Amazing how much the TV & radio commentators ruin the gameday experience for so many of you. It's never bothered me (unless it's Bill Walton being Bill Walton doing hoop games, but I've come to accept his obnoxious goofiness). I'm more focused on what's happening on the field.
Gang- it’s funny to reread this the following day. This was pretty much a drunk post on a walk home after a big wino dinner out with the boys.Honestly, and I, Don’t disagree- many here have legitimate complaints,… but we one- for the first time since October 21 2017 we beat someone not name Umass or playing as fcs. So- I don’t care about the coverage on cbssn- it’s what any of us on the ninth live game at that hr should expect. Thank you UConn for delivering a win. And for the announcers- I know you wanted us to win- I could hear that - so thanks for the support:
The guys on the radio weren’t any better.
Agree with your observation on the fumble rePlay. Looked to me like he was down.I was sitting upstairs near UConn's 30-yard-line, and the fumble was not apparent to the naked eye, because Houston was smothered by defenders as he went to the ground. It was only the players' reactions and the ref's signal that clued us in, and honestly, from the replays I saw on the scoreboard I'm still not convinced the ball was out before he went down. We assumed the replays were deemed inconclusive, and the original call was therefore upheld. I can see how announcers, especially inexperienced ones, would have been slow to realize what was up.
They talked about how Houston got picked up and held off of the ground and the ball was torn out, which is exactly what happened. All their comments were after the ref signaled it on slow motion replays.Your idea makes some sense, that they may not have seen the fumble at first, but as Dog mentioned, they didn't even comment on it AFTER the refs signaled it, they kept going on with their story. That is just inexcusable for professionals calling a game. It was amateur hour in the booth and these two really shouldn't be doing games at this level.
Looking at the slow motion replay on TV it was obvious that they picked him up and didn't let him hit the ground while tearing the ball out. He was three feet off the ground when the ball came out and then they dropped him.Agree with your observation on the fumble rePlay. Looked to me like he was down.
Wayne Norman is good he had to keep correcting the sports cast to keep it decent. He does know his stuffI’ve never been a Mike Crispino fan (MBB or Football) but Wayne Norman and Adam Giardino do a good job.
Wow. LoLI saw the first half on TV, and heard the second half on the radio...
The radio guys were MUCH better imo
I thought “drunk post” immediately after I read it.Gang- it’s funny to reread this the following day. This was pretty much a drunk post on a walk home after a big wino dinner out with the boys.
Im confused. I thought the whole intent of instant replay was to get it right. This year I am now hearing that the referees cant be expected to see what slow motion replay shows.Looking at the slow motion replay on TV it was obvious that they picked him up and didn't let him hit the ground while tearing the ball out. He was three feet off the ground when the ball came out and then they dropped him.
I agree. It was so unlikely to matter either way (FSU missing an extra point or us responding to a TD with a FG that might only get us OT instead of a win) that not stepping on our momentum made perfect sense.Going for two would have been the correct decision on the Playstation. A failed conversion returns some momentum to Fresno, and who knows what happens after that. In real life, for a team in UConn's position, the prudent choice was to kick the PAT.