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The on-side kick was not a "bouncer." It DID NOT hit the ground before Coleman touched it.
A Fair Catch Anyone ??
Check the rules - Including kickoffs

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Kaiser Toro said:Hate on him all you want, but at least I know we got a guy on a 1-10 team that is trying to make plays for this team on and off the field.
TEXANS84 said:After the touchdown that was given up against Jason Bell in the north endzone, Jason Bell was screaming at Marcus Coleman for not going coming over for help.
billtxus said:NO WAY Coleman should intercept the ball on 4th down. The odds of running it back for a TD are low, the odds of getting poorer field position are high. Plus the possibility of the fumble, which happened. The CORRECT play since I was in high school was to knock the ball down. He is supposed to be a professional, and supposed to know how to play his position. He should be released, and so should Capers so they can start evaluating people for next year.
Coleman was slow to react on that play and all day long for that matter. He should have been there, no question about it. Sorry, the dude cannot play the position and it shows on the field.Kaiser Toro said:I watched the replay again of Holt's TD and it was not all Coleman's fault. Remember you had a CB in Bell that has barely played and was quite animated after the catch. That does not necessarily add up to a mistake by Coleman.
Kaiser Toro said:Coleman makes an interception and then fumbles the ball, he should definetley be cooked for this.![]()
He is the last man standing after a very good onside kick that had gone past ten yards. I am sure all of you would have fielded the ball differently, perhaps a fair catch when one is not allowed?![]()
I watched the replay again of Holt's TD and it was not all Coleman's fault. Remember you had a CB in Bell that has barely played and was quite animated after the catch. That does not necessarily add up to a mistake by Coleman.
If you remember Coleman was the one who spoke up in the press about the D needing to be aggressive and they were in the first half.
Hate on him all you want, but at least I know we got a guy on a 1-10 team that is trying to make plays for this team on and off the field.
mean mark8 said:for the refs.
On Tivo, can you see who lined up where for that kick? Where were Derick Armstrong (best hands), Andre Johnson (big guy with good hands), Jabbar Gaffney, Domanick Davis, Vernand Morency, Jonathan Wells, Tony Hollings, Rivers, and other OFFENSIVE players who are used to catching a ball and getting hit? Who failed to block the guys who came in clean to clock Coleman? It just looked like about the poorest execution of fielding an on-side kick I've ever seen.
Good post...welcome aboardknowyourfootball said:First lets understand that that was the Texans hands team, and secondly lets understand how the majority of NFL "hands" teams differ from college or high school...With NFL hands teams there is a front line and then behind them there is two to three more guys. One of these three guys is designated the "ball guy"...His only job is to get the ball while everyone else's job is specifically to block and keep the kicking team members off of the "ball guy" and are not to go after the ball or touch it unless it is kicked directly to them. The Rams executed a kick which is call a "bomb" kick. The kicker drives the ball into the ground, which is very hard to do on natural grass and im also told very painful for kickers to do so, and renders the ball live and not eligible for a fair catch... if executed perfectly and only perfectly, which it most certainly was, will result with a member of the recieving team being "blown up", hense the word "bomb" kick,and jarring the ball loose..
Gmurrie said:Saw your post and couldn't help but go back and look at the replay on dvr. The kick bounced immediately after it was kicked and bounced a mile in the air.
I'm not saying Coleman shouldn't wear goat horns after his mistakes yesterday, but that kick did hit the ground...
So what happens on a "non-bomb" on-sides kick against us? We have just linebackers there to recover the ball? Why not have running backs and TEs lined up on the first line with the hands guys being wide-receivers behind them. If what you're saying is true, wouldn't it make sense to have the "ball guy" be our best-hands player on the team, Derrick Armstrong? Was Armstrong even on the field? Or AJ or Gaffney or DD? I just don't believe that Marcus Coleman is the best choice to have lined up as a "hands guy." JMO.knowyourfootball said:First lets understand that that was the Texans hands team, and secondly lets understand how the majority of NFL "hands" teams differ from college or high school...With NFL hands teams there is a front line and then behind them there is two to three more guys. One of these three guys is designated the "ball guy"...His only job is to get the ball while everyone else's job is specifically to block and keep the kicking team members off of the "ball guy" and are not to go after the ball or touch it unless it is kicked directly to them. The Rams executed a kick which is call a "bomb" kick. The kicker drives the ball into the ground, which is very hard to do on natural grass and im also told very painful for kickers to do so, and renders the ball live and not eligible for a fair catch... if executed perfectly and only perfectly, which it most certainly was, will result with a member of the recieving team being "blown up", hense the word "bomb" kick,and jarring the ball loose..
mean mark8 said:...
As I've said before, I don't have the game taped or on Tivo, but I saw it replayed several times on channel 13 last night and I never saw it hit the ground. Doesn't mean it didn't happen, I just couldn't see it from the replays they showed. I think in any case, Coleman could've or should've given a fair catch signal to at least make the defenders question whether they could hit him or not and/or create a reviewable scenario for the refs.