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redskinsskickazz 09-30-2004 01:26 PM

reviewable plays
 
does anyone else agree that pass interference plays should be reviewable. i meen having most penaltys non reviewable is fine we dont want to slow the game down too much and usually a blown holding call only costs you five or ten yards and for the most part your defense has a chance to still shut the other team down but a pass interference call can cost you up to 70 yards and possibly give the other team first and goal on the one essentially giving them a touchdown or not giving you first and goal essentially robbing you of one (we found out the hard way) . what im saying is by having replays at all there admitting that referes can and will make mistakes and they dont want the refs to decide the game but for some reason they still have penaltys that can cost a team 60 or 70 yards (depending on the arm strength of the quarterback ) that are non reviewable.

RedskinRat 09-30-2004 01:40 PM

There should be a crew of zebras in front of monitors in a booth somewhere so that they can add their viewpoint to any game. There are so many things that the field crew can't see.

If there is already a booth crew they need to stay awake during the game.

SkinsRock 09-30-2004 01:45 PM

[QUOTE=RedskinRat]There should be a crew of zebras in front of monitors in a booth somewhere so that they can add their viewpoint to any game. There are so many things that the field crew can't see.

If there is already a booth crew they need to stay awake during the game.[/QUOTE]

I said almost the same thing on another thread. At the very least, there should be officials that are able to view it on a monitor and chime in on questionable calls.

illdefined 09-30-2004 01:56 PM

with this new contact rule, interference is like holding. happens every play. imagine if holding was challengeable.

reviewable i think is good as long as its by the officials and on truly questionable calls.

JWsleep 09-30-2004 02:00 PM

[QUOTE=RedskinRat]There should be a crew of zebras in front of monitors in a booth somewhere so that they can add their viewpoint to any game. There are so many things that the field crew can't see.

If there is already a booth crew they need to stay awake during the game.[/QUOTE]


I always wondered why they didn't do that. Also, why have the head ref stick his head under the hood on the sideline? Why not have someone up in the booth do the whole review, instead of this odd process they do now? Isn't that what they do in the NHL? As for expanding replay, I don't know. The game is full of potential penalties. It could grind to a halt.

Still, I'd love to get those two from Monday back!

BossHog 09-30-2004 02:04 PM

Interference calls should be reviewable. That's not to say that they will be overturned.

Hogskin 09-30-2004 02:17 PM

[QUOTE=illdefined]with this new contact rule, interference is like holding. happens every play. imagine if holding was challengeable.

reviewable i think is good as long as its by the officials and on truly questionable calls.[/QUOTE]

I don't really agree about interference on every play, although it is fairly frequent. No matter how often there IS interference, it SHOULD BE CALLED. Period. It bears no relation to holding, which is very hard to detect in the crowded area where it occurs. The interference is out in the open, and there is no excuse for not seeing it or not calling it. So what if there are frequent penalties stopping the game. That would get fixed REAL quick by the coaches - they don't like getting penalized.

The defensive backs need to learn to cover their guys without manhandling them - they used to do a damn good job of years ago, when you couldn't TOUCH the receiver without seeing a flag. This crap of giving defenders leeway to clobber the receiver if they turn to look at the ball, and ignoring pushoffs going down the field screws up the game. They should either change the rules so that anything goes for the defender AND receiver, or enforce the rules they have!!

Giving the officials all this leeway and no recourse for replay, invites , not just errors in judgement, but outright FAVORITISM that changes the outcome of games. I'm not convinced there was not bias by the officials in our game.

cpayne5 09-30-2004 02:28 PM

Either everything should be reviewable (and the loopholes the refs have, be tightened up), or nothing should be reviewable. I know there are judgment calls, but sometimes a judgment call is just not the right call once you see it on film. Maybe for such challenges, they can have the ref who threw the flag also watch the film and see if he wants to change his mind about it.

