Someone who might have a little more knowledge or insight than I please comment with fact and or opinion about this scenario. Marquise Gray fumbled the ball after a nice 10 yard pick up (ball in wrong hand but that is another topic) sometime in the first half I believe.
Having been at the game I, like everyone else in the stadium including Brewster, waited on pins and needles to see the replay on the big screen to see if perhaps it is a play worthy of a challenge. No replay was shown before AF took the field and was about to begin play so a time out was called by us, I believe coach Brewster used this time out so the play could be seen on the big screen and provide some direction regarding a challenge. Well, during the entire time out the replay was not shown on the big screen and coach Brewster then challenges the play and looses the challenge. After watching the game at home Sunday it was clear to me that Gray either fumbled or that there would have been insufficient evidence to overturn the call from the camera angle I viewed. So we burned two timeouts on this one play.
So my questions are:
1. Are there NCAA rules which prevent the showing of replays on stadium big screens that would
aid coaches in making decisions regarding challenges?
2. If there are no rules regulating this then why the #*&% did'nt they show the replay!
3. If there are no rules regulating this was it simply our choice not to utilize this technology to
our advantage because of who we were playing, AFA, a team which most hold in a very
high regard. So then what would happen if a similar scenario presents itself when we play
Wisconsin, a team/coach many have little regard for?
4. Who regulates/controls the subject matter on the big screen?
5. Are any of the coaches up in the press boxes allowed to watch some type of replay, other
than what might be shown on a stadium big screen and then
provide that information to the coaches on the field for decision making purposes?
Thanks for you input.
Having been at the game I, like everyone else in the stadium including Brewster, waited on pins and needles to see the replay on the big screen to see if perhaps it is a play worthy of a challenge. No replay was shown before AF took the field and was about to begin play so a time out was called by us, I believe coach Brewster used this time out so the play could be seen on the big screen and provide some direction regarding a challenge. Well, during the entire time out the replay was not shown on the big screen and coach Brewster then challenges the play and looses the challenge. After watching the game at home Sunday it was clear to me that Gray either fumbled or that there would have been insufficient evidence to overturn the call from the camera angle I viewed. So we burned two timeouts on this one play.
So my questions are:
1. Are there NCAA rules which prevent the showing of replays on stadium big screens that would
aid coaches in making decisions regarding challenges?
2. If there are no rules regulating this then why the #*&% did'nt they show the replay!
3. If there are no rules regulating this was it simply our choice not to utilize this technology to
our advantage because of who we were playing, AFA, a team which most hold in a very
high regard. So then what would happen if a similar scenario presents itself when we play
Wisconsin, a team/coach many have little regard for?
4. Who regulates/controls the subject matter on the big screen?
5. Are any of the coaches up in the press boxes allowed to watch some type of replay, other
than what might be shown on a stadium big screen and then
provide that information to the coaches on the field for decision making purposes?
Thanks for you input.