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The NFL is screwing the ref issue up big time (1 Viewer)

Have you seen the polls? Many people agree with me here.
What polls does everyone keep talking about? If they're not scientific, using them as evidence of widespread fan-dissatisfaction is about as useful as. . . well, something that's not very useful. Show me the results of a scientific poll, and I might buy your argument that the dissatisfaction is widespread (rather than a bunch of whiners getting really motivated and self-selecting into voting in a poll on the internet).
 
Have you seen the polls? Many people agree with me here.
What polls does everyone keep talking about? If they're not scientific, using them as evidence of widespread fan-dissatisfaction is about as useful as. . . well, something that's not very useful. Show me the results of a scientific poll, and I might buy your argument that the dissatisfaction is widespread (rather than a bunch of whiners getting really motivated and self-selecting into voting in a poll on the internet).
Only a moron would not understand the frustration and dissatisfaction that NFL fans feel after Super Bowl.
 
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Have you seen the polls? Many people agree with me here.
What polls does everyone keep talking about? If they're not scientific, using them as evidence of widespread fan-dissatisfaction is about as useful as. . . well, something that's not very useful. Show me the results of a scientific poll, and I might buy your argument that the dissatisfaction is widespread (rather than a bunch of whiners getting really motivated and self-selecting into voting in a poll on the internet).
Well I'll just write my Senator to get those polls going nation-wide. There are not any "scientific polls" outside most websites. Obviously people aren't happy. There has never been this kind of outcry in the past about refs and questionable officiating.
 
Have you seen the polls? Many people agree with me here.
What polls does everyone keep talking about? If they're not scientific, using them as evidence of widespread fan-dissatisfaction is about as useful as. . . well, something that's not very useful. Show me the results of a scientific poll, and I might buy your argument that the dissatisfaction is widespread (rather than a bunch of whiners getting really motivated and self-selecting into voting in a poll on the internet).
Only a moron would not understand the frustration and dissatisfaction that NFL fans feel after Super Bowl.
Oooooh, *that's* your logic. Yes, your point of view seems much more intelligent and well-versed now. I forgot the ol' "only a moron wouldn't agree with my biased and unfounded claims" argument.Touche! :thumbup:

Get a life. It's over.

 
Have you seen the polls? Many people agree with me here.
What polls does everyone keep talking about? If they're not scientific, using them as evidence of widespread fan-dissatisfaction is about as useful as. . . well, something that's not very useful. Show me the results of a scientific poll, and I might buy your argument that the dissatisfaction is widespread (rather than a bunch of whiners getting really motivated and self-selecting into voting in a poll on the internet).
Only a moron would not understand the frustration and dissatisfaction that NFL fans feel after Super Bowl.
Oooooh, *that's* your logic. Yes, your point of view seems much more intelligent and well-versed now. I forgot the ol' "only a moron wouldn't agree with my biased and unfounded claims" argument.Touche! :thumbup:

Get a life. It's over.
:lmao: Are you kidding? Watching Steeler fans trying to justify the officiating is priceless.

 
:lmao:

Are you kidding? Watching Steeler fans trying to justify the officiating is priceless.
See, that's just it. I'm not a Steeler fan. Been a Cowboys fan all of my life. Don't like the Steelers, am annoyed that they have 5 titles, just like my team. Go check out Yudkin's "is Bettis a Hall of Famer" thread--I argue against Bettis there.Fact is, I'm probably as objective as one can be; I have no dog in this fight. If I did have a mild preference, it was for the Seahawks. But the game is over. The officiating was bad. Worst game ever? Probably not. Too bad the Seahawks got the fuzzy end of the lollypop. Too bad they were too inept to overcome adversity.

It's karma. Steelers got screwed in the Indy game, got the breaks in the Seattle game.

It's football. Jeez-us, you think you people had never watched a poorly-officiated game before.

Get a life. It's over.

 
4. Require fans to get rigorous NFL official training before being allowed to watch NFL games.
This list is kind of half-joking, half-serious. However, I think this one actually hits on something that pertains uniquely to the Super Bowl. I don't think there's any disputing the fact that the Super Bowl has the most uninformed and least knowledgeable football audience. It would not surprise me in the least to see these people vote that the officiating was particularly bad due to less understanding of the rules and a greater likelihood of being swayed by the media.In any case, you need look no farther than this board to see people who sincerely believe that Darrell Jackson should have a TD for getting one foot inbounds and the other hitting the pylon. You also see posts that show people don't understand that the "chop blocking" rule applies differently at the line of scrimmage and especially after a change in possession. The horsecollar rule is probably the least understood, and I'll include myself in that one, but I do know that part of the rule is that the tackle must be immediate. I see two factors at work here contributing to the chatter about bad officiating:

1. People are exaggerating/overestimating the number of calls that were questionable due to not understanding some of the rules listed above, but it's not all their fault due to factor #2;

2. The NFL has continued to add layer after layer of nuance to its rulebook (down by contact, football move, tuck rule, ground cannot cause a fumble) that are occasionally confusing for avid fans. How inconsistent must the rulings appear to a casual fan? It wasn't always this way. It's getting to be like the federal tax code.

While it's impossible to "educate" the fans concerning the rules to any large extent, it is possible to simplify many of these recently added rules. The more nuance that is placed in the rulebook, the greater opportunity for claims of selective enforcement by officials.

This is far from the only action the NFL could or should take to improve its officiating, but it would help both the perception and more importantly the reality of its officiating.

 
Well I'll just write my Senator to get those polls going nation-wide. There are not any "scientific polls" outside most websites. Obviously people aren't happy. There has never been this kind of outcry in the past about refs and questionable officiating.
Well, I just talked to three different people at work today, and all of them said that they don't think that the officiating issue is that big of a deal. So I must be right.That information is just as useful as using internet polls to back up your point of view. (In other words, it's not.)

