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Since there has been much discussion about the officiating in this year's playoffs, there was a huge call made that not many are talking about. I don't know if they made the right call or not, because I guess I am just not up to speed with the rules of the end zone.
Oh, the call I am talking about is the potential Chris Simms TD pass late in the WAS-TB playoff game that was ruled incomplete because the ball jarred loose from the recevier upon hitting the ground.
I thought it would be ruled a catch because it was in the endzone and once he had possession in the endzone it would be ruled TD regardless of whether or it later came out.
I think about how that was ruled incomplete, but in the regular season game with the Giants were at the the Seahawks, Giants TE Shockey was creditted with a questionable endzone TD. If you recall, Shockey caught the ball at the highest point of his jump, one foot came down on the ground and then he got walloped by a DB. The hit caused Shockey's other leg to swing towards the ground. You can't actually tell if it hits or not, but the ref ruled that it did so I will also for the sake of this discussion. The ball also popped loose. I have no doubt in my mind that if this play had happened at the 40 yard line it would have been ruled an incompletion, but it was ruled a TD because of the rules of the endzone (only needing possession for an instance to be considered a TD).
The two rulings seem to contradict each other, don't they. If not please explain the difference that I am not seeing.
Also in regards to the endzone, how come the endzone boundary extends to infinite but a regular sideline doesn't. For instance, Corey Dillon had a big rush attempt on third down in our first game against the Jets this year where he reached the ball over the third down marker as he was falling out of bounds. His body was still in but the ball was out as he was reaching. The officials marked him short, the Pats challenged and lost because the refs ruled that the ball was short when it crossed the imaginary sideline boundary even though he was still in. If he had been reaching for the endzone, however, he would have been given the TD right?
Many times when I see a player jump across the endzone while flirting with the sideline, I always see them try to reach the ball inside the pylon, but technically they don't need to do this right(because the goalline extends to infinite)?
I'm confusing myself even more
someone help clear this up for me
Oh, the call I am talking about is the potential Chris Simms TD pass late in the WAS-TB playoff game that was ruled incomplete because the ball jarred loose from the recevier upon hitting the ground.
I thought it would be ruled a catch because it was in the endzone and once he had possession in the endzone it would be ruled TD regardless of whether or it later came out.
I think about how that was ruled incomplete, but in the regular season game with the Giants were at the the Seahawks, Giants TE Shockey was creditted with a questionable endzone TD. If you recall, Shockey caught the ball at the highest point of his jump, one foot came down on the ground and then he got walloped by a DB. The hit caused Shockey's other leg to swing towards the ground. You can't actually tell if it hits or not, but the ref ruled that it did so I will also for the sake of this discussion. The ball also popped loose. I have no doubt in my mind that if this play had happened at the 40 yard line it would have been ruled an incompletion, but it was ruled a TD because of the rules of the endzone (only needing possession for an instance to be considered a TD).
The two rulings seem to contradict each other, don't they. If not please explain the difference that I am not seeing.
Also in regards to the endzone, how come the endzone boundary extends to infinite but a regular sideline doesn't. For instance, Corey Dillon had a big rush attempt on third down in our first game against the Jets this year where he reached the ball over the third down marker as he was falling out of bounds. His body was still in but the ball was out as he was reaching. The officials marked him short, the Pats challenged and lost because the refs ruled that the ball was short when it crossed the imaginary sideline boundary even though he was still in. If he had been reaching for the endzone, however, he would have been given the TD right?
Many times when I see a player jump across the endzone while flirting with the sideline, I always see them try to reach the ball inside the pylon, but technically they don't need to do this right(because the goalline extends to infinite)?
I'm confusing myself even more
someone help clear this up for me











