RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (Full Version)

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SoMnFan -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/7/2015 1:27:52 PM)

They had the perfect thing going and completely F-Ed it up.
The last-resort angle for troubled players could have worked even better today than it did back in the day.
My closet consisted of raider gear in the '70s
When I went anywhere, there were legions of fans. It was a nation of MIs-fit toys that worked.
And they somehow screwed it all up. It didn't mean they were all "bad" guys.
My favorites were often great misunderstood dudes. Plunkett was a story that should be much more admired than it is.




Jim Frenette -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/7/2015 3:24:30 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Final, definitive proof that the people who run Da Raiders are Knucking Futs.
Looking at Shanahan, Rexy, or Trestman.
Are
You
Serious
I was a proud Raider lover in the glory days. They've been more embarassing than the TWolves the last decade however.
Hard to believe you can screw up the good thing they had going there.
Great fan base
Great location
Great legacy
That they've basically erased frm memory. Idiots. And now they're gonna make it even worse.


The Raiders will have a hard time finding a top notch guy come in there for awhile because of reputation of them canning them quickly. The ones they will attract are the coaches that are trying to find a place for a second chance after a failure or a coach looking for a 1st chance




SoMnFan -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/11/2015 1:36:20 PM)

That final minute Dallas played perfect "Viking" football.
F up your own chances, give up points the other way.
I give GB credit .... They're the one team that can make me love the Cowgirls.
The Cowboys should we this. They're better. They won't.




SoMnFan -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/11/2015 1:44:26 PM)

Love seeing Edelman, Amendola, Beasley, Welker , Nelson types succeed.
My boy Thielen still has a shot.
They're irreplaceable during playoff games.




MDK -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/11/2015 2:31:03 PM)

Not a fan of either GB or Dallas.....but my dislike of Dallas still far greater than dislike of GB. Pretty good game going.




twinsfan -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/11/2015 2:40:56 PM)

I'm going for GB in this game, but it sure is fun seeing the anger of GB fans when calls actually go against their beloved Packers.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/11/2015 3:12:51 PM)

The last call is the one that matters, and it goes GB way. As expected.

That said, fun to see Dallas get hosed as well.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/11/2015 3:13:50 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Love seeing Edelman, Amendola, Beasley, Welker , Nelson types succeed.
My boy Thielen still has a shot.
They're irreplaceable during playoff games.



More Thielen in 2015 please.

Cord-airhead Patterson starts 2015 in the doghouse.




twinsfan -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/11/2015 10:10:17 PM)

I'm copying this comment from an ESPN comment section. It's exactly how I feel about the controversial play:

This was the wrong call. Here's why, in a longer explanation; the problem with applying that rule to Bryant's catch is that Bryant wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" when he reached to get the ball in the end zone. He had already secured the ball away from the defender and was making a move forward, stumbling/running with the ball in an effort to gain more yards. At that point, to apply the rule in this situation and deny Bryant the catch, basically goes against the purpose of the rule, which is to make sure that a person has control of the ball in a "to-the-ground" type situation of catching a difficult pass. The purpose of the rule is not to deny a player a catch for attempting to get more yards in the process of moving his legs/body forward. In this particular case, the call is even more obvious because Bryant was doing what a lot of players do, which is reach a bit farther to try to score a touchdown. His reaching towards the end zone further broke the act of catching the pass and made it clear that he was no longer catching the pass. His act had transformed into a move towards the end zone, separate from and subsequent to catching the pass.

To conclude, Bryant was no longer in the act of catching the pass, since his stumbling/running towards the end zone broke the act of catching the pass and transformed it into a running or independently moving after-the-catch act. This means that the rule cited by the NFL wouldn't apply in this situation, and the ball would be placed where it hit the turf. Any other intrepretation of the situation would go against both the actual letter of the rule (the actual words written) and the purpose of the rule.

-Sean Davidson




sixthwi -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 6:14:23 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

I'm copying this comment from an ESPN comment section. It's exactly how I feel about the controversial play:

This was the wrong call. Here's why, in a longer explanation; the problem with applying that rule to Bryant's catch is that Bryant wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" when he reached to get the ball in the end zone. He had already secured the ball away from the defender and was making a move forward, stumbling/running with the ball in an effort to gain more yards. At that point, to apply the rule in this situation and deny Bryant the catch, basically goes against the purpose of the rule, which is to make sure that a person has control of the ball in a "to-the-ground" type situation of catching a difficult pass. The purpose of the rule is not to deny a player a catch for attempting to get more yards in the process of moving his legs/body forward. In this particular case, the call is even more obvious because Bryant was doing what a lot of players do, which is reach a bit farther to try to score a touchdown. His reaching towards the end zone further broke the act of catching the pass and made it clear that he was no longer catching the pass. His act had transformed into a move towards the end zone, separate from and subsequent to catching the pass.

