December 26, 2022 04:34AM
The TE caught a ball, was hit by I think it was Scott. As he was getting hit he was being rolled by the tackler, as he was being rolled the ball came lose and was picked up by a RAM DB. As this was all going down his knee was hitting the ground, but the ball was lose just as his knee was going down. It happened early in the 3rd quarter I think. It went to review after Sean threw the red flag. Then the guy who they go to to discuss the review started talking about he was down because the ball was only dislodged. My question is what is the difference between having a ball dislodged and losing control of a ball.
SubjectAuthorViewsPosted

  So let me get this straight, dislodging a football...

roman18339December 26, 2022 04:00AM

  Sorry Roman... but which play are you referring too?

JamesJM57December 26, 2022 04:23AM

  Re: Sorry Roman... but which play are you referring too?

roman1883December 26, 2022 04:34AM

  Re: Sorry Roman... but which play are you referring too?

Classicalwit49December 26, 2022 05:48PM

  Re: So let me get this straight, dislodging a football...

Coy Bacon113December 26, 2022 04:34AM

  Re: So let me get this straight, dislodging a football...

roman1867December 26, 2022 04:44AM

  Re: So let me get this straight, dislodging a football...

3030123December 26, 2022 05:06AM

  That's how I understood it....

JamesJM46December 26, 2022 05:14AM

  I say GET RID of replay. It's USELESS!

Ramgator55December 26, 2022 04:37AM

  The idea of replay isn't useless, it becomes useless...

roman18131December 26, 2022 04:48AM

  Agreed. IMO...Only the 1980s USFL did it right.

Ramgator46December 26, 2022 10:51AM