 
Do people really believe that D. Jax did not push off? Seriously.
If you look at the play, there's defensive pass interference too. If we really want to be super ticky-tacky there should have been off-setting penalties ... and a TD.
Actually, if you look at the play, you won't find any defensive pass interference. There's nothing but hand-checking by both players until Jackson extends his arm, and the contact is enough to knock Chris Hope backwards a slight bit. Ticky tack? Possibly.And for arguments sake, off-setting penalties would result in a replayed down, not a TD.
Actually if you look at the play you will see Hope grab DJax as he enters the Endzone. Then when DJax turns into Hope both players extend their arms to each other. Then Djax turns away and catches the TD then Hopes complains to the Back Judge to throw the flag and after two motions to the ref to throw the flag the Back Judge thru the flag.To me you have to be this play is not called a penalty 95% of the time. And that is what the fans have a problem with. This was a ticky tack call. By the rule in the NFL yes there was contact after 5 yards BY BOTH players.

But to bury your head in the sand and say that the game was called great is just wrong. To me how the game was called did change the game. Would Pitt still have won? that I cannot say yes or no. But The game would of been different.
I'd suggest you watch it again.One, Hope never grabs him. Yes, the both use their hands to keep tabs on where the other is, but neither of them impede the other's progress. Hand checking is never, ever called.

And second, if Jackson had simply turned away, it would've been a TD. He extended his right arm into Hope's chest, which can be seen plainly in every replay. THAT is what the official saw that drew the flag - when the receiver extends his arm, that's plainly visible to the officials.

Ticky tack? Probably. I never said the game was called great. Not one time have I said that. I said the Steelers got a lot of breaks on calls that were borderline.

 
My freaking lord. My advice at this point:

1. Watch Iside the NFL.

2. By an NFL rules book.

3. Start looking forward to next season.

4. Build a bridge and get over it.

Nobody cares and nobody is changing their minds. The talk and discussion ended days ago.

 
Well I'll just write my Senator to get those polls going nation-wide.  There are not any "scientific polls" outside most websites.  Obviously people aren't happy.  There has never been this kind of outcry in the past about refs and questionable officiating.
Well, I just talked to three different people at work today, and all of them said that they don't think that the officiating issue is that big of a deal. So I must be right.That information is just as useful as using internet polls to back up your point of view. (In other words, it's not.)
Then I guess everyone that is even a bit uncertain about the calls aren't justified. There is an obvious outcry like I said before, more than ever before. Something has to be true there. I'm not saying that it cost the game, but it surely didn't help the Seahawks. Djax's PI woulda been a td anyway (simply moved his hand down, no push-off), the block penalty on Hass, the holding call was a tickytack. Ben Worthelessburger's TD was a TD or at least not enough evidence to reverse it. Everything was just so conspicuously in favor of the bad guys that it chaps my ### a bit.
 
Well I'll just write my Senator to get those polls going nation-wide. There are not any "scientific polls" outside most websites. Obviously people aren't happy. There has never been this kind of outcry in the past about refs and questionable officiating.
Well, I just talked to three different people at work today, and all of them said that they don't think that the officiating issue is that big of a deal. So I must be right.That information is just as useful as using internet polls to back up your point of view. (In other words, it's not.)
I'm not sure that's true in this case. This isn't, say, a political poll where majority of responders would be partisan to one side or the other, and pre-disposed to reply a certain way. If you ran a poll with just Seattle or Pittsburgh responders, you could be assured of a biased sample in both cases and toss out the results. Multiple national polls have all trended the same in this case (including the one on this site). The responders are self-selected, but should represent a fairly broad sampling of sports fans. ESPN actually has a very good system of breaking down results by state, and 48 out of 50 states showed a majority of people having problems with the Super Bowl officiating. I'd just seriously like the discussion to turn away from the Super Bowl, to what the NFL is or isn't doing about the overall state of officiating. Does anyone want to jump in and say that the current system is perfect and can't be improved?

 
Well I'll just write my Senator to get those polls going nation-wide.  There are not any "scientific polls" outside most websites.  Obviously people aren't happy.  There has never been this kind of outcry in the past about refs and questionable officiating.
Well, I just talked to three different people at work today, and all of them said that they don't think that the officiating issue is that big of a deal. So I must be right.That information is just as useful as using internet polls to back up your point of view. (In other words, it's not.)
I'm not sure that's true in this case. This isn't, say, a political poll where majority of responders would be partisan to one side or the other, and pre-disposed to reply a certain way. If you ran a poll with just Seattle or Pittsburgh responders, you could be assured of a biased sample in both cases and toss out the results. Multiple national polls have all trended the same in this case (including the one on this site). The responders are self-selected, but should represent a fairly broad sampling of sports fans. ESPN actually has a very good system of breaking down results by state, and 48 out of 50 states showed a majority of people having problems with the Super Bowl officiating. I'd just seriously like the discussion to turn away from the Super Bowl, to what the NFL is or isn't doing about the overall state of officiating. Does anyone want to jump in and say that the current system is perfect and can't be improved?
Very :goodposting:
 
I'm not sure I can take another Super Bore like that one. I could care less who won, but the officiating was poor and uneven, and I think it greatly effected the game. A better called game might not of helped the Hawks win, but it could of at least made it interesting.
:goodposting: My sentiments exactly! I wasn't thrilled with either team being there - but was was still anxious to see the big game! I've only seen one other game called more poorly in my life... (Kings/Lakers - game 6!) The BS call of Hass's block below the waste... the bogus holding call on the Seattle's O-lineman... D-Jax's pushoff with the defender holding his arm... COMEON! The other thing that astonishes me over this BS Super Bowl... is the # of Steeler fans adorning their gear again. For the first time ever - I was out of the country watching the game in the Bahamas - and Monday morning, everyone on the Island had on a friggen Steelers cap or jersey.. :confused: What gives? I think the Steelers just moved into my #2 position of most-hated (no one will overtake the Cowboys).