To conclude, Bryant was no longer in the act of catching the pass, since his stumbling/running towards the end zone broke the act of catching the pass and transformed it into a running or independently moving after-the-catch act. This means that the rule cited by the NFL wouldn't apply in this situation, and the ball would be placed where it hit the turf. Any other intrepretation of the situation would go against both the actual letter of the rule (the actual words written) and the purpose of the rule.

-Sean Davidson




That's baloney - the instance everyone mentions is the Calvin Johnson non-TD against the Bears. Johnson wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" either. He caught the ball in the end zone
He lost the ball when he rolled over. Stupid rule, but correct call.




CPAMAN -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 8:03:34 AM)

The NFL has a poor product and it keeps getting worse. This post season has been a travesty. Nearly every game has been decided by the referees and stupid instant replay.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 8:21:30 AM)

quote:

Stupid rule, but correct call.


That's the bottom line. It is one of the dumbest rules in the NFL. Get rid of it.

And if Jerry Jones gets his way, they'll review PI calls too? Ugh.




Lynn G. -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 8:37:30 AM)

Since I mention baseball in my post, I'm copying and pasting the one I just posted on the Vikes forum over here:


In baseball, people are very upfront about the fact that veteran pitchers get calls that other guys don't get. Announcers are actually quite proud of that - as if it is a show of respect for the old vet that the umpire is going to give him a bigger strike zone than he gives the other guy for the other team who isn't an old grizzled guy with a name that everyone knows.

Baseball is damn proud of the fact that the calls aren't handed out equally.

Football needs to own up to the fact that they do it too. No one got as many questionable roughing the passer calls as Brett Favre. All you had to do was blow on his shoulder and the flags would come out. There are some teams that just get those calls and some teams that don't. We all know it.

It's about time announcers go ahead and just admit it like they do for baseball. It doesn't make it right - but at least acknowledge it.




twinsfan -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 8:38:58 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: sixthwi

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

I'm copying this comment from an ESPN comment section. It's exactly how I feel about the controversial play:

This was the wrong call. Here's why, in a longer explanation; the problem with applying that rule to Bryant's catch is that Bryant wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" when he reached to get the ball in the end zone. He had already secured the ball away from the defender and was making a move forward, stumbling/running with the ball in an effort to gain more yards. At that point, to apply the rule in this situation and deny Bryant the catch, basically goes against the purpose of the rule, which is to make sure that a person has control of the ball in a "to-the-ground" type situation of catching a difficult pass. The purpose of the rule is not to deny a player a catch for attempting to get more yards in the process of moving his legs/body forward. In this particular case, the call is even more obvious because Bryant was doing what a lot of players do, which is reach a bit farther to try to score a touchdown. His reaching towards the end zone further broke the act of catching the pass and made it clear that he was no longer catching the pass. His act had transformed into a move towards the end zone, separate from and subsequent to catching the pass.

To conclude, Bryant was no longer in the act of catching the pass, since his stumbling/running towards the end zone broke the act of catching the pass and transformed it into a running or independently moving after-the-catch act. This means that the rule cited by the NFL wouldn't apply in this situation, and the ball would be placed where it hit the turf. Any other intrepretation of the situation would go against both the actual letter of the rule (the actual words written) and the purpose of the rule.

-Sean Davidson




That's baloney - the instance everyone mentions is the Calvin Johnson non-TD against the Bears. Johnson wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" either. He caught the ball in the end zone
He lost the ball when he rolled over. Stupid rule, but correct call.

Proof that Bryant had control - He had his mind on getting the ball over the goalline. A guy that doesn't have control of the ball would just be worried about making the catch.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 8:58:35 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: sixthwi

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

I'm copying this comment from an ESPN comment section. It's exactly how I feel about the controversial play:

This was the wrong call. Here's why, in a longer explanation; the problem with applying that rule to Bryant's catch is that Bryant wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" when he reached to get the ball in the end zone. He had already secured the ball away from the defender and was making a move forward, stumbling/running with the ball in an effort to gain more yards. At that point, to apply the rule in this situation and deny Bryant the catch, basically goes against the purpose of the rule, which is to make sure that a person has control of the ball in a "to-the-ground" type situation of catching a difficult pass. The purpose of the rule is not to deny a player a catch for attempting to get more yards in the process of moving his legs/body forward. In this particular case, the call is even more obvious because Bryant was doing what a lot of players do, which is reach a bit farther to try to score a touchdown. His reaching towards the end zone further broke the act of catching the pass and made it clear that he was no longer catching the pass. His act had transformed into a move towards the end zone, separate from and subsequent to catching the pass.

