Can someone pls make a GIF of the ball moving in Coale's hands?

Submitted by artds on

You can clearly see from this clip that, when the ball makes contact with the ground, it flips forward in Coale's hands. He did not have posession.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0Xh8MlPw38#t=00m47s

I was hoping someone could make a GIF of this that we can post on forums as evidence that the right call was made. 

Edit: Here's one I just made, but it's grainy. Perhaps someone can make one that's more clear. This really is the best angle.

 

 

Steve Lorenz

January 4th, 2012 at 10:25 AM ^

That's the worst angle to look at. With the angle on the far side of the field facing Coale as he brings the ball in, you can definitely see that the ball not only hit the ground, but that his elbow looked to hit first and was out of bounds as well (after possession was reached). Being at the game and seeing the constant replays, I didn't think it was nearly as close a call as some are making it out to be. 

artds

January 4th, 2012 at 10:28 AM ^

Great job! Thanks.

I think the angle shown at the 47 second mark that I linked to shows the ball moving a little better than the one you posted.

Would it be too much trouble to make a gif of that shot?

I think a very quick clip from 0:47 to 0:48 that just plays over and over is all that would be needed to make the point.

MGlobules

January 4th, 2012 at 1:08 PM ^

in may opinion: if he had been sailing through the air several feet higher, or not NEAR the OOB marker, would he have hung onto it? No, the ball is clearly moving through his hands, coming through the other (bottom) side. He meets the ground, the ball is pushed back into his solar plexus and STILL bobbles around AS HE IS SLIDING OUT OF BOUNDS. I don't see how this is a catch, nor do I see--given this kind of visual evidence--how the refs could do anything but reverse.

profitgoblue

January 4th, 2012 at 10:19 AM ^

I completely disagree with you.  They took a ton of time reviewing the play because it was far from easy to overturn, in my opinion.  In fact, I didn't see conclusive evidence that the call should be overturned.  But that is what all of my Hokie fans are crying this morning too so maybe I should rethink my conclusion . . .

 

coastal blue

January 4th, 2012 at 10:23 AM ^

I was screaming Incomplete last night, but in my heart I knew that was a catch...and it was... until it wasnt! We were extremely fortunate that that was overturned.

coastal blue

January 4th, 2012 at 10:48 AM ^

is if you are a delusional Michigan fan that can't accept that fortune shined on us, if only for one night.

Even better is the fans below arguing that Hemingway's almost catch against Iowa was closer than this. 

PburgGoBlue

January 4th, 2012 at 10:55 AM ^

Does an elbow in bounds count the same as a foot? Just wondering. This is such a bang-bang play, to me, I think they should have focussed more on the fact that he didn't have control of the ball before hitting the boundary instead of talking about control the whole time.

Ali G Bomaye

January 4th, 2012 at 11:19 AM ^

In college football, all that matters is where the first body part to hit the ground after the receiver gains possession lands.  It could be a foot, a knee, a hand, an elbow, or anything else.  If a receiver catches the ball, his elbow hits in bounds, then both feet land out of bounds, it's still a catch.  Thus, since Coale's elbow appears to hit in bounds, the only question is whether he had possession before he slid out of bounds.

mgowill

January 4th, 2012 at 11:33 AM ^

To further solidify your point, the rule from the NCAA 2011-2012 rule book -

 

Incomplete Pass

ARTICLE 7. a. Any forward pass is incomplete if the ball is out of bounds by

rule or if it touches the ground when not firmly controlled by a player. It also

is incomplete when a player leaves his feet and receives the pass but first lands

on or outside a boundary line, unless his progress has been stopped in the field

of play or end zone (Rule 4-1-3-p) (A.R. 2-4-3-III and A.R. 7-3-7-I).

CRex

January 4th, 2012 at 10:23 AM ^

The issue seems mostly to be that Coale's hands were on the sides of the ball.  He didn't have a hand underneath.  So he actually has a level of control, but the bottom point of the ball does impact the turf (which in turn makes the ball squirt upwards a bit).  If Coale has a hand under the ball we're not having this discussion as it would be a catch.  As it stands I guess the replay ref felt he was bobbling it slightly and the tip impacting the turf helped make the catch.  

End of the day, having seen the Wolverines get royally screwed by PAC officials, I'm just glad to be on the other side of that for a change.

