Posted on 12/17/2001 4:42:15 PM PST by TexRef
To all of the official bashers out there, time to eat a little crow... Take a look at the following excerpts from NFL reviewing end of Browns-Jaguars game (Click the link to read the entire article).
According to the article, the NFL reached a conclusion today that the "...correct procedures were followed and the correct decision made when replay overturned what had been ruled a fourth-down catch by Cleveland's Quincy Morgan."
BUT, BUT... All the Cleveland fans whine -- you CAN'T challenge a play when another play has been run -- EVERYBODY knows that.
Well, turns out that's not really how it played out. NFL's Director of Officiating Mike Pereira described what happened:
"The Browns were in a no-huddle offense trying to get to the line of scrimmage to snap the ball and stop the clock. Things were moving very quickly. When the pager went off (just before the snap), the referee allowed the play to take place before confirming with the umpire and the replay assistant that he was paged for a review."
Now you can sit here and debate about the rule all you want, but the fact is that the officials got it right AGAIN!
That's all that matters.
out in LA LA..land....
EVERYBODY!!!
I do remember having a discussion with you about the 16th amendment, but I believe in the end I decided that you made very valid points.
Regardless...best to you and Merry Christmas! :)
;-)
Other useful abbreviations:
IMHO = In My Humble Opinion
IMNHO = In My Never Humble Opinion
BTDT = Been There, Done That
But what all the feverish bashers aren't telling you is that there was no review called prior to the next snap. This is why none of the field officials did anything to stop the next play--as far as they were concerned, it was first down. That is also why the time which ran between the placement of the ball after the catch, and the "spike," was never put back on the clock.
What actually happened after that is and will always be speculation, but one fact is a rookie referee had lost control and been rattled the whole game anyway, and a whole lot of a**-covering took place between then and this morning.
The story about the buzzer "simultaneously" going off with the snap, but all the officials on the field not being sure they "heard" it, until afterward, at which point they conferred and all suddenly agreed that indeed they all had heard it, is the story the officials told right after the game.
That is a level of BS no self-respecting freeper would ever accept in a million years if a clintonoid had said it.
As far as the actual review, if the catch had been reversed before the next play had been run--legally, as far as anyone knew, no whistle, no flag, no nothing from the officials,-- there would have been a lot of booing but that would have been it. Game over.
Most of the facts and circumstances didn't make it to the national media, so all the guessing and confusion is understandable. The peculiarly spiteful quality of the Cleveland bashing is a curiosity, considering that the fan behavior yesterday was no worse than has occurred on other occasions at other parks throughout the league over the years.
But what interests me is why so may people who weren't there, and don't know what happened, suddenly have this child-like faith in the media to give them the whole truth unedited and complete, all aspects, etc., without suspecting that they are toadying up to the NFL who pays them a billion dollars or so every year to make them look good.
You're such a tease.
No, I didn't. This is your assertion, not mine.
When I want your opinion about my city or my teams, I'll give it to you.
Ya heard?
You're right -- if Klinton or one of his cronies said something we would KNOW that it is BS. But officials go in every week and work their a$$ off doing an incredible job and they have done NOTHING to make us assume that they are lying or covering up.
Can you name ANY situation in which an official has been caught covering up for a play?
But what interests me is why so may people who weren't there, and don't know what happened, suddenly have this child-like faith in the media to give them the whole truth unedited and complete, all aspects, etc., without suspecting that they are toadying up to the NFL who pays them a billion dollars or so every year to make them look good.
I don't trust the media, but I do trust the officials.
Brother... you don't know the half of it!
see POST 105...
Of course, if the play had stood, we would have taken it. So would every single person on this thread, if s/he was a fan of a team in the Browns' position, including you.
The fact is simple: if the catch had been legally reviewed and reversed, there would have been no bottles (well maybe one or two.)
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