tnvikesfan wrote:When will it be our turn to do whatever WE want and win our game? When will the officiating be done in a FAIR manner, cheap shots being called when they happen to US? We have been the red-headed stepchild of the NFL long enough. If the officials won't make the calls, maybe our players can start defending their own.
Our turn is coming now that we got the new stadium ... oh wait, is the new stadium still a go? But yeah I think the league was trying to punish us for never having a state of the art stadium they could be proud of.
"Our playoff loss to the Vikings in '87 was probably the most traumatic experience I had in sports." -- Bill Walsh
We'll begin to move on from the Kevin Williams-Joe Looney play after this afternoon -- the Vikings are now about as close to their next game against the Tennessee Titans as they are to last Sunday night's game in San Francisco -- but I thought it would be worthwhile to add one more item to the discussion, from Vikings players Chad Greenway and Jared Allen on the double standard they believe exists on hits like these.
Allen's comments are interesting and he definitely has a point.
Purplemania wrote:
I swear it's only a matter of time before players will get flagged for hitting too hard, even if the "hitting zone" was all legal
Already happened last year (IIRC). I think it was Robinson who made a tackle on a player while the play was still live where be basically body slammed the ball carrier to the ground. It was an "aggressive tackle" but Robinson was pulling the runner over his own body while taking him down. It looked like a hard tackle, but we've all seen those fluke tackles where the ball carrier lands on a defensive player (doesn't contact the ground) and bounces up to run for additional yards or a TD. I think Robinson was just trying to make sure some part of the carrier touched the ground. Again, it was a hard tackle, but IMHO legit, and he got flagged for "Unnecessary Roughness." I wish I could remember who we were playing...
I've told people a million times not to exaggerate!