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Post by FredFan7 on Nov 20, 2011 17:43:41 GMT -5
Replay coming up in Chicago. I don't know if there is enough to reverse. It depends on if #80 had the ball in his possession in the field of play and then broke the plane. There was enough to reverse. Great explanation by Triplette. Triplette is starting to slow down. He's not as spry as he once was. But, neither am I! But, he can still keep up with the play.
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Post by zcr57 on Nov 20, 2011 19:06:36 GMT -5
Chalk up another ejection for Morelli's crew as SF's Dashon Goldson was tossed for throwing multiple punches in a scuffle with Arizona's Early Doucet.
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Post by zcr57 on Nov 20, 2011 19:50:13 GMT -5
Chalk up another ejection for Morelli's crew as SF's Dashon Goldson was tossed for throwing multiple punches in a scuffle with Arizona's Early Doucet. Video: bit.ly/tHDar3
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Post by FredFan7 on Nov 20, 2011 20:59:22 GMT -5
Someone's going to get tossed tonight at the Meadowlands. Very chippy play and Carey has been getting in players' faces.
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Post by FredFan7 on Nov 20, 2011 21:03:24 GMT -5
3.95 for the Triplette crew. The crew did an outstanding job officiating the game. Barry Anderson did very well making the calls downfield. Triplette was more of a "presence" while on mic and making his penalty announcements.
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Post by FredFan7 on Nov 20, 2011 21:05:15 GMT -5
One thing I did notice is that Byron Boston is now carrying his flag in his belt. He was the last to carry the flag old-school flopping out of the back pocket. If officials are carrying their primary flags in their back pockets, they are completely tucked out of sight.
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Post by JugglingReferee on Nov 20, 2011 21:22:12 GMT -5
One thing I did notice is that Byron Boston is now carrying his flag in his belt. He was the last to carry the flag old-school flopping out of the back pocket. If officials are carrying their primary flags in their back pockets, they are completely tucked out of sight. Byron Boston was the one that correctly ruled backwards pass in the Music City Miracle play.
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Post by ak482 on Nov 20, 2011 21:50:40 GMT -5
A little help please. After making a 50-yard catch, DeSean Jackson is called for taunting for throwing the ball to a Giants assistant coach then making a gesture towards the bench. On the play the Giants were called for illegal hands to the face. Mike Carey said the fouls offset and replay the down. I thought that taunting was a dead ball foul, and that live and dead-ball fouls didn't offset.
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Post by FredFan7 on Nov 20, 2011 21:57:46 GMT -5
A little help please. After making a 50-yard catch, DeSean Jackson is called for taunting for throwing the ball to a Giants assistant coach then making a gesture towards the bench. On the play the Giants were called for illegal hands to the face. Mike Carey said the fouls offset and replay the down. I thought that taunting was a dead ball foul, and that live and dead-ball fouls didn't offset. NFL codes make a dead ball taunting foul a "continuing action foul" which is treated as a live ball foul. So, the enforcement spot is the previous spot which really hurts the offense. Even though the taunt was after the whistle blew, it was, by rule, treated as a live ball foul, thus offset with the hands to the face.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 20, 2011 21:58:13 GMT -5
So NYG benefits for commiting a penalty. With no Hands to the Face, the catch would have counted, minus the 15 yds tauting penalty. Makes no sense at all.
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Post by JugglingReferee on Nov 20, 2011 22:00:58 GMT -5
The Canadian ruling would be up 5 yards from the dead ball spot.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 20, 2011 22:01:21 GMT -5
A little help please. After making a 50-yard catch, DeSean Jackson is called for taunting for throwing the ball to a Giants assistant coach then making a gesture towards the bench. On the play the Giants were called for illegal hands to the face. Mike Carey said the fouls offset and replay the down. I thought that taunting was a dead ball foul, and that live and dead-ball fouls didn't offset. NFL codes make a dead ball taunting foul a "continuing action foul" which is treated as a live ball foul. So, the enforcement spot is the previous spot which really hurts the offense. Even though the taunt was after the whistle blew, it was, by rule, treated as a live ball foul, thus offset with the hands to the face. It's a bad rule in this case. NYG basically benefits from commiting a penalty. Without the hands to the face, it's first and 10 at NYG 37. Makes zero sense.
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Post by mike on Nov 20, 2011 22:11:42 GMT -5
fabio, as a live ball foul it would have been half the distance to the goal from the previous spot not the end of the run
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Post by FredFan7 on Nov 20, 2011 22:15:43 GMT -5
So NYG benefits for commiting a penalty. With no Hands to the Face, the catch would have counted, minus the 15 yds tauting penalty. Makes no sense at all. Pereira tweet. It's more than taunting fouls. Didn't see fouls but in NFL, live ball fouls combine with dead ball fouls and offset. In NCAA, both would be enforced but not in NFL.
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Post by FredFan7 on Nov 20, 2011 22:18:50 GMT -5
Chalk up another ejection for Morelli's crew as SF's Dashon Goldson was tossed for throwing multiple punches in a scuffle with Arizona's Early Doucet. Video: bit.ly/tHDar3Good ejection. Last week Vernatchi was on the bottom of a pile in Chicago, this week he's separating fighters. Busy two weeks.
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