“WHERE WAS THE HOLDING?!”
“THAT WASN’T PASS INTERFERENCE!”
“GET OFF YOUR KNEES REF YOU’RE BLOWING THE GAME!!!”
These aren’t all phrases that we discovered last night while watching the Seahawks beat the Packers. These are phrases we have yelled at zebras every single Sunday since the day we first witnessed a pigskin bearing the NFL shield flung across the gridiron. Your favorite refereeing crews of Mike Carey and Ed Hochuli are being locked out over a few bucks. It’s not a big deal, except for the fact that you think that the “scabs” are a significant downgrade from the previous standard.
Officials, in general, are our sworn enemies. They cost our favorite team yards, points, and in the occasional 3-point loss on a last second field goal, we, as football fans love to defer to the men in black and white and chalk it up to “oh it was a poorly officiated game.” Now we go to the Monday night fiasco in which Golden Tate and M.D. Jennings shared a catch in the end zone. Now a couple of things need to be cleared up: First, the rule on possession (from the NFL Rule Book):
A player is in possession when he is in firm grip and control of the ball in bounds.
It does not say: “When the ball is held close to a person’s chest closer than the other guy going for the ball to win a game.” A ball can be possessed with two hands, between a hand and a helmet, or as Calvin Johnson likes to do when disarming a secondary, with one hand in an extremely grippy glove. People look at last nights play and point to the fact that Golden Tate only got one hand on the ball initially and M.D. Jennings brought the ball close to his chest as both players were falling…Now let’s define a catch:
A catch is made when a player inbounds secures possession of a pass, kick, or fumble in flight… Keep an eye on that word possession, it’s going to mean a lot more in a minute.
Why is possession important in this case? How quickly have people forgotten the “Calvin Johnson Rule” or Note 1 under the definition of possession?
A player who goes to the ground in the process of attempting to secure a possession of a loose ball (with or without contact by an opponent) must maintain control of the ball throughout the process of contacting the ground, whether in the field of play or in the end zone. If he loses control of the ball, and the ball touches the ground before he regains control, there is no possession.
What that means is that possession of the football can NOT be established in the air. So if Tate and Jennings wanted to play paddy-cake in the air with the ball it wouldn’t matter who touched it first or who had two hands on it as opposed to one hand or one arm, until the players come down in the field of play, possession can NOT be established. So if M.D. Jennings has two firm hands on the ball in the air, and Golden Tate (who did physically touch the ball first) has a hand and an arm and a firm grip on the ball (which he did as is evidenced by him not bouncing around when going to the ground) then the call is a simultaneous catch:
If a pass is caught simultaneously by two eligible opponents, and both players retain it, the ball belongs to the passers. It is not a simultaneous catch if a player gains control first and an opponent subsequently gains joint control.
The argument made last night was that M.D. Jennings clearly had MORE control of the ball…Well the rule doesn’t establish who has more control, if I have a firm grip with one hand and another player is hugging the football with both hands and arms, guess what?! We both still have control of the football. So in this case, when Golden Tate CLEARLY has a single hand and arm on the ball while going to the ground, and M.D. Jennings CLEARLY has two hands on the ball and is bringing it closer to his numbers, the NFL Rule book says that if the two players maintain control of the ball while going to the ground, it will belong to Golden Tate, and it doesn’t matter if the split of control was 50/50 or 75/25…Any form of control can establish possession. Touchdown Seahawks, game is over…after you kick the extra point.
TJ Lang wants to yell at the scabs, and tweet that they got f$%&ing screwed? That’s fine, but I didn’t hear TJ complaining when a blown pass interference call, by the regular officials, in a Bucs v Lions game (a call which the league apologized for…by the way), sent the Packers to the playoffs on their way to winning a Super Bowl. They weren’t complaining, they were grateful that the regular officials blew an obvious call. Now the replacements make a questionable and obviously difficult call and you want to criticize them? Take your $50,000 ring and shove it. You guys really feel that bad about the replacement refs? Don’t show up to work today…or tomorrow…or Sunday. That is the only way to force the commissioner’s hand in this situation. We still joke about the tuck rule, and the Megatron rule, but it wasn’t replacement refs back then that forced the league and the competition committee’s hands.
We look at the refs under a microscope now because it’s an issue and we hate them by nature. Its funny how replacement players are good for us, but when it’s the refs, it just gives us a better excuse to blame our teams’ inadequacies on. Bill Belichick is getting scrutinized for chasing an official…if it goes to the replay booth and gets overturned, John Harbaugh is doing the same thing. These officials were not afforded the same training regimen that our Hochuli’s are, but they are going on that field and being disrespected by players, coaches and fans alike, when in fact, they are the only reason you are have the privilege to watch your favorite team on Sunday. I went to the NFL rulebook to find the info I needed to make my point, the reality is that most of you will never pick up an NFL rule book and in the five minutes I spent scanning it my head almost exploded. The league and the standard officials will reach an agreement eventually, but as NFL fans, we have to realize that they might not, and you have to be okay with that.
As far as last night is concerned though, the Seahawks won. For those of you looking for justice and want Roger Goodell to reverse this decision, he shouldn’t and probably won’t. If he would have done it 2 years ago the Packers would not have been Super Bowl Champions…They wouldn’t have even made the playoffs. To the Packers, ease up, and stop acting like your dog got shot. You still get paid more in a weekend than most people make in year…for playing a game.
Last edited by rogers park bryan on Tue Sep 25, 2012 1:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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