That looked like a Big Ten basketball game in which the defense is allowed to mug the offense with impunity. And the greatest example of all was absolutely egregious, one of the worst no-calls I've ever seen at any level of football in decades of playing, coaching, and watching the game. You know the one. The ISU defender grabs Ragaini's jersey, pulls him to the ground, and then stands there and catches McNamara's long pass. That's just plain BS. Instead of a long gain for the Hawkeyes, it becomes an ISU "interception." Instead of setting up a scoring drive, ISU has the ball. It could have turned the game around.
The announcers kept saying the officials "were letting them play." Sure. Just like they do in Big Ten basketball. LOL
Incidental contact is one thing, but literally tackling the receiver and then "intercepting" the ball is plainly against the rules. How you don't call that is beyond me. Which is why coaches should have TWO challenges per half to contest bad calls. That play takes 1 second to review and set right. So either give the coaches a chance to rectify obvious blunders, or improve the officiating to at least middle school level.
The announcers kept saying the officials "were letting them play." Sure. Just like they do in Big Ten basketball. LOL
Incidental contact is one thing, but literally tackling the receiver and then "intercepting" the ball is plainly against the rules. How you don't call that is beyond me. Which is why coaches should have TWO challenges per half to contest bad calls. That play takes 1 second to review and set right. So either give the coaches a chance to rectify obvious blunders, or improve the officiating to at least middle school level.