Martz blames officials for poor play call
Really, check it out.
Criticized after the game for a bizarre choice of plays, Martz said nothing to reporters and took the heat. The team’s head coach and players took the heat, too, with Mike Singletary saying that Robinson got the call because “Coach Martz felt that there would be a cavity inside, so he made that call. So you’ve got to live with the result.”
That doesn’t mean they have to live happily ever after. In fact, Martz is steamed about how Monday’s game concluded. He made the call, all right, but he made it before officials re-spotted the football following a replay review and started the clock with three seconds remaining.
That makes a difference, a big difference, and I know because I spoke to Martz on Tuesday morning.
“It cost us the game,” he said. “We go to the 1 — or the half-yard line — then spike the ball when, all of a sudden, officials tell us they’re going to look at the replay. While they’re looking at it, the ball stays at the 1. So we send in a play. Then, when they make their decision, they move the ball back to the 2½ and tell us they’re going to start the clock on the official’s wind.
“We couldn’t change the play. We had to go with what we called. If it would’ve been at the 1, we would’ve made it. But they moved it and didn’t give us any time. So what are we going to do? If they would’ve moved it to the 10 we still would’ve had to run the play that was called. We got screwed because of the spot, first and foremost.”
That might need an explanation. Because officials overruled San Francisco quarterback Shaun Hill’s spike, there was no dead ball. And no dead ball means the clock doesn’t stop. San Francisco didn’t have a timeout left, so it had exactly three seconds to produce a game-winning play.
At that point, Martz said, the 49ers could do nothing but run what he called. And what he called, was a play designed to score from the 1, not the 2½.
“Obviously, if we had had time we wouldn’t have called that play for that situation,” he said. “We would’ve called a double fade and passed it. I didn’t expect anything like that. We had no recourse. We got screwed every way possible.” (Source and the league’s defense)
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