An assessment I read elsewhere indicated that the LTG was the B12 from the B22. The LTG was reached on the initial spot and the U pulled on the chains too hard when he took the front stake, thus pulling the chains forward. The R got HACKED on the sloppy mechanics by the crew and just reset the ball instead of making them re-set the chains properly and remeasuring. Still a poor job by the R but not the conspiracy to commit malfeasance some have suggested. True or not, I don't know.
That's the problem. All anybody can go by is what was seen.
I was very tough in my previous post, because of what this looked like. No. None of us had any idea of what was going through the R's head when he did this. But our reaction was no different than any player, coach, fan, or uninterested observer. The referee moved the ball forward to GIVE Team A a first down. That's what the entire world saw. No amount of explanation of "bad chain placement" or anything else is going to change what was seen by the entire world. The perception by the entire world was that the R was helping Team A. And, in the eyes of almost every human on this planet,
perception is reality.There is no evidence in the video of any misplacement of the chain. From the video, no one can tell where the LTG was, other than the forward stake, itself. All anyone sees is the ball short of the front stake, and then the R pushes the ball forward and awards Team A a first down. What should anybody conclude from all of that?
Was this just a case of poor measurement mechanics? Well, maybe. We can only hope so. But that's not what the world saw. The world saw a game official consciously, and, apparently, deliberately, assist one team. And that can't be tolerated.
If, in fact, the chains were misaligned, then, for God's sake, re-align the chains, and measure again. Better yet, be sure they are properly aligned before observing the measurement to begin with. I doubt you will ever convince anyone on the defensive side of the ball (players, coaches, fans) that this action by the R was "on the up and up."