That Guy 09-30-2004 03:10 PM

in the nba the refs will favor the better team, but the penalties there are for 2% or so of the total score or a change of possession (which only happens about 100 times a game), in football favoritism is just that much worse because (in this game), it could have changed each side's score by over 30%!! thats just two mistakes... bit harder to overcome than 4-10% score difference of bad calls (many more than 2 mistakes) in a crappily officiated nba game.

skinsguy 09-30-2004 03:21 PM

It's pretty bad though to think that the Refs on the field have to have other refs watching the monitors to help them do their jobs they should already be doing on the field. I know the refs cannot call every play exactly right..but NFL refs should be able to get pass interference calls (like the ones Monday Night) right.

offiss 09-30-2004 03:37 PM

The only changes I would like to see are, the down by contact rule, which is absolute nonesense, and if a challenge is inconclusive you should not be charged a time out, inconclusive mean's that the challenger could very well be right, but because of camera angle you can't tell, I believe that should be a wash, I then want younger referee's on the field, and they also have to be in top shape, they should have to pass a physical test, as well as an eye test, I don't know why we have guy's who can't get out of their own way, and probably can't pass an eye exam for a drivier's license, on the field decieding the outcome of games? It's like the NFL has gone to WWF for ref's.

FRPLG 09-30-2004 03:40 PM

[QUOTE=illdefined]with this new contact rule, interference is like holding. happens every play. imagine if holding was challengeable.

reviewable i think is good as long as its by the officials and on truly questionable calls.[/QUOTE]

Ok...
This is something that pisses me off because the damn game announcers do the same damn thing. The new contact rule (which isn't actually new at all...nor does it seem to have been enforced any more than normal) has very little to do with Pass Interference. Pass interference as we all know (especially Mr. Harris and Mr. Gardner) is interfering with the the rights of another player to attempt to catch a thrown ball. In essense whenever a ball is thrown one player may not physically prevent another eligible receiver from trying to catch to ball. The new/not exactly new contact rule pertains to preventing an eligible receiver from even getting open AFTER they have exited the 5 yard safety zone but PRIOR to a thrown ball. Inside that 5 yard zone the secondary can basically do perform any legal act of contact(IE: not holding) at any time.

Now contact DOES happen on just about any play but for the most part it is of the incidental and non-impeding type. The new enforcement is seeking to eliminate the absolute mauling(impeding with normally legal types of contact...again: not holding) of receivers after the 5 yard zone.

My whole point is that Pass Interference and Illegal Contact are not the same thing and should be treated differently. One can reasonably assume a player, who having been interfered with thus causing him to drop the ball, would have caught the ball and that seems like it should be reviewable since it's not really that subjective. I mean either they guy impeded him from catching the ball or he didn't. Illegal contact on the other hand doesn't allow you to assume a player would have caught a pass since the ball was never thrown his direction anyways.

I say PI should be the MOST reviewed play in all of football and it is a sham that it isn't even reviewable at all.

FRPLG 09-30-2004 03:47 PM

[QUOTE=offiss]The only changes I would like to see are, the down by contact rule, which is absolute nonesense, and if a challenge is inconclusive you should not be charged a time out, inconclusive mean's that the challenger could very well be right, but because of camera angle you can't tell, I believe that should be a wash, I then want younger referee's on the field, and they also have to be in top shape, they should have to pass a physical test, as well as an eye test, I don't know why we have guy's who can't get out of their own way, and probably can't pass an eye exam for a drivier's license, on the field decieding the outcome of games? It's like the NFL has gone to WWF for ref's.[/QUOTE]

The down by contact rule is a joke but I can't think of a good way to change it. I guess the reason the rule works the way it does is so a player doesn't pick up a fumbled ball and score while everyone else sits with their thumbs up their butts since they heard the whistle. Problem is, if they tell refs to curtail the quick whistles then we'll start seeing guys getting piled on after their down and there doesn't seem to be a good way to augment to rules to make this more defense friendly. I guess maybe they should get rid of the crappy refs like my man says.