 
I think the Steelers just moved into my #2 position of most-hated (no one will overtake the Cowboys).
Hummm, couldn't possibly be clouding peoples vision a bit could it..... Well I guess some things never change. Everyone hates the Champs. Boy it feels good to get so much attention. :thumbup:

 
Well I'll just write my Senator to get those polls going nation-wide.  There are not any "scientific polls" outside most websites.  Obviously people aren't happy.  There has never been this kind of outcry in the past about refs and questionable officiating.
Well, I just talked to three different people at work today, and all of them said that they don't think that the officiating issue is that big of a deal. So I must be right.That information is just as useful as using internet polls to back up your point of view. (In other words, it's not.)
I'm not sure that's true in this case. This isn't, say, a political poll where majority of responders would be partisan to one side or the other, and pre-disposed to reply a certain way. If you ran a poll with just Seattle or Pittsburgh responders, you could be assured of a biased sample in both cases and toss out the results. Multiple national polls have all trended the same in this case (including the one on this site). The responders are self-selected, but should represent a fairly broad sampling of sports fans. ESPN actually has a very good system of breaking down results by state, and 48 out of 50 states showed a majority of people having problems with the Super Bowl officiating. I'd just seriously like the discussion to turn away from the Super Bowl, to what the NFL is or isn't doing about the overall state of officiating. Does anyone want to jump in and say that the current system is perfect and can't be improved?
I have bolded all that you need to know. ESPN could break down into NEIGHBORHOODS the number of people who self-selected to responding to a poll. Doesn't matter--the results are garbage. Trash. Worthless. Not indicative of anything other than the opinion of the people who responded.Internet polls (and call-in phone polls, and mail-in questionnaires, etc.) are not able to generalize their results, period.

Heck, you could even get over 2 MILLION PEOPLE to respond. Would still make your results worthless (from which to generalize).

 
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All of the rules were followed by the book
I seem to remember Alexander running down the sideline and a Steeler defender reaching from behind into his jersey, grabbing his pad, and pulling him down. Thought they made a huge stink about something sort of EXACTLY LIKE THAT this season called a horsecollar. Madden missed that one, apparently his mind was on horsetrailers or something. That was in front of God and everybody. Refs just didnt feel in the Steeler penalty kind of mood for some reason.
 
Why do Steeler fans feel the need to defend the officiating? I realize that there may be a few other fans defending the referees, but the majority are Steeler fans.

Whether the officiating was good or bad, who cares, you won the superbowl. New Englands first Superbowl was won on the back of one of the worst calls in NFL history (tuck rule). They still get credit for the game and the Superbowl.

I just don't understand why you try and defend what was obvious to the majority. The refs had a bad game (perhaps the worst officiated Superbowl of all time). You guys still won. You don't need to break down all 10 penalties and say "see, his left picky looks like it may have touched so-and-so's arm which is the clear reason why the flag was thrown.

Just accept, like the other 80% of the population, that this was just a really poorly officiated game. You guys still won the Superbowl regardless.

...and by the way, the NFL never came out and admitted that the referee blew the tuck rule call either, they just chose some goofy interpretation of the rules so that it would seem like the Ref got the call correct. No sports league will ever admit that the title was won because of bad officiating. Just look at Dallas winning the Stanley Cup over Buffalo. The winning goal should have been called back but the league tried to make up some goofy reason for why it wasn't called back and why the referee was correct.

 
All of the rules were followed by the book
I seem to remember Alexander running down the sideline and a Steeler defender reaching from behind into his jersey, grabbing his pad, and pulling him down. Thought they made a huge stink about something sort of EXACTLY LIKE THAT this season called a horsecollar. Madden missed that one, apparently his mind was on horsetrailers or something. That was in front of God and everybody. Refs just didnt feel in the Steeler penalty kind of mood for some reason.
Actually, Al Michaels said "close to a horsecollar but no call" which is one of the reasons people believe this should have been called. And you cannot blame Michaels for not knowing what distinguishes legal from illegal here. I've been looking for specifics on the rule and finally found a decent article on it:USA Today article on the passage of the horsecollar rule

Key to the rule's language, as it was in the original draft, is for the yanking to be immediate. And officials also will have to make the distinction between a defender grabbing the shoulder pads or the top of the jersey. A takedown from behind with the defender grabbing a fistful of jersey is still legal.
I could not tell based on the camera angles whether or not Porter grabbed the top of the jersey or had Alexander's shoulder pad, but it doesn't matter. Based on the "immediate" qualifier, Porter's tackle was legal.This just reinforces what I said in my eralier post (#60), where a combination of ignorance on the part of media and the fans and nuances in the rules contributes to calls (or non-calls) that look like they are incorrect when they actually follow the rules.

