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View Full Version : Dolphins got ripped....


eduncan22
09-09-2006, 08:18 AM
Refs need glasses...:mad:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bo6F0TiTBjI

bobtheflob
09-09-2006, 08:34 AM
That was Saban's own fault for not doing a good job of challenging it. How did he get that open anyway?

eduncan22
09-09-2006, 08:37 AM
Looks like busted coverage...my guess is the safety was sleepin

Dion2288
09-09-2006, 08:39 AM
True...But they deserved to lose for letting a TE score on an 83 yard touchdown, 50 yards of it on a sprint to the end zone.

Lesson learned for the rest of the NFL. Throw that red flag at the refs like they are Orpheus Poye. If you hit them in their eyes, it just might improve their on field vision anyway.

conner01
09-09-2006, 08:44 AM
i think i would have my emergency qb with a ball in his hands, when i want to review a play you have him hit the official in the back of the head and get his attention.lol

noshame
09-09-2006, 08:49 AM
Bad call, but it would have been 1st and goal at the 1yd line.so.......:rolleyes:

DragonCowboy
09-09-2006, 09:05 AM
Bad call, but it would have been 1st and goal at the 1yd line.so.......:rolleyes:

Anything can happen.

Anyway though, Miami shouldn't have even let that happen.

Danny White
09-09-2006, 09:43 AM
The Dolphins were done in by their horrible QB much more than they were ripped off by the refs on a marginal call that would have resulted in the ball being first and goal on the 1 yard line.

Rowdy
09-09-2006, 09:44 AM
I don't see Super Bowl dominance in that game from the Steelers however.

Unforgiven
09-09-2006, 09:45 AM
Bad call, but it would have been 1st and goal at the 1yd line.so.......:rolleyes:


That's right. What difference does it make.

The Dolphins got ripped off when they traded a second round pick for Culpepper. Now, that's a rip off.

Yeagermeister
09-09-2006, 09:45 AM
True...But they deserved to lose for letting a TE score on an 83 yard touchdown, 50 yards of it on a sprint to the end zone.

Lesson learned for the rest of the NFL. Throw that red flag at the refs like they are Orpheus Poye. If you hit them in their eyes, it just might improve their on field vision anyway.

Orlando Brown was the player who was hit in the eye.

Eddie
09-09-2006, 09:45 AM
True...But they deserved to lose for letting a TE score on an 83 yard touchdown, 50 yards of it on a sprint to the end zone.

Lesson learned for the rest of the NFL. Throw that red flag at the refs like they are Orpheus Poye. If you hit them in their eyes, it just might improve their on field vision anyway.


I agree, Saban's toss was pathetic. He underhanded the throw like a girl playing softball.

Throw the freakin' red flag and hit the Ref in the back of the head if you have to.

Waffle
09-09-2006, 09:48 AM
You know who else got ripped? Fantasy owners who had an opponent starting Heath Miller. That's a six to eight point difference in scoring depending on the league and it's scoring system. Even worse, if you had Willie Parker and your opponent had Miller, that's probably a 12 point swing right there as Parker would have probably dived in for the TD had the challenge been made and the ball spotted at the 2.

conner01
09-09-2006, 09:51 AM
i can't believe we can put a man on the moon but we can't develope a better system than throwing a flag at the official. we should have a buzzer system that works.
saben should have been more forceful but this is a billion doallr business and we can't come up with a buzzer system that works

Eddie
09-09-2006, 09:53 AM
i can't believe we can put a man on the moon but we can't develope a better system than throwing a flag at the official. we should have a buzzer system that works.
saben should have been more forceful but this is a billion doallr business and we can't come up with a buzzer system that works

That's a good idea. Electric shock. Zap the ref and he'll pay attention.

If he screws up, zap him again.

bobtheflob
09-09-2006, 09:54 AM
i can't believe we can put a man on the moon but we can't develope a better system than throwing a flag at the official. we should have a buzzer system that works.
saben should have been more forceful but this is a billion doallr business and we can't come up with a buzzer system that works

Considering how often the refs' microphones don't work right it's no surprise that they couldn't get the buzzers to work either.

Yeagermeister
09-09-2006, 10:02 AM
That's a good idea. Electric shock. Zap the ref and he'll pay attention.

If he screws up, zap him again.

It depends on where you put the electrodes :D

gbrittain
09-09-2006, 10:06 AM
Aside from the weak throw by Saban, how long did it take them guys to figure out they should challenge the call?

