The Province

GET THE REF OUT

Harassed NFL officials moved to different New Orleans hotel

- JOHN KRYK jokryk@postmedia.com @JohnKryk

NEW ORLEANS — The NFL officiatin­g crew that worked the NFC championsh­ip game was moved to a different suburban hotel Sunday night, after being harassed both in person and even by cellphone at their first downtown hotel, Postmedia has learned.

According to multiple witnesses, who agreed to share what they saw and learned in exchange for anonymity, a half-dozen or more yellow-jacketed event security staff, plus NFL security personnel as well as at least one local law-enforcemen­t officer, escorted the game officials off a bus and to the front desk of the second hotel, to check in.

There, in an otherwise near empty lobby, one game official (not referee Bill Vinovich) continuall­y received harassing cellphone calls, multiple witnesses told Postmedia, including a hotel guest from San Antonio.

Finally, a sheriff officer took the cellphone from the beleaguere­d official and ordered the caller to cease, or face prosecutio­n.

The guest from San Antonio said a friend of his, who accompanie­d him to New Orleans, saw what appeared to be two plaincloth­es security guards stationed outside a room on the hotel’s fifth floor, throughout the night. Another witness confirmed this.

All game officials checked out of the suburban hotel by mid-morning Monday, without incident during their stay, sources said.

The NFL confirmed to Postmedia through a spokesman that officials did relocate to a different hotel on Sunday night, but said there was no threat to their safety and no issues involved, just a switch made out of an abundance of caution.

As well, it is standard procedure for security people to accompany officiatin­g crews during the playoffs.

The bus that relocated the officials from their downtown hotel arrived in suburbia at about 7:30 p.m. CST, approximat­ely four hours after the Los Angeles Rams defeated the host New Orleans Saints 26-23 in overtime to win the NFC championsh­ip and advance to Super Bowl LIII, witness sources said.

About 30-45 minutes later after arriving at the second hotel on Sunday night, at least five members of the officiatin­g crew came down from their rooms and watched some of the AFC Championsh­ip Game at the lobby bar, and ordered food and drinks, including wings.

Saints fans and millions of bettors are livid that neither of two officials close by on a critical play late in the fourth quarter — side judge Gary Cavaletto and down judge Patrick Turner — threw a flag for what appeared to be obvious defensive pass interferen­ce by Rams cornerback Nickell Robey-Coleman, on Saints receiver Tommylee Lewis. It was a third-and-10 play from the Rams’ 13-yard line with 1:49 remaining in the fourth and the score tied 20-20.

If pass interferen­ce had been called on Robey-Coleman, the Saints would have been awarded an automatic first-and-goal at the Rams’ six-yard line, on a half-the-distance-to-the-goal walk-off.

As it was, denied a chance to burn more game clock and score a possible winning touchdown, the Saints had to settle for a field goal, to go up 23-20 — their last lead of the game and, as it turned out, in their 2018 season.

That’s because they left enough time for the Rams to tie it in regulation, then win it in overtime, on two long Greg Zuerlein field goals.

Robey-Coleman admitted afterward he slammed hard and recklessly into Lewis, well before the ball arrived. Robey-Coleman said he definitely was in the “wrong” in hitting Lewis too early, before the ball arrived, and said he hoped not to see penalty flags on the field as he got to his feet.

“I was looking for laundry,” Robey-Coleman said. “I had to! It was natural, because I knew I was ... wrong.”

Saints head coach Sean Payton said the NFL’s senior VP of officiatin­g, Al Riveron, told him by phone minutes after the game that Cavaletto and Turner “blew the call” and that “not only was it interferen­ce, it was (illegal) helmet-to-helmet.”

Numerous reports later confirmed Payton’s version and the nature of Riveron’s post-game call to him.

Referee Vinovich afterward told a pool reporter: “It was a judgment call by the covering official. I personally have not seen the play.” The NFL makes only the referee from any officiatin­g crew available for post-game interview by a host team’s designated local pool reporter.

The league on Monday reiterated it will not offer any immediate, additional comment on the matter, beyond the pool report and confirmed reports of Riveron’s post-game conversati­ons with Payton.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? Referee Bill Vinovich and his crew had to be relocated to a different hotel after Sunday’s controvers­ial NFC championsh­ip game.
— GETTY IMAGES Referee Bill Vinovich and his crew had to be relocated to a different hotel after Sunday’s controvers­ial NFC championsh­ip game.
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