Barfarn...I generally agree with what you're saying, but in this case not as much.
With last week's int, I think it's more a matter of the league not knowing how to define a catch.
Calls influenced by other circumstances is not unique to the nfl. Jordan's winning shot vs. The Utah Jazz had a nice push off. Google traveling violations in the NBA. Strike zones are grey. To me that's more a part of human nature, an element you cant, and I don't think should regulate out of the game.
Aside from Fail Mary, I can't recall a game or situation where calls were one-sided enough to cost the Packers the game. Sure the IG play was clunky, but tjat or any other call was nowhere near as influential on the outcome as injuries and the Packers' performance on the field.
Originally Posted by: musccy
Musccy normally I do agree with you, even on this issueđ: ref suckyness typically goes both ways; but what is happening today, it is
CREATING A COMPETITIVE DISADVANTAGE TO PACKERS.
Everyday GB tries to elevate a player's awareness of the rules and to play within them, so the team can play penalty free; or do things to induce the other team to commit a penalty, like hard counts. So this should give GB an advantage over players coached to be hooligans like Harbaugh's 49ers or Seattle, right?
Let's take the Illegal contact; Seattle coaches DBs to hold/make illegal contact almost every play, because they wont call it every time; and once you get a IC/hold call against you, on the next play its okay to pull the WR's shorts down and shove your fist and make that WR your hand-puppet, because for sure they'll be no call. Now, who should have the advantage: the well-coached team on not being penalized or those wilfully committing penalties? Shamefully, no bullshittingly, it is the thugs that get the competitive advantage. If a CB makes illegal contact 12 plays in a row, then 12 flags should be thrown whether it's a star like Sherman or a nobody like Gunter. See the league is thinking of viewership: if an IC call is made every play, viewership will decline. But, here's what those dumba$$es dont get: if ya throw 3 flags in a row, and every other time they commit IC, they'll stop committing IC penalties. So if they throw flags for every penalty, they'll stop and you get the same # of flags, the same viewership, but the NFL maintains its integrity.
This is my problem w/ the refs, their suckness is a disadvantage to the teams, GB being one, that spend time every day in practice on penalties and an advantage that those that encourage penalties; it is not a 50-50 goes both ways deal.
The teams that have been trying to stay within the rules on "rub" plays have been b!tching over teams that are running "pick" plays and creating a competitive disadvantage. Now supposedly that is becoming point of emphasis.
I think that was you Musccy that thought Bryant made the catch, right? I think a catch is perfectly defined. A player going to the ground after "catching" the ball has to maintain possession through the process. The ball can hit the ground as long as the player is not using the ground to secure the ball and as long as the ball is secure and
does not move in the hands or arms when it hits the ground. There is no disagreement here. There's just refs getting it WRONG!
Now processing the reality might create disagreement. If Bryant took 2 steps and Lunged for the Goal line after making the "catch;" then it was a catch and a fumble, which he recovered and ball is at .5 yard line. If he didn't take 2 steps, then the "catch" became an incomplete pass when the ball shifted in his arm when it hit the ground.
Personally I've seen Bryant lunge and take steps several times; an the aforementioned action dont look like anything I've seen him do before. The ball never extended beyond his helmut, he simply stuck his arms out so his head didn't hit the ground first and his left and right foot just happened to touch the ground in succession after the ball was secure in his hands as his momentum was taking him to the ground.