469/524-1000. That's the number to the Big 12 office. Maybe if enough of us bother them the light will come on.
The Big 12 offices fabricated that shot by using camera trickery...Just showed a different angle and the ball did hit the ground. Where was that angle initially?
Just showed a different angle and the ball did hit the ground. Where was that angle initially?
The still "proof" they showed had the ball hovering about the ground. If it takes half an hour to come up with that, you don't overturn it. Oh well, let's beat their *** anyway.
Even so ... let's look at "indisputable evidence" and how the Big XII interprets it.
Last week in the Iowa-Indiana game, Beathard goes airborne at the goal line at the end of the first half. The ball gets knocked out of his arms by a defender's helmet, but it's called a touchdown. They review the play, of course, because it was really close as to "breaking the plane" before the ball came out. The B1G review guy looks at it for about six seconds, says, "Ehh, I can't tell either way. Call stands."
Big XII replay officials take a play that has hardly any reason to be reviewed. They look at it for twenty, thirty, fifty seconds, until they can find something to justify changing the call on the field. Not just with this call today, mind you - remember last year in Stillwater at the end of the first half? No way that ball broke the plane, but it got overturned then.
"Indisputable evidence" needs to be, you know, indisputable. If the officials blatantly miss a call on the field, change it. Otherwise, leave it the frak alone.
Even so ... let's look at "indisputable evidence" and how the Big XII interprets it.
Last week in the Iowa-Indiana game, Beathard goes airborne at the goal line at the end of the first half. The ball gets knocked out of his arms by a defender's helmet, but it's called a touchdown. They review the play, of course, because it was really close as to "breaking the plane" before the ball came out. The B1G review guy looks at it for about six seconds, says, "Ehh, I can't tell either way. Call stands."
Big XII replay officials take a play that has hardly any reason to be reviewed. They look at it for twenty, thirty, fifty seconds, until they can find something to justify changing the call on the field. Not just with this call today, mind you - remember last year in Stillwater at the end of the first half? No way that ball broke the plane, but it got overturned then.
"Indisputable evidence" needs to be, you know, indisputable. If the officials blatantly miss a call on the field, change it. Otherwise, leave it the frak alone.
Well, there was, ya know, indisputable evidence. Sooooo
Then the b1g is doing it incorrectly. The ball hit the ground, it then moved in his arms. It was the correct call, get over it.