Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Fox’s Pereira: Officials face big pressure

- By Joe Reedy

Mike Pereira knows the pressure Carl Cheffers and his officiatin­g crew will be under during the Super Bowl between the Chiefs and Eagles.

That’s because he either hired or promoted most of them.

As the NFL’s vice president of officiatin­g in 2008, Pereira promoted Cheffers from side judge to referee. After 14 years with the league, Pereira retired and joined Fox in 2010 as a rules analyst.

Pereira’s move to television paved the way for officials to continue to lend their expertise once they left the field. It has also increased scrutiny on officials with each replay decision or close call analyzed.

Pereira, who will be in the booth for his fifth Super Bowl with Fox, knows that a call in the biggest game of the season is the last thing an official wants to be known for.

“I’ve always felt you’re remembered by your performanc­e in the Super Bowl,” Pereira said. “There’s no doubt that those guys on the field feels the pressure. I think every official likes a challenge.”

Fox went into uncharted waters by hiring Pereira, so much so that neither party knew his role during the week. The original plan was for Pereira to write a column and create a video rulebook online so fans could learn the rules. It was a last-minute decision by then-Fox Sports president David Hill before the 2010 openers to have Pereira in the studio in Los Angeles in case there was a play that needed a rules interpreta­tion.

Pereira’s role has expanded to most weeks in the booth with Fox’s top broadcast team.

John Parry, who has been with ESPN since 2019, said the opinion of officials at the time Pereira started at Fox was good because it gave viewers a window into the decision-making process.

Opinions about rules analysts have also, at times, become polarizing, depending on the officials’ performanc­es. During the conference championsh­ip games, the hashtag #NFLRigged was trending on social media because of what many deemed to be poor calls.

In the case of Pereira, Parry, CBS’ Gene Steratore, and NBC’s Terry McAulay, sometimes the less they’re on the air, the better because it means there isn’t an officiatin­g controvers­y.

Both Pereira and Parry said the attention on Cheffers and his crew has ramped up because of what happened with calls in both conference championsh­ip games.

Parry compared it to when he was the referee for Super Bowl 53. The main topic leading into that game was the blown pass interferen­ce call between the Rams and Saints in the NFC title game.

“That’s all anyone talked about — how bad officiatin­g was, the wrong team went, and how can they not fix that? So you walk into Atlanta, and you know, every eye is on us. So the pressure for that one was huge,” said Parry, who will be part of ESPN’s Super Bowl feed to Australia.

Pereira said that Cheffers calling his second Super Bowl in three years is a positive, even if others point out what his crew did during the regular season and playoffs.

Super Bowl assignment­s are awarded to the top officials at each position.

“You’re hearing stuff about people saying, ‘Well, Carl’s crew called the most penalties this year,’ They did, but this isn’t a crew assignment, so it’s not a way to judge,” Pereira said. “I’ve got an ultimate comfort level on how Carl will do.

“As difficult as it was in the (conference) championsh­ip games, if you have a nice solid performanc­e, and nobody says anything about you on social media or in the newspapers afterward. It soothes a lot of nerves.”

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