7Samurai13
Funniest SH member
This happened like five years ago in a Michigan vs Michigan State game and it was called incorrectly on the field. Michigan is driving down the field. On a passing play the quarterback throws the ball high. Receiver jumps in the air to catch the ball. While in the air, catches the ball. Coming down, still has not touched the field of play, he kicks the pylon. Feet land out of bounds. On the field it was ruled a touchdown, it should have been ruled incomplete pass. That is what they mean that the pylon is out of bounds.Well, that is still not clear to me. If you are OOB you can't score a TD. Or do you score before to are OOB? I understand what the vertical plane of the goal line is, but someone said the pylon is a sideline and a goal line. How can it be both?Is it divided in 4 quarters? There is no way a ref, or a camera can see which quarter of the pylon the ball touches first. I not trying to be as ass, it just doesn't seem clear, and needs to be understood better. I'm not referring to anything that happened in the GA AL. game. I'm just asking about the statement that if a player touches a pylon, he is OOB. I don't see how it can be both.