During the live play it looked a little questionable. During the replay seconds after it was obvious. Yet they decide to throw the flag seconds before the PAT, that was horrible all the way around.

cowboyfan4life_mark
09-09-2006, 10:07 AM
That's a good idea. Electric shock. Zap the ref and he'll pay attention.

If he screws up, zap him again.
You could use a dog buzzer. You know, the ones that people use to train their dogs from excessive barking. :D

Dion2288
09-09-2006, 10:55 AM
Orlando Brown was the player who was hit in the eye.
Thanks for the correction. It was early and I'm stuck at home with my kids.

Erik_H
09-09-2006, 11:03 AM
Aside from the weak throw by Saban, how long did it take them guys to figure out they should challenge the call?

During the live play it looked a little questionable. During the replay seconds after it was obvious. Yet they decide to throw the flag seconds before the PAT, that was horrible all the way around.
You could tell what Saban was thinkin at the time.

He knew the call should be challenged, but alos realized that a successful challenge would put the Steelers at less than the one yard line with a first down. Looks to me like he was weighing the chances that the fins would be able to stop them vs the time left in the game. The steelers had three shots to move 2 feet, and eat up the clock in the meantime.

Tough call that he'd never admit (since not showing confidence in you D is avery bad thing). But in the end, he knew the Steelers would score.

So he's flip-flopping between:
1) Challenging, winning the challenge and watching the Steelers score anyway on the next play or so while eating up time.

2) Passing on the challenge, getting the ball back but showing a lack of confidence in his D.

The result was his arm swing almost throwing the flag yet pulling it back, followed by his wince and the sissy little throw at the last second that he figured (or at least secretly hoped) probably wouldn't be seen.

So he made a show of choosing #2 while really choosing #1. It was most likely seen right away that the call was wrong by the guys upstairs, and it was Saban's deliberating that took so long.

In any case, it was the Dolphins (and particularly Culpepper's) play in the last 5 mintues that cost them the game.

Yeagermeister
09-09-2006, 11:04 AM
Thanks for the correction. It was early and I'm stuck at home with my kids.

no problem :thumbup:

needforspeed
09-09-2006, 11:15 AM
You could tell what Saban was thinkin at the time.

He knew the call should be challenged, but alos realized that a successful challenge would put the Steelers at less than the one yard line with a first down. Looks to me like he was weighing the chances that the fins would be able to stop them vs the time left in the game. The steelers had three shots to move 2 feet, and eat up the clock in the meantime.

Tough call that he'd never admit (since not showing confidence in you D is avery bad thing). But in the end, he knew the Steelers would score.

So he's flip-flopping between:
1) Challenging, winning the challenge and watching the Steelers score anyway on the next play or so while eating up time.

2) Passing on the challenge, getting the ball back but showing a lack of confidence in his D.

The result was his arm swing almost throwing the flag yet pulling it back, followed by his wince and the sissy little throw at the last second that he figured (or at least secretly hoped) probably wouldn't be seen.

So he made a show of choosing #2 while really choosing #1. It was most likely seen right away that the call was wrong by the guys upstairs, and it was Saban's deliberating that took so long.

In any case, it was the Dolphins (and particularly Culpepper's) play in the last 5 mintues that cost them the game.

Too bad MNF doesn't have this kind of analysis.:D

marsbennett
09-09-2006, 11:16 AM
Refs need glasses...:mad:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bo6F0TiTBjI
Blame that on Saban. Dolphins got manhandled late and that spells disaster every time. On the bright side, I could give a rat's fecal material about Miami and Wesley Welker kicked some fanny on his way to a 23 point FFl outing.:geek:

diamond cutter
09-09-2006, 11:19 AM
You could tell what Saban was thinkin at the time.

He knew the call should be challenged, but alos realized that a successful challenge would put the Steelers at less than the one yard line with a first down. Looks to me like he was weighing the chances that the fins would be able to stop them vs the time left in the game. The steelers had three shots to move 2 feet, and eat up the clock in the meantime.

Tough call that he'd never admit (since not showing confidence in you D is avery bad thing). But in the end, he knew the Steelers would score.

So he's flip-flopping between:
1) Challenging, winning the challenge and watching the Steelers score anyway on the next play or so while eating up time.

2) Passing on the challenge, getting the ball back but showing a lack of confidence in his D.

The result was his arm swing almost throwing the flag yet pulling it back, followed by his wince and the sissy little throw at the last second that he figured (or at least secretly hoped) probably wouldn't be seen.