To conclude, Bryant was no longer in the act of catching the pass, since his stumbling/running towards the end zone broke the act of catching the pass and transformed it into a running or independently moving after-the-catch act. This means that the rule cited by the NFL wouldn't apply in this situation, and the ball would be placed where it hit the turf. Any other intrepretation of the situation would go against both the actual letter of the rule (the actual words written) and the purpose of the rule.

-Sean Davidson




That's baloney - the instance everyone mentions is the Calvin Johnson non-TD against the Bears. Johnson wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" either. He caught the ball in the end zone
He lost the ball when he rolled over. Stupid rule, but correct call.

Proof that Bryant had control - He had his mind on getting the ball over the goalline. A guy that doesn't have control of the ball would just be worried about making the catch.



But can you see that in the replay? He hadn't truly established "Making a football move" because he had not even landed on the ground. Which makes this rule incredibly stupid.

If the receiver has control before hitting the ground, then IMO the ground can't cause an incompletion, just like the ground can't cause a fumble when tackled.




SoMnFan -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 9:12:03 AM)

I've watched it a hundred times
And to me it's the WRONG call, every time.
It's not painful to me, because it screws Dallas, but it was still wrong, IMO.




sixthwi -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 9:13:06 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: sixthwi

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

I'm copying this comment from an ESPN comment section. It's exactly how I feel about the controversial play:

This was the wrong call. Here's why, in a longer explanation; the problem with applying that rule to Bryant's catch is that Bryant wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" when he reached to get the ball in the end zone. He had already secured the ball away from the defender and was making a move forward, stumbling/running with the ball in an effort to gain more yards. At that point, to apply the rule in this situation and deny Bryant the catch, basically goes against the purpose of the rule, which is to make sure that a person has control of the ball in a "to-the-ground" type situation of catching a difficult pass. The purpose of the rule is not to deny a player a catch for attempting to get more yards in the process of moving his legs/body forward. In this particular case, the call is even more obvious because Bryant was doing what a lot of players do, which is reach a bit farther to try to score a touchdown. His reaching towards the end zone further broke the act of catching the pass and made it clear that he was no longer catching the pass. His act had transformed into a move towards the end zone, separate from and subsequent to catching the pass.

To conclude, Bryant was no longer in the act of catching the pass, since his stumbling/running towards the end zone broke the act of catching the pass and transformed it into a running or independently moving after-the-catch act. This means that the rule cited by the NFL wouldn't apply in this situation, and the ball would be placed where it hit the turf. Any other intrepretation of the situation would go against both the actual letter of the rule (the actual words written) and the purpose of the rule.

-Sean Davidson




That's baloney - the instance everyone mentions is the Calvin Johnson non-TD against the Bears. Johnson wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" either. He caught the ball in the end zone
He lost the ball when he rolled over. Stupid rule, but correct call.

Proof that Bryant had control - He had his mind on getting the ball over the goalline. A guy that doesn't have control of the ball would just be worried about making the catch.



But can you see that in the replay? He hadn't truly established "Making a football move" because he had not even landed on the ground. Which makes this rule incredibly stupid.

If the receiver has control before hitting the ground, then IMO the ground can't cause an incompletion, just like the ground can't cause a fumble when tackled.


Ed, I totally agree although if there's one team who has no right to complain it's the Cowboys after the gift they got last week.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 9:18:12 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

I've watched it a hundred times
And to me it's the WRONG call, every time.
It's not painful to me, because it screws Dallas, but it was still wrong, IMO.


They're sticking to "the letter of the rule", which makes it a stupid call period.

Stupid to have to "determine a football move", stupid to have control and stretch and have it called incomplete.

The technicality of the rules in several cases is ridiculous.




CPAMAN -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 9:27:03 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: sixthwi

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

I'm copying this comment from an ESPN comment section. It's exactly how I feel about the controversial play:

This was the wrong call. Here's why, in a longer explanation; the problem with applying that rule to Bryant's catch is that Bryant wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" when he reached to get the ball in the end zone. He had already secured the ball away from the defender and was making a move forward, stumbling/running with the ball in an effort to gain more yards. At that point, to apply the rule in this situation and deny Bryant the catch, basically goes against the purpose of the rule, which is to make sure that a person has control of the ball in a "to-the-ground" type situation of catching a difficult pass. The purpose of the rule is not to deny a player a catch for attempting to get more yards in the process of moving his legs/body forward. In this particular case, the call is even more obvious because Bryant was doing what a lot of players do, which is reach a bit farther to try to score a touchdown. His reaching towards the end zone further broke the act of catching the pass and made it clear that he was no longer catching the pass. His act had transformed into a move towards the end zone, separate from and subsequent to catching the pass.