Good idea on the inconclusive replays but then the refs are left to decide when the replay is inconclusive and when the challenge was just plain wrong. Now we expect these dunces to get this right also? Man this starts the ball tumbling down the mountain.

memphisskin 09-30-2004 04:17 PM

No review of pass interference or expansion of reviewable plays. The games already take 3 hours, add in all those reviews and challenges and it'll climb to 4 hours.

The refs are there to enforce the rules, one or two missed calls a game is acceptable. Bad calls are part of the game, good teams overcome them and bad teams use them as excuses.

Inconclusive means that there is no visual evidence to support a challenge, seems pretty straightforward to me. You disagree with what the ref says happened on a play, you think you see something that they missed, well let the videotape prove it. But if you're wrong there has to be some penalty, because there definitely is a reward.

Hogskin 09-30-2004 04:33 PM

[QUOTE=memphisskin]No review of pass interference or expansion of reviewable plays. The games already take 3 hours, add in all those reviews and challenges and it'll climb to 4 hours.[/QUOTE]
That is exactly the kind of argument the people that were against the original replay plan made. And it never happened. If it is implemented correctly, it won't add an hour to the games. It will just GREATLY improve the accuracy of calls, and decreade the number of times each year that a win is stolen from a team by incompetent refs. None of this would be necessary if the NFL would make the refs FULL TIME, and DEDICATED to this job. This is a side job for most, who have another primary job. If they spent their weeks working out with teams, they would be MUCH more competent. Every other major sport has dedicated refs.

FRPLG 09-30-2004 04:40 PM

[QUOTE=Hogskin]That is exactly the kind of argument the people that were against the original replay plan made. And it never happened. If it is implemented correctly, it won't add an hour to the games. It will just GREATLY improve the accuracy of calls, and decreade the number of times each year that a win is stolen from a team by incompetent refs. None of this would be necessary if the NFL would make the refs FULL TIME, and DEDICATED to this job. This is a side job for most, who have another primary job. If they spent their weeks working out with teams, they would be MUCH more competent. Every other major sport has dedicated refs.[/QUOTE]

This is a good point. Does anyone know why the NFL lets their refs make this side job? I mean I know they only have one game a week unlike NBA and MLB but still doesn't that make it MORE important that the refs are of good quality since each game means so much?

Bunglehead 09-30-2004 05:05 PM

The coaches are only allowed two challenges, plus a third if their first two are successful. I can't possibly see how allowing more plays to be reviewable would slow the game down at all. We're not talking about increasing the actual number of challenges are we?

Plus, there ARE review officials upstairs all the time. They're the ones who step in after the two minute warning. I like that rule. If the guys upstairs were changing calls throughout the whole game, it definitely WOULD slow things down a lot. Plus, since they're the only ones allowed to call for a review in the last two minutes, it obviously stops either team from gaining 'extra' time-outs.

I don't see anything wrong with allowing the coaches to challenge any type of call by the refs; be it a penalty, down by contact, fumble, premature whistle, ball placement, or whatever. It would be stupid to ask for a review when no penalty was called, but if a player is called for pass interference and the replay clearly shows that the opposing player initiated the contact, it only seems fair that the call should not only be reviewable, but the proper penalty should be implemented in it's place.

It does seem petty to challenge a 'holding' call, and I don't think any coaches really would. But, if it comes at a key moment, where the game outcome is on the line, and the guys in the booth can see it was a bogus call, why not make it challengeable?

The coaches have precious few challenges, so they're not going to throw them away unnecessarily. Also, has anyone noticed that there are still a lot of coaches who throw out the red flag on unreviewable calls? This, in effect, still gives them a brief time-out, and they aren't charged for it. By making more plays reviewable, it would erase these 'free' clock-stoppers.

Daseal 09-30-2004 05:13 PM

I was going to say what Bunglehead said. It wouldn't slow the game down any more than it does now and coaches wouldn't waste one of their 2 (or 3) challenges to challenge a silly 5 yard penelty. Only fumbles, PI, etc.

