• The Ending of Cowboys-Lions Game Sparks Outrage and Accusations That Re

    From Official Payoffs@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 1 21:16:40 2024
    XPost: alt.sports.football.pro.detroit-lions, alt.sports.football.pro.dallas-cowboys, rec.sport.football.misc
    XPost: rec.sport.football.pro

    The Cowboys-Lions game on December 30 was a nailbiter, but Dallas emerged victorious 20-19 over the Detriot, though not without controversy. With
    the Eagles' epic collapse against the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday, all the Cowboys need to do is beat the rival Washington Commanders to clinch the division, continuing the trend of the NFC East not having a repeat winner
    since 2004. Still, this victory might have been highway robbery.

    The game’s final minutes were baffling. Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy
    opted to run three passing plays when Dallas needed to run the ball and
    get a first down, forcing Detroit to burn its timeouts and take a knee to
    close the game. They were up 20-13. What were they thinking? If McCarthy believed that Lions’ quarterback Jared Goff couldn’t march downfield, he
    was dead wrong.

    They carved up Dallas’ secondary to secure a touchdown, which tied the
    game and could’ve sent it into overtime. Instead, Lions head coach Dan
    Campbell opted for the two-point conversion to clinch the win. It was a
    ‘big man’ play, as Lions offensive tackle Taylor Decker caught what
    would’ve been the game-winning two-point conversion. It was well-executed
    until an illegal touching penalty caused the game to devolve into a
    circus. It highlighted the ongoing issues with the officiating this
    season, with the explanation for the controversial penalty making it an
    even more puzzling debacle.

    Decker claimed he reported to the referee as eligible. Backup tackle Dan Skipper did not. Yet, there are two competing narratives here, and the consensus for many is that Detroit got robbed (via Detroit Free Press):

    National analysts were up in arms across social media after the Lions had
    their go-ahead 2-point conversion wiped off the board by a penalty,
    leading to a 20-19 loss to the Cowboys.

    In typical Lions fashion, the high-stakes, standalone game finished very controversially when left tackle Taylor Decker caught a pass in the end
    zone, seemingly putting the Lions in position to win the game.

    However, the elation was quickly crushed when head referee Brad Allen
    announced an illegal touching penalty on Decker.

    After the game, Decker said he specifically told Allen that he was
    declaring as an eligible receiver. Allen, however, said Dan Skipper
    declared as an eligible receiver, despite Skipper seemingly never getting
    close enough to speak with the referee.

    Skipper said he never said a word to Allen, and Lions head coach Dan
    Campbell added in his postgame press conference that he went over all of
    the team's trick plays with the refereeing crew before the game, but there
    was still seemingly a mix-up.

    When the penalty was called, Campbell decided to leave his offense on the
    field to attempt the 2-point play from roughly the 7-yard line. Goff was intercepted on the play, but Cowboys star Micah Parsons jumped offsides,
    giving the Lions another play. On the third try, this time from the 3,
    Goff attempted a pass to tight end James Mitchell, but the throw was low
    and Mitchell was unable to grab the pass, effectively ending the game.

    Had the play stood, the Lions would've been up by 1 with 23 seconds left,
    but instead, the Cowboys recovered an onside kick and took a knee to run
    out the clock.

    What a fiasco. With the rise of legal sports betting, these situations
    give much credence to the narrative that the games are rigged, and not in
    a funny 'It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia' kind of way:

    There were profound implications regarding the outcome of this game, so
    much so that even Philadelphia Eagles fans, were pulling for a Cowboys win
    due to playoff seeding. Instead, we got mayhem, and the Eagles suffered a crushing loss against a 3-12 (now 4-12) Cardinals team the following day.

    Head official Brad Allen and his crew could be precluded from officiating
    any playoff games because they've been a total trainwreck this season.

    https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2024/01/01/the-cowboys-lions- games-controversial-ending-n2633021

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