is to have the Schools, Presidents, and AD's insist that the **** gets better. The the SEC office and officials are not infallible. The tail don't wag the dog.
As painfully frustrating as all of this is for fans, I can’t even imagine having to deal with crap like this week after week as a head coach that has millions on the line.
What blows my mind, however, is why the SEC doesn’t display the slightest desire to fix it. This isn’t 1985 where human judgment errors have to be part of the game. We’ve had the technology and resources for years to make the vast majority of these atrocious mistakes a thing of the past, but there’s no willingness to improve.
This is why I'm so surprised that the incompetence (or malicious 17headery) of our officiating is not being scrutinized further. The money is there and the need for reform is so painfully obvious. There are millions of dollars on the line, not to mention the jobs of coaches, and to a lesser extent the players themselves are affected. Yet the league wants to protect these expendable jackasses. Boggles the mind.
Instead we can chalk up TWO losses this season that are solely at the feet of retards in striped shirts.
SEC is about protecting the big boys…. Could care less about what the other 2/3 of the SEC thinks.
I wish more coaches would speak up about this. They can afford the fine. I was just now starting to get over the Arky loss until this. Thinking about that 4th down holding call makes me sick to my stomach.
Of course not. The games would take forever to play. We're already spending too much time reviewing plays that don't really matter. The answer is more and better training for officials and to hold them accountable. Get the calls right the first time. Far too many of the missed calls are obvious ones that shouldn't require a review to get right.
Of course not. The games would take forever to play. We're already spending too much time reviewing plays that don't really matter. The answer is better recruitment and training for officials and to hold them accountable. Get the calls right the first time. Far too many of the missed calls are obvious ones that shouldn't require a review to get right.
It won't help because they need all coaches complaining about officiating quality. I'm more worried about quality and teaching them not to insert themselves into the game outcome and just overall making both teams forget they were there except to keep the game moving along. It would be nice if they occasionally asked the others what they saw on a subjective call that is not reviewable.
Of course not. The games would take forever to play. We're already spending too much time reviewing plays that don't really matter. The answer is better recruitment and training for officials and to hold them accountable. Get the calls right the first time. Far too many of the missed calls are obvious ones that shouldn't require a review to get right.
I would hate that. HATE IT!
Officials who make bad calls or no calls should be evaluated and suspended for a game or series of games. After your third suspension you are let go. Three strikes and you're out. Most of these 17ers are too comfortable. It's a great gig, but there are plenty of people looking for work and the SEC has plenty of money to provide adequate training and evaluations for their officials.
They should also have to undergo a series of tests before each season. They may do that now, but that too needs to be evaluated, cause whatever they're doing now is not working.
Seriously? Review every flag? The delays would be unbearable. The easy solution to review is only review on a coach's challenge. If he's wrong, he loses a time out; if he's out of time outs, it's a delay of game penalty. The coaches would very quickly sort out which plays need to be reviewed and which ones don't.
The head official needs to be in the booth, controlling the game and correcting on field officials as the games is in progress.