Sheriff Gonna Getcha 09-30-2004 05:14 PM

I definately believe that pass-interference calls should be challengeable. They result is 50 yard gains/losses; they are game changers.

memphisskin 09-30-2004 06:17 PM

[QUOTE=Bunglehead]The coaches are only allowed two challenges, plus a third if their first two are successful. I can't possibly see how allowing more plays to be reviewable would slow the game down at all. We're not talking about increasing the actual number of challenges are we?

Plus, there ARE review officials upstairs all the time. They're the ones who step in after the two minute warning. I like that rule. If the guys upstairs were changing calls throughout the whole game, it definitely WOULD slow things down a lot. Plus, since they're the only ones allowed to call for a review in the last two minutes, it obviously stops either team from gaining 'extra' time-outs.

I don't see anything wrong with allowing the coaches to challenge any type of call by the refs; be it a penalty, down by contact, fumble, premature whistle, ball placement, or whatever. It would be stupid to ask for a review when no penalty was called, but if a player is called for pass interference and the replay clearly shows that the opposing player initiated the contact, it only seems fair that the call should not only be reviewable, but the proper penalty should be implemented in it's place.

It does seem petty to challenge a 'holding' call, and I don't think any coaches really would. But, if it comes at a key moment, where the game outcome is on the line, and the guys in the booth can see it was a bogus call, why not make it challengeable?

The coaches have precious few challenges, so they're not going to throw them away unnecessarily. Also, has anyone noticed that there are still a lot of coaches who throw out the red flag on unreviewable calls? This, in effect, still gives them a brief time-out, and they aren't charged for it. By making more plays reviewable, it would erase these 'free' clock-stoppers.[/QUOTE]


If you make more plays reviewable then why even have refs on the field? The reason some plays are reviewable and some aren't is because it's an imperfect game. The rules are subjective and open to interpretation, to review every potential game changing call means that you no longer need refs on the field to call the action. The refs have to make decisions and some of those decisions have to be binding, everything cannot be open for interpretation because if everything is then chaos results.

There are missed calls, its part of the game. It adds to the drama, but looking back on the game we still had a chance to win that game if we don't blow two timeouts early in the 2nd half. So the poor officiating, and it was definitely poor, didn't cost us the game. Poor clock management, wasted timeouts and dropped passes cost us the game. It's easy to use the officials as scapegoats, but it's part of the game and reviewing every play doesn't seem to make the game better to me.

I remember a playoff game between the 49ers and somebody. Jerry Rice caught a pass, was hit and fumbled but the refs blew the whistle and ruled him down by contact. Some things you just have to live with, blown calls being one of them.

The funny thing is if those two Pass Interference calls went in our favor instead of against us we'd never even be discussing expanding or changing replay.

Bunglehead 09-30-2004 06:22 PM

In defense of the refs, I really think they're doing their best on every play. I have a good friend who's been a high-school referee for many years and he tells me what goes on in those official's huddles. Many times flags are picked up because one or more officials over-rule it on the field. He also reprimands over-zealous officials who throw flags for technically correct penalties that occur in an area that doesn't affect the outcome of the play.

For most of us, the NFL officials operate like some sort of secret society. We don't know what type of training they receive, how they're chosen, where they come from, or even what their names are. We learn to recognize the TRUE referees, the guys wearing the white hats, who announce all the penalties, but the other officials are just nameless, faceless, entities in zebra suits.

I truly believe that it takes a special individual to become a referee, and they don't just throw a bunch of guys out there who appear to know a couple of rules. Maybe they SHOULD make the officials full time, it's not as though the NFL doesn't have enough money to pay them! But, they do have only one game a week and a very extended off-season...they might want other jobs just because they get bored.

The officials in any sport are essential, but you can't deny that modern technology has put them in a very tough spot. In the last twenty years or so, the number of cameras on the field has certainly quadrupled, and you can't find a stadium or arena today that doesn't have multiple big screen displays for all the fans to see each and every replay. It seems like the officiating has gotten worse, but most likely it's gotten better, only the spectators get to see everything from multiple angles and in slow-motion replay.