 
All of the rules were followed by the book
I seem to remember Alexander running down the sideline and a Steeler defender reaching from behind into his jersey, grabbing his pad, and pulling him down. Thought they made a huge stink about something sort of EXACTLY LIKE THAT this season called a horsecollar. Madden missed that one, apparently his mind was on horsetrailers or something. That was in front of God and everybody. Refs just didnt feel in the Steeler penalty kind of mood for some reason.
Actually, Al Michaels said "close to a horsecollar but no call" which is one of the reasons people believe this should have been called. And you cannot blame Michaels for not knowing what distinguishes legal from illegal here. I've been looking for specifics on the rule and finally found a decent article on it:USA Today article on the passage of the horsecollar rule

Key to the rule's language, as it was in the original draft, is for the yanking to be immediate. And officials also will have to make the distinction between a defender grabbing the shoulder pads or the top of the jersey. A takedown from behind with the defender grabbing a fistful of jersey is still legal.
I could not tell based on the camera angles whether or not Porter grabbed the top of the jersey or had Alexander's shoulder pad, but it doesn't matter. Based on the "immediate" qualifier, Porter's tackle was legal.This just reinforces what I said in my eralier post (#60), where a combination of ignorance on the part of media and the fans and nuances in the rules contributes to calls (or non-calls) that look like they are incorrect when they actually follow the rules.
I thought Shawn went down immediately?
 
Based on the "immediate" qualifier, Porter's tackle was legal.This just reinforces what I said in my eralier post (#60), where a combination of ignorance on the part of media and the fans and nuances in the rules contributes to calls (or non-calls) that look like they are incorrect when they actually follow the rules.
I addressed that in the other thread, but briefly that intepretation makes no sense. Porter had no idea Alexander could gut out another step nor is it material to the ruling. Immidiate can more accurately and logically be read to mean in the same motion... ie the tackle. Porter grabbed and pulled him down to the ground, thats immediate on his part. The fact that Alexander trucked out a few extra feet horizontally is immaterial.
 
Why do Steeler fans feel the need to defend the officiating?
Answer: because of statements like these:
Just accept, like the other 80% of the population, that this was just a really poorly officiated game.
I'm not going to say anything more because I am a Steeler fan, as you know, Chaz. I'll just refer you to what pinequick, a self-described Cowboy fan who also stated he dislikes the Steelers, said a few posts before yours.
 
Based on the "immediate" qualifier, Porter's tackle was legal.

This just reinforces what I said in my eralier post (#60), where a combination of ignorance on the part of media and the fans and nuances in the rules contributes to calls (or non-calls) that look like they are incorrect when they actually follow the rules.
I addressed that in the other thread, but briefly that intepretation makes no sense. Porter had no idea Alexander could gut out another step nor is it material to the ruling. Immidiate can more accurately and logically be read to mean in the same motion... ie the tackle. Porter grabbed and pulled him down to the ground, thats immediate on his part. The fact that Alexander trucked out a few extra feet horizontally is immaterial.
I agree with this :goodposting:
 
Based on the "immediate" qualifier, Porter's tackle was legal.

This just reinforces what I said in my eralier post (#60), where a combination of ignorance on the part of media and the fans and nuances in the rules contributes to calls (or non-calls) that look like they are incorrect when they actually follow the rules.
I addressed that in the other thread, but briefly that intepretation makes no sense. Porter had no idea Alexander could gut out another step nor is it material to the ruling. Immidiate can more accurately and logically be read to mean in the same motion... ie the tackle. Porter grabbed and pulled him down to the ground, thats immediate on his part. The fact that Alexander trucked out a few extra feet horizontally is immaterial.
Immediate means immediate, as in right away, as in no time elapses from the time the contact is made, and the pulling down occurs. If the NFL wanted the rule to be "in the same motion" I'm guessing they would have used the words "in the same motion" instead of "immediate" in the rule.
 
Based on the "immediate" qualifier, Porter's tackle was legal.

This just reinforces what I said in my eralier post (#60), where a combination of ignorance on the part of media and the fans and nuances in the rules contributes to calls (or non-calls) that look like they are incorrect when they actually follow the rules.
I addressed that in the other thread, but briefly that intepretation makes no sense. Porter had no idea Alexander could gut out another step nor is it material to the ruling. Immidiate can more accurately and logically be read to mean in the same motion... ie the tackle. Porter grabbed and pulled him down to the ground, thats immediate on his part. The fact that Alexander trucked out a few extra feet horizontally is immaterial.
I agree with this :goodposting:
Shocking!
 
Why do Steeler fans feel the need to defend the officiating?
Answer: because of statements like these:
Just accept, like the other 80% of the population, that this was just a really poorly officiated game. 
I'm not going to say anything more because I am a Steeler fan, as you know, Chaz. I'll just refer you to what pinequick, a self-described Cowboy fan who also stated he dislikes the Steelers, said a few posts before yours.
I did quantify this with my second sentence."Why do Steeler fans feel the need to defend the officiating? I realize that there may be a few other fans defending the referees, but the majority are Steeler fans.

The majority of neutral fans thought the game was poorly officiated. Turn on any sports radio program,outside of Pittsburgh and Seattle, and listen to the average fans that call in.

 
Immediate means immediate, as in right away, as in no time elapses from the time the contact is made, and the pulling down occurs. If the NFL wanted the rule to be "in the same motion" I'm guessing they would have used the words "in the same motion" instead of "immediate" in the rule.
Immediate, as in 'instant'? What about the second or so it would take the runners knee to hit the ground? By your reading a horsecollar is impossible. Unless it was made on a runner already lying on the turf i suppose.
 
Based on the "immediate" qualifier, Porter's tackle was legal.

This just reinforces what I said in my eralier post (#60), where a combination of ignorance on the part of media and the fans and nuances in the rules contributes to calls (or non-calls) that look like they are incorrect when they actually follow the rules.
I addressed that in the other thread, but briefly that intepretation makes no sense. Porter had no idea Alexander could gut out another step nor is it material to the ruling. Immidiate can more accurately and logically be read to mean in the same motion... ie the tackle. Porter grabbed and pulled him down to the ground, thats immediate on his part. The fact that Alexander trucked out a few extra feet horizontally is immaterial.
I agree with this :goodposting:
Shocking!
I tend to agree with ideas that make sense. Immediate and in the same motion is the same thing. How is something that is immediate not in the same motion? No matter what this rediculous rule says, it should be only to prevent an injury like we've seen before. Therefore, I don't agree with any use of the back pads to make any form of tackle. It's just too dangerous.
 
