Not all penalties are created equally and the last was absolutely wrong. The first, even according to the announcers, shouldn't have been called.How many touchdowns were called back due to penalty? Was it 2 or 3? One was by the very same silly preventable penalty we had against Illinois- the pick- offensive pass interference.
Yes no turnovers is an absolute plus. NU threw deep 2 times and Toure definitely performs as advertised- thank you transfer portal.
Yes, I've stated that as well. I've fired that shot already.We don't need 2-3 4* recruits, we need someone who can develop lineman. Getting high rated guys doesn't matter if you can't develop, and if you can develop, you can turn 3*'s with 4* mixed in into the best lines in the country. See our own division for evidence.
Yes everyone runs pick plays. Not everyone commits an obvious offensive pass interference call on the play.Could the pick play have been run a little smoother? Of course but we all know that every team in the country runs them.
You may be technically right? The problem I have with the call is that it had nothing to do with the play. There was no way those defenders were going to get to the receiver to make a play.Yes everyone runs pick plays. Not everyone commits an obvious offensive pass interference call on the play.
The salient coaching point on the player setting the pick is he MUST look like and behave like an intended receiver- NOT a blocker. You MUST whip your head around and look for the ball and you certainly DONT raise your hands to set up a block. He Didn't whip his head around to "locate" the ball and he was a blocker all the way. The announcers were dead wrong, they often times are. This- just like the Illinois game was a clear cut and easy to call pick play- offensive pass interference. We didn't learn from the Illinois game it seems.
I think the call is BS even more now. We had two WRs in the area and it's clear that the three defenders were there trying to defend those two WRs. They weren't even attempting to get outside to defend the WR that caught the ball.
Yes everyone runs pick plays. Not everyone commits an obvious offensive pass interference call on the play.
The salient coaching point on the player setting the pick is he MUST look like and behave like an intended receiver- NOT a blocker. You MUST whip your head around and look for the ball and you certainly DONT raise your hands to set up a block. He Didn't whip his head around to "locate" the ball and he was a blocker all the way. The announcers were dead wrong, they often times are. This- just like the Illinois game was a clear cut and easy to call pick play- offensive pass interference. We didn't learn from the Illinois game it seems.
It doesn't matter-Yep. It's like when defensive pass interference gets waived off because the ball was uncatchable anyway.
@Nebraska55fan I just went back and rewatched the play several times. I think the call is BS even more now. We had two WRs in the area and it's clear that the three defenders were there trying to defend those two WRs. They weren't even attempting to get outside to defend the WR that caught the ball. AND, our WRs didn't make a direct block on them. They basically brushed them hard.
Look at the clip of the Minnesota game above. Our players did nothing like that. They brushed against the defenders. The defenders were actually trying to defend the WRs that brushed against them.Not true-
Play 3: A1 and B2 are beyond the neutral zone, attempting to catch a legal forward pass intended for A1. A3, who is on the opposite side of the field, blocks B4 downfield. Ruling 3: A3 is guilty of offensive pass interference. Note it would be a foul under both codes whether it occurred before or after the legal forward pass crossed the line and, in NCAA, even if the pass to A1 was uncatchable
It doesn't matter-
Play 3: A1 and B2 are beyond the neutral zone, attempting to catch a legal forward pass intended for A1. A3, who is on the opposite side of the field, blocks B4 downfield. Ruling 3: A3 is guilty of offensive pass interference. Note it would be a foul under both codes whether it occurred before or after the legal forward pass crossed the line and, in NCAA, even if the pass to A1 was uncatchable.
https://caaf.cz/upload/zebri/docs/UltimatePI.pdf
2 hours ago, Husker in WI said:
You don't have to be constantly looking back for the ball for it to be a good, legal route. You don't even have to avoid contact - you just can't seek it out. You want to see OPI, watch Minnesota's TE in the slot on this play. This wasn't called, and was pretty big in keeping Minnesota in this game.
Good coaches do all they can to avoid penalties and even the appearance of penalties. That is why on pick type plays you coach your receiver to look as much like an eligible receiver as you can- to avoid the penalty or possibility of a penalty. That is why many coaches tell the receiver to look back at the QB and hence avoid a penalty like at the NU game that cost Nebraska a touchdown. Had our receiver done that and not put up his hands to appear to be a blocker- highly likely we dont get the penalty and get the touchdown. Perception matters when you are talking rules and penalties and you coach to the referees perception- which will in turn be the final result. Perception is reality when in these types of circumstances and you dont want to leave anything to the discretion of a referee.Look at the clip of the Minnesota game above. Our players did nothing like that. They brushed against the defenders. The defenders were actually trying to defend the WRs that brushed against them.
The call was BS.