Jump to content

Did Jonathan Jones purposely take out Josh Allen?


Recommended Posts

4 minutes ago, 50yrpatsfan said:

This video angle completely exonerates Jones, and shows Allen to be a little too aggressive for his own good. There will be no fine, and there should not have been a penalty either. 

 

 

He was being tackled, I'm pretty sure he wasn't targeting the defender.  ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I honestly dont think so. Allen was comin in hot. You have to hit him hard when Allen wanted to strong arm his way for the 1st. 

 

It just happened to be a bad hit. He should be punished for it 100%...but I dont think hes looking to end careers there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

34 minutes ago, Fixxxer said:

Did you guys notice the holding penalty on Dawkins? Proposterous

Wow, Fixxxer, you are dead on. I was also wondering about that holding call (and of course freaking CBS didn't show a replay). But your comment reminded me to watch the o-line carefully on that play, keying on Dawkins (the call was against Dawkins, correct?). It was absolute textbook pass blocking -- hands in tight -- and DE just falls on his face. In what parallel universe could that be construed as holding?? "Preposterous" indeed ... The call was especially galling given how many times Hughes was obviously held yesterday. 

 

And now for something a little wonkish ... Look, I think the refs try to do their job in a chaotic environment, and I don't believe in conspiracies, etc. But the referees' decisions all come down to perceptual psychology -- how one interprets what ones sees (it's my line of work -- don't ask!). A school of thought in perceptual psychophysics derives from Bayesian statistics, which holds that our percepts -- for example, a referee's decision about what he just saw (the "posterior probability") -- is a combination of what we actually saw (the visual evidence) combined with our prior expectation ("prior distribution"). Prior expectation is essentially bias -- not in an intentional, conspiratorial sense, but in the implicit perceptual sense. The "prior" in this case is that the refs implicitly expect the "well-coached" teams, like NE, to not commit penalties, while "undisciplined" teams, like the Bills, to commit penalties. Thus a clean pass block is perceived as holding because the edge-rusher fell; a young QB can take a vicious hit to the head without the offender being ejected; an experienced future HOF QB can get away with obvious grounding; or a call for defensive holding can actually be *reversed* (the latter is a perfect example of perceptual bias: there is no way in hell Gilmore would have escaped that same call when he was a Bill). Likewise, I remember the Bills getting away with a lot of calls back in the early 90s when they were considered to be a "disciplined" team. By definition, perceptual bias is unfair, but I'm not sure what one can do about it in refereeing. Maybe we'll replace refs with unbiased  machine-vision-based systems in the future!

 

 

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

he led with his helmet, Allen was already being tackled.  This gets any other player ejected.  Hyde and Poyer are correct on this point.  Intent (and I think he had it) is beside the point.  That was a play that should result in ejection and a suspension.  

Just now, Stranded in Boston said:

Wow, Fixxxer, you are dead on. I was also wondering about that holding call (and of course freaking CBS didn't show a replay). But your comment reminded me to watch the o-line carefully on that play, keying on Dawkins (the call was against Dawkins, correct?). It was absolute textbook pass blocking -- hands in tight -- and DE just falls on his face. In what parallel universe could that be construed as holding?? "Preposterous" indeed ... The call was especially galling given how many times Hughes was obviously held yesterday. 

 

And now for something a little wonkish ... Look, I think the refs try to do their job in a chaotic environment, and I don't believe in conspiracies, etc. But the referees' decisions all come down to perceptual psychology -- how one interprets what ones sees (it's my line of work -- don't ask!). A school of thought in perceptual psychophysics derives from Bayesian statistics, which holds that our percepts -- for example, a referee's decision about what he just saw (the "posterior probability") -- is a combination of what we actually saw (the visual evidence) combined with our prior expectation ("prior distribution"). Prior expectation is essentially bias -- not in an intentional, conspiratorial sense, but in the implicit perceptual sense. The "prior" in this case is that the refs implicitly expect the "well-coached" teams, like NE, to not commit penalties, while "undisciplined" teams, like the Bills, to commit penalties. Thus a clean pass block is perceived as holding because the edge-rusher fell; a young QB can take a vicious hit to the head without the offender being ejected; an experienced future HOF QB can get away with obvious grounding; or a call for defensive holding can actually be *reversed* (the latter is a perfect example of perceptual bias: there is no way in hell Gilmore would have escaped that same call when he was a Bill). Likewise, I remember the Bills getting away with a lot of calls back in the early 90s when they were considered to be a "disciplined" team. By definition, perceptual bias is unfair, but I'm not sure what one can do about it in refereeing. Maybe we'll replace refs with unbiased  machine-vision-based systems in the future!

 

 

 

this would make sense, if the Pats** were also not a perpetual cheating and dirty team.  

 

Refs are also, or should be, taught to avoid this type of perceptual bias.  They are professional refs, not "common people" making on the fly decisions.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Aireskoi said:

 

He was being tackled, I'm pretty sure he wasn't targeting the defender.  ?

I see Allen slightly change the direction of his body to the left to directly take on Jones, and lower his helmet. He could've nose dived or veered right. Jones wasn't looking for the helmet to helmet contact, he was bracing himself at the last second. The other tackler was irrelevant, he hadn't yet slowed down Allen.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, 50yrpatsfan said:

This video angle completely exonerates Jones, and shows Allen to be a little too aggressive for his own good. There will be no fine, and there should not have been a penalty either. 

 

 

No it doesn't.  Jonathan Jones did not need to make contact with Allen.  The angle looking at Allen shows just how much time and room Jones had to avoid a collision.