To conclude, Bryant was no longer in the act of catching the pass, since his stumbling/running towards the end zone broke the act of catching the pass and transformed it into a running or independently moving after-the-catch act. This means that the rule cited by the NFL wouldn't apply in this situation, and the ball would be placed where it hit the turf. Any other intrepretation of the situation would go against both the actual letter of the rule (the actual words written) and the purpose of the rule.

-Sean Davidson




That's baloney - the instance everyone mentions is the Calvin Johnson non-TD against the Bears. Johnson wasn't "in the act of catching a pass" either. He caught the ball in the end zone
He lost the ball when he rolled over. Stupid rule, but correct call.

Proof that Bryant had control - He had his mind on getting the ball over the goalline. A guy that doesn't have control of the ball would just be worried about making the catch.



But can you see that in the replay? He hadn't truly established "Making a football move" because he had not even landed on the ground. Which makes this rule incredibly stupid.

If the receiver has control before hitting the ground, then IMO the ground can't cause an incompletion, just like the ground can't cause a fumble when tackled.



I could not agree more Ed. If the receiver has control of the football and it comes lose as a result of hitting the ground. DEAD BALL, END OF PLAY




CPAMAN -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 9:29:10 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

I've watched it a hundred times
And to me it's the WRONG call, every time.
It's not painful to me, because it screws Dallas, but it was still wrong, IMO.


They're sticking to "the letter of the rule", which makes it a stupid call period.

Stupid to have to "determine a football move", stupid to have control and stretch and have it called incomplete.

The technicality of the rules in several cases is ridiculous.



Whoever thought up the concept "football move" should be ashamed of themself. What the hell does that mean anyway?




djskillz -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 9:33:40 AM)

That's how I feel about it too. They had the VP of Officiating on someone this morning and asked him: "Does the lunge for the end zone constitute a football move?" And he said "Yes, it could. But we didn't see it that way."

That's total horseshit IMO. Of course that's a football move. Plus the 2 1/2 steps he took after controlling the ball. Terrible rule, but also a terrible call IMO. Dallas got hosed, as we all knew they would at Lambeau.

And I don't really agree that Dallas got a "gift" in the first game. They actually got hosed before that by Suh being allowed to play at all. That was the ultimate "take back" by the NFL. Without Suh that's probably not even a game.




sixthwi -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 9:34:03 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

I've watched it a hundred times
And to me it's the WRONG call, every time.
It's not painful to me, because it screws Dallas, but it was still wrong, IMO.


I think you know me well enough and if I thought it was the wrong call I'd admit it, but technically I think it was the right call. I saw the Calvin Johnson no-catch live and that was just as much a catch as Bryant's. If I hear any current or former ref say something different then maybe I'd change my mind but I haven't heard any.




SoMnFan -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 10:03:12 AM)

Will always be a catch to me
As was Calvin Johnsons (watched that one live too)
The wording of the rule is stupid.
Aaron Rodgers arrogantly telling us all that we are stupid to not know the rule is more gas on the fire.
Take your ingrained belief that you will always get the benefit, and head to Seattle.
Remember what happened there? That ONE call where the Pack got screwed? GASP!
The GB faithful handled that well, tho, didn't they? [&:][&:][&:]




SoMnFan -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 10:03:52 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: sixthwi

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

I've watched it a hundred times
And to me it's the WRONG call, every time.
It's not painful to me, because it screws Dallas, but it was still wrong, IMO.


I think you know me well enough and if I thought it was the wrong call I'd admit it, but technically I think it was the right call. I saw the Calvin Johnson no-catch live and that was just as much a catch as Bryant's. If I hear any current or former ref say something different then maybe I'd change my mind but I haven't heard any.

Technically...... You are correct.




djskillz -> RE: Vikes talk for Twins fans (1/12/2015 10:25:40 AM)

I'll just never forget the fact that Rodgers' one and only SB (hopefully he'll never have another) will be forever tainted because they weren't actually a playoff team that year since the NFL had to apologize to us for about 3 scoring plays in one game against them. Those calls are made correctly, GB isn't even in the playoffs, let alone the SB.




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