I'm not sure what your agenda is here but this is an idiotic statement to try and support it.fc2112 said:
I've know many refs at the high school and college level and have never known one who tried to bias a game one way or the other.
This is what needs to happen.AlexNguyen said:
No need to approach it from this angle which invites controversy and negativity. I'd rather propose a professional and national group of college referees. Maybe affiliate with the NFL system somehow. Make it a coveted occupation with performance standards, high pay and benefits. Insist on correct calls and have a transparent progression system that rewards competence.
Would you be tempted to make calls to favor a team if were at risk of losing a $250,000 job for doing it? Maybe, maybe not.
Many Ags would prefer to believe in a sip conspiracy than face the reality in front of them. They truly believe some sort of media overlord called the replay booth and said "don't call targeting."fc2112 said:
It must be miserable going through life convinced that the officiating in the sport you love is rigged.
I think this comes from not really knowing the rules. I would suggest signing up to become a football official so that you can learn the rules of the game and learn to apply them equally to both teams.
I've know many refs at the high school and college level and have never known one who tried to bias a game one way or the other.
Why have a targeting rule if you are going to call obvious targeting in the biggest games?
— Jay Feely (@jayfeely) January 1, 2025
How could they look at this and deem it not targeting???
pic.twitter.com/GhJVMHAvMy
Philip J Fry said:
I expect the replay booth to get it right 100% of the time
Kansas Kid said:AustinAg2K said:Kansas Kid said:
Great article talking about officiating errors and philosophy on making calls. Most officials I know would rather have a no call be wrong than throw a flag and be wrong. The only exception are the safety fouls. I know our assigners agree with that.
https://247sports.com/article/how-many-calls-are-missed-in-a-college-football-game-big-ten-ref-dan-capron--143645515/amp/
Lol. That article says in average game, refs miss 4 calls. I would say it's more like 50 or 60. If they called every penalty, the game would be so boring because of constant play stoppages. There is someone holding on nearly every play, both on offense and defense. There is tons of uncalled PI. Most plays have something missed, but the game is actually better when they do ignore stuff that doesn't really matter.
For example with holding and many other calls, there has to be a clear advantage gained by the foul. Merely holding but not materially affecting the play would be an incorrect call if flagged for the reasons you mention. There needs to be a restriction, take down, turn, etc at the point of attack on a run or on a pass play, it needs to be on a rusher that has a good chance to get the sack. For double teams, unless the defender gets through it and is taken down, it is essentially never called.
Until this was put on this thread no one was saying anything about the missed obvious one against ASUMasonStorm said:
ExactlyThe true missed targeting call of the game. Dude literally lunged to the head/neck of Isaiah Bond. pic.twitter.com/r3iYp9Z4cC
— J❌red. (@SerJaredd) January 2, 2025
Animal said:I'm not sure what your agenda is here but this is an idiotic statement to try and support it.fc2112 said:
I've know many refs at the high school and college level and have never known one who tried to bias a game one way or the other.
Are we supposed to believe they are going to come running to you and say "I made 10K on that HS playoff game last night!"
Just because you didn't know they did it doesn't mean a thing.
Emilio Fantastico said:
Our opponents literally did not have a single accepted holding penalty called against them after the first half of the Florida game which was Game 3. How can you explain that?