they won’t have 100% of the media rights in the near future . those days are ending .
see March Madness or NFL playoffs
Thst just means they need to move quickly in the short term.
they won’t have 100% of the media rights in the near future . those days are ending .
see March Madness or NFL playoffs
If he actually follows through I would say it aged wonderfully for the country as a whole.This didn’t age well at all,hopefully he’s already packing his bags.
I'm torn on this one.WR also pushed the defender in the facemask right at the goal line. Good no-call.
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Probably a dumb question, but I don't exactly recall. How did all the other networks allow ESPN to control 100% of the playoff?That just means they need to move quickly in the short term.
This. Every time last night..."awww, ha-yup, ha-yup, good call"I will also say, the way the "rules analyst" position is starting to become shameless propaganda for whatever choice the on-field refs make is not good for the broadcasts, not good for the sport, and ultimately not good for the on-field refereeing. The leagues and networks should be working towards eliminating that role, but instead it seems to be a bigger and bigger part of the broadcasts.
FIFYThe SEC should be limited to one team (Deleted - less than the B1G gets.)
Heck last night on the first targeting call (the one that was reversed), Bill Lemonier at first said "it was targeting" then after it was overturned said "no it wasn't & here's why".I'm torn on this one.
There is obviously an understandable resistance to throwing flags on hail mary's. You start governing those plays by the exact same rules as a normal passing play and you have a farcical mess on your hands in which games never end.
That said, you can also end up with a farce if you just refuse to call anything ever. And the thing about it in context, the refs had been very flag-happy downfield in the last few minutes of that game, there is no doubt this would have been called on any other snap of that game. It's risky to open the door of "the rules are different on this kind of play" too wide.
I will also say, the way the "rules analyst" position is starting to become shameless propaganda for whatever choice the on-field refs make is not good for the broadcasts, not good for the sport, and ultimately not good for the on-field refereeing. The leagues and networks should be working towards eliminating that role, but instead it seems to be a bigger and bigger part of the broadcasts.
moneyProbably a dumb question, but I don't exactly recall. How did all the other networks allow ESPN to control 100% of the playoff?
Watching that play again after 23 years it is apparent that Ohio State got gifted a national championship. Miami would have won their 6th national championship in 20 years if there was a no call on that play. It was incredible how dominant Miami was from the 1983 season to the 2002 season. Not only did Miami win 5 national champioships during that time span but they finished second/third in 1986, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2000 & 2002. It seemed like Miami lost their mojo after that Ohio State loss in January 2003 and the SEC teams started poaching more players from Southern Florida. It looks like Miami has upgraded their recruiting and keeping more top southern Florida players home in Miami.It could have been called but it looked overthrown and somewhat uncatchable. Makes up for the PI call against O$U in the national championship game 2002 years
It did allow Illinois to say in 2002 they took the eventual champs to overtime (and kinda got jobbed at the end against them).Watching that play again after 23 years it is apparent that Ohio State got gifted a national championship. Miami would have won their 6th national championship in 20 years if there was a no call on that play. It was incredible how dominant Miami was from the 1983 season to the 2002 season. Not only did Miami win 5 national champioships during that time span but they finished second/third in 1986, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2000 & 2002. It seemed like Miami lost their mojo after that Ohio State loss in January 2003 and the SEC teams started poaching more players from Southern Florida. It looks like Miami has upgraded their recruiting and keeping more top southern Florida players home in Miami.
The call was for a tug on Gamble's shoulder impeding him from being able to turn and face the ball, which is not visible in the replay angle everyone always shows.Watching that play again after 23 years it is apparent that Ohio State got gifted a national championship. Miami would have won their 6th national championship in 20 years if there was a no call on that play. It was incredible how dominant Miami was from the 1983 season to the 2002 season. Not only did Miami win 5 national champioships during that time span but they finished second/third in 1986, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2000 & 2002. It seemed like Miami lost their mojo after that Ohio State loss in January 2003 and the SEC teams started poaching more players from Southern Florida. It looks like Miami has upgraded their recruiting and keeping more top southern Florida players home in Miami.
I see there is a new replay of that whole game on YoutubeIt did allow Illinois to say in 2002 they took the eventual champs to overtime (and kinda got jobbed at the end against them).
I agree. That was one of worst cases ever of refs making the game about them.Watching that play again after 23 years it is apparent that Ohio State got gifted a national championship. Miami would have won their 6th national championship in 20 years if there was a no call on that play. It was incredible how dominant Miami was from the 1983 season to the 2002 season. Not only did Miami win 5 national champioships during that time span but they finished second/third in 1986, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2000 & 2002. It seemed like Miami lost their mojo after that Ohio State loss in January 2003 and the SEC teams started poaching more players from Southern Florida. It looks like Miami has upgraded their recruiting and keeping more top southern Florida players home in Miami.
funnyMaybe the SEC will get an entire side of the bracket moving forward with Notre Dame getting a bye to the semifinals from the non-SEC side.
19:00 minute mark of the YouTube. The Illini crowd noise causes OSU to false start three straight plays. The TV crowd mic doesn't do it justice. I was there that day and it was deafening.The call was for a tug on Gamble's shoulder impeding him from being able to turn and face the ball, which is not visible in the replay angle everyone always shows.
I see there is a new replay of that whole game on Youtube
One thing that's very obvious looking at these old games: High Definition TV has made a DRAMATIC difference in the ability of a broadcast to cast doubt and reveal error in the refereeing of a game. There was a literal haze of uncertainty before, no longer.
And IMO the sports industry as a whole is handling that newfound ability catastrophically badly.
Thanks for posting - it's wild seeing our QB go under center and take a 7 step drop! That simply doesn't exist anywhere in football anymoreThe call was for a tug on Gamble's shoulder impeding him from being able to turn and face the ball, which is not visible in the replay angle everyone always shows.
I see there is a new replay of that whole game on Youtube
One thing that's very obvious looking at these old games: High Definition TV has made a DRAMATIC difference in the ability of a broadcast to cast doubt and reveal error in the refereeing of a game. There was a literal haze of uncertainty before, no longer.
And IMO the sports industry as a whole is handling that newfound ability catastrophically badly.
I will also say, the way the "rules analyst" position is starting to become shameless propaganda for whatever choice the on-field refs make is not good for the broadcasts, not good for the sport, and ultimately not good for the on-field refereeing. The leagues and networks should be working towards eliminating that role, but instead it seems to be a bigger and bigger part of the broadcasts.