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It’s time. It was already time. It’s definitely now time.
Technology exists to do this right. The only question is whether the NFL will make a leap – and write a check.
The ball must be equipped with digital components that will allow the exact measurement of whether the player scored or, as it refers to the championship on Sunday nights, whether it got first down.
The current system is too imperfect. And these imperfections showed tonight. Human beings using the eyes and legs to see through the bodies and around in an effort to determine how many runners transmitted the ball.
As the CBS rules analyst genene sterator, it looked like an attacker Josh Allen got the ball to the gain line Before he was drawn back in the fourth and short early in the fourth quarter, with accounts leading 22-21.
It is difficult to make a suitable place in real time, and it is still harder to determine the reproduction of whether Allen has made.
A separate problem, of course, lack of transparency in the NFL reproduction process. Who makes decisions? Who is in the room when decisions are made? What corners are watching?
In the end, there is no reason to rely on weak human assessments. Too many rides on the outcome of these league games so they do not invest in precision.
I can do it. They need to do it. While the wrong call in such circumstances always hurts one team and helps another, it does not ensure consistent accuracy. Or to ensure that the team that truly won and made it completely.
Maybe the bosses would still win if the buffalo drive continues. The point is that stubborn insists leagues are released that officials think they have seen must be received on technology that can delete any doubt.
Everyone should want to. Until NFL feel enough pressure from teams, the media, fans, and maybe even Congress to fix it, the league will not decide to do so.