Jones' cheap shot was on purpose and at the least wanted to send a message to Josh, but was more likely to try and hurt him.

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Happy Gilmore said:

 

No it doesn't.  Jonathan Jones did not need to make contact with Allen.  The angle looking at Allen shows just how much time and room Jones had to avoid a collision.

Jones' cheap shot was on purpose and at the least wanted to send a message to Josh, but was more likely to try and hurt him.

He had to make contact with him to stop him from getting a 1st down. It was a 3rd down play and you had a 235lb RB barreling toward the yard marker.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, mattynh said:

It was a penalty, we can argue about intent and if he should have been ejected all day and I am sure he will get fined.  But to go frame by frame and decide that he changed his target for the sole intent on injuring is pure conjecture.  Given the down and distance, it was important to stop forward progress immediately.  Here is the thing from my perspective, the QB should use his arm to beat the opponent and not have to rely on putting his head down and trying to move the chains.  If that continues, injuries will continue.

I agree with part of what you said and disagree with part.  Yes, I think the issue of intent to injure is conjecture.  I don't see Jones changing the level of his helmet, but he certainly is leading with his helmet, and his posture indicates he is driving into Allen.  On the other side of it, it is as important for the ball carrier, QB or not, to protect the ball while he's being tackled, so you cannot expect him to take a hand off the ball to shield himself from a tackler doing something illegal, especially not at game speed.  Allen's forward momentum had pretty much stopped at that point, and he already had a first down.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, RyanC883 said:

this would make sense, if the Pats** were also not a perpetual cheating and dirty team.  

 

Refs are also, or should be, taught to avoid this type of perceptual bias.  They are professional refs, not "common people" making on the fly decisions.  

Ryan, I completely agree about Pats' dirty play (think Gronk on Tre, Wilfork on Losman, etc.). But it's chicken and egg: the Pats may play dirty precisely because they've learned there are few consequences from the referees. The disgusting part is that there are also few consequences from the league, which has time to carefully review plays and avoid potential bias. That is the business side of things, which I am definitely not qualified to address! But I would argue that referees' perceptual biases are super hard to overcome, because that bias is essentially built into our brains.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, 50yrpatsfan said:

He had to make contact with him to stop him from getting a 1st down. It was a 3rd down play and you had a 235lb RB barreling toward the yard marker.

 

Did you see the other defender on Josh Allen's back?  Josh was in process of going down, Jones' dirty and illegal hit was completely unnecessary.

I hope someone drills Brady in the head.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

48 minutes ago, BillsFan4 said:

 

This is the first time I’ve seen this angle of the hit. 

 

I still see him dropping his helmet slightly, but you can also see Allen drop his head slightly too. 

 

I don't see how anyone can watch this and think that Jones was at fault in any way. 

Allen clearly causes this helmet to helmet, it's the crown of HIS helmet striking the side of Jones'. That's how they evaluate who's at fault. He should be the one fined.

I'm sure if Jones had to do it over again, he'd go low, then you could be looking at a knee injury. He had to make a play, a 1st down was at stake.

The problem is Josh Allen thinking he's an indestructible running back cause of his physical advantages.  

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, 50yrpatsfan said:

This video angle completely exonerates Jones, and shows Allen to be a little too aggressive for his own good. There will be no fine, and there should not have been a penalty either. 

 

Completely disagree with this take.  Players facing impeding contact with the head do tend to lean their head forward.  I think this is instinct to protect their face.  If he doesn't angle his head forward, impact from the hit would cause his head to snap back.  That could conceivably cause a neck fracture and a spinal cord injury, and that would be even worse.  The position of Allen's head did not lower enough to have caused the helmet to helmet contact.  At most it only changed slightly the part of Allen's helmet that he contacted.  By the way,  I didn't know you posted here Mr. Riveron.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Happy Gilmore said:

 

Did you see the other defender on Josh Allen's back?  Josh was in process of going down, Jones' dirty and illegal hit was completely unnecessary.

I hope someone drills Brady in the head.

watch the video again and you'll see that the other tackler hadn't yet started pulling him down, Allen was still in control of his own momentum and turned slightly left to take on Jones

Just now, TigerJ said:

Completely disagree with this take.  Players facing impeding contact with the head do tend to lean their head forward.  I think this is instinct to protect their face.  If he doesn't angle his head forward, impact from the hit would cause his head to snap back.  That could conceivably cause a neck fracture and a spinal cord injury, and that would be even worse.  The position of Allen's head did not lower enough to have caused the helmet to helmet contact.  At most it only changed slightly the part of Allen's helmet that he contacted.  By the way,  I didn't know you posted here Mr. Riveron.

Allen could have gone down to the ground and avoided Jones completely, but then he wouldn't have reached the 1st down yardage. He chose to take on Jones, and lowering his helmet like he did was an aggressive act to run over and through Jones to get the 1st down.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, 50yrpatsfan said:

I don't see how anyone can watch this and think that Jones was at fault in any way. 

Allen clearly causes this helmet to helmet, it's the crown of HIS helmet striking the side of Jones'. That's how they evaluate who's at fault. He should be the one fined.

I'm sure if Jones had to do it over again, he'd go low, then you could be looking at a knee injury. He had to make a play, a 1st down was at stake.

The problem is Josh Allen thinking he's an indestructible running back cause of his physical advantages.  

You also follow and respect the organization that has made cheating a cherished artform. The things you can't see aren't really all that surprising.

  • Like (+1) 1
  • Awesome! (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...