So he made a show of choosing #2 while really choosing #1. It was most likely seen right away that the call was wrong by the guys upstairs, and it was Saban's deliberating that took so long.

In any case, it was the Dolphins (and particularly Culpepper's) play in the last 5 mintues that cost them the game.

I don't think that there is a better assessment than this. I think if Saban was really wanting to challenge the call, then it is his job to make sure the officials saw the flag or heard him challenging it. Personally it looked like a half-hearted throw. I don't know you you can throw a flag, behind an offical and then somehow wonder why they didn't see it. It looked kind of pathetic to me.

gbrittain
09-09-2006, 11:28 AM
You could tell what Saban was thinkin at the time.

He knew the call should be challenged, but alos realized that a successful challenge would put the Steelers at less than the one yard line with a first down. Looks to me like he was weighing the chances that the fins would be able to stop them vs the time left in the game. The steelers had three shots to move 2 feet, and eat up the clock in the meantime.

Tough call that he'd never admit (since not showing confidence in you D is avery bad thing). But in the end, he knew the Steelers would score.

So he's flip-flopping between:
1) Challenging, winning the challenge and watching the Steelers score anyway on the next play or so while eating up time.

2) Passing on the challenge, getting the ball back but showing a lack of confidence in his D.

The result was his arm swing almost throwing the flag yet pulling it back, followed by his wince and the sissy little throw at the last second that he figured (or at least secretly hoped) probably wouldn't be seen.

So he made a show of choosing #2 while really choosing #1. It was most likely seen right away that the call was wrong by the guys upstairs, and it was Saban's deliberating that took so long.

In any case, it was the Dolphins (and particularly Culpepper's) play in the last 5 mintues that cost them the game.

Very good observation. I never thought of it that way, but in retrospect I should have. Good call and I agree.

peppersquad
09-09-2006, 11:29 AM
Note to Sabin, Zack on a good TE is prolly not the greatest idea.

theogt
09-09-2006, 11:38 AM
Bad call, but it would have been 1st and goal at the 1yd line.so.......:rolleyes:But did you see what happened the last time it was 1st and goal on the 1 yard line? Fumblerooski.

conner01
09-09-2006, 11:46 AM
It depends on where you put the electrodes :D
I bet bradie james could give them some idea's as to where to put those elctrodes

Erik_H
09-09-2006, 11:51 AM
Very good observation. I never thought of it that way, but in retrospect I should have. Good call and I agree.
Thank ya all. Occasionally I have a good point to make.;)

Yeagermeister
09-09-2006, 12:35 PM
I bet bradie james could give them some idea's as to where to put those elctrodes

It would get their attention and make them get the call right the next time :D

DragonCowboy
09-09-2006, 12:49 PM
That would be awesome. If I were a coach, and I had a zapper, I'd zap the refs every time a call went against us, even if it was right.

FLcowboy
09-09-2006, 03:10 PM
The Dolphins were done in by their horrible QB much more than they were ripped off by the refs on a marginal call that would have resulted in the ball being first and goal on the 1 yard line.

You're right, what was Culpepper doing in training camp that made everybody so high on him. I don't think Miami has a very good WR corp, but that wasn't the problem. Culpepper looked slow and indecisive.

The30YardSlant
09-09-2006, 03:10 PM
They wouldnt have won anyway

FLcowboy
09-09-2006, 03:12 PM
You know who else got ripped? Fantasy owners who had an opponent starting Heath Miller. That's a six to eight point difference in scoring depending on the league and it's scoring system. Even worse, if you had Willie Parker and your opponent had Miller, that's probably a 12 point swing right there as Parker would have probably dived in for the TD had the challenge been made and the ball spotted at the 2.

That's called football.

FLcowboy
09-09-2006, 03:13 PM
i can't believe we can put a man on the moon but we can't develope a better system than throwing a flag at the official. we should have a buzzer system that works.
saben should have been more forceful but this is a billion doallr business and we can't come up with a buzzer system that works

A whistle would work too, but the refs have a monopoly on whistles. If Saben had wanted to really call for a review, he could have run out onto the field.

Waffle
09-09-2006, 07:25 PM
That's called football.

I guess you have Heath Miller. Congratulations! ;)

Seven
09-10-2006, 02:18 AM
Refs need glasses...:mad:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bo6F0TiTBjI

Dolphins didn't get ripped. They got Culpepper.