The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Can NFL fix officiatin­g woes?

- By The Associated Press

This has been the year of the penalty in the NFL.

Not so much because more flags have been thrown in 2016 — through Week 15 teams were averaging 8.09 flags a game this season compared to 8.10 in 2015 — or because a larger-than-normal number of games have been decided by questionab­le calls.

More because the questionin­g of the competence of the officials began, literally, on opening day with a flurry of unflagged hits to the head of the reigning MVP, Cam Newton, and continued, in some form, virtually every week, without a stop.

Patterns? There weren’t any, in particular.

Phantom pass interferen­ce calls have been as common as unflagged hits to the head, the likes of which sent Newton to the commission­er’s office to discuss. There were petty calls for hugging refs (Earl Thomas) and throwing towels (Travis Kelce got ejected ), all underscore­d by a flurry of flags for celebratio­ns that grew more subversive the harder the NFL tried to curb them.

Replay worked — sometimes. But it didn’t change anything at the end of the Cowboys-Vikings game. Cedric Thornton wasn’t flagged even though he clearly hit Minnesota quarterbac­k Sam Bradford in the head as Bradford threw for a potential tying 2-point play.

Also not reviewed: The non-call for Richard Sherman’s takedown of Julio Jones at the end of the Seahawks-Falcons game; or a particular­ly poor spotting of the ball in an especially poorly called game between the Texans and Raiders.

“The scrutiny and the attention are at an all-time high on anything related to NFL, and that is a very positive thing,” said Dean Blandino, the NFL’s senior vice president of officiatin­g. “And sometimes it can be negative, and we understand that in officiatin­g.” What to do about all this? Nothing new here — there is no single answer, but merely a list of remedies the NFL has committed to and could consider in the offseason.

FULL-TIME REFEREES: The league is considerin­g hiring 17 full-time officials and increasing the size of officiatin­g crews from seven to eight. The part-time official has long been a staple of the league, and there’s good reason for it. Why would an official quit his day job for one with very little job security? Only if the league and the unions representi­ng the players and officials can figure out a way to guarantee full-time officials some job security will this work out. Even then, 17 full-time referees will only represent a bit more than 10 percent of the workforce.

“Over 60 percent of (questions from coaches) are not about calls made but those not made,” Blandino said. “So we could cover more of the field of play, which of course is a positive.”

PASS INTERFEREN­CE: It’s an almost annual cry: The NFL should consider changing its long-held rule on penalizing pass interferen­ce at the spot of the foul in favor of the more lenient college rule, which calls for only a 15-yard penalty.

If Mike Pereira, the former VP of officiatin­g for the NFL, could change one single thing in the NFL, this would be it.

“You can change the course of a game on one of those calls, and what if a referee’s not sure?” said Pereira, now an analyst for Fox.

The con to this is that it would now pay for a badly beaten defensive back to dive and tackle a receiver who was breaking open for a sure touchdown.

Of course, the league could consider a major and minor version of pass interferen­ce, though that has the potential to raise as many questions as it answers.

TARGETING REPLAY: Week 14 was Exhibit A, but hardly the only example of an instance in which officials could have used help from the booth to determine whether to eject a player for targeting to the head.

Darren Sproles of the Eagles was moving forward to field a punt when Deshazor Everett of the Redskins launched himself into Sproles and hit him helmet to helmet, knocking Sproles out of the game.

In college, this play might’ve been sent to the booth to determine if the rule calling for an automatic ejection should be enforced. The NFL does none of that, and Pereira explained that the call wasn’t as automatic as many outraged posters on social media made it sound.

“Sproles didn’t call for a fair catch, and you’ve got a guy running toward him, trying to time the hit with the ball behind him and he can’t see it,” he said. That doesn’t always make it a play worthy of an ejection, Pereira explained, but rather a timing play that went awry.

SPOTTING THE BALL: The Nov. 21 game between the Raiders and Texans may have been the worst-called game of the season.

Among the misses: a pair of questionab­le spots with the Texans trying to gain short yardage to keep a potentiall­y go-ahead drive going. Replays indicated the officials may have missed the spots both times. (That Texans coach Bill O’Brien didn’t challenge the first spot is another issue).

The league is looking into technology already used in soccer: inserting a chip into the football that would help officials locate the ball and make more accurate spots.

 ?? ED ZURGA - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Nov. 6 file photo, field Judge Mike Weatherfor­d, left, throws his cap toward Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) after Kelce, who was ejected for unsportsma­nlike conduct, threw a towel in his direction during the second half of an...
ED ZURGA - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Nov. 6 file photo, field Judge Mike Weatherfor­d, left, throws his cap toward Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) after Kelce, who was ejected for unsportsma­nlike conduct, threw a towel in his direction during the second half of an...

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