Fort Dorchester 28 Spring Valley 14 ... Final
Re: Fort Dorchester 28 Spring Valley 14 ... Final
The ball hit a sv player. The second onside was a live ball. Anyway. Even a guy who sat near me who had no dog in the fight even question the refs motives early on but were fair for both side in the second half
- Wavefan70s
- Summerville Green Wave
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- Joined: Tue Feb 12, 2013 6:47 pm
Re: Fort Dorchester 28 Spring Valley 14 ... Final
You guys should a seen some of the calls in the doorman game.gguy 5 yds from the play no flag.dude literally 40 plus yds and with 12 to 15 players in the way flinging flags.it got better in the third and early 4th.but Early on it was perplexing.
Re: Fort Dorchester 28 Spring Valley 14 ... Final
Wow. 3 calls that made our crowd go nuts was first the no call on the face mask where the jerked Joyner head around. The second was the dead ball personal foul where sv was jumping around begging for a call that they got. And the obvious no call on the holding on the td pass. Last was the miss on the onside kick. But the pf and no holding calls help them score. No pf no pts early on for sv
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OnlineSF Band dad
- South Florence Bruins
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- Location: Florence
Re: Fort Dorchester 28 Spring Valley 14 ... Final
I really wish we had video of all these incidents. We could post video clips on-line and do our own version of the old NFL "You Make the Call" segments.
Hmmm?
Most of the schools are public, the recordings they make of the games are arguably public records that are subject to FOIA requests. This could be fun....
www.scpress.org/Documents/citizen.pdf
" PUBLIC RECORDS
The law says public records include all books, papers, maps, photographs, cards, tapes, recordings, or other documentary material regardless of physical form or characteristics that is prepared, owned, used, in the possession of, or retained by a public body. This includes electronic records such as emails. The FOIA does not require a public body to create a record that doesn’t already exist. If part of a document can legally be shielded from release, that doesn’t mean the entire document may be withheld. The agency must separate the exempt data and release the rest of it (this usually means taking a marker and blacking out some information). "
Hmmm?
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Most of the schools are public, the recordings they make of the games are arguably public records that are subject to FOIA requests. This could be fun....
www.scpress.org/Documents/citizen.pdf
" PUBLIC RECORDS
The law says public records include all books, papers, maps, photographs, cards, tapes, recordings, or other documentary material regardless of physical form or characteristics that is prepared, owned, used, in the possession of, or retained by a public body. This includes electronic records such as emails. The FOIA does not require a public body to create a record that doesn’t already exist. If part of a document can legally be shielded from release, that doesn’t mean the entire document may be withheld. The agency must separate the exempt data and release the rest of it (this usually means taking a marker and blacking out some information). "