The majority of neutral fans thought the game was poorly officiated. Turn on any sports radio program,outside of Pittsburgh and Seattle, and listen to the average fans that call in.
Oh yeah, the game was poorly officiated from my POV.What I get a kick out of are the people clamoring for an overhaul of the entire NFL refereeing system, claiming that there is widespread discontent among the fans (and then using internet polls to "bolster" their argument).

Do I think the game was poorly officiated? Yep. Do I think major changes are needed? Not a chance.

So long as there is a human element in the game, mistakes will be made. Deal with it. AND MOVE ON.

 
Immediate means immediate, as in right away, as in no time elapses from the time the contact is made, and the pulling down occurs. If the NFL wanted the rule to be "in the same motion" I'm guessing they would have used the words "in the same motion" instead of "immediate" in the rule.
Immediate, as in 'instant'? What about the second or so it would take the runners knee to hit the ground? By your reading a horsecollar is impossible. Unless it was made on a runner already lying on the turf i suppose.
Compare the Roy Williams tackle of Terrell Owens last year with the Porter tackle of Alexander. Williams ended up landing on Owens legs because he pulled immediately and directly down so that Owens' entire forward progress was immediately stopped. It was like he ran into a clothesline.Again, the subtleties and nuances of the rules are what is getting everyone to believe the calls were wrong. Why did the NFL add the "immediately" clause? It just leads to situations like this one. One person's immediate may not be the same as another's, and that leads to trouble. I think it would be better to simplify the rule and make it illegal to grab the shoulder pads from the front or the sides. However, that is not the rule that was in place for SB XL. If it was, there would be no argument.

 
Well I'll just write my Senator to get those polls going nation-wide. There are not any "scientific polls" outside most websites. Obviously people aren't happy. There has never been this kind of outcry in the past about refs and questionable officiating.
Well, I just talked to three different people at work today, and all of them said that they don't think that the officiating issue is that big of a deal. So I must be right.That information is just as useful as using internet polls to back up your point of view. (In other words, it's not.)
I'm not sure that's true in this case. This isn't, say, a political poll where majority of responders would be partisan to one side or the other, and pre-disposed to reply a certain way. If you ran a poll with just Seattle or Pittsburgh responders, you could be assured of a biased sample in both cases and toss out the results. Multiple national polls have all trended the same in this case (including the one on this site). The responders are self-selected, but should represent a fairly broad sampling of sports fans. ESPN actually has a very good system of breaking down results by state, and 48 out of 50 states showed a majority of people having problems with the Super Bowl officiating. I'd just seriously like the discussion to turn away from the Super Bowl, to what the NFL is or isn't doing about the overall state of officiating. Does anyone want to jump in and say that the current system is perfect and can't be improved?
I have bolded all that you need to know. ESPN could break down into NEIGHBORHOODS the number of people who self-selected to responding to a poll. Doesn't matter--the results are garbage. Trash. Worthless. Not indicative of anything other than the opinion of the people who responded.Internet polls (and call-in phone polls, and mail-in questionnaires, etc.) are not able to generalize their results, period.

Heck, you could even get over 2 MILLION PEOPLE to respond. Would still make your results worthless (from which to generalize).
Again, you are using an example where there is an assumption of bias and clear demographic skew. The only bias that should be assumed in this case (outside of WA, PA, and WV) is that the people choosing to respond have an opinion. At best you could postulate that a randomly selected group of sports fans would turn up a higher percentage no opinion or no strong leaning. Either that, or that the nation is filled with closet Seahawk fans/Steeler haters who are skewing the results. While these poll cetainly shouldn't be looked at as an exact measurement, for all of the good reasons you cited, to deny that a large percentage (if not large majority) of neutral fans thought there was a problem would be foolish.

 
Immediate means immediate, as in right away, as in no time elapses from the time the contact is made, and the pulling down occurs. If the NFL wanted the rule to be "in the same motion" I'm guessing they would have used the words "in the same motion" instead of "immediate" in the rule.
Immediate, as in 'instant'? What about the second or so it would take the runners knee to hit the ground? By your reading a horsecollar is impossible. Unless it was made on a runner already lying on the turf i suppose.
I find that Pittsburgh fans who claim that this was not a horse collar are lumped in to the same group as Seattle fans who claim that Daryll Jackson hitting the pylon should have counted as a TD. Both groups lose credibility in my eyes, and both groups cannot overcome the bias they have for their team to view these calls objectively.
 
Therefore, I don't agree with any use of the back pads to make any form of tackle. It's just too dangerous.
I am 100% in agreement with you, but unfortunately that is not how the rule was defined for this year. I believe the best thing the NFL could do as far as this rule is concerned is make a tackle illegal any time the back or sides of the pads are used. That said, unless they also make it illegal to tackle when grabbing the front of the pads, you'll STILL have some judgment involved. And on and on it goes.
 
The majority of neutral fans thought the game was poorly officiated. Turn on any sports radio program,outside of Pittsburgh and Seattle, and listen to the average fans that call in.
The average fans who call into sports radio programs are freakin' idiots. Evidence: Every sports radio program.
 
