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On the Muffed Punt…

Posted on 10/26/25 at 1:57 am
Posted by mistaken4193
Member since Jan 2017
29415 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 1:57 am
I thought it was illegal for a member of the kicking team to push a member of the receiving team into the ball?

Or I am I wrong?

The South Carolina player clearly pushed Mbakwe into the ball
This post was edited on 10/26/25 at 2:10 am
Posted by crimsoncoded94
Georgiana
Member since Aug 2025
1165 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 3:08 am to
That was a weird play. I think it was on the return man for not running up to field it.

He didnt seem to try to move mbakwe off the ball either.
Posted by SECSolomonGrundy
Slaughter Swamp
Member since Jun 2012
18009 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 3:21 am to
I thought the same thing, but no call.

Mbakwe needs to do something to earn his money.
Posted by JustGetItRight
Member since Jan 2012
16126 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 7:56 am to
quote:

I thought it was illegal for a member of the kicking team to push a member of the receiving team into the ball?


As long as it’s not the returner, it’s not illegal to block someone into the ball.

HOWEVER it is very illegal to do so when you hit them in the back to do it.

Just another day of SEC refs missing a game changing call.


Posted by Robot Santa
Member since Oct 2009
46009 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:02 am to
quote:

Mbakwe needs to do something to earn his money.


Have I got some bad news for you.

Should have let him walk and used that money on a DL. He's just an athlete without a position.
Posted by Robot Santa
Member since Oct 2009
46009 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:03 am to
quote:

Just another day of SEC refs missing a game changing call.


frickers need the replay booth to help them count. We really have the worst officials in all of CFB.
Posted by Diego Ricardo
Alabama
Member since Dec 2020
11275 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:09 am to
Yeah, they weren't calling anything but holding on SCAR's bad OL apparently. That meant they got away with at least 3 DPIs and 1 block in the back. Alabama played poorly thus they gave the refs the opportunity to be on their bullshite and have a meaningful effect on scoreboard.
Posted by Night Vision
Member since Feb 2018
18755 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:17 am to
He and Williams are pretty tight I believe. They probably did it to make sure Williams stayed. Shouldn't matter now.
Posted by bamatide07
Member since Jan 2019
5504 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:20 am to
Then you have Tessitore on the call acting like he was having an orgasm when that play happened. So glad we were able to win that game.
Posted by Amarillo Tide
Amarillo, TX
Member since Aug 2023
1492 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:21 am to
The refs also missed a flagrant PI on Bernard in the first. The USC DB clearly got there before the ball and no call. ??
Posted by SECSolomonGrundy
Slaughter Swamp
Member since Jun 2012
18009 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:23 am to
Definitelt DPI on one of the 4th qtr passes to The Virus. DB never turned his head and dove right into him.
Posted by Diego Ricardo
Alabama
Member since Dec 2020
11275 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:41 am to
The tough thing is that with NIL, you can't cover up with road officiating incompetence with superior depth. More teams are going to get their asses beat by the officials. This is why we can't have mentally weak hobbyist who gets swept up in the emotion in the stands calling our multi-billion dollar product's games.
Posted by JustGetItRight
Member since Jan 2012
16126 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:52 am to
NFL refs aren’t any better. The crux of the entire problem is lack of accountability. People are going to make mistakes. Players do, coaches do, officials do.

Players and coaches face public consequences and answer publicly for theirs. Those that repeatedly make them lose their positions. Do the same thing with officials and you will immediately see an improvement in their product and the perception of them by the public.

I remember several years ago an NFL ref made a terrible, game changing call. I don’t remember the details, but what made it different was he straight out in public said I blew it and apologized to the player. The players reaction was appreciation and an acknowledgment that we all make mistakes.

Posted by PuertoRicanBlaze
Book Board Admin
Member since Apr 2024
6871 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:55 am to
Officiating is one profession I'd be happy to see replaced by AI.
Posted by Diego Ricardo
Alabama
Member since Dec 2020
11275 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 8:58 am to
quote:


NFL refs aren’t any better. The crux of the entire problem is lack of accountability. People are going to make mistakes. Players do, coaches do, officials do.

Players and coaches face public consequences and answer publicly for theirs. Those that repeatedly make them lose their positions. Do the same thing with officials and you will immediately see an improvement in their product and the perception of them by the public.

I remember several years ago an NFL ref made a terrible, game changing call. I don’t remember the details, but what made it different was he straight out in public said I blew it and apologized to the player. The players reaction was appreciation and an acknowledgment that we all make mistakes.


I feel you but I truly think the NFL officiating is much better. They don't miss some of the things we have identified on here. At least not as regularly and consistently as the typical SEC crew.

It does come down to accountability and it is hard to have accountability on people doing a job as a hobby on the weekend. You're lucky to have qualified men who are free to administrate your sports. When it becomes a full-time, salaried position then that whole relationship changes: they're lucky that you have them on payroll. It's basic economic incentives...
This post was edited on 10/26/25 at 8:59 am
Posted by Night Vision
Member since Feb 2018
18755 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 9:30 am to
Posted by bamarep
Member since Nov 2013
52352 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 10:06 am to
Bak was clearly pushed in the back to the ball.

Any before the ball hit the ground Adams was point at the ground for Bak to move away from the ball.

Agree with others in that Bak seems to have BJ Scott syndrome.
Posted by YStar
Member since Mar 2013
19176 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 10:09 am to
It's pretty terrible that those stupid commentators didn't highlight this and nobody cared to actually speak about this becuase it happened to Alabama.

Yet when Sellers fumbles they are trying to find ways to say he was down so the fumble doesn't count.

Very obvious agenda
Posted by Tide or Die87
Huntsville, AL
Member since Jan 2012
13257 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 11:02 am to
The ball hit him first then he pushed him down
Posted by JustGetItRight
Member since Jan 2012
16126 posts
Posted on 10/26/25 at 11:35 am to
quote:

The ball hit him first then he pushed him down


You need to watch the video in the Twitter link posted above because that’s not true at all. The USCe defender was pushing him in the back well before the ball hit his leg.

I don’t think he was trying to push him into the ball because neither of them knew it was coming down there. I think he was trying to get him out of the way to make a play on the returner, but the result is the same. It was an illegal block in the back right in front of the zebras and they cold missed it.
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