From ESPN : South Carolina vs Georgia Conspiracy theorists - TopicsExpress



          

From ESPN : South Carolina vs Georgia Conspiracy theorists loved The X-Files. Maybe they should open up The SEC Files. If you believe in conspiracy theories, then you believe the SEC will do whatever it takes to further the ingrained perception that it is the strongest conference in the land. So it would behoove the SEC to have as many league teams as possible in contention for the first College Football Playoff. Well, the SEC gave some fodder to the tinfoil hat crowd during the Georgia-South Carolina game on Saturday in Columbia, South Carolina -- a day filled with rain and lightning, the perfect conditions to construct a conspiracy theory. To rewind: One 54-yard touchdown run from Georgia Heisman contender Todd Gurley was called back on a phantom holding call, and Georgia eventually punted. Georgia quarterback Hutson Mason was whistled for intentional grounding on first-and-goal from the 4-yard line, even though his pass clearly hit a South Carolina defender. Georgia ended up missing a game-tying field goal on the drive. The officials made a tough call for a spot in the Georgia-South Carolina game. Or did they? Then, one of the most controversial fourth-down spots in recent memory went South Carolinas way. On fourth-and-inches with less than 2 minutes left, Dylan Thompson plowed ahead. There was no real, clear way to tell where Thompson ended up because all 22 players converged at once. So the officials guessed on the spot. The sticks came out. The officials ruled South Carolina got a first down, giving the Gamecocks the win. We were meant to win this game and Georgia was not, said South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier, clearly a believer in divine intervention (or is it something else?). But based on the measurement and the NCAA rulebook (Section 2, Article 7B), South Carolina looked just a millimeter short. As Georgia coach Mark Richt lamented afterward, If we had a credit card we might could have slipped it in there. Richt sent the holding and intentional grounding plays to the SEC office for a formal explanation. He said the SEC told him the grounding call was made because there was no reasonable chance the intended receiver would make the catch, regardless of whether the ball was tipped. Surely, the SEC would not give its referees marching orders on how to call a game. Regardless of the officiating, Georgia blew multiple chances to win. But is it just a coincidence that what resulted ended up helping the league? Steve Spurrier, who creates headlines nearly on a daily basis, remains relevant and prominent. And the SEC bolstered its rep -- despite two league teams beating up on each other. Take a look at the AP Top 25. Seven SEC teams are ranked in the Top 15. That includes No. 13 Georgia AND No. 14 South Carolina -- which moved a whopping 10 spots up the poll over the previous week. Imagine that. Both remain alive for the College Football Playoff
Posted on: Thu, 18 Sep 2014 21:50:51 +0000

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