Immediate means immediate, as in right away, as in no time elapses from the time the contact is made, and the pulling down occurs. If the NFL wanted the rule to be "in the same motion" I'm guessing they would have used the words "in the same motion" instead of "immediate" in the rule.
Immediate, as in 'instant'? What about the second or so it would take the runners knee to hit the ground? By your reading a horsecollar is impossible. Unless it was made on a runner already lying on the turf i suppose.
I find that Pittsburgh fans who claim that this was not a horse collar are lumped in to the same group as Seattle fans who claim that Daryll Jackson hitting the pylon should have counted as a TD. Both groups lose credibility in my eyes, and both groups cannot overcome the bias they have for their team to view these calls objectively.
Your opinon, Chaz. I don't think they are comparable. There is no judgment call on Jackson's catch, unless you're going to argue that his foot touched down in bounds. The pylon -- by rule -- means nothing.By contrast, the horsecollar tackle -- by rule -- includes the "immediate" clause, so the official must determine whether or not he considers it immediate. I hate the subjectivity, but it is there.

 
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The majority of neutral fans thought the game was poorly officiated. Turn on any sports radio program,outside of Pittsburgh and Seattle, and listen to the average fans that call in.
The average fans who call into sports radio programs are freakin' idiots. Evidence: Every sports radio program.
Yep. And far be it for a radio (or TV) program to stir stuff up to increase the audience. The 4 letter network has done nothing but ride this "controversy" all the way to higher listernership.
 
The majority of neutral fans thought the game was poorly officiated. Turn on any sports radio program,outside of Pittsburgh and Seattle, and listen to the average fans that call in.
Oh yeah, the game was poorly officiated from my POV.What I get a kick out of are the people clamoring for an overhaul of the entire NFL refereeing system, claiming that there is widespread discontent among the fans (and then using internet polls to "bolster" their argument).

Do I think the game was poorly officiated? Yep. Do I think major changes are needed? Not a chance.

So long as there is a human element in the game, mistakes will be made. Deal with it. AND MOVE ON.
I don't understand this position at all. Plane crahes happen, so there isn't a reason for Pilots to constantly study and be evaluated, right? I mean, they are human and humans make mistakes. Same thing goes with Surgeons. People die in surgery, so why bother to continually strive for better technology and quality controls?Of course there will always be human error, and there will never be 100% quality in any human system. However, that should always be the goal and anything less than striving for that should not be accepted.

 
If we have to debate semantics:

im·me·di·ate  (-md-t)

adj.

1. Occurring at once; instant: gave me an immediate response.

Not possible in the given circumstance. You cant begin pulling someone down and instantly they are down, not a reasonable reading

2.

a. Of or near the present time: in the immediate future.

Hard to define a word using that same word, but the point is clear

b. Of or relating to the present time and place; current: "It is probable that, apart from the most immediate, pragmatic, technical revisions, the writer's effort to detach himself from his work is quixotic" Joyce Carol Oates.

Again, relating to the entirety of the circumstance, as opposed to 'instantly'

3. Close at hand; near: in the immediate vicinity. See Synonyms at close.

Same thing, in the very near future

4. Next in line or relation: is an immediate successor to the president of the company.

Even a more useful definition for my reading

5. Directly apprehended or perceived: had immediate awareness of the scope of the crisis.

Again, not applicable. A person cannot be instantly tackled

6. Acting or occurring without the interposition of another agency or object; direct.

Now here is the money shot. Exactly the point im trying to make. Porters actions  need to be taken in the context of what he did and what those consequences were. That Alexander extended the time of the event longer than 'instantly' is immaterial. The 'direct' event was Porter puts hand in jersey, grabs pad, Alexander is pulled to the ground. What Alexander did in the meantime doesnt matter. All the elements are there on Porters end.
Williams ended up landing on Owens legs because he pulled immediately and directly down so that Owens' entire forward progress was immediately stopped
If Owens had landed on another player before being grounded would that have mattered in the context of this rule? In such a case, he wasnt 'immediately' brought down. Thats the point, its the tacklers actions that are relevant, not the circumstances outstanding to that (such as Alexander gaining a yard before being Porter pulled him completely down).
 
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Reposted from other thread:

Eagles fan here from near Philly (which is far from Pitt)

Both teams had a few calls go their way. Of course, the team that won benefitted more, by definition. In general, the game announcers created this whole situation and they were clearly biased towards Seattle.

THE CALLS:

1) Jax pushed off, good call that SHOULD have been made...I think the announcers made people feel it was a bad call by saying it was when it was clearly PI

2) Ben may or may not have gotten in...mighty close...no way you can say it was a bad call or overturn it

3) Hasselback clipping call was just weird...not much effect on the game...but a bad call in favor of Pitt for 15 midfield yards

4) overturned fumble call -- properly overturned in favor of Seattle -- obvious bias on the announcers who were actually trying to claim he was down regardless of whether or not there was contact...duh...more Seattle bias there

5) holding call was ticky tack, but he was reaching around, so not a terrible call, but it was surely a crucial break for Pitt

6) incomplete pass vs fumble by Stevens -- called incomplete, unreviewable -- could have gone either way, but did go Seattle's way -- announcers had no beef....hmmm

People, we are the Footballguys on this board. We all know close to if not more than the announcers. So why are so many people taken in by their bias? Perhaps you had your own bias, and theirs made you feel some justification? I don't get it

MY VIEW:

All in all, the officiating was not perfect. It never is. It is impossible. The NFL has no bias. The officials were not slanted. The TV analysts were slanted.

Congrats to Pittsburgh. Shame on all of you for complaining about the officiating, ESPECIALLY MIKE HOLMGREN. Show some class.

