This is clearly a debate that won't be unanimously agreed upon & is utterly w/o benefit. nonetheless, I agree with dressedcheeseside on the semantic interpretation of the rules governing a forward pass. Also, no one here would ever lightly side with UGA over GT, so I respect you for giving your unbiased opinion.
That said, if you think this is an example of (c) unclear fumble/pass, therefore default to calling it a forward pass, we'd still have to overcome the review hurdle. Can there be indisputably ambiguous evidence? What a heady question. Based on the reasonable difference of opinion in this thread, the answer may be no. Therefore, if it's not indisputable, it can't be reversed on the basis of (c). . . And, I'm not sure to what degree I'm willing to fault the refs on this play only, if it was indeed a (c) fumble/pass.
As I said in my first argument, this is a very difficult call to make while watching it live b/c it's so unexpected. Me personally, when I was watching it on TV, it took me a second or 2 to realize the ball was loose. When UGA's sideline starting going nuts, I immeditely shouted "incomplete pass!" & did the intentional grounding hand signal & made a fool of myself. But that's only b/c I was praying to every god ever known that it wasn't a fumble. Based on what I saw during the actual play, there's no way in hell I would have blown my whistle & called it dead, if i were the ref & it was a neutral game. If anyone says differently, they are either a liar, an idiot, or a person who deserves a sincere "bravo" for making a hell of a call.
It's impossible to write a perfect rule. Read up on Kurt Godel's work. Brilliant stuff. Mankind's provably-unprovable intelligence may result in some unfortunate calls here or there in a football game, but it's also what make us truly unique. . . and provides the content for us to join in a lively debate on an otherwise dreary wednesday night. So,
THWG, go jackets, and cheers to unprovable proof.