I asked what warranted the extra long look. There is no way they were looking for anything beyond o.b. There was zero reason beyond that. And that took half a second to see CDJ stayed inbounds. So no "longer" look was warranted.
Yep, me as well. How ANY reviewer watched it and saw, "Hey, an invalid fair catch!" is beyond me.Think you misunderstood me then. I understood looking at the out of bounds; them deciding to re-officiate the entire play is what will piss me off about this for years.
A. I know an FBS college football official and asked him about that play. He had listened to the recording of the replay booth audio. The booth was asking in real time if he gave the wave off signal. With either a valid fair catch signal or a wave off, the ball is dead when it is fielded and can't be advanced. (I never knew that about a wave off.) Nothing was called on the field except the play was under review and then the illegal fair catch ruling.The DeJean punt return overrule. Look, I'm sorry to bring this up yet again, but it bugs me.
Does it bother me that the Hawks lost a game? Nope. Does it bother me that the game might have been stolen and DeJean robbed of an epic "for all-time" play? Yep.
So, here is my question. After everything I've seen and read, it haven't gotten a straight answer yet.
A. Did the officials announce the review? Usually it's "The ruling on the field is ......". I don't think they did - is that just because it was a scoring play? If he was tackled at the one-yard line, would they have had to "announce" the review?
B. Are the officials permitted to simply re-officiate the play? Or, do they have to have a reason to look at something in order to overrule it? Did the officials suspect he might have made an illegal fair catch signal? Or, just see it on the replay?
C. At the end of the day, did the officials do the correct thing in all respects? Was the overrule "indisputable"? Is it clear to all that it was an illegal fair catch signal?
Reminds me of the Iowa BB "phantom call" against Purdue when Lute lost his sh*t. Or similarly, when Ronnie "Goat" Harmon fumbled four times in the first half in the Rose Bowl.
These things bother me for a while.
Excellent analysis.A. I know an FBS college football official and asked him about that play. He had listened to the recording of the replay booth audio. The booth was asking in real time if he gave the wave off signal. With either a valid fair catch signal or a wave off, the ball is dead when it is fielded and can't be advanced. (I never knew that about a wave off.) Nothing was called on the field except the play was under review and then the illegal fair catch ruling.
B. The wave off signal is reviewable. Based on the replay booth audio, that is why it was reviewed. It was not to see if he stepped out as that would be immaterial if he waved the play dead.
C. The officials made a mistake by not blowing the play dead when the ball was fielded. The replay booth audio, Dolphin's broadcast and a national broadcast all said he was waving it off as it was happening in real time. I also thought he was giving the get away signal when I was watching, but I didn't know he couldn't advance it once you do that.
As controversial as it was, the officials got it right except that it should have been blown dead. I know that doesn't make you feel any better as for a moment it was one of the most amazing plays to win a game in Hawkeye history. (I was there for the FG against #1 Michigan, the Chuck Long bootleg against MSU and the long FG against SDSU in the Holiday Bowl. This was more amazing than any of those.)
Per other posts in this thread, a fair catch signal is a reviewable element of a play.A. I know an FBS college football official and asked him about that play. He had listened to the recording of the replay booth audio. The booth was asking in real time if he gave the wave off signal. With either a valid fair catch signal or a wave off, the ball is dead when it is fielded and can't be advanced. (I never knew that about a wave off.) Nothing was called on the field except the play was under review and then the illegal fair catch ruling.
B. The wave off signal is reviewable. Based on the replay booth audio, that is why it was reviewed. It was not to see if he stepped out as that would be immaterial if he waved the play dead.
C. The officials made a mistake by not blowing the play dead when the ball was fielded. The replay booth audio, Dolphin's broadcast and a national broadcast all said he was waving it off as it was happening in real time. I also thought he was giving the get away signal when I was watching, but I didn't know he couldn't advance it once you do that.
As controversial as it was, the officials got it right except that it should have been blown dead. I know that doesn't make you feel any better as for a moment it was one of the most amazing plays to win a game in Hawkeye history. (I was there for the FG against #1 Michigan, the Chuck Long bootleg against MSU and the long FG against SDSU in the Holiday Bowl. This was more amazing than any of those.)
A. I know an FBS college football official and asked him about that play. He had listened to the recording of the replay booth audio. The booth was asking in real time if he gave the wave off signal. With either a valid fair catch signal or a wave off, the ball is dead when it is fielded and can't be advanced. (I never knew that about a wave off.) Nothing was called on the field except the play was under review and then the illegal fair catch ruling.
B. The wave off signal is reviewable. Based on the replay booth audio, that is why it was reviewed. It was not to see if he stepped out as that would be immaterial if he waved the play dead.
C. The officials made a mistake by not blowing the play dead when the ball was fielded. The replay booth audio, Dolphin's broadcast and a national broadcast all said he was waving it off as it was happening in real time. I also thought he was giving the get away signal when I was watching, but I didn't know he couldn't advance it once you do that.
As controversial as it was, the officials got it right except that it should have been blown dead. I know that doesn't make you feel any better as for a moment it was one of the most amazing plays to win a game in Hawkeye history. (I was there for the FG against #1 Michigan, the Chuck Long bootleg against MSU and the long FG against SDSU in the Holiday Bowl. This was more amazing than any of those.)
I was only reporting what I was told by an official. I don't claim that I have knowledge of the rules. He told me it was reviewable.Per other posts in this thread, a fair catch signal is a reviewable element of a play.
An invalid fair catch signal isn't mentioned as a reviewable element.
So, if you're going to change a play an alter a game on an obscure technicality that in no way affected the play or actions of the players....then you better damn well be sure that you're technically correct, by the book.
It's not in the book.
I was only reporting what I was told by an official. I don't claim that I have knowledge of the rules. He told me it was reviewable.
I get it. I also agree that Cooper was waving his arm(s)/making a poison call ... and that that's addressed in the rules as an 'invalid fair catch/dead ball'.I was only reporting what I was told by an official. I don't claim that I have knowledge of the rules. He told me it was reviewable.
Where does it list the wave off signal as being reviewable? Hint....it doesn't.A. I know an FBS college football official and asked him about that play. He had listened to the recording of the replay booth audio. The booth was asking in real time if he gave the wave off signal. With either a valid fair catch signal or a wave off, the ball is dead when it is fielded and can't be advanced. (I never knew that about a wave off.) Nothing was called on the field except the play was under review and then the illegal fair catch ruling.
B. The wave off signal is reviewable. Based on the replay booth audio, that is why it was reviewed. It was not to see if he stepped out as that would be immaterial if he waved the play dead.
C. The officials made a mistake by not blowing the play dead when the ball was fielded. The replay booth audio, Dolphin's broadcast and a national broadcast all said he was waving it off as it was happening in real time. I also thought he was giving the get away signal when I was watching, but I didn't know he couldn't advance it once you do that.
As controversial as it was, the officials got it right except that it should have been blown dead. I know that doesn't make you feel any better as for a moment it was one of the most amazing plays to win a game in Hawkeye history. (I was there for the FG against #1 Michigan, the Chuck Long bootleg against MSU and the long FG against SDSU in the Holiday Bowl. This was more amazing than any of those.)