 
Immediate means immediate, as in right away, as in no time elapses from the time the contact is made, and the pulling down occurs. If the NFL wanted the rule to be "in the same motion" I'm guessing they would have used the words "in the same motion" instead of "immediate" in the rule.
Immediate, as in 'instant'? What about the second or so it would take the runners knee to hit the ground? By your reading a horsecollar is impossible. Unless it was made on a runner already lying on the turf i suppose.
I find that Pittsburgh fans who claim that this was not a horse collar are lumped in to the same group as Seattle fans who claim that Daryll Jackson hitting the pylon should have counted as a TD. Both groups lose credibility in my eyes, and both groups cannot overcome the bias they have for their team to view these calls objectively.
Your opinon, Chaz. I don't think they are comparable. There is no judgment call on Jackson's catch, unless you're going to argue that his foot touched down in bounds. The pylon -- by rule -- means nothing.By contrast, the horsecollar tackle -- by rule -- includes the "immediate" clause, so the official must determine whether or not he considers it immediate. I hate the subjectivity, but it is there.
In all honesty, do you think that was a horse collar or not. Based on how you've seen this penalty called, do you think it should have been called.Please don't answer "it doesn't matter what I think".

Almost all rules have subjectivity. Look up the definition of holding and tell me that if it was called on every play the referee probably wouldn't be wrong.

The fact that you guys are defending the non-horsecollar call, the phantom holding penalty, etc., tells me that you're not being objective. Of course the referee could have made these calls or non-calls (they are subjective), it still doesn't stop them from being bad calls.

 
Again, you are using an example where there is an assumption of bias and clear demographic skew. The only bias that should be assumed in this case (outside of WA, PA, and WV) is that the people choosing to respond have an opinion. At best you could postulate that a randomly selected group of sports fans would turn up a higher percentage no opinion or no strong leaning. Either that, or that the nation is filled with closet Seahawk fans/Steeler haters who are skewing the results.

While these poll cetainly shouldn't be looked at as an exact measurement, for all of the good reasons you cited, to deny that a large percentage (if not large majority) of neutral fans thought there was a problem would be foolish.
Let me tell you what would be foolish--to try to support one's argument with worthless data. And that is what this is.Again, I have highlighted the portion of your post that leads us to conclude that internet polls are WORTHLESS FROM WHICH TO GENERALIZE, especially on this issue. I have italicized the portion of your post where you seem to grasp why. Yes, the only bias we should assume is that those who have responded actually CARE. Read portions of this thread's initial post:

"But I have never seen more fan outrage at anything like the officiating of Super Bowl XL. This needs extreme measures to fix. . . Business 101 - the customer is always right. The fans are in an overwhelming majority that the game was screwed up. The polls are 2-1."

When one makes claims that "extreme measures" are needed, and then points to results taken from fans who are clearly up in arms to support those claims, that is faulty logic.

Argue about the calls, tell me about what the people thought at the Super Bowl party that you were at, whatever. But don't try to support your argument with "an overwhelming majority" of fans think such-and-such because "I read it a poll on the internet." That's just dumb.

 
Immediate means immediate, as in right away, as in no time elapses from the time the contact is made, and the pulling down occurs. If the NFL wanted the rule to be "in the same motion" I'm guessing they would have used the words "in the same motion" instead of "immediate" in the rule.
Immediate, as in 'instant'? What about the second or so it would take the runners knee to hit the ground? By your reading a horsecollar is impossible. Unless it was made on a runner already lying on the turf i suppose.
I find that Pittsburgh fans who claim that this was not a horse collar are lumped in to the same group as Seattle fans who claim that Daryll Jackson hitting the pylon should have counted as a TD. Both groups lose credibility in my eyes, and both groups cannot overcome the bias they have for their team to view these calls objectively.
Your opinon, Chaz. I don't think they are comparable. There is no judgment call on Jackson's catch, unless you're going to argue that his foot touched down in bounds. The pylon -- by rule -- means nothing.By contrast, the horsecollar tackle -- by rule -- includes the "immediate" clause, so the official must determine whether or not he considers it immediate. I hate the subjectivity, but it is there.
In all honesty, do you think that was a horse collar or not. Based on how you've seen this penalty called, do you think it should have been called.Please don't answer "it doesn't matter what I think".

Almost all rules have subjectivity. Look up the definition of holding and tell me that if it was called on every play the referee probably wouldn't be wrong.

The fact that you guys are defending the non-horsecollar call, the phantom holding penalty, etc., tells me that you're not being objective. Of course the referee could have made these calls or non-calls (they are subjective), it still doesn't stop them from being bad calls.
How many times was a horsecollar called this year? Answer. Not once.
 
If we have to debate semantics:

im·me·di·ate  (-md-t)

adj.

1. Occurring at once; instant: gave me an immediate response.

Not possible in the given circumstance. You cant begin pulling someone down and instantly they are down, not a reasonable reading

2.

a. Of or near the present time: in the immediate future.

Hard to define a word using that same word, but the point is clear

b. Of or relating to the present time and place; current: "It is probable that, apart from the most immediate, pragmatic, technical revisions, the writer's effort to detach himself from his work is quixotic" Joyce Carol Oates.

Again, relating to the entirety of the circumstance, as opposed to 'instantly'

3. Close at hand; near: in the immediate vicinity. See Synonyms at close.

Same thing, in the very near future

4. Next in line or relation: is an immediate successor to the president of the company.

Even a more useful definition for my reading

5. Directly apprehended or perceived: had immediate awareness of the scope of the crisis.

Again, not applicable. A person cannot be instantly tackled

6. Acting or occurring without the interposition of another agency or object; direct.

Now here is the money shot. Exactly the point im trying to make. Porters actions  need to be taken in the context of what he did and what those consequences were. That Alexander extended the time of the event longer than 'instantly' is immaterial. The 'direct' event was Porter puts hand in jersey, grabs pad, Alexander is pulled to the ground. What Alexander did in the meantime doesnt matter. All the elements are there on Porters end.
Williams ended up landing on Owens legs because he pulled immediately and directly down so that Owens' entire forward progress was immediately stopped
If Owens had landed on another player before being grounded would that have mattered in the context of this rule? In such a case, he wasnt 'immediately' brought down. Thats the point, its the tacklers actions that are relevant, not the circumstances outstanding to that (such as Alexander gaining a yard before being Porter pulled him completely down).
So you are going to use the sixth definition of a word to make your argument? Wow, pretty convincing. But you know what, let's use it, because it's irrelevant to the discussion. In my opinion, you're missing the bigger point. It doesn't matter how I, or you, or the dictionary defines immediate. All that matters is does the official consider the downward motion of the tackle to be immediate or not. If he does, then it's an illegal tackle. If he doesn't than it is not.Which leads us to one of three conclusions:

