I don't know how anyone could tell any better than the ref standing right beneath the uprights. The camera certainly did not give an angle that was worthy of a definitive call.
Agreed. It was close, but no one had a better angle than that guy.
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I don't know how anyone could tell any better than the ref standing right beneath the uprights. The camera certainly did not give an angle that was worthy of a definitive call.
Anyone still think ALL Big 12 refs are out to get us?
The rule is that if it's directly over, then it's good. To me, it looked directly over.
Not that I care.
The live shot from the back of the kicker looked to be wide by quite a margin. The shot from the back of the end zone made it look a lot closer. I'd have to see it again but wasn't the camera off to the side as opposed to right in the center? Paralax?
I don't know how anyone could tell any better than the ref standing right beneath the uprights. The camera certainly did not give an angle that was worthy of a definitive call.
Answer: NFHS & NCAA: The ENTIRE ball must pass to the inside of the INSIDE edge of the upright extended indefinately above the upright.
NFL: The ENTIRE ball must pass to the inside of the OUTSIDE edge of the upright extended indefinately above the upright.
BOTH: Since the upright is 3-4 inches in diameter and the football is more than 4 inches in diameter in any direction, a ball that passes EXACTLY over an upright will be no good under all 3 codes because part of the ball will be breaking the aforementioned plane.
Found this online. And since everything online is true thought I needed to post it.
On a side note, funny how you can watch football for decades and not know nuances in the rules like this...
Anyone still think ALL Big 12 refs are out to get us?
Reynolds' TD was absolutely incomplete.