RazorHawk wrote:warrriorsfan808 wrote:Dossenator wrote:The penalty was declined by Vandy. After the hit a Vandy player picked up the ball and advanced it 24 yards. They allowed the ball to be advanced.
You are correct about allowing the ball to be caught first.
The rules for punt returns have been plastered all over AR message boards...and the Vandy player should have been flagged as well. If you put your arm up and do not properly call for a fair catch (waving the hand more than once constitutes a fair catch) then it is a 5 yard penalty and the ball can not be advanced by either team.
Also, the celebration after the hit has been blown out of proportion. He went and celebrated with a teammate away from the Vandy player...believing he had hit a player with the ball. He did not hover over the guy, and to be honest was oblivious to the Vandy player still laying on the field hurting.
Now his behavior on the sideline and as he was being removed from the stadium was atrocious.
Wade came out today and spoke with the media. He gave an apology...and you can clearly tell that no one wrote his apology for him. Petrino said he spoke with Wade, and Wade honestly thought the guy had the ball when he hit him. If you watch the video the Vandy player puts his hand in the air, drops his hand, and then runs forward (several steps) right into the hit. I am not trying to condone the hit but that is what he feels like happened. This kid is not a dirty player. This is the only time all year he has been flagged in this manner. He is the gunner on kick off and punt returns...he is usually the first guy there and hits hard. In 8 games this year, I have seen no reason to believe he has a poor attitude, or is out to hurt someone. On this particular play it was bad judgement on his part. I am sure he will learn from this, and I expect him to have an attitude adjustment (especially after hearing Petrino refer to his behavior on the sideline and how that has been addressed). At the time, he became heated for his ejection (which he felt was unwarranted), and then lost his cool.
This fair catch call is a "no brainier" the punt returner clearly raises his hand over his head. The hit was a fraction early (interference with a fair catch), so I guess that would make this a dead ball personal foul, 15 yard penalty, and play on, with no ejection for the unfortunate hit on the punt returner, because the young man was not being "thuggish" until after the ejection.
And his "thuggish" after the call is that he felt the ejection was wrong, as he thought the receiver actually had the ball and he had just made a good play. This whole thing has gotten blown way out of proportion.
Check that again fellas:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XDEHflpbzko@ the one minute three second mark in this video, you can clearly see Wade mouthing off with an attitude on the sideline; the ejection wasn't announced until the two minute sixteen second point.
The ref declared it a deliberate personal foul. This was because he lead with his helmet, not because he was early.
It was his jumping up & celebrating after delivering a deliberate personal foul which got him the boot.
Blown outta proportion or no; this is what the referees decided on.
Now, to play devil's advocate;
Not That This Is My Opinion, Simply Just An Observation . . .
Wade's apology was sent over his twitter/facebook page ( which-ever ), and so, without actually hearing him speak, it is hard to determine whether or not he was sincere, or gauge if his apology sounded written for him. It really does become very difficult to discern his true remorse through a text message.
Now,
I am not saying his apology was disingenuous. It may have been his honest feelings. I am just conveying the inability to observe his demeanor from reading a quick tweet (or what have you).
In any event, if the SEC wanted to send a message, they should have given him a verbal warning; making it publicly known to the media that they had done so . . . not giving him a suspension from further competition for an isolated penalty.
It is not as though he got up and slugged someone in the face after the play. He received an ejection; that should have been suffice. In TJ McDonald's incident during the USC/Stanford game, the pac-12 commissioner gave him a half game suspension because he had been previously warned by the conference for this kind of hit.
The SEC gave no leniency here; no warning, no citing of previous infractions. Just, Dovovan's favorite mantra "Off With His Head!" ... Now let us review how we should handle things.
I don't like it.
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