1. The official considered the tackle made by the jersey, not the pad.

2. The official considered the downward motion of the tackle not immediate to the grabbing of the shoulder pad.

3. The official blew the call.

I'm leaving out the conspiratorial fourth case -- the official intentionally blew the call.

The term immediate is subjective. As a result, the whole rule is subjective. And the problem with subjective rules is there will be people like you that believe the call was bad simply because the official saw one thing (in this case, not immediate) and some fans and/or the media saw another (in this case, immediate).

You're actually making my case about how the subjectivity of certain rules is a big problem and contributes to the perception of SB XL being poorly officiated.

 
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I don't understand this position at all. Plane crahes happen, so there isn't a reason for Pilots to constantly study and be evaluated, right? I mean, they are human and humans make mistakes. Same thing goes with Surgeons. People die in surgery, so why bother to continually strive for better technology and quality controls?

Of course there will always be human error, and there will never be 100% quality in any human system. However, that should always be the goal and anything less than striving for that should not be accepted.
Good lord, over-dramatize some more, would you? This was not a plane crash, in refereeing terms. It was a bad day by the refs. It was on a big stage, so it was magnified. Was this worse than any other bad day--say in a Jets/Dolphins game this season (I'm just picking a random game here) that you and I never watched, or some other poorly-officiated game from any other season? No.Because one team lost, now we need to study how to make officiating better? Good grief, how many other teams could have whined this song and dance?? :cry:

 
In all honesty, do you think that was a horse collar or not. Based on how you've seen this penalty called, do you think it should have been called.

Please don't answer "it doesn't matter what I think".

Almost all rules have subjectivity. Look up the definition of holding and tell me that if it was called on every play the referee probably wouldn't be wrong.

The fact that you guys are defending the non-horsecollar call, the phantom holding penalty, etc., tells me that you're not being objective. Of course the referee could have made these calls or non-calls (they are subjective), it still doesn't stop them from being bad calls.
How many times was a horsecollar called this year? Answer. Not once.
I wasn't even remotely surprised the flag wasn't trown there for exactly that reason. In fact Seattle benefited from almost the exact same non-call in the Redskins game.
 
Again, you are using an example where there is an assumption of bias and clear demographic skew.  The only bias that should be assumed in this case (outside of WA, PA, and WV) is that the people choosing to respond have an opinion. At best you could postulate that a randomly selected group of sports fans would turn up a higher percentage no opinion or no strong leaning.  Either that, or that the nation is filled with closet Seahawk fans/Steeler haters who are skewing the results. 

While these poll cetainly shouldn't be looked at as an exact measurement, for all of the good reasons you cited, to deny that a large percentage (if not large majority) of neutral fans thought there was a problem would be foolish.
Let me tell you what would be foolish--to try to support one's argument with worthless data. And that is what this is.Again, I have highlighted the portion of your post that leads us to conclude that internet polls are WORTHLESS FROM WHICH TO GENERALIZE, especially on this issue. I have italicized the portion of your post where you seem to grasp why. Yes, the only bias we should assume is that those who have responded actually CARE. Read portions of this thread's initial post:

"But I have never seen more fan outrage at anything like the officiating of Super Bowl XL. This needs extreme measures to fix. . . Business 101 - the customer is always right. The fans are in an overwhelming majority that the game was screwed up. The polls are 2-1."

When one makes claims that "extreme measures" are needed, and then points to results taken from fans who are clearly up in arms to support those claims, that is faulty logic.

Argue about the calls, tell me about what the people thought at the Super Bowl party that you were at, whatever. But don't try to support your argument with "an overwhelming majority" of fans think such-and-such because "I read it a poll on the internet." That's just dumb.
The fact is, on ESPN the poll is just on the site. People don't go out looking for polls to do, they are presented to them. Most of the viewers of the poll agree that there was unfair officiating. These are the same sort of polls where anything that Pittsburgh is involved in, they are the overwhelming majority due to their large fanbase. I think that alone has something to say.
 
You want evidence the game was called fairly. here it is. The NFL says it was. Now you can come up with your own stupid conspiracy theories saying it wasn't. But think about this. This was the worst officiated off season ever and every time this year the NFL has sent out letters saying when they missed a call. NONE YET. THEY SAY IT WAS DONE WELL. come up with your own theories all you want. "Ohhh they would never say they messed up the super bowl." its crap. every media outlet except ESPN (whose professor thought hitting a pylon meant possession) and some no name punks agree with you. get over it. your wrong. (except about the hasselbeck blocking call, thats it)

 
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The fact is, on ESPN the poll is just on the site. People don't go out looking for polls to do, they are presented to them. Most of the viewers of the poll agree that there was unfair officiating. These are the same sort of polls where anything that Pittsburgh is involved in, they are the overwhelming majority due to their large fanbase. I think that alone has something to say.
*sigh* No, no it doesn't. Because a poll is on a webpage, then that means I am obliged to click on it? No. So who would be those most motivated to click on it? Those most pissed off (or most joyously happy) with the officiating. In any case, that = BIAS.
 

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