BeachBuffs
Starter
I think you answered your own question, if they were holding how could they have gotten 9 sacks? lolHow do you get 9 sacks with zero holding calls?
I think you answered your own question, if they were holding how could they have gotten 9 sacks? lolHow do you get 9 sacks with zero holding calls?
I think we just invented a Zen Koan.I think you answered your own question, if they were holding how could they have gotten 9 sacks? lolHow do you get 9 sacks with zero holding calls?
Do you even know anything about football? If a player touches the ball while he is down, THE BALL IS DOWNED, doesn't matter if he has possession or not. you see it on kickoffs all the time. it was the correct call.My take on the officiating:
There were two pass interference calls that I thought were harsh the main one was when the Texas receiver was 5 yards out bounds to begin with and never even knew the ball was comming, that was an absolutely horrible call.(+1 for Nebraska)
There was a no-call unneccesary roughness penalty that should have been thrown against Nebraska when a Cornhusker DB tattooed a Horn receiver after the kid took about 5 steps after dropping the football.(+1 for Texas)
How many chop blocks can you get called for before you get ejected? The reason a chop block is a personal foul is for player safety issues.(+1 for Nebraska)
The kickoff where the Texas returner dropped the ball on the 1 yard line but was ruled down was clearly the wrong call, Texas was able to move the ball out of there which in retrospect seems to be ingored.(+1 Texas)
The clock issue, the ball does hit the ground with time on the clock, that issue seems to be not argued by the most ardent Cornhusker supporters but the issue of why it was reviewed is the issue. I think for both schools sake the NCAA or the Big 12 should really make a strong statement for both schools about this today. If the play is reviewable then it is owed to your shool to clarify the rule it should be explained to Texas as well to give them the peace of mind that they won fairly. If it should not have been reviewed then let the sh#t storm continue.
I think the balance of bad calls was about even, the real question is the clock and I would like to see an explanation today from the powers that be.
He had the ball then fumbled it, then when down, then got up and picked up the ball, he wasn't down. Keep posting though because if there is some mythical statue of so called classy knowledgeable Nebraska fans you do your best to chip it away with every post you type.Do you even know anything about football? If a player touches the ball while he is down, THE BALL IS DOWNED, doesn't matter if he has possession or not. you see it on kickoffs all the time. it was the correct call.My take on the officiating:
There were two pass interference calls that I thought were harsh the main one was when the Texas receiver was 5 yards out bounds to begin with and never even knew the ball was comming, that was an absolutely horrible call.(+1 for Nebraska)
There was a no-call unneccesary roughness penalty that should have been thrown against Nebraska when a Cornhusker DB tattooed a Horn receiver after the kid took about 5 steps after dropping the football.(+1 for Texas)
How many chop blocks can you get called for before you get ejected? The reason a chop block is a personal foul is for player safety issues.(+1 for Nebraska)
The kickoff where the Texas returner dropped the ball on the 1 yard line but was ruled down was clearly the wrong call, Texas was able to move the ball out of there which in retrospect seems to be ingored.(+1 Texas)
The clock issue, the ball does hit the ground with time on the clock, that issue seems to be not argued by the most ardent Cornhusker supporters but the issue of why it was reviewed is the issue. I think for both schools sake the NCAA or the Big 12 should really make a strong statement for both schools about this today. If the play is reviewable then it is owed to your shool to clarify the rule it should be explained to Texas as well to give them the peace of mind that they won fairly. If it should not have been reviewed then let the sh#t storm continue.
I think the balance of bad calls was about even, the real question is the clock and I would like to see an explanation today from the powers that be.
Problem is, the player didn't appear down. His knees never touched the groundDo you even know anything about football? If a player touches the ball while he is down, THE BALL IS DOWNED, doesn't matter if he has possession or not. you see it on kickoffs all the time. it was the correct call.My take on the officiating:
There were two pass interference calls that I thought were harsh the main one was when the Texas receiver was 5 yards out bounds to begin with and never even knew the ball was comming, that was an absolutely horrible call.(+1 for Nebraska)
There was a no-call unneccesary roughness penalty that should have been thrown against Nebraska when a Cornhusker DB tattooed a Horn receiver after the kid took about 5 steps after dropping the football.(+1 for Texas)
How many chop blocks can you get called for before you get ejected? The reason a chop block is a personal foul is for player safety issues.(+1 for Nebraska)
The kickoff where the Texas returner dropped the ball on the 1 yard line but was ruled down was clearly the wrong call, Texas was able to move the ball out of there which in retrospect seems to be ingored.(+1 Texas)
The clock issue, the ball does hit the ground with time on the clock, that issue seems to be not argued by the most ardent Cornhusker supporters but the issue of why it was reviewed is the issue. I think for both schools sake the NCAA or the Big 12 should really make a strong statement for both schools about this today. If the play is reviewable then it is owed to your shool to clarify the rule it should be explained to Texas as well to give them the peace of mind that they won fairly. If it should not have been reviewed then let the sh#t storm continue.
I think the balance of bad calls was about even, the real question is the clock and I would like to see an explanation today from the powers that be.