The Steelers WR lined up on the left didn't get set before the ball was snapped. Good job missing that too refs.
I agree it was close but I am confident that they would have had a lot more angles of the play that would show that it was a forward pass. Even with the clip we do have, it shows that.
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When Ben releases the ball, it is behind the second hash mark.
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When Brown catches that ball, he is clearly ahead of the second hash mark.
what you have to worry about with officials though is them looking at that and saying that angle is not straight on the play as in right down the line...so it could be viewed as a judgment call...and i've seen enough bad ones of those to feelthey would blow this one also...especially if it means overriding their own officials to get it right...
forward lateral though all the way...dont care what angle they have it' s obvious
The Steelers WR lined up on the left didn't get set before the ball was snapped. Good job missing that too refs.
It's indisputable, if you draw a straight line relative to the field and not point of view.
Had to lol at NYJUNC and his crooked line lol. The only way you say say it's not a forward lateral is if you draw a skewed line non-relative to the field. Then you can make a yard ahead seem like only a few inches ahead, lol.
LD
I agree it was close but I am confident that they would have had a lot more angles of the play that would show that it was a forward pass. Even with the clip we do have, it shows that.
![]()
When Ben releases the ball, it is behind the second hash mark.
![]()
When Brown catches that ball, he is clearly ahead of the second hash mark.
I said as the play was going on it was a forward lateral. Want to know how I can tell? Look at #76 for Pittsburgh. He's right next to Rapeberger. The only way for Rapeberger to throw a lateral around #76 would be to throw it forward (since he can't throw it through him).
The difference is this was a scoring play, so IF they are reviewing they are reviewing to make sure Brown scored. That would only cover him running down the sideline and crossing the endzone.
If this happened outside of 2 min then Philbin could throw the challenge flag to have them review whether it was #5 or not. In this case the booth would have to call for the review on #5 and there is no given they would because, as stated before, this was a scoring play. There is a distinction between different parts of the play.
They have to review the score. Not the entire play.
Great point. Not that it was needed cause they must be blind to not see it as a forward pass but great point.
Ozzy rules!!
Tony Kornheiser just said that had Brown not stepped out of bounds then the "scoring play" play would have been reviewed. He sounded like the whole play would have been reviewed but im not going to trust him and his staff.
Even if it was im not sure it was indisputable
It looks like it went from about the 32.5 to the 33.
It is ridiculously close and I am not sure that it would have been overturned.
if he hadnt stepped out im sure Philbin would have thrown the red flag for the 2nd time today .