NorthHawk wrote:What if they blocked the kick or Ryan fumbled the snap? There are a number of things that could have happened.
I agree that with the Defense playing well it looks doubtful, but like looking at teams on paper, things often work out differently than expected.
NorthHawk wrote:What if they blocked the kick or Ryan fumbled the snap? There are a number of things that could have happened.
I agree that with the Defense playing well it looks doubtful, but like looking at teams on paper, things often work out differently than expected.
It might not have changed the outcome of a win, but you can't say with total certainty that it didn't.
I was right there with ya till you swerved into XL
NorthHawk wrote:We could make 'what if' assumptions on every call and no call decision made during the course of the entire game, and the possibilities would be endless. But when you are assessing the impact of one particular call such as we are here on the roughing the passer penalty, you have to consider how the game changed, if it did change, from the way it was being played prior to the call if you want to get some sort of reasonable estimate of the impact that penalty had on the outcome of the game. This call quite simply was not game changing, at least not until the game winded down into the last part of the 4th quarter after the Niners STILL couldn't get into FG range even by going for it on 4th down not once, but twice in the same drive. Heck, they did a better job of taking time off the clock than we could have, so you can't convince me that they would have played it any differently had the lead been 6 points.
Clearly that's not an option, so teams that are on the bad side of calls have a right to complain that it might have cost them the game.
Hey, if you guys want to remain bent out of shape about a football game that happened nearly a decade ago, knock yourself out.
But the flip side of the coin is always that there were any number of things the Hawks COULD HAVE done to make those blown calls a moot point.
HumanCockroach wrote:North they aren't remotely similar, and comparing the two is folly. Seattle WAS moving the ball successfully, WAS driving for a winning score, we aren't talking about a single call, or even a couple, we are talking about calls from the first through the fourth, consistently, that either took points off the board, or added points to the Steelers.
The Niners hadn't shown an ability for three quarters of the game to be able to move said ball, OR scor a single point minus the one drive ( and that was ONLY after successfully converting a 4th down into a TD). You can argue until you're blue in the face, but comparing one call that went against a team that hasn't been able to successfully accomplish squat the entire game ( ie they were WORSE offensively BEFORE the call) and a team that continually was moving the ball up and down the field only to have the plays called back on blown calls, aren't in anyway, remotely similar.
And this from a guy that has consistently stated a SB championship team overcomes those calls, scores enough points and focusses enough to win anyway.
I'm sure you are not saying that teams never come back from a deficit or never get a turnover or break that changes the whole game.
burrrton wrote:And if you want to try revisionist history now that that football game is a decade ago, bring it on.
I said then it'd always have a special place in my craw, and that's remained true.
I'll be over here completely forgetting about a game a decade ago and busy myself with the present.
What does harboring these feelings of ill content get you?
It's like hoping to change the weather by sheer force of will.
How on earth do you see anything I wrote as "revisionist history"?
THX-1138 wrote:It rings a bell that sounds a bit 49erish in tone.
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