KidSilverhair
Well-Known Member
Even if they did, making a fair catch signal on a kickoff and then not catching the ball is still extremely boneheaded.Both guys made a fair catch signal.
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Even if they did, making a fair catch signal on a kickoff and then not catching the ball is still extremely boneheaded.Both guys made a fair catch signal.
Even if they did, making a fair catch signal on a kickoff and then not catching the ball is still extremely boneheaded.
I disagree, it was pretty obvious Townsend didn't touch it. Enough evidence that I'm 99% sure. Nothing on him moved and the ball's spin/trajectory didn't change, because it didn't hit him, unless it defied the laws of physics. If that's not enough evidence to I return a call, then I don't know how you ever overturn anything. A ref can always convince himself there is a 1% chance what he's seeing is wrong, and therefore the call on the field has to stand.On the muffed punt, the official call was that ISU touched the punt. But you can’t say with any certainty that he actually did touch it.
On replay, there’s absolutely no way to tell if it touched him or not. I’m fine with that part of the call on the field standing, there was no clear and obvious evidence to overturn it - but also nobody can tell me flat-out “the returner touched the ball first” because nobody can tell that on the replay. He might have, he might not have, but there’s no proof, and that’s why the call stood.
Picking up the flag for fair-catch interference was extremely dicey, though.
I know returning kicks is very difficult, but that returner should have gotten away from the Iowa cover guy as soon as he saw him barreling at him. (And don’t get me started on the later play with the kickoff return guy signaling fair catch when he wasn’t even the guy fielding the kick. That was really boneheaded.)
At no point did the spin or trajectory of the ball change until it squarely struck the Iowa player. At that point it should have been downed, ISU ball, no? Multiple mistakes were made by the stripes. That’s what I saw.Some posters are saying it so matter of fact that Townsend touched it like it's obvious. I must be going blind.
On the muffed punt, the official call was that ISU touched the punt. But you can’t say with any certainty that he actually did touch it.
On replay, there’s absolutely no way to tell if it touched him or not. I’m fine with that part of the call on the field standing, there was no clear and obvious evidence to overturn it - but also nobody can tell me flat-out “the returner touched the ball first” because nobody can tell that on the replay. He might have, he might not have, but there’s no proof, and that’s why the call stood.
Picking up the flag for fair-catch interference was extremely dicey, though.
I know returning kicks is very difficult, but that returner should have gotten away from the Iowa cover guy as soon as he saw him barreling at him. (And don’t get me started on the later play with the kickoff return guy signaling fair catch when he wasn’t even the guy fielding the kick. That was really boneheaded.)
You can see it hit his hand/forearm in the angle from the back, 3:41 in the video @JUKEBOX posted you can see his arm/fingers shake as the ball goes by and clips it.On the muffed punt, the official call was that ISU touched the punt. But you can’t say with any certainty that he actually did touch it.
On replay, there’s absolutely no way to tell if it touched him or not. I’m fine with that part of the call on the field standing, there was no clear and obvious evidence to overturn it - but also nobody can tell me flat-out “the returner touched the ball first” because nobody can tell that on the replay. He might have, he might not have, but there’s no proof, and that’s why the call stood.
Picking up the flag for fair-catch interference was extremely dicey, though.
I know returning kicks is very difficult, but that returner should have gotten away from the Iowa cover guy as soon as he saw him barreling at him. (And don’t get me started on the later play with the kickoff return guy signaling fair catch when he wasn’t even the guy fielding the kick. That was really boneheaded.)
Here’s the deal, if you have to break down the video like the Zapruder film to make a call one way or the other, you’ve already blown past the “clear and convincing evidence” standard of video review.You can see it hit his hand/forearm in the angle from the back, 3:41 in the video @JUKEBOX posted you can see his arm/fingers shake as the ball goes by and clips it.
You just have to look at it, no advanced techniques required. It was the only angle that showed it hitting, but it’s there.Here’s the deal, if you have to break down the video like the Zapruder film to make a call one way or the other
You just have to look at it, no advanced techniques required. It was the only angle that showed it hitting, but it’s there.
No apology necessary, I thought the same thing as the replay was happening. You basically had to focus on his fingers in that one particular camera angle and that was the only indicator.I have to apologize, looks like you’re right. Watching the game and all the replays during the broadcast, I swear I didn’t see that little flutter of his hand. I was even specifically looking for that, but I was convinced it didn’t happen.
You’re right, it’s clear, you can see that little flutter as the ball brushes his arm. I still can’t explain how I didn’t see it during the original replays.
It looked like miscommunication. The upman was in position to catch it and it looked Townsend called him off. Upman should always defer to main returner, but Townsend should have caught it.
Just speculation. Regardless of what happened, it was not great, obviously.
Here’s the deal, if you have to break down the video like the Zapruder film to make a call one way or the other, you’ve already blown past the “clear and convincing evidence” standard of video review.
I would have been stunned if the replay crew had reversed the call from what was made on the field. There was nothing there to prove Townsend didn’t touch it. But likewise, if the call on the field was “it touched Iowa first, ISU ball” are you telling me that replay would have reversed the call to “Townsend touched it, Iowa ball”?
To quote Ron Burgundy, “I don’t believe you.”
And like I’ve been saying, Townsend shouldn’t have been trying to field that in the first place.
Let alone before that he backs over the pile of tackled ball after the whistle grabbing and pulling the Iowa State player of the ball pile which is a personal foul the other directions which is what most likely started the altercation.Also on the Iowa State "personal foul", you can see #70 on Iowa kick the Iowa State player.
(~7:24 in the video above)
You just have to look at it, no advanced techniques required. It was the only angle that showed it hitting, but it’s there.