gotta disagree with you Atlanta on this one. To suggest "This was a severe lack of concentration at a critical point" is reaching that conclusion only from the outcome or result, something that I submit goes too far on this type of play. I can assure you I have missed big calls yet was concentrating as much as humanly possible. It's simply the nature of our avocation.
I am not suggesting that calls can’t be missed while still concentrating. But those are calls that require you to process and make judgments that depend on your training and experience. Deciding if a ball went to the left or right of a post requires no such training. Yes, it’s still “judgment”. But not judgment based on your vast experience and knowledge.
Don't know if you have experience under an upright but it's not as easy as it appears. Those kicks come at you very fast and following the exact flight of the ball can be very difficult - looking up into lights or the sun can instantaneously blind you.
I coach kickers, and have done so on both the high school and college levels. I am under the uprights virtually every day during the football season, and would willing to bet I have watched more kicks from that vantage point than most officials. I can easily watch 50-60 kicks A DAY from that vantage point. It’s not that tough, and I would expect any official at this level to do it with 100% accuracy. If the ball is OVER the post, yes, that's a tougher call, but this one was well below the top of the uprights.
And if you get under the upright and don’t check where the sun or lights are BEFORE the ball arrives, shame on you, that’s not preparing yourself for the play.
And this was a game in a dome!
Now is it a miss? of course. Is it, as you say, worthy of " ... a suspension, or simply losing some assignments, having his games cut back is not out of the question, and probably deserved." - absolutely not unless there is a pattern, or as has been said before, if there's a need to feed the media and the losing team.
I still think it deserves it. It was a major miss of a simple call. Allowing it to go “unpunished” condones the outcome.
And yes, at this level, public relations has a lot to do with it. Whether it should or not is debatable, but it does.
A number of years ago (pre-replay), an SEC crew missed a call by allowing a fumble to stand when the runner was clearly down. The call caused Georgia not to be able to try a winning field goal against Georgia Tech in the closing seconds. The crew lost the bowl game they would have gotten. Had the call happened in the first quarter of a Georgia – New Mexico State game, would they have lost their bowl game. I’m doubting it, but the situation led to the “suspension”.
Same thing occurred in another SEC game just last year. Official called a USC penalty in the last minute of the game. Call had a significant effect on the outcome (note in both cases I NEVER said the call “cost the team the game”, but they had a significant effect). Rogers Redding himself sat the official down for a week. Had the call come in the first quarter of that Georgia-New Mexico State game, would he have been suspended? I highly doubt it.
Like it or not, the situation DOES play a role in the discipline.
If this occurs in a nothing game in the first quarter, would you be arguing for a suspension? No - because you would not have heard about it.
If I knew about it I would, but you are correct, I probably wouldn’t know about it.
Let's not let game circumstances control the disciplinary action.
Sorry, it does. See the PR comment above.
The "mistake" by the official is exactly the same no matter when and under what circumstances it occurs.
True, we agree here.
As to the IR folks - I have no experience in the booth so have no basis to comment one way or the other.
I have been in the replay booth for numerous games in two conferences. The Big East uses the same system with which I have had experience (DV Sport). Unless there was a major technical breakdown, the end zone view was available to the replay official at his request. Why he would have focused on the sideline view, I can’t even begin to imagine. Short of the technical breakdown possibility, I can’t come up with any scenario where the RO couldn’t be said to have made a major error.