Quote:
Originally Posted by voiceoflg
Every once in a while I see a game where an official gets at worst injured, at best bumped. I had not seen a game like that all season until tonight.
First, the umpire got his elbow banged against a helmet. Looked like it may have hit the badly named "funny bone." After a few minutes, play resumed.
Then on a sweep to the far sideline, the ball carrier dove for the pylon and took out a wing official. Knocked his legs right out from under him. After a good five to seven minute delay, the official walked it off and finished the game.
Finally as the quarterback tried to throw the ball, he was hit from behind altering the trajectory. The ball still had some zip on it and hit the umpire in the forehead, popped up in the air a few feet, then fell to the turf. The umpire was not injured, and I refrained from making a "hard headed" joke on the air.
Sometimes you guys should get combat pay.
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The umpire is obviously in the most dangerous position, which was part of the NFL's motivation to test moving him to A's backfield on scrimmage downs.
The two linesmen can easily be involved on rushes to the sideline if they mis-read or mis-judge even one player. The mechanic for the HL and LJ is usually to move to the pylon at the snap when the ball is within the 5 yard line. I always move the goal-line marker back a few more yards than the rest of the yard line markers before the game. During those goal-line plays I wait for it to be apparent that the play won't come to me before closing to my sideline. Just a few more feet lets me calmly stand, pivot and watch the play and I don't lose anything if a pile forms at the center of the goal line. But I've learned that from experience and from my own crew coaching me, ... and having been knocked on my butt a few times.
Sometimes the lottery of life grants you a great clinic in the hazard of the game. Glad to hear no one was seriously hurt.