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View Full Version : Blown Call During the Pitt-Indy game



Sooner_Havok
1/16/2006, 05:13 PM
I don't know if this has been posted already or not, but I thought I would put this up.


NEW YORK -- The NFL said the referee made a mistake: Troy Polamalu caught the ball.

The league acknowledged Monday that referee Pete Morelli erred when he overturned on replay Polamalu's interception of a Peyton Manning pass Sunday in the playoff game between Pittsburgh and Indianapolis.

Mike Pereira, the league's vice president of officiating, said in a statement that Morelli should have upheld the call, made with 5:26 left in Pittsburgh's win over the Colts.

After the reversal, the Colts went on to score a touchdown and a 2-point conversion, cutting the Steelers' 21-10 lead to 21-18. That led to a wild final few minutes and Pittsburgh clinched its win only when the Colts' Mike Vanderjagt missed a 46-yard field-goal attempt.

On the play, Polamalu made a diving catch of Manning's pass, tumbled with it in his hands and got up to run. When he did, he fumbled the ball, then recovered. Colts coach Tony Dungy challenged and Morelli ruled Polamalu had not completed the catch.

About a dozen TV and scoreboard replays indicated otherwise. Had the call stood, the Steelers would have had the ball at their own 48 with an 11-point lead.

"The definition of a catch -- or in this case an interception -- states that in the process of making a catch a player must maintain possession of the ball after he contacts the ground," Pereira said.

"The initial call on the field was that Troy Polamalu intercepted the pass because he maintained possession of the ball after hitting the ground. The replay showed that Polamalu had rolled over and was rising to his feet when the ball came loose. He maintained possession long enough to establish a catch. Therefore, the replay review should have upheld the call on the field that it was a catch and fumble.

"The rule regarding the performing of an act common to the game applies when there is contact with a defensive player and the ball comes loose, which did not happen here."

The NFL almost never makes public the result of its reviews, although it did three years ago, when Pereira said officials should have called pass interference against San Francisco on the final play of a wild-card game with the New York Giants. The correct call would have given New York a second chance to kick a game-winning field goal in a 39-38 loss.

After the game, Pittsburgh linebacker Joey Porter said of the ruling:

"I know they wanted Indy to win this game; the whole world loves Peyton Manning. But come on, man, don't take the game away from us like that."

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello had no comment on Porter's statement.

In the past, players who have made such statements have been subject to fines.

Wish the big 12 would have done something like this after a certain game...:mad:

mikeelikee
1/16/2006, 05:31 PM
I agree totally. It was obviously a catch, then a fumble, just like the T-Tech receiver STILL hasn't made it to the first down line. Looks like the hideously incompetent officiating at the college level is matriculating to the pros. Sheesh! :rolleyes:

Texas Golfer
1/16/2006, 05:55 PM
Until the hierarchy of the officials levy a heavy fine against those officials in the booth who blow those calls, nothing will be done.

The outcomes of too many games this year, NCAA and NFL, were dictated by the officials instead of the players. This is borderline criminal.

Whenever the commentators say, "What the hell?", you know it was a bad call.

tbl
1/16/2006, 06:02 PM
Whoa baby! Fining a ref if they make a bad review call? That would never happen.... but I think it would work.

Sonner magic923
1/16/2006, 06:02 PM
Well you know it was obviously a terrible call, but luckily it really didnt determine the outcome of the game like some of the other ones

footballfanatic
1/16/2006, 07:16 PM
That was one horrible call, and it wasn't even close--how on earth could they overturn that INT?

RacerX
1/16/2006, 07:26 PM
Whoa baby! Fining a ref if they make a bad review call? That would never happen.... but I think it would work.

It has happened.

TeamMother
1/16/2006, 07:48 PM
Bravo for the NFL. There's a lot of money involved in this league (duh) and they know they have to have believability. Good for them. My Broncos will crush them (Pittsburgh) though.

Sooner_Havok
1/16/2006, 08:38 PM
I think this guy should get rewarded, not fined! He had the testicular fortitude to come out and say what everyone else was thinking.




"I know they wanted Indy to win this game," Porter told The New York Times. "The whole world loves Peyton Manning, but come on man, don't take the game away from us.

"I felt they were cheating us. When the interception happened, everybody in the world knew that was an interception. Don't cheat us that bad. When they did that, they really want Peyton Manning and these guys to win the Super Bowl. They are just going to straight take it for them. I felt that they were like 'We don't even care if you know we're cheating. We're cheating for them.' "


"The way the refs were going, I wouldn't have trusted them in overtime," Porter told the Pittsburgh Post Gazette. "If we hadn't won, they would have cheated us in overtime."

walkoffsooner
1/16/2006, 10:10 PM
one of the worst call's I have ever seen using replay.They need to get with these guys and determine what each rule means to each ref that reads it.

Frozen Sooner
1/16/2006, 10:34 PM
Everyone remembers that one, nobody remembers the Pittsburgh false start on 4-1 that would have given Indy the ball with a lot more time..

RUSH LIMBAUGH is my clone!
1/17/2006, 01:05 AM
That was one horrible call, and it wasn't even close--how on earth could they overturn that INT?:texan: Yeah, just like the UT referees in the RRS every year get away with the crap they call officiating. How on earth does it happen YEAR AFTER YEAR AFTER YEAR ad nauseum???:mack:

OUinFLA
1/17/2006, 08:51 AM
Had the Colts won that game, do you think that the NFL would have had the ballz to admit that the overtuned interception was an incorrect call? or would they have just glossed it over and said it was questionable?

IMO they would not have admitted it was a wrong call.

OUTrumpet
1/17/2006, 11:40 AM
At least the NFL has the guts to stand up and admit it. Unlike Certain organizations that Start with Big T and end with welve.

GrapevineSooner
1/17/2006, 05:42 PM
Had the Colts won that game, do you think that the NFL would have had the ballz to admit that the overtuned interception was an incorrect call? or would they have just glossed it over and said it was questionable?

IMO they would not have admitted it was a wrong call.

They admitted the Giants should have gotten a last-second field goal try against San Francisco three years ago off a pass interfence penalty that was not called. As such, I don't think the outcome of the game would have factored into their decision to admit Pete Morelli botched the call.

And like Frozen mentioned, they missed a false start penalty on Alan Faneca on a 4th and 1 in the fourth that would have forced a punt. Instead, Pittsburgh got the first down and took an extra 4:40 off the clock.