Everyone knows that the officials make incorrect calls, even when trying their best to be fair to both teams. I don't think you can find an official who won't admit that himself. With that said, I don't think that expanding the range of challengeable calls will undermind the authority of the officials on the field. It actually is to their benefit, because it gives them the ability to make the RIGHT call in the end, and that's exactly what they were trying to do in the first place.

Gmanc711 09-30-2004 06:30 PM

Those penlties can change a game way too much ( ala Monday ), to not be reviewable. I think any PI penalty that is over 20 yards should be reviewable as one of the coaches challenges.

That Guy 09-30-2004 08:35 PM

[quote]This is a good point. Does anyone know why the NFL lets their refs make this side job? I mean I know they only have one game a week unlike NBA and MLB but still doesn't that make it MORE important that the refs are of good quality since each game means so much?[/quote]

6 refs per game right? x 16 games (first two weeks, then 14 etc) = 96 refs + 10 subs (minimum) that the league would have to pay full time, year round, for four months of work... lotta money for 48 hours of on field work.

[quote]If you make more plays reviewable then why even have refs on the field? The reason some plays are reviewable and some aren't is because it's an imperfect game. The rules are subjective and open to interpretation, to review every potential game changing call means that you no longer need refs on the field to call the action. The refs have to make decisions and some of those decisions have to be binding, everything cannot be open for interpretation because if everything is then chaos results.

There are missed calls, its part of the game. It adds to the drama, but looking back on the game we still had a chance to win that game if we don't blow two timeouts early in the 2nd half. So the poor officiating, and it was definitely poor, didn't cost us the game. Poor clock management, wasted timeouts and dropped passes cost us the game. It's easy to use the officials as scapegoats, but it's part of the game and reviewing every play doesn't seem to make the game better to me.[/quote]

maybe it adds to the drama to you, to me its total bull. and yes, those calls did lose us the game. if we did better on time management etc we could have won, but if one of those plays went the other way, we also would have won... changing the scoring by 60% is a lot to overcome, usually too much.

the refs aren't their to randomize the results of who wins, they're there to make CORRECT calls. I get no joy out of watch the "human element" completely destroy a game. the refs are their to get it right and keep the game flowing, usually they do it pretty well... the problem is when they don't, the only recourse is some toilet paper from the league a week too late to matter. I'd say getting the plays right more often means that the officiating would be far LESS chaotic... making something binding just for the hell of it is dumb. Changing that rule wouldn't make any more chaos than is already present in the current red flag challenge rules.

offiss 09-30-2004 08:54 PM

If a whistle blow's that's fine, but to many times the whistle doesn't blow and they still say down by contact, for instance, if a player legitamitly fumbles a ball, he is not down, and the opposing player recover's immediatly, why can't that be challenged? The whistle hasen't blown, you don't here the ref's saying they incorrectly blew the play dead, they say down by contact, in other word's they deciede whether or not the play will stand, that gives these guy's to much power to deciede games, how many times have the whistles blown after the ball comes out and there is a mad scramble at the bottom of the pile to see who get's possession, the whistle has blown, and the ref doesn't know who has the ball, why doesn't it go back to the offense being they had the ball last? How is it any different, if the whistle has sounded, then don't allow the ball to be advanced, but don't take away a turnover.

I have expierence as a football ref, [pre HS] and it's not a problem whatsoever to allow a play, to play out, everyone who has played football know's, regardless of the whistle, if you see the ball on the ground there will be a scramble, unless it's blatantly obvious, almost all these call's are immediate recoveries, it's bang, bang, it should be reviewable, down by contact is a cute way of saying we are controlling the game, those pass interference call's the other night are inexcusable, those ref's should be fired on the spot, both call's were easy call's, if you have any ability as a ref, as I said earlier, watching those 2 call's was like watching a WWF tag team wrestling match, where the ref turn's his back on the bad guy's, to chastise the good guy, while the bad guy's go to town on the other opponent, it really tick's me off, because I think it's more than poor judgement, I think it's dishonest, and I think the rules have been set up to allow it, down by contact circumvents instant replay, and allow's the ref's to controll the game.