CWoodson

January 4th, 2012 at 11:12 AM ^

This kind of feeds into what you're getting at, and they didn't talk about it last night, but isn't the rule that if the ball hits the ground as the receiver is making a catch, the ball can't move?  I'm pretty sure that's the NFL rule and why the elbow didn't matter.

Schembo

January 4th, 2012 at 10:32 AM ^

I'm trying hard not to use rose colored glasses on this one, but the way I understand it is after the ball hits the ground the player must reastablish possession, which he does, but at that point he is out of bounds.  The player can't have possession and the ball touching the ground simultaneously.

mikoyan

January 4th, 2012 at 10:33 AM ^

Why do you ask?  Because the national media hates Michigan.  And I'm not just talking the Wolverines, I'm talking the State of Michigan.  Especially ABC.  Ever since Coleman Young made them look like jackasses on 20/20 or whatever channel they interviewed him on, they've had a woody towards all things Michigan.  Which is why every so often the have the "woah is Detroit" stories or any other number of negative views of Michigan.  Well, I'll let the media know that 5 out of 5 Great Lakes hate them and don't want to be anywhere near them.

And for the SEC loving fools at ESPN...I hope the Magic Mitten can transform into a Magic Finger.

Erik_in_Dayton

January 4th, 2012 at 10:17 AM ^

That's the one in which I think you can see that the ball moves, though ever-so-slightly.  I would feel worse for Tech fans about this if we hadn't seen Hemingway's catch - a more catch-y catch than Coale's - ruled incomplete. 

ijohnb

January 4th, 2012 at 10:17 AM ^

I thought is was a catch and highway robbery at gun point.  It is the exact kind of call that I don't think should be reversed on review.  I am very happy that Michigan won, and could still have won even if it was ruled a catch, but even watching that clip, I say catch and I cannot be convinced otherwise.  The question to ask is "how much of a catch does it need to be before it is a catch." 

If you ask me, that is the video that is played at the How to Make a Diving Catch While Falling Out of Bounce Seminar.  By overturning that, the refs are essentially saying that a "catch cannot be made under those conditions."

Thrilled for the win, but I say catch, and catch hard.

Waveman

January 4th, 2012 at 10:20 AM ^

I can't see any way that this is a catch! I don't think it's even particuarly close, and it certainly shouldn't be controversial. The ball is moving in his arms before he hits the ground. It moves again when the ball hits the turf.  The ball can touch the ground only if you have complete possession the whole time. The ball is going through his arms like a basketball goal until the ground helps him secure it against his chest.

Erik_in_Dayton

January 4th, 2012 at 10:24 AM ^

As I said just above, I think the ball moved slightly as he landed.  To the bigger issue, though, the following needs to be clarified:  Is a catch a catch when a player controls the ball but the ball also touches the ground?  The rules say yes, IIRC what we looked up after the Hemingway play, but a number of calls this year have said otherwise.  Refs appear to be leery of calling something a catch when a significant part of the ball touches the ground.

Wolverman

January 4th, 2012 at 11:20 AM ^

 His elbow landing in bounds has nothing to do with anything. You have to maintain control through the contact  and when the ball hits the ground it moves. The point that hits the ground first bounces up and into the players body and the part thats in his hands moves up towards his helmet.

 The call could have went either way and i would have accepted it. I was wrestling with the fact Michigan did very little to deserve this win. Virginia Techs Defense played a spectacular game. Every offensive play for michigan there where unblocked defenders, they tackled well and they swarmed to the ball. I'd almost rather lose a game where we played a lot better than to win a game like this when we looked horrible for 60 minutes of the game.

 What it came to tho (least thats what i am tell myself) is Michigan took advantage of opportunities in the redzone and VT could not.

coastal blue

January 4th, 2012 at 10:25 AM ^

The people below you have no idea what they are talking about.

He pulls the ball in. His elbow touches the ground before he's out of bounds. He has possession at this very point. The ball moves slightly within his hands as he's bouncing off the ground. 

100% a catch and had it happened the other way, everyone would be screaming bloody murder. 

I love winning, but I hate to see things like this happen. I mean, we were furious about Junior at Iowa and that wasn't even remotely as close as this. 

