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I’m tired of this Sh*t: The Official Whine, *****, & Moan Thread after a Victory....

Guys, Eli drew the flag at the end on third down to help ice the game.

You guys want to jump on him when he lays out to try to catch a ball. It's not like he was wide open and Ben just misses him like he did with DHB.
 
Guys, Eli drew the flag at the end on third down to help ice the game.

You guys want to jump on him when he lays out to try to catch a ball. It's not like he was wide open and Ben just misses him like he did with DHB.
He was wide open and hit him right in the hands

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My Whine, *****, & Moan is JUJU et al should have celebrated differently....

Maybe take a pretend hit off a a "Blunt" (pun intended), then put a pacifier in his mouth, cry like a baby, throw a temper tantrum & fall to the ground kicking & screaming.....

Then have Le'Veon & AB put him in "Time-Out"
 
My Whine, *****, & Moan is JUJU et al should have celebrated differently....

Maybe take a pretend hit off a a "Blunt" (pun intended), then put a pacifier in his mouth, cry like a baby, throw a temper tantrum & fall to the ground kicking & screaming.....

Then have Le'Veon & AB put him in "Time-Out"

lulz

interesting
 
My gripe is with NBC. Why do they have to show that STUPID ******* "Dungy Coaching Tree" in EVERY primetime Steelers game? That jumped the shark years ago.
 
AB pushing off, there's another 4 pts

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The officiating especially downfield reeked. They allowed offensive and defensive pass interference on plays. I'm still wondering how Stafford got away with not being called for intentional grounding?
 
The officiating especially downfield reeked. They allowed offensive and defensive pass interference on plays. I'm still wondering how Stafford got away with not being called for intentional grounding?
Yep, Hunter on that ball that popped up, the db was holding his right arm and Hunter could only use one arm to attempt to make a catch

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I'm still wondering how Stafford got away with not being called for intentional grounding?

If it is the play I am thinking of, the ball hit the defender in the arm before the ball hit the ground. Not intentional grounding at that point.
 
If it is the play I am thinking of, the ball hit the defender in the arm before the ball hit the ground. Not intentional grounding at that point.

That is it. Seems like every QB ought to be just throwing it trying to hit the defender's feet/legs as they are rushing in. It makes sense if the defender jumps up and tips the ball, but what happened there ought to be the very definition of intentional grounding,
 
That is it. Seems like every QB ought to be just throwing it trying to hit the defender's feet/legs as they are rushing in. It makes sense if the defender jumps up and tips the ball, but what happened there ought to be the very definition of intentional grounding,

This guy wrote the book on that move years ago....


burt-reynolds-the-longest-yard.jpg
 
That is it. Seems like every QB ought to be just throwing it trying to hit the defender's feet/legs as they are rushing in. It makes sense if the defender jumps up and tips the ball, but what happened there ought to be the very definition of intentional grounding,

No doubt he was trying to throw it in the dirt. Spiking the ball to stop the clock is, by definition, intentional grounding. Thinking they ought to start calling that.
 
Spiking the ball to stop the clock is, by definition, intentional grounding.

I was wrong. NFL rule book states......

"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."

So without the imminent loss of yardage due to pressure from the defense, there can be no intentional grounding on clock plays.
 
I was wrong. NFL rule book states......

"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."

So without the imminent loss of yardage due to pressure from the defense, there can be no intentional grounding on clock plays.

The rule allows for intentional grounding if you immediately throw the ball into the turf after a snap to stop the clock.
 
The officiating especially downfield reeked. They allowed offensive and defensive pass interference on plays. I'm still wondering how Stafford got away with not being called for intentional grounding?

I prefer this to calling every a flag on every pass. Make em earn it.
When teams have intentionally adopted the plan to throw balls short or back shoulder to draw flags it had gone too far.
A defender can have perfect position for the route run, and then receive a penalty for that technique when a qb either intentionally or unintentionally throws a short pass.


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