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Origen
09-18-2008, 01:46 PM
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Ed-Hochuli-is-very-frowny-after-the-disaster-in-?urn=nfl,108018

Ed Hochuli is very frowny after the disaster in Denver
By MJD

According to NFL supervisor of officials Mike Pereira, Ed Hochuli is "devastated" at what went down in Denver on Sunday. If you missed it, Hochuli made an inexplicable mental gaffe--I won't call it a "blown call" or "missed call" because I think it goes a little beyond that--that almost directly cost the Chargers a loss against the Broncos.

From Kevin Acee of the San Diego Union Tribune:

No one, it appears, is taking the mistake and its ramifications harder than Hochuli.

"He's devastated," said Mike Pereira, the NFL's supervisor of officials. "... I was talking to Ed within 10 minutes after the game was over, and he was sick. He's still sick (yesterday).

"Everybody works so hard and wants to be perfect in a game you're not likely to ever be perfect. I've talked to him three times. He's really struggling with the fact he made such a bad call."

Hochuli's also manning up and taking his e-mail lumps. His e-mail address isn't hard to find with a simple Yahoo! search, and he's been bombarded with hate mail. And still, he's replying to everyone. Someone relayed the following reply from Hochuli to a message board at the San Diego Union Tribute.

I'm getting hundreds of emails – hate mail – but I'm responding to it all. People deserve a response.

You can rest assured that nothing anyone can say can make me feel worse than I already feel about my mistake on the fumble play. You have no idea ...

Affecting the outcome of a game is a devastating feeling. Officials strive for perfection – I failed miserably. Although it does no good to say it, I am very, very sorry.

Ed Hochuli

No one was more upset about the call than me, I promise you. I was driving to a friend's house after the game, and had to stop at a local convenience store so I could throw a child-like fit and kick inanimate objects. I said things about Ed Hochuli in the hours after the loss that could've gotten me arrested. Eventually, my grief took the form of a letter from Ed's dog.

But knowing now that Hochuli feels so bad about it, it sort of takes some of the venom out of me. It's hard to hate a guy who knows he screwed up and feels bad about it.

It's just so hard to understand why he blew that whistle. A ball went flying backwards out of the quarterback's hand. In what way would that lead anyone to believe that a play should be blown dead? Why would it even occur to him to blow the whistle?

It's not like Hochuli missed a hold, or botched a pass interference call. I rarely complain about mistakes like that. There are so many shades of gray on every play, and there's so much to see. Judgment calls will be blown, and that, I've learned to live with.

This was different, though. Hochuli wasn't making a judgment. There's no way he could look at what Jay Cutler did from any angle and conclude that he threw a forward pass, any more than you could watch Ryan Seacrest wax his chest and then conclude that mashed potatoes are delicious. It just couldn't happen.

Anyway, the man feels bad about it, he's been punished, and I think I can start to let it go now. Hopefully someday, I'll once again be able to look at Ed Hochuli and see a fine official with great pecs, instead of the guy who handed Denver a win.

Brother Brian
09-18-2008, 01:59 PM
Hochuli is one of the best refs in the NFL.

He screwed up. Cutler's arm was moving forward and the ball went backwards. His brain equted the arm motion with a forward pass, and he blew the whistle instinctively.

Life happens, I've seen ref's hand games to just about every team in pro-sports. But Hochuli didn't let Denver score all those points, SD still had oppertunities to win.

Time to move along.

Parzival
09-19-2008, 02:19 AM
He blew the call.

That said, the Chargers had more opportunities to stop the Broncos, and didn't.

<shrug> It's much like the BS "tuck rule" the refs pulled out of their asses when the Raiders were playing the Patriots. The Raiders absolutely got screwed. But it was their collapse *after* getting screwd that cost them the game.

Or my Seahawks getting screwed by officiating in the Superbowl. They could have overcome it, but they didn't. (Whereas Pittsburgh got screwed over in favor of Indy a couple weeks prior, but rallied and won.)

silverwhisper
09-19-2008, 07:35 AM
i agree with BB re: hochuli's usual skill. one horendous call does not send an entire career of otherwise quality work into the sphere of annihilation. indeed, if anything this increases my respect for him.

Brother Brian
09-19-2008, 07:42 AM
He blew the call.

That said, the Chargers had more opportunities to stop the Broncos, and didn't.

<shrug> It's much like the BS "tuck rule" the refs pulled out of their asses when the Raiders were playing the Patriots. The Raiders absolutely got screwed. But it was their collapse *after* getting screwd that cost them the game.

Or my Seahawks getting screwed by officiating in the Superbowl. They could have overcome it, but they didn't. (Whereas Pittsburgh got screwed over in favor of Indy a couple weeks prior, but rallied and won.)

The only difference in the tuck rule, is that technically, the refs made the right call. The rule itself was bad, but the refs weren't.

Parzival
09-19-2008, 01:00 PM
Despite the introduction of a novel rule during the final minutes of a playoff game?

If the tuck rule had been enforced during the season, we could argue that it was a bad rule, not a bad call.
But it wasn't.

Brother Brian
09-19-2008, 01:40 PM
Despite the introduction of a novel rule during the final minutes of a playoff game?

If the tuck rule had been enforced during the season, we could argue that it was a bad rule, not a bad call.
But it wasn't.

It had been invoked twice during the regular season. It was on the books. The refs made the right call...technically.

The rule itself was bad and poorly written. That said, it's not the ref's fault.