In reply to by coastal blue

wolverinestuckinEL

January 4th, 2012 at 10:30 AM ^

The Hemmingway play showed zero signs of the ball moving when he hit the ground.  As was stated at the time if it had been ruled a touchdown it would have stood.  The ball moves. Unless his hands or body part are between the ball and the ground it cannot move.  The ball is laying on the ground when it moves so imcomplete.  

wolverinestuckinEL

January 4th, 2012 at 10:43 AM ^

The more I look at this play from this angle (the worse of the two) the less I understand how anyone sees a catch.  The ball isn't really secure in his hands until after the ball hits the ground and is forced into his forearm.  If he had both hands flat under the ball there would be a better case for a catch, but even then there would be a question if he had possession before sliding out of bounds.  The officials saw the ball hit the turf and moved and saw enough to overturn.  Anyone who says this is a clear catch is kidding themselves.  It is a hell of an athletic play and if I was a VT fan I would be upset, but still the right call.

Waveman

January 4th, 2012 at 10:50 AM ^

To me, the ball continues to move down through his arms all the way until he hits the ground. If he had it firmly against his chest on the way down, or firmly in both hands, and then it budged a bit, I would see it as more questionable. When I look at this play, though, it looks like he's got loose control of the ball at best (by squeezing it between his forearms) until after the ball hits the ground. 

coastal blue

January 4th, 2012 at 10:53 AM ^

I just rewatched Hemingway's catch to confirm we are actually talking about the same catch. 

Unlike Coale's catch, Hemingway doesn't even come close to having his hand below the ball. He's got it by the upper sides. You can clearly see the turf push the ball up into his hands as he's hitting he ground. 

Coale has his arms underneath the ball. The back nose of the ball MAY move upwards as he's pulling it in upon hitting the ground, or it may be moving upwards exactly because he's pulling it it.

Can't we just admit we were lucky with this win? We've been on the other side many times. I think it's fine to acknowledge that VT fans and players have got to be in some disbelief this morning to see the 23 next to Michigan and the 20 next to Va Tech. 

Waveman

January 4th, 2012 at 10:58 AM ^

We were thoroughly dominated in this game, and I feel very lucky to have the win. I understand VT fans being in disbelief, too.  If you only give up 184 yards, you shouldn't loose a ball game.  This was an ugly, ugly win for Michigan in a game that VT should have won.

I disagree with you, though, because I don't think this play was where we got lucky. I think the refs got this call right, and I think the evidence is pretty convincing.

EDIT: and BTW... We've apparently got different definitions of "under." The entire bottom third of the ball is exposed.  He doesn't have anything "under" the ball. If he did, it wouldn't hit the ground.

coastal blue

January 4th, 2012 at 11:32 AM ^

the back nose appears in the space between his elbows as he is clutching it. As he's pulling the ball up, he hits the ground and the ball moves up slightly at that instant. However, there is no way to say that he doesnt have possession and this isn't just the force of him hitting the ground as his arm is also moving with the ball to pull it in towards his body. At the very least, there isn't enough there to overturn it and really, I think its a catch every single time.

I do know one thing for certain: If he was wearing a winged helmet, on MGoBlog, it would be a catch. 

wolverinestuckinEL

January 4th, 2012 at 11:54 AM ^

Look, we are going to disagree all day on this.  But he has the top half of the football loosely in his hands, the ball gets forced up into his arms by the ground.  What you are describing him doing is physically impossible.  Grab the top half of a football with just your hands flat against it and tell me how you can pull it up towards you while rotating it back in.  You can't.  But that is besides the point, not only is it physically impossible, the ball clearly moved.  His hands are on the sides, not underneath.  These are the rules.  Live with them.

wolverinestuckinEL

January 4th, 2012 at 11:57 AM ^

Besides that I don't see why you have to take such a hard-line contrarian position.  Does it suck for VT?  Yes.  Would it suck if it had been us? Yes.  Was it a catch?  No.  Absolutely not, the ball f-ing moves and his hands or body are not under the ball.  Rules suck sometimes but they are kind of necessary in football. 

coastal blue

January 4th, 2012 at 12:51 PM ^

This is why I take "hard-line": Because of your post. You saying it is "absolutely not" a catch when if the guy played for Michigan it "absolutely shouldn't have been overturned". 

I can be happy we won and also acknowledge we got incredibly lucky. You and others have to feel like we're the only team that ever gets screwed and try and downplay what was an incredible catch - and it was a catch because the ball isn't clearly moving in a way that isn't with his arm - that got overturned in extremely fortunate circumstances. 

We dodged a bullet. It was better than the alternative of having our anemic offense try and score a touchdown to tie, but it was still a lucky break. 

Edit: Your post, with the whole "loosely" desciption shows the homerism. You cannot have a rational opinion on this. You're right, we will disagree all day because you can't see it from anything but an extremely biased Michigan fan standpoint. 

wolverinestuckinEL

January 4th, 2012 at 1:29 PM ^

Way to tell me what I am.  Thanks for that.  I was never up in arms about the Hemmingway catch by the way.  The officials made the call on the field and there was nothing in the replay to overturn.  That sucks because as defined by the rules of football, there is nothing there to show that it was not a catch.  But I did not, as you suggest, come on to MGoblog and screaming about how we got hosed by some bullshit call.  You do not understand football, nor the rules which define possession or a catch in college football, yet you continue to argue that those of us who find the video evidence "conclusive" along with the refs are pathetic homers.  In short you are delusional, STFU.  Hands on the side of the football, ball moves, no catch.  It is really that simple, but by calling me out you avoid the factual argument and instead choose to retaliate emotionally.  

coastal blue

January 4th, 2012 at 1:59 PM ^

So I argued your post with a clear rebuttal, then added that I don't think you can clearly argue this point because you are a biased Michigan fan, so I guess the first part doesn't count. But well played. Almost as well-played as you saying I was taking a "hard-line" stance on the call when you said there was no way on earth it was a catch, even though most everyone in the country except delusional Michigan fans and - thankfully - the refs seem to think otherwise.

On top of this, you can't even comprehend what you are seeing: His arms are under the football. The back end of the football is hanging out slightly between his elbows. Yet you are saying he only has his hands on the side of the football, which is actually the bottom because he is pulling it into his chest as he is turning sideways as he hits the ground. You cannot tell whether the ground or simply his impact causes the ball to jump that way or a combination of those things while he pulls the ball in. 

Like I said, luckily the refs agree with the homers. I'm thankful that they took away that play, but to pretend like it is "absolutely not a catch" is just maize and blue shades all the way. 

In reply to by coastal blue

wolverinestuckinEL

January 4th, 2012 at 2:21 PM ^

 

ARTICLE 7. a. Any forward pass is incomplete if the ball is out of bounds by

rule or if it touches the ground when not firmly controlled by a player.

 

Ball hits ground, ball moves, incomplete pass.  You actually say in a previous post that the ball moves "slightly"; your words, not mine.   So you know what you see, you just don't know what an incomplete pass is?  I just think you should get a better grasp on that before you accuse me of displaying poor judgement based on my fanhood.

In reply to by coastal blue

Logan

January 4th, 2012 at 3:38 PM ^

You should read Seth's front page article on this and check out the gif he included. You're just flat-out wrong about everything you think you're seeing.

In reply to by coastal blue

CompleteLunacy

January 4th, 2012 at 10:46 AM ^

I don't necessaruly disagree with you, but this isn't a cut and dry situation, and that Junior catch was definitely more clearcut than this one imo (if you recall, the nose of the ball hit the ground then too but the ball didn't move!)

This was a lucky intepretation, for sure, but it's not like this was an unprecedented replay reversal...ref sees nose of ball hit ground, ball moves a little, ref calls it no catch. That, and 99% of the body landed out of bounds, and how do you determine exactly at what point he has full and complete control of the ball? 

It;s not 100%  a catch. It's also not 100% a non-catch. Depends on how you interpret the rules.

I love winning, and if it takes a call like this so be it. Michigan got hosed on a similar situation earlier, so I consider this as repayment of our karmatic debt. No body outside of VT will care that Michigan got lucky by this call reversal...all it will say is "Michigan 2012 BCS Sugar Bowl Champs". I'll take that all day, no matter what it takes.

Action

January 4th, 2012 at 10:23 AM ^

I thought he landed out of bounds, thus not a catch.  I thought that was why they were reviewing it, and I still don't see how he would have been ruled in bounds.  His shoulder landed out.