GrantK
Footballguy
Bears are fortunate the Eagles stood around and didn't recover it, both teams were dumb.Then the def should have picked it up even after the whistle
Bears are fortunate the Eagles stood around and didn't recover it, both teams were dumb.Then the def should have picked it up even after the whistle
This right here. Even if there was a recovery, since it was blown dead, would eagles have been awarded possession? I think no.If the ref blew the whistle after the initial play. Then I guess it's the right call.
How? The ball is sitting in the floor and both teams have equal rights to it.Of course you can.
Good ptHow sad is it that NFL Broadcasts have to include a 3rd man in booth to provide color on rules and interpretations ?
yeah, leaning this way. outside of Jenkins, most of the secondary has only played a handful of NFL games. they should have had the instinct to grab the ball just in caseBears are fortunate the Eagles stood around and didn't recover it, both teams were dumb.
Call on the field stands. Simple as that.I think they said it was a catch then a fumble with no clear recovery so what do you do?
The ref was standing next to the ball waiving his arms that it was incomplete. If players fight for the ball after the whistle, they risk a late hit penalty.Bears are fortunate the Eagles stood around and didn't recover it, both teams were dumb.
"It would have been a catch, if a player had recovered the fumble after the catch"
Happened to be "near"???he was getting blocked and pulled down and his hand was extended. happened to be near the guy's facemask. Dumb call. I know Cowboys fans are used to seeing horrible calls all the time because if it doesn't go Dallas way in Dallas it is wrong, but this one was
And that's the sticking point here. If the offensive team fumbled it and there is no clear recovery, it would stay with the offense at the spot of the catch. You can't wipe out the catch, that makes no sense...This right here. Even if there was a recovery, since it was blown dead, would eagles have been awarded possession? I think no.
That's never stopped them before.Well, I guess the silver lining is that the Philly fans can’t claim a bad/crazy call gave the Bears points.
If there is no clear recovery then the ball is dead where it was fumbled. That's how the rule has been since the day they started allowing fumbles that were blown dead to be reviewed and it has been enforced that way many times.How? The ball is sitting in the floor and both teams have equal rights to it.
Wasn't one of the refs ruling in incomplete on the field?Call on the field stands. Simple as that.
The call on the field was an interception. It was a catch, fumble, with no recovery after replay. How is that bears ball? Eagles have equal rights to it so call on field stands.If there is no clear recovery, the ball stays with the offense. That's the rule and that's how it's applied to dozens of other plays.
"If there's no clear recovery, we just make the result something completely different like calling it an incomplete pass" is certainly not the rule.
Yeah.....call stood. No catch.Wasn't one of the refs ruling in incomplete on the field?
The wording that the refs used was it was incomplete because "there was no clear recovery"... that's asinine.Wasn't one of the refs ruling in incomplete on the field?
I think you're talking about another play, no?The call on the field was an interception. It was a catch, fumble, with no recovery after replay. How is that bears ball? Eagles have equal rights to it so call on field stands.
And we STILL don’t know what a catch is.How sad is it that NFL Broadcasts have to include a 3rd man in booth to provide color on rules and interpretations ?
Sorry but I've never seen a fumbled ball picked up by a ref.If there is no clear recovery then the ball is dead where it was fumbled. That's how the rule has been since the day they started allowing fumbles that were blown dead to be reviewed and it has been enforced that way many times.
Because they made a call.......screw the freaking replay....they blew the whistle!!!!! That’s it. You blow the whistle you stop play. How can it be a reception then a fumble when they blew the whistle which tells players.....STOP PLAYING!!! No recovery because the ref picked the ball up.The wording that the refs used was it was incomplete because "there was no clear recovery"... that's asinine.
I think what the ref meant is "Because there was no clear recovery, we cannot use replay to change the call on the field."The wording that the refs used was it was incomplete because "there was no clear recovery"... that's asinine.Wasn't one of the refs ruling in incomplete on the field?
Ref should've explained the rule better. And I meant incompletion.The wording that the refs used was it was incomplete because "there was no clear recovery"... that's asinine.
I think you're talking about another play, no?
I'm pretty sure he may be drinking.The wording that the refs used was it was incomplete because "there was no clear recovery"... that's asinine.
It does happen. Most commonly on plays where a QB gets hit as he throws and it is ruled incomplete, but is determined to be a fumble on replay. In those scenarios (when the ball is often just left sitting on the field) it is considered a sack and the play is dead where the QB lost the ball. They don't just arbitrarily rule it incomplete even though replay determined it was a fumble.Sorry but I've never seen a fumbled ball picked up by a ref.
i'm still confused@MikePereira: Instant replay was correct in staying with incomplete pass. In order to go from incomplete to catch and fumble is if there is a clear recovery by either team or if the ball goes out of bounds. Case book plays 15.114 and 15.115.
The #### you expect them to do when a ref is blowing the whistle and signaling incomplete pass while he’s standing next to the ball? The #### out of here with that nonsense.Bears are fortunate the Eagles stood around and didn't recover it, both teams were dumb.
Yea, he did a terrible job explaining it. It was play stands as called regardless of what a cop out that was.Ref should've explained the rule better. And I meant incompletion.
Yeah they got it right I guess, just weird set of circumstances there.Yeah.....call stood. No catch.
The official rulebook disagrees.It does happen. Most commonly on plays where a QB gets hit as he throws and it is ruled incomplete, but is determined to be a fumble on replay. In those scenarios it is considered a sack and the play is dead where the QB lost the ball. They don't just ridiculously rule it incomplete even though replay determined it was a fumble.
Same thing with a player lunging into the endzone. If replay determined he actually fumbled the ball before breaking the plane but no one picked it up (or the recovery wasn't clear) they don't just arbitrarily leave it as a TD even when replay shows it clearly wasn't. Instead they go back and spot the ball where the runner fumbled it.
This was the same.
You may wanna slam a shot or 2 at halftime the way this is going.Me?!?
Well, yeah
We stopped in Bako today for breakfast. There's one on Union Ave, swear to God (we didn't eat there).They just showed a local commercial for a Cajun/NOLA type restaurant called Crab in a Bag.
Every time the VO guy says the name it sounds like Crap in a Bag. Somebody didn’t think it through.
Add “nonsensical explanation” to that list.That was the NFL at its worst. Vague rule + confused refs + tv slomo = refs protecting themselves.
Rule 7 from the NFL Rulebook:Sorry but I've never seen a fumbled ball picked up by a ref.If there is no clear recovery then the ball is dead where it was fumbled. That's how the rule has been since the day they started allowing fumbles that were blown dead to be reviewed and it has been enforced that way many times.
Or did theyThey just showed a local commercial for a Cajun/NOLA type restaurant called Crab in a Bag.
Every time the VO guy says the name it sounds like Crap in a Bag. Somebody didn’t think it through.