Incredible, improbable, unreal, insane. Whatever adjectives you use to describe it, Arizona State's victory in the last 18 seconds Saturday night against Wisconsin is something that never has and probably never will be seen again in a college football game. Check out some of the tweets that came across in the reaction to the end of the game.

ASU wins! Clock ran down. Wisconsin thought clock had stopped! — House of Sparky (@HouseOfSparky) September 15, 2013

It's all over, the referees ran off the field after this without giving much of an explanation, ASU wins 32-30.

Here's the facts: Stave took a knee and whistle blew with 15 seconds left. Anything after that is incompetence by the officials. #Badgers — Tom Oates (@TomOatesWSJ) September 15, 2013

Fine, you know what? He kneeled the ball. However he should have given the ball to the referee right then and there. Instead he placed the ball himself which understandably flustered the officials.

Stave’s knee never hit the ground… he just placed it there. It’s a fumble. — Bryan Fischer (@BryanDFischer) September 15, 2013

This is the other side of the argument. Arizona State fell on the ball but the play was already blown dead so it technically should have been a delay of game penalty.

Raise your hand if you had this one ending with a botched downing the ball/possible fumble/time running out play. — Doug Haller (@DougHaller) September 15, 2013

*Keeps hand down* with everyone else in the entire country.

Unbelievable. — Badger Football (@BadgerFootball) September 15, 2013

The official Wisconsin football twitter account is speechless.

You need to watch the final seconds of the Wisconsin-Arizona State game. http://t.co/r07EzMuLRY Wow. — Buster Olney (@Buster_ESPN) September 15, 2013

Even ESPN baseball insider Buster Olney switched sports momentarily.

I've watched the end of Wisconsin-Arizona State and remain confused. Also, dumb Wisky. Dumb refs. http://t.co/wV6OcU48mw via @thebiglead — Jason McIntyre (@jasonrmcintyre) September 15, 2013

McIntyre echoes most people here. Still confused and believe fault lies equally with referees and the Badgers

Players pointing to clock, Ref giving stiff arm to them. Doesn't make sense pic.twitter.com/aN4uId8gTC — Mike Hall (@BTNMikeHall) September 15, 2013

Just chaos, no way to explain it for the time being at least.

What a bizarre ending to a GREAT game between Wisconsin and Arizona State. Refs blew it but will they be held accountable? — Desmond Howard (@DesmondHoward) September 15, 2013

How can anyone believe that was a fumble or that the officials thought it was a fumble? Sweet geezus. #Badgers — Jeff Potrykus (@jaypo1961) September 15, 2013

Potrykus is the Wisconsin beat reporter for the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinal.

From replay, looks like Stave downed the ball. So that rules out the fumble. Badgers wait for officials to do something. Officials never did — Doug Haller (@DougHaller) September 15, 2013

Your Arizona Republic beat writer chiming in. Sure Stave downed it but then put the ball down himself instead of giving it to a referee to spot, that is where things went wrong.

As I said on-air, I'm shocked the officials took so long to spot the ball. Should've been delay of game on ASU but officials seem confused. — Dave Pasch (@DavePasch) September 15, 2013

About ASU last night, Wisconsin should have had another play. QB's knee was down. ASU laid on the ball - timeout should have been called. — Mike Pereira (@MikePereira) September 15, 2013

Mike Pereira's opinion carries a lot of weight, only problem is Wisconsin didn't have time out and their was nothing to review on the play.

To be clear the officials spotted the ball-whistle blew-QB was called down on the field. The issue was w/ ASU laying on the ball!! — Kirk Herbstreit (@KirkHerbstreit) September 15, 2013

No statement re: Pac-12 officiating planned for today (ASU-UW). Normal review process. Plays and officiating calls reviewed Monday. — Joe Schad (@schadjoe) September 15, 2013

It will certainly be interesting to see what comes out of this.

Editor's Note: Larry Scott has spoken and it isn't pretty for the officials who lacked any sense of urgency at the end of Saturday night's game. The Pac-12 released the following statement.