SUNRA 09-30-2004 09:42 PM

I don't know about you but that damn fumble ruled a dead ball was a bunch of bull. How many times have we seen one player at the bottom of the pile appear to have possession but when the smoke clears he doesn't have the ball? This play was the first of what was instored for the Redskins. I am convinced that there are many people in the NFL including officials who do not want to see Gibbs and the
Redskins succeed. They look at the team's owner and it's worth and they say, we'll fix their asses and I can tell you this we've just begun. I love haters of the Redskins, don't you?

That Guy 10-01-2004 07:21 AM

"never blame on malice that which can be attributed to stupidity" ;)

MTK 10-01-2004 08:35 AM

PI is such a huge call at times and can really swing a game. We're talking about 40 or 50 yard penalties at times. To not be able to review these crucial plays that can have such a huge effect on the outcome of the game is just silly.

SkinsRock 10-01-2004 02:02 PM

Everyone says that these PI penalties should be reviewable, and I don't disagree, but remember that the Gardner play was a non-call. I think that would create a gray area of challenging a play when no penalty has been called.
I still say a better option is to have an official, or officials, either in the booth or next to the field that are viewing the game on a monitor, and can give their input when there is a questionable call or non-call....basically to give their input when the officials confer before officially calling the penalty. They would have the advantage of the TV angles that the on field refs don't have. To cut down on it taking too long, maybe only make it for penalties of over 20 yards or something....

FRPLG 10-01-2004 03:50 PM

[QUOTE=SkinsRock]Everyone says that these PI penalties should be reviewable, and I don't disagree, but remember that the Gardner play was a non-call. I think that would create a gray area of challenging a play when no penalty has been called.
I still say a better option is to have an official, or officials, either in the booth or next to the field that are viewing the game on a monitor, and can give their input when there is a questionable call or non-call....basically to give their input when the officials confer before officially calling the penalty. They would have the advantage of the TV angles that the on field refs don't have. To cut down on it taking too long, maybe only make it for penalties of over 20 yards or something....[/QUOTE]

This is the best idea I have heard. Have the Referee wear an ear piece and the booth official can make determinations about "subjective" calls too. It could be implemented so it was almost like the booth official can essentially throw a virtual flag. There would be less need for challenges and basically no delay since they'd only have until the ball is snapped to call a penalty just like the on fiel officials can.

Perfect...solves problems with PI and judgment calls about whether a guy was in or out of the 5 yard chuck zone which isn't subjective at all it is just difficult to determine with the human eye sometimes.

5 stars for SkinsRock

AnonEmouse 10-01-2004 04:03 PM

Simple answer is the rules and the officials themselves. To my mind the crew has to be tested regularly, and guys doing day jobs mostly (or retired) are maybe not getting enough time in game type situations to hone their reactions and skills. In the UK Premier football officials are all pro, but to honest it hasn't stopped bad decisions. What has increased the number of bad decisions is the rule changes. PLayers can't remove shirts, can't leave the field of play to celebrate, can't geture to opposing fans etc. All these things are over and above rules affecting play and an added responsibility of officials. They have no impact on the game so shouldn't be in the rule book.

In the NFL I think the issues about removing your helmet, gesturing to provoke opponents/fans, TD celebrations et al have all caused the fun level to be diminished, but for what? The league seems soworried about image and political correctness, they seem to be slowly forgetting what the game is about. Safety and fairness rules are fine (such as offsides, false start, holding or helmet to helmet contact), but the obsession with protecting QB's like the can throw ball away once outside the pocket etc. just over complicate the officials responsibilities. They really need to look at whether the rule book can be trimmed to aid officials.

