The Record (Troy, NY)

Patriots

-

field goal.

They couldn’t.

Tom Brady threw a 14yard TD pass with 23 seconds left.

O’Brien said Monday he thinks it was indeed a catch by Gronkowski.

“On the coach’s film, I really do,” O’Brien said. “He went up; he caught it; he kept both hands underneath it. Now relative to some TV angles and some other video angles that I’ve seen, maybe it was questionab­le. From the coach’s vantage point on the coach’s tape, it looked like a catch to me.”

We’ll never know what Al Riveron, the NFL’s senior vice president of officiatin­g, would have ruled. SEATTLE SLOW

Seahawks coach Pete Carroll was slow on the draw in Denver after Broncos rookie running back Royce Freeman put the ball on the ground for an appar-

ent fumble Sunday. But just like Brady in Foxborough, Case Keenum hustled up to the line and the Broncos got the next snap off quickly.

“They were going fast and I had a couple of seconds to throw it and I’ve got to find an official,” Carroll explained after Seattle’s 27-24 loss. “I threw it, but he said it was too late to call it, which I’m sure he was right about that. I just needed to respond a little bit faster. I didn’t hear the word from upstairs as quickly as I needed to get it executed before they hurried up.

“That’s how the hurryup does help you once in a while.”

Or hurt you.

FLAG FOOTBALL

There were 26 penalties enforced in the NFL opener between the Eagles and Falcons to go with offsetting penalties on a Philadelph­ia punt in the fourth quarter.

Eagles coach Doug Pederson, however, is convinced the officials acciden-

tally called a foul on them when it was actually on Atlanta.

The officials called holding on No. 39 of the Eagles even though there wasn’t anyone on the field for Philly wearing that number. Replays showed that No. 39 on the Falcons, Deante Burton, committed holding.

OUT OF SIGHT ...

Seattle six-time Pro Bowl safety Earl Thomas ended his holdout last week after his pay-me-or-trade-me demands were ignored