I'm no fan of Jim Schwartz, but I don't understand the logic underlying the result of his 'challenge' in the Lions game today.
The runner's knee hit the ground, but he didn't realize it at the time and kept going, crossing the goal line. Call on the field was a TD.
Schwartz threw his red flag -- but he didn't need to because the play would automatically be challenged anyway, it bring a scoring play. This did two things:
1. It canceled the review that would have occurred had he not thrown the flag.
2. It in effect raised the runner's knee of the ground, legitimizing a bad call.
So he threw a flag at the wrong time. Boo-hoo. This is injurious to the game how? I can remember lots of instances where a coach threw a challenge flag over something that was not reviewable at all, was told this, picked up his flag and that was that. Why is this so bad?
I thought the thinking behind the booth reviews was to make things more accurate. This says that on-field etiquette -- on a comparable level, I feel, to obsessing over whether someone eats his salad with the right fork -- is much more important.
Not only does it kill the review intended to make the play of the game more accurately called -- in this case by turning a tackle into a TD -- but it carries an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, as well.
If league officials are so offended by the sight of a flag hitting the ground when what it is signaling would happen anyway had the flag not been thrown, OK -- assess the unsportsmanlike penalty but don't kill the review.
Seems to me someone's priorities may be out of whack.
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