Los Angeles Times

Game results shouldn’t change after controvers­y

The sport would be ruined by appeals and do-overs, even after controvers­ial calls.

- DAVID WHARTON ON COLLEGE FOOTBALL david.wharton@latimes.com

No one ever said college football was fair.

That’s not why we watch games on Saturday afternoons. We’re not looking for thoughtful deliberati­on or due process — we want to see two teams go at it and, in the end, we want a winner.

Which is precisely why the powers-that-be should not go back and change the ending of Oklahoma State’s controvers­ial loss to Central Michigan.

In case you missed it, the Cowboys appeared to secure a victory when time ran out as they threw the ball away on fourth down. But the officials threw a flag for intentiona­l grounding and mistakenly gave Central Michigan one play on offense.

A Hail Mary pass and a desperate lateral later, Central Michigan grabbed a 30-27 win.

“I guess I need to go and read the rule,” a bewildered Oklahoma State Coach Mike Gundy said afterward. “I don’t even know what to say because I don’t know enough.”

Rule 3, Section 2, Article 3.a.1 states that when an offensive penalty includes loss of down, as the intentiona­l grounding did, the game should not be extended.

The eight officials on the field — from the Mid-American Conference, home to Central Michigan — blew it. So did two Big 12 officials in the replay booth who could have stepped in, citing an “egregious error.”

The mistake went unnoticed until the teams left the field, at which point Oklahoma State was informed that — under Rule 1.1.3.b — the final result could not be altered.

“In my mind, it is incomprehe­nsible that a mistake made after time had expired cannot be corrected,” Athletic Director Mike Holder said in a statement.

This isn’t the first time a missed call has decided a college game. Last fall, officials allowed Miami’s victory over Duke to stand even though a ballcarrie­r’s knee had clearly touched the ground during an eightlater­al, game-winning kickoff return.

The situation was somewhat different in 2011 when USC preserved a narrow win by blocking Utah’s field-goal attempt in the closing seconds. Hours later, Pac-12 officials announced the scoreboard had failed to reflect that the Trojans had returned the block for a touchdown.

The final score was changed, but not the result.

The things is, sports are supposed to be visceral and immediate. They are joyously unpredicta­ble while, at the same time, offering a degree of resolution that most of us don’t get from the nuances of daily life.

As painful as it might be to see an unjust result, the thrill of college football would be ruined by appeals and bureaucrat­ic do-overs. Who wants their winner to be determined after the fact by a subsection buried deep within a rule book?

Besides, the wild finish in Stillwater, Okla., befit a day that was short on marquee matchups but highly entertaini­ng in its own way.

Tennessee’s victory over rebuilding Virginia Tech felt like something much bigger because it was held inside a converted NASCAR track with a record crowd of almost 157,000 in the stands.

For the second straight week, a player accounted for eight touchdowns in a game. Louisville quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson did it last week. This time, Arizona State running back Kalen Ballage ran for seven scores and caught a pass for another in his team’s 68-55 win over Texas Tech. His eight touchdowns tied an NCAA mark.

In Tuscaloosa, an otherwise dull Alabama-Western Kentucky game was enlivened by Coach Nick Saban going ballistic over his team’s sluggish performanc­e, screaming at offensive coordinato­r Lane Kiffin on the sideline.

“There are no arguments,” Saban said. “Those are called ass-chewings.”

The Crimson Tide remained entrenched at No. 1 in this week’s Associated Press media poll, their ranking unharmed by a less-than-impressive 38-10 win.

The same could not be said for Oklahoma State.

Voters dropped the formerly No. 22 Cowboys out of the top 25 on Sunday, though that situation — unlike Saturday’s outcome — might be rectified down the road.

Gone are the days of the Bowl Championsh­ip Series when computer algorithms had no code for an official’s bumble. The humans on the selection committee for the College Football Playoff have the reasoning and leeway to make allowances for what happened.

“The goal is still attainable,” Oklahoma State safety Jordan Sterns said after the game. “We just have to bounce back.”

Late Sunday afternoon, the MAC punished the eight officials who were on the field, suspending them for two games.

The Big 12 handed down a similar punishment for its two officials in the replay booth, adding that they will not be permitted to work a bowl game in the postseason.

None of that changed the winner and loser of the game. Nor should it have.

 ?? Brody Schmidt Associated Press ?? OKLAHOMA STATE linebacker Chad Whitener sits alone in the end zone while Central Michigan celebrates a last-second touchdown by Corey Willis, resulting in a 30-27 win over the Cowboys.
Brody Schmidt Associated Press OKLAHOMA STATE linebacker Chad Whitener sits alone in the end zone while Central Michigan celebrates a last-second touchdown by Corey Willis, resulting in a 30-27 win over the Cowboys.

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