Curl almost "intercepted" it, and it would have been the Rams ball at the 20. If that had happened, there would be no complaining about the play.
And even though "advancing a fumble" doesn't apply in this instance, it wasn't advanced, it bounced off of a guys helmet, then bounced out of the DBs arms and landed to his right, where Charbonet picked it up, taking over possession.
But we have this:
"Very interesting," coach Sean McVay said, via ESPN. "Didn't get a clear explanation of everything that went on just because of some of the timing of it.
"I've never seen anything or never been a part of anything like that. And I've grown up around this game. I'm not making excuses. We don't do that. I don't believe in that. It doesn't move us forward, but we do want clarity and an understanding of the things that we can do to minimize that when we rejected the two-point conversion."
Matthew Stafford, who became the fifth player in NFL history with 450-plus pass yards, 3-plus pass TDs and 0 INTs in a loss (Jared Goff, Andrew Luck, Ben Roethlisberger, Matt Cassel), wondered how a fumble can be advanced in that situation.
"I just want to know that rule," Stafford said, per the L.A. Daily News. "Because I thought on plays like that -- two-minute plays or two-point plays, inside of two minutes and stuff -- I didn't think you were allowed to advance a fumble."
A Seahawks two-point fourth-quarter attempt was initially ruled incomplete but overturned into a fumble and score, allowing Seattle to tie the score. The play was one part of a 16-point collapse for the Los Angeles Rams on Thursday night.
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