Incidentally, one more thing about those 2 PI calls. There are 2 if not 3 officials in position to call PI or not on those plays. The one line judge facing the players faces, and the back judge should both have seen the first contacts made on each play and called it. the other line judge should have also had a view. Yet all 6 officials decided the call or non-call were both fine? I'm not sure I go with the conspiracy theories, but in both cases those officials showed gross incompetence, not to mention a level of incompetence on the other bum calls. As such they shouldn't officiate another NFL game this season (at least not as a team). I'd also query how they were rated prior to the game, considering they were given the job on a MNF game played out in front of millions worldwide.

I can't see how replay challenges on bad or missed penalties would ever work, but the teams should be permitted to critisize said offials and where justified request their suspension etc.

Hogskin 10-01-2004 04:12 PM

[QUOTE=That Guy]6 refs per game right? x 16 games (first two weeks, then 14 etc) = 96 refs + 10 subs (minimum) that the league would have to pay full time, year round, for four months of work... lotta money for 48 hours of on field work.[/QUOTE]
One thing the NFL has tons of is $$$$$$$. That is not a problem. In fact they are grossly overpaid as it is for part-timers. If NFL and NBA can afford full time refs, the NFL sure as hell can - regardless of how many games there are per week. The NFL season is a great deal shorter than those other 2, also. Especially, when you figure in the playoffs that have almost everyone in them.

But the argument for full time refs has been ongoing for many years. The NFL's argument has always been that they ARE full time. But when a guy is a lawyer or accountant, and goes to that job 4-5 days a week, no one else considers that a full time ref. And their sorry-ass performance shows it. This is one area the NFL has not risen above college ball.

redskinsskickazz 10-01-2004 04:47 PM

there are 162 regular season games in baseball only 16 in football we spend the whole week working up to the games chatting talking matchups getting siked etc and when the game finally arives we actually give a %$#@ how long it takes to complete i dont care if the game takes ten hours ill enjoy every second of it and if thats what it took to get the calls right then so be it. and someone said earlier that if those calls didnt happen we wouldnt be discussing reviews. well no kidding something has to happen to talk about it wouldnt you say.

BIGREDSKINFAN63 10-01-2004 06:29 PM

[b]i think that instant replay the way they it is now is a complete and total joke.when you see something obvious the zebras do'nt seem to see it,one would think with the advances in the techno age we could set up a replay system with various and unimpeded clear views.[img]http://maninblack.net/cashpics/119_small.jpg[/img][/b]

Gmanc711 10-01-2004 06:53 PM

I agree with Bigredskinfan. I think next offseason, since they cant do anything now, they need to totally revamp Instant replay. I think the 2 challenges should be kept, so the game isnt slowed down a whole ton, but I think they should be able to challenge a whole lot more than they can now.

Brute44 10-01-2004 08:14 PM

I hate to be the one to say it but even if we were able to have challenged those two interference calls, it wouldn't have made much difference. The refs today know that through the use of instant replay shows inconsistency and down right stupidity on their behalf. Thats why you see so many instant replay challenges NOT overturned by the refs on the field. Here in lies the most IDIOTIC problem in the entire NFL, EGO and trying to cover your ASS.
I mean its like giving someone a second chance to admit that they were wrong about something, OFCOURSE your gonna accept the wrong decision even if its wrong, just so you don't look like a dummy.
Even if the entire world knows that it was a bad call those same refs have the power to either fess up or be jerks and ignore the bad call. This is simply RIDICULOUS. This has to be changed. We should have like others here have mentioned, refs or some sort of officials off the field monitoring EVERY play to see if it's correct. Now I'm not saying that every play could be overturned by these people but these hidden officials would in turn be the ones to have the power to overturn the challenged play, not the refs on the field who are embarrassed already. I also think that ANY play should be given the right to be challenged, aslong as you only have three challenges. Whats the point of instant replay if you cant challenge everything? WE WERE FUC*ING ROBBED.


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