Fireballs seen in Texas sky

I often check out a few different Web sites to find out if anything of interest is happening in outer space when I came across a story that really caught my attention on spaceweather.com.It was a story about fireballs streaming across the Texas sky on Sunday. The thought from residents was that this was debris from the Iridium 33 and Kosmos 2251 satellites that collided Feb. 10. It turns out that researchers studied the video and crunched some numbers only to conclude that it was most likely a natural meteoroid hitting the Earth’s atmosphere.I read on and found that people living in central Kentucky witnessed a similar event on Feb. 13 only hours after another fireball was spotted over Italy. I realize that meteorites hit the Earth every day, but could it be more than a coincidence that these ‘large fireballs’ follow the fallout of two satellites colliding?In theory, there is enough space above the Earth’s surface to allow plenty of satellites to orbit the planet. The space between most of these satellites spans many thousands, if not, hundreds of thousands of miles of space, but with private companies and several countries lofting their satellites into the unknown this will become a more common headline. What are your thoughts?