section122 Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 for all you there could have been a mix up on the route crowd. http://eye-on-football.blogs.cbssports.com/mcc/blogs/entry/22475988/34769713 Also interesting tidbit from the article, Belicheat wanted the Giants to have to use Manningham instead of Cruz or Nicks on the final drive...
Max997 Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 there was no doubt he was throwing it away but i still think it was a bad call how many times have we seen QBs throw the ball 20 rows into the seats out of the end zone under pressure with no flag with the way routes are run depending on the defense these days there is always the chance of miscommunication which the ref will never be able to determine
ACor58 Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 there was no doubt he was throwing it away but i still think it was a bad call how many times have we seen QBs throw the ball 20 rows into the seats out of the end zone under pressure with no flag Right but remember that this is the Super Bowl - and the highest rated refs are officiating the game. If that was one of the crappy crews that probably wouldn't have been called.
Pirate Angel Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 for all you there could have been a mix up on the route crowd. http://eye-on-footba...475988/34769713 Also interesting tidbit from the article, Belicheat wanted the Giants to have to use Manningham instead of Cruz or Nicks on the final drive... why wouldn't he? Cruz and Nicks are better than Manningham. You cant defend a perfectly thrown pass or an amazing catch.
NoSaint Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 there was no doubt he was throwing it away but i still think it was a bad call how many times have we seen QBs throw the ball 20 rows into the seats out of the end zone under pressure with no flag with the way routes are run depending on the defense these days there is always the chance of miscommunication which the ref will never be able to determine If outside the pocket that's legal. If drilled at about 12 feet high - it's uncatchable but you can argue it was attempting to put it where only his wr could get it. This was lobbed about 30 yards from anyone's route
NoSaint Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 why wouldn't he? Cruz and Nicks are better than Manningham. You cant defend a perfectly thrown pass or an amazing catch. Agreed - the right call doesn't always work out. You play the odds and none are 100%
K-9 Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 there was no doubt he was throwing it away but i still think it was a bad call how many times have we seen QBs throw the ball 20 rows into the seats out of the end zone under pressure with no flag with the way routes are run depending on the defense these days there is always the chance of miscommunication which the ref will never be able to determine I remember Kelly getting called for intentional grounding for doing exactly that against Miami (not sure when, exactly). He sat in the pocket, looked left and right, and fired through the EZ and into the stands. GO BILLS!!!
Cash Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 Apparently if you were at the stadium (or watching the coach's cam), it was very clear he was throwing it away. No WR within 30 yards, no one had ever been heading that way, etc. Good call by both the letter and spirit of the rule. And good job by Brady not being a total whiner for once.
Max997 Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 (edited) If outside the pocket that's legal. If drilled at about 12 feet high - it's uncatchable but you can argue it was attempting to put it where only his wr could get it. This was lobbed about 30 yards from anyone's route the point was what if one of the receivers was supposed to go deep but instead cut his route off across the middle bc of what he saw in the coverage but Brady thought he was still going deep i dont think this was the case but how can the ref say without a doubt it wasnt Edited February 9, 2012 by Max997
JoeF Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 (edited) Giselle still thinks Welker or Gronk should have been there to drop the ball on that play... "My husband avoids the rush to throw the ball and they can't even get to it to drop it and save him from looking bad. #$%^" Edited February 9, 2012 by JoeF
CardinalScotts Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 He said as much during his press conference..."had to get rid of it Tuck was coming, it's a judgement call and he made it" ....I don't think he has ever said it was a bad call or wrong
syhuang Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 the point was what if one of the receivers was supposed to go deep but instead cut his route off across the middle bc of what he saw in the coverage but Brady thought he was still going deep i dont think this was the case but how can the ref say without a doubt it wasnt They don't have to, refs just need to call it according to rulebook. As long as the QB is not out of pocket and under pressure, and Refs think there is no realistic chance of completion, they can call it an intentional grounding. intentional grounding Intentional Grounding of Forward Pass Intentional grounding of a forward pass is a foul: loss of down and 10 yards from previous spot if passer is in the field of play or loss of down at the spot of the foul if it occurs more than 10 yards behind the line or safety if passer is in his own end zone when ball is released. Intentional grounding will be called when a passer, facing an imminent loss of yardage due to pressure from the defense, throws a forward pass without a realistic chance of completion. Intentional grounding will not be called when a passer, while out of the pocket and facing an imminent loss of yardage, throws a pass that lands at or beyond the line of scrimmage, even if no offensive player(s) have a realistic chance to catch the ball (including if the ball lands out of bounds over the sideline or end line).
Heels20X6 Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 the point was what if one of the receivers was supposed to go deep but instead cut his route off across the middle bc of what he saw in the coverage but Brady thought he was still going deep i dont think this was the case but how can the ref say without a doubt it wasnt So the ref made the correct call and you're questioning why he didn't decide to not make the call because there was a risk he could be wrong? Um...yeah.
Doc Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 It was clearly grounding, and I said to my friends just after the play ended that it was (and should be a safety), half-jokingly because I never thought they'd call it against Tommy Boy. And when they did throw the flag, I was expecting a call against the Giants.
DrDawkinstein Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 the point was what if one of the receivers was supposed to go deep but instead cut his route off across the middle bc of what he saw in the coverage but Brady thought he was still going deep i dont think this was the case but how can the ref say without a doubt it wasnt You're making very little sense towards logic in this thread. So you want the refs to do the wrong thing, because maybe something was supposed to happen that didnt?!?!?! Even if a WR did run the wrong route, the events that actually happened in reality were grounding.
PDaDdy Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 there was no doubt he was throwing it away but i still think it was a bad call how many times have we seen QBs throw the ball 20 rows into the seats out of the end zone under pressure with no flag with the way routes are run depending on the defense these days there is always the chance of miscommunication which the ref will never be able to determine You can do anything you want outside the tackles as long as the ball makes it past the line of scrimmage. Brady was inside the pocket albeit a collapsing one.
Doc Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 You're making very little sense towards logic in this thread. So you want the refs to do the wrong thing, because maybe something was supposed to happen that didnt?!?!?! Even if a WR did run the wrong route, the events that actually happened in reality were grounding. Yep. It doesn't matter what the WR was supposed to do. If the QB is in the pocket, under duress, and throws the ball where no one is even remotely close to, it's grounding. And on that play, it wasn't even close. The closest receiver was still over 20 yards away from where the ball landed.
BillsFan-4-Ever Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 what the rules say and how it's enforced ate 2 diffeerent things Intentional grounding will be called when a passer, facing an imminent loss of yardage due to pressure from the defense, throws a forward pass without a realistic chance of completion. (too high) Intentional grounding will not be called when a passer, while out of the pocket and facing an imminent loss of yardage, throws a pass that lands at or beyond the line of scrimmage, even if no offensive player(s) have a realistic chance to catch the ball (including if the ball lands out of bounds over the sideline or end line). The refs reserve judgement based on if there was no receiver in the area. Again 10 feet too high or at their feet. its still towards a receiver.
section122 Posted February 9, 2012 Author Posted February 9, 2012 It was clearly grounding, and I said to my friends just after the play ended that it was (and should be a safety), half-jokingly because I never thought they'd call it against Tommy Boy. And when they did throw the flag, I was expecting a call against the Giants. Me too... except I was more than a little bit animated. What can I say my hatred for the Pats* runs deep
Doc Posted February 9, 2012 Posted February 9, 2012 what the rules say and how it's enforced ate 2 diffeerent things Intentional grounding will be called when a passer, facing an imminent loss of yardage due to pressure from the defense, throws a forward pass without a realistic chance of completion. (too high) Intentional grounding will not be called when a passer, while out of the pocket and facing an imminent loss of yardage, throws a pass that lands at or beyond the line of scrimmage, even if no offensive player(s) have a realistic chance to catch the ball (including if the ball lands out of bounds over the sideline or end line). The refs reserve judgement based on if there was no receiver in the area. Again 10 feet too high or at their feet. its still towards a receiver. Generally, they won't call IG is there is a receiver in the vicinity, regardless of how high or low a QB throws it. I assume the refs give some leeway since they figure it might just have been a bad pass.
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