Ultimately it doesn’t matter since they won, but I’m still trying to figure out how a receiver running into another receiver and knocking him into the defender is DPI.


Ultimately it doesn’t matter since they won, but I’m still trying to figure out how a receiver running into another receiver and knocking him into the defender is DPI.

Ultimately it doesn’t matter since they won, but I’m still trying to figure out how a receiver running into another receiver and knocking him into the defender is DPI.
byu/TheBunionFunyun indetroitlions

10 comments
  1. >ARTICLE 2. PROHIBITED ACTS BY BOTH TEAMS WHILE THE BALL IS IN THE AIR

    >Acts that are pass interference include, but are not limited to:

    >1. Contact by a player who is not playing the ball that restricts the opponent’s opportunity to make the catch;

    >2. Playing through the back of an opponent in an attempt to make a play on the ball;

    Looks like they got him on point 2 here. I think the call is right but I’m not mad about Iffy finding and making a play on the ball

  2. It’s the lions!!! What is the zebras greatest threat in the African wilderness? Clearly a natural instinct of a prey faced with a predator in the wild

  3. If you want an honest answer it’s because that’s extremely hard to notice in real time. It took you pointing it out and me watching the replay 4 times in slow motion to notice.

  4. As a life-Long Lions fan I know I’m going to get downvoted to oblivion, but look at the physics of the play: If Osborne hit Jefferson, or even touched him into coverage, why isn’t there any visual transfer of energy from Osborne to Jefferson? Osborne even pulls back and spins out to avoid contact. Am I missing something?

  5. What even is this? A dude spun out to avoid contact with his own player. You play it as he actually did run into him when he literally avoided him. GTFO. This is a big reach. Watch football

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