Philly lose

Discussion in 'Miami Dolphins Forum' started by Finatik, Oct 23, 2023.

  1. OwesOwn614

    OwesOwn614 Well-Known Member

    4,110
    4,157
    113
    Jul 8, 2020
     
  2. OwesOwn614

    OwesOwn614 Well-Known Member

    4,110
    4,157
    113
    Jul 8, 2020
    Meanwhile (courtesy of AP News):
    NFL pitted two of the top teams on prime time but the officiating crew didn’t match up to the moment

    BY ARNIE MELENDREZ STAPLETON
    Updated 6:00 AM EDT, October 24, 2023
    Share
    If the NFL flexed officials like they do enticing matchups for prime time, the crews led by referees Brad Allen and Shawn Smith wouldn’t get much work under the bright lights.

    Not after their performances in Week 7, when an unsually high number of calls and non-calls across the league drew scrutiny from fans and rules analysts all wondering just what the rules keepers on the field and the watchdogs at NFL headquarters were watching.

    Only once this century had there been an NFL game where one team was flagged 10 or more times and the other avoided penalties altogether. That occurred on Dec. 1, 2019, when the Raiders were whistled for a dozen penalties to the Chiefs’ zero in a 40-9 loss to Kansas City.

    Now, make that two games.

    While Miami was flagged 10 times for 70 yards, the Eagles weren’t penalized at all in their 31-17 signature win over the Dolphins on Sunday night, although there were a couple of offsetting flags and plenty of other times Philadelphia should have been penalized.

    In Indianapolis, the Colts were on the verge of upsetting the Browns when backup cornerback Darrell Baker Jr. was called for a pair of debatable penalties that helped Cleveland stunningly escape with a 39-38 victory.

    A Colts takeaway was, well, taken away by the first phantom foul on Baker and he was whistled again for pass interference on the next play even though the throw was uncatchable.

    Indy was clinging to a 38-33 lead with 47 seconds remaining and the Browns were facing third-and-4 from the Colts 13 when E.J. Speed strip-sacked P.J. Walker, whose fumble was recovered by defensive lineman DeForest Buckner.

    Hold on.

    Baker was called for illegal contact on wide receiver Amari Cooper, although it was Cooper who pushed down Baker as he made his way into the end zone and it didn’t appear Baker did anything to interfere with his route or to merit the whistle.

    The ruling negated the takeaway and gave the ball back to the Browns at the Indy 8 after the 5-yard walkoff.

    On first-and-goal on the next snap, Walker threw the ball out of the back of the end zone, well out of wide receiver Donavon Peoples-Jones’ reach.

    Although the throw was uncatchable without 10-foot stilts, Baker was called for pass interference, giving the Browns four chances from the 1-yard line to score the winning touchdown, which they did on their fourth try with 15 seconds remaining.

    That sequence stood as the lowlight of the abundance of debatable calls and non-calls that peppered Sunday’s slate of 11 games. That is, until the nightcap when the Dolphins and Eagles squared off in a matchup of 5-1 teams.

    From this admittedly early, pre-Halloween viewpoint, it was easy to envision the Dolphins-Eagles game as a prelude to Super Bowl 58 in Las Vegas three months and three weeks hence.

    What had shaped up as a sensational showdown, however, devolved into a one-sided game of “flag” football with the Eagles getting away with blatant infractions and the Dolphins getting dinged every time the yellow penalties flags hit the ground.

    Among the plays that drew fans’ ire was Allen’s crew missing an obvious face mask on cornerback James Bradberry.

    The worst call came when the officials flagged Miami pass rusher Christian Wilkins with roughing the passer for basically playing two-hand touch on Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts.

    While 15 yards were being marked off, former NFL official and current NBC rules analyst Terry McAulay chimed in to say that was a ticky-tacky call and that Wilkins had actually pulled up and certainly didn’t deserve a personal foul.

    “I say he hits him in one step. He actually pulls off with his hands, he doesn’t follow through and blow up the quarterback. This just isn’t enough for roughing the passer,” McAulay said. “He just puts his hands on him, a little shove, not enough for a foul.”

    But the consummate call, actually, on a weekend such as this.

    https://apnews.com/article/eagles-dolphins-officials-2917a4c4936a4a8bcc3e8539ca67c9b4
     
    Fishhead likes this.
  3. KeyFin

    KeyFin Well-Known Member

    10,544
    12,913
    113
    Nov 1, 2009
    We had one TD pass negated by a penalty and another on an interception where the receiver was being held. Then we had the sideline throw into the red zone where the ridiculous facemask wasn't called. Playing devil's advocate, let's call that 17 points that the Fins would have scored on any other field.

    The Wilkins love tap happened on a scoring drive. There were also multiple first downs given for off-sides on that drive and others. Let's just call that 10 bonus points, for the sake of argument.

    That means the Eagles score 21, the Fins score 34 and the "ref effect" negates a 27 point swing. In reality, the refs were more influential than the Eagles that night since they contributed to more points.

    I'm over it, the Dolphins lost. But man, this really might be my last season watching NFL football. If I didn't already give $350 to YouTube, I'd just sit back and wait for the playoffs before watching another game.
     
    dolphin25 and Fishhead like this.
  4. dolphin25

    dolphin25 Well-Known Member

    6,852
    2,717
    113
    Nov 22, 2014
    I realized really early the Dolphins were not going to be allowed to win the game.
     
    KeyFin likes this.
  5. Destroyer

    Destroyer There for every play.

    3,806
    1,528
    113
    Oct 25, 2010
    Maryland
    Best part about it the Eagles fans who said to shut up about the refs. Went on facebook Phillies groups after the loss and guess what they were complaining about. Umpires!
     

Share This Page