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Zach Miller catch followup
Riveron explains Bears' TD overturn, predecessors skeptical | Football Zebras
It's interesting to see what the official explanation was. On the other hand, it's certainly discouraging that the NFL's Officiating Head could get a play so wrong. It seems as though it's representative of the replay decisions we've been seeing this year. What do you guys, as football officials, think of the question at the end of the article? Are instant replay reviews becoming too technical? I like replay review to fix the "obvious miss" (something that in itself is quite subjective), but I don't care for it on plays such as these, especially when an error is made. |
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This thread is a contribution. There's no reason why we shouldn't be able to discuss our opinions on replay and the shortcomings of the system. I haven't engaged in any official bashing. Obviously I've been critical in some cases but not unfair. This forum is for discussing all aspects of officiating, no? Not just what's done well? Ultimately I'd like to be able to discuss rules and situations with the knowledgeable people here without it being needlessly censored or devolving into personal attacks. |
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Do you guys feel as football officials that you'd review plays with a more or less technical eye than someone who hasn't officiated on the field?
From what I've read, the new centralized system was setup with Dean Blandino, who I don't believe was an on-field official, in mind. It seems as though "clear and convincing evidence" is no longer required to overturn. It seems as though the contrast from years past is due to new people making the decisions, but I don't know how there could be such a seemingly large gap. In the context of this particular play, it seems to me like he was trying to be too "technical" and "saw" something that wasn't there. It's frustrating to me because replay should exist to fix the obvious mistake, not to seek out a technical reason for a reversal, which seems to be the trend this year. |
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Which is what replay was supposed to be for in the first place. |
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Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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It was originally kept alive and the Bears ran it in for a touchdown, although I'd think that interception would actually be what the play-by-play should say. Upon review they called it a catch and down by contact. I think there are a lot of people who would argue that he never even controlled the ball. I feel like the rule that's least consistent across the board is "what is a catch?" |
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Maybe NFL holds a lottery each week and 50 guys (and gals) at random are admitted to the replay center and given beer. They vote on whether to overturn or uphold a call.
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I'm pretty sure I've read, although I don't recall exactly where, that the replay decisions are made by one of three people. One is Alberto Riveron as the VP of Officiating. NFL’s head of officiating will make all replay decisions – ProFootballTalk Quote:
Ben Austro of FootballZebras.com stated "This season, however, has had many of these head-scratching calls in replay, which is really undermining confidence in the system." in his write-up about the Zach Miller play. That's part of why I asked about the mindset a former on-field official might go into replay reviews with. Dean Blandino wasn't an on-field official, but he was heavily involved in the review process when he was there. Now calls are being decided by Riveron, who was an on-field official. (with involvement from Wayne Mackie and Russell Yurk) |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZfnsZgbwKwM
Another tough to watch overturn. He MAY have gotten this right, but I don't think it's conclusive enough to make that call. And it's not what the vast majority of people expect replay to be used for. Also, even if he fumbled prior to touching out of bounds, shouldn't his continued contact with the ball while out of bounds kill the ball where it is? Or is that a gap in the "common sense" part of the rules? Last edited by FormerUmp; Sun Nov 12, 2017 at 04:54pm. |
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You're right about it being a bone-headed challenge. I'm just not sure the right call was made in the end. The write-up on Football Zebras suggests I'm right about the rule, but it's debatable on whether or not his foot dragged out of bounds. I agree that I went a little overboard in my initial post, but if he's looking at reviews with the same mentality he used to overturn the Zach Miller play, there will be more issues going forward. He overturned it and doubled down with his defense by pointing to "evidence" that only he could see. It would have made sense of he went into it thinking "how can we make this incomplete?" I'm sure that's not how he looked at it, but that's where my confusion stems from, because that overturn was mind-boggling and affects people's confidence in the system as a whole. Last edited by FormerUmp; Sun Nov 12, 2017 at 10:59pm. |
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Peace
__________________
Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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