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Relive the Rams thrilling, last-second victory over the San Francisco 49ers.
Watch Relive It: Rams vs. SF
Watch Relive It: Rams vs. SF
thanks for the post RamBill, Loved the video! This is my favorite still shot I've seen so far, from the game..Relive the Rams thrilling, last-second victory over the San Francisco 49ers.
Watch Relive It: Rams vs. SF
That is a great shot! Kapperdoodle looks like he's preparing for a gut punch by Hayes.thanks for the post RamBill, Loved the video! This is my favorite still shot I've seen so far, from the game..View attachment 3946
How will that tell them if it is in possession?They should put something in the football that triggers an alarm when it crosses the goal line. Something tiny and durable. Then install a sensor under the grass along the goal line.
One of the sensors has Horns on it. Lol. IDK!How will that tell them if it is in possession?
This combined with sensors in the ball would make it pretty definitive if and when the ball crossed the goal line.http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...-on-the-goal-line-limits-refs-replay-rulings/
Lack of cameras on the goal line limits refs’ replay rulings
Posted by Michael David Smith on November 7, 2014
AP![]()
One of the most fundamental questions in football — whether the ball crossed the goal line — is often the subject of instant replay review. Too often, there’s simply no replay angle that can definitively answer that most fundamental of questions.
That was the case on two different occasions in San Francisco on Sunday, as the Rams won with the help of two very close calls, one at the end of the first half and one at the end of the game. In both cases, there was no definitive replay angle that showed whether the ball crossed the goal line, and therefore the referee had to defer to what had been called on the field. In both cases, the Rams benefitted.
Most of the attention this week has gone to Colin Kaepernick’s attempt to sneak into the end zone at the end of the game, which could have been a game-winning touchdown but became a game-losing fumble. Kaepernick insists he’s positive he still had the ball when he crossed the goal line, but the officials weren’t so sure, and the replay angles were inconclusive.
But the Kaepernick play wasn’t the only close call at the goal line in that game. At the end of the first half, Rams return man Tavon Austin caught a missed field goal, started to run it out of the end zone, attempted to reverse course just as he was crossing the goal line, and eventually was tackled and brought down in the end zone. The officials on the field ruled that Austin’s forward progress had been stopped in the field of play, although the 49ers thought they had tackled Austin in the end zone and deserved a safety. Again, the referee said there was no conclusive replay angle.
NFL head of officiating Dean Blandino said in a video released by the league that there’s simply no way for the referee to make a definitive ruling if there’s no camera on the goal line.
“There just wasn’t anything definitive,” Blandino said. “Very difficult to tell from this angle, and we really need a shot down the goal line. Unfortunately, we didn’t have that. . . . With a goal line shot we would’ve been able to make a definitive ruling, but with the angles available it just wasn’t there.”
That raises a question: Why don’t the NFL and its network partners agree to have a camera fixed at each goal line at all times during every game? That would serve the referee, the teams and viewers at home well. It wouldn’t clear up every call — sometimes even when there is a camera at the goal line, it’s unclear where the ball is because players are blocking the camera’s view — but it would clear up enough calls that it would be worth doing.