Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Is it time to review replay review?

Technology has changed DNA of competitio­n

- Matt Sieger

Video review in sports has become as controvers­ial as the calls it is meant to settle.

First introduced in the NFL in 1986, it became universal in college football in 2004. While the system, now used in most major profession­al sports, has undoubtedl­y overturned wrong calls by officials, it has also slowed down the game and taken away the joy of many fans.

As Bob Ford wrote in the Philadelph­ia Inquirer, “The problem with replay came when it went from being a part of the telecasts to actually being a part of the games. Using replays to review decisions made by umpires, referees, and officials is totally understand­able on one level — let’s have a fair outcome by getting the calls right — but it also removes the human element of those outcomes and introduces a tyranny of technology.”

Trevor Denton put it this way in the Daily Trojan: “Instant replay can be a good thing. It can help clear up controvers­ial scoring plays and make sure teams don’t get away with egregious fouls or penalties. But when overused, video replays make games choppy and often add new layers of dispute — exactly what they are supposed to prevent.”

In any case, the use of this technology is here to stay and will probably expand. Major League Baseball may take it one step further and introduce robot umpires. Let’s take a look at some infamous blown calls that almost certainly would have been overturned by video review had it existed at the time.

Diego Maradona’s “Hand of God”

In the 1986 World Cup quarterfin­al between England and Argentina, the late legendary Maradona initiated an attack that ended when England defender Steve Hodge sliced at the ball, causing it to fly into the air.

Maradona, who had continued his run into the box, leaped into the air to contest the ball with England keeper Peter Shilton. Maradona reached the ball first and appeared to head it into the net.

Replays show that he actually punched the ball into the goal with his left hand, a move which he labeled the “Hand of God.” Maradona struck again three minutes later, leading Argentina to a 2-1 victory. Argentina later captured its second World Cup.

Video technology would have caught the violation and Maradona may well have been given a red card.

Don Denkinger’s blown call in the 1985 World Series

The St. Louis Cardinals were up 1- 0 in Game 6, three outs away from a title. Kansas City’s Jorge Orta led off the ninth with a slow roller that Jack Clark fielded and tossed to pitcher Todd Worrell, who stepped on first base a clear half-step ahead of Orta. Denkinger called Orta safe.

The Royals rallied for two runs and won the game 2-1. They took Game 7 the next night with Denkinger working behind the plate. He received a slew of hate mail, including some death threats, which eventually got the FBI involved.

Briana Scurry stops China’s penalty kick in 1999 World Cup

Neither team could score a goal after 120 minutes, which meant penalties decided the match at Pasadena’s Rose Bowl.

After each team made its first two penalty shots in the shootout, Scurry stopped China’s Liu Ying. The U.S. responded to Scurry’s save with three more successful penalty shots, including Brandi Chastain’s clincher to give the team its second World Cup title.

The U.S. might not have won if Scurry hadn’t charged a few feet off the line before the ball was kicked. Goalkeeper­s are supposed to keep at least one foot on the goal line while a penalty kick is being taken until the ball is struck.

Scurry later admitted she broke the rule.

“Everybody does it,” she told the Los Angeles Times. “It’s only cheating if you get caught.”

Missed PI:

Saints vs. Rams on Jan. 20, 2019

In the NFC championsh­ip, the Saints had the ball on the Rams 13-yard line with 1:48 to play and the score tied 20-20. Drew Brees dropped back and threw a pass to Tommylee Lewis, who was met by Rams cornerback Nickell Robey- Coleman.

Robey- Coleman made contact long before Lewis had an opportunit­y to catch the ball. None of the refs threw a penalty flag and the Saints had to settle for a field goal. The Rams then tied the game before winning in overtime.

A pass interferen­ce call would have given the Saints a first-and-goal with a chance to run the clock all the way down before a potential game-winning touchdown or field goal.

This play led to a rule change that made offensive and defensive pass interferen­ce calls and noncalls reviewable.

In June 2010 in a game between the Tigers and Indians, veteran umpire Jim Joyce was assigned to first base. Detroit’s Armando Galarraga was one out away from pitching a perfect game when Cleveland’s Jason Donald hit a routine ground ball to the first baseman and Galarraga covered first base. He clearly received the ball before Donald’s foot hit the bag. But Joyce called Donald safe.

After the game when Joyce saw the replay, he broke down in tears and admitted to reporters that he cost Galarraga a perfect game. In fact, last year Joyce and Gallaraga told The Athletic that they would like Major League Baseball to overturn the call.

Of course, if MLB decided to do that, it would open Pandora’s box to everyone who ever had a call go against them.

Perhaps, as Ford concludes, we have created a monster: “Sports played by humans should be officiated by humans. It’s that simple. If we can live with a fielder dropping an occasional fly ball, we should be able to live with a bang- bang missed call at first base. Trying to achieve perfection in an imperfect world never works, and there are centuries of history that can be replayed and reviewed to prove that.”

 ?? KEVIN C. COX — GETTY IMAGES, FILE ?? The Saints’ Tommylee Lewis (11) drops a pass broken up by the Rams’ Nickell RobeyColem­an during the 2019 NFC Championsh­ip.
KEVIN C. COX — GETTY IMAGES, FILE The Saints’ Tommylee Lewis (11) drops a pass broken up by the Rams’ Nickell RobeyColem­an during the 2019 NFC Championsh­ip.
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 ?? CARLO FUMAGALLI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Diego Maradona holds up his team’s trophy after Argentina’s 3-2 victory over West Germany at the 1986 World Cup final at Azteca Stadium in Mexico City.
CARLO FUMAGALLI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Diego Maradona holds up his team’s trophy after Argentina’s 3-2 victory over West Germany at the 1986 World Cup final at Azteca Stadium in Mexico City.

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