A spike is an exemption from the intentional grounding penalty. The QB must be under center, and he must spike the ball immediately after the snap. I've only seen a spike called intentional ground once in my entire life, and it was during a middle school football game. (wrong call).
JT's fumble was definitely not a spike since he ran out of the pocket & attempted to throw it. But I agree that it should been ruled an incomplete pass + flagged for intentional grounding, since it didn't cross the LOS.
The ball landed in front of JT, so the only way it could have been "confirmed" as a fumble after the challenge is if the reply offical clearly saw JT begin the process of bringing the ball back towards his body before the ball was released from his hand.
IMO, this play is close enough to a fumble that I may agree the call on the field should "stand". But, I think it's technically an incomplete pass.
Here's the play @3:07 (warning: it's a pro U(sic)GA announcer). Thoughts?
IIRC the call did not "stand" by the replay official but both Thomas's so-called fumbles were reviewed and very quickly confirmed by the replay official. Can anyone verify my recollection?
Anytime a ball is on the ground, players are diving after it. Even after obvious incompletions. Why? The refs occasionally screw up and call them fumbles. The players are doing what they were coached to do because the refs sometimes call it wrong. I wouldn't base the ruling/call on the players' reactions.if you look at JET & the UGA player's immediate reaction, it sure does look like a fumble.
As I recall, neither were "confirmed"--both "stand as called". If one was confirmed, it would have been the second (4th quarter fumble).IIRC the call did not "stand" by the replay official but both Thomas's so-called fumbles were reviewed and very quickly confirmed by the replay official. Can anyone verify my recollection?
Be that as it may, I think the obvious call is intentional grounding because my understanding of the rule is that the officials are supposed to default to calling a pass if the ball comes out from the QB's forward throwing motion. I do not believe they are allowed to consider if the intent was to pump fake (versus make a pass or throw it away). All that matters is whether arm is going forward in the throwing motion when the ball comes out. He has not tucked the ball here either as the ball is already out on the throwing motion.
Imo Thomas could just as easily have intended to throw it away as to tuck since he didn't really have anywhere to run to anyway and he is jumping into the air at the time he made the arm motion.
But, on the other hand, every time I watch the replay of JT's ill fated pass attempt the ESPN announcer refers to it as "a stripped ball." That is a pretty generous voice over interpretation. Not simply the ball comes loose and the refs rule it a fumble, but the ball was "stripped."officials have to protect the shiny SEC ring. We all know who they work for
just like ESPN has to protect it.
BTW, funny though...i think ESPN has gotten so much SEC Bias blame that this morning and recently listening to them they are starting to state not so much SEC love....perhaps 4-0 last saturday went a longer way to point that out, and miss st losing to a realing and struggling ole miss team bad....Bama did not look great AT HOME vs Auburn who also had been struggling of late.
Bottom line...they were a preseason hype machine....
That's what I thought! Glad Coach confirmed it. This was a clean miss by the officials. I think what the replay guy was thinking was that he was going to tuck hit in if he hadn't dropped it. No doubt that's true; I don't think anyone would deny it. But … he didn't tuck it in; the ball came out at the end of a forward motion of his arm. Unless the replay guy is telepathic - you never know - he should have reversed the call on the field by rule.FWIW, on his call-in show, CPJ said he talked to the head of ACC officials, and that guy said the rule is that, if the arm is going forward, it should be an incomplete pass, and that if there is any doubt, that should be resolved in favor of an incomplete pass instead of a fumble.
I think if the ball would have flown forward, it would have been ruled an incompletion. It was pretty obvious not a pass attempt, but a pump fake.On the incomplete pass/fumble call, my understanding was that the ruling was that JT had completed the passing motion, and was bringing the ball back towards his body when he lost control. If the UGa QB had done that, we'd all be screaming it was a fumble because the passing motion had already completed.
Haven't looked at a replay though (don't care that much). This was how I saw it at the time.
Yeah, those "highlights" are a joke. They show all of Ugag's scores. They don't show any of ours except what they have to show because they determined the outcome of the game. They didn't show the huge TD to Waller to tie it at the end of the half. They didn't show any of our plays shoving it down their throats to tie the game. They show the Ugag fake field goal as a huge play (it turned out to be meaningless because they kicked the field goal anyway). They didn't show anything about us stuffing Chubb in the 2nd half. They didn't show our TWO goalline stands with Ugag at the 3 and getting 6 tries at it after that fake field goal. They didn't show our TD in OT. I think they only showed 1 offensive play for us that wasn't one of our big fumbles for Ugag. I felt like I was watching highlights of a Ugag win and then the fact that we actually won the game was just an anti-climactic afterthought.But, on the other hand, every time I watch the replay of JT's ill fated pass attempt the ESPN announcer refers to it as "a stripped ball." That is a pretty generous voice over interpretation. Not simply the ball comes loose and the refs rule it a fumble, but the ball was "stripped."
This is how I saw it and since forward motion had been stopped and pushed back for 4 seconds the ball should have been dead.But, on the other hand, every time I watch the replay of JT's ill fated pass attempt the ESPN announcer refers to it as "a stripped ball." That is a pretty generous voice over interpretation. Not simply the ball comes loose and the refs rule it a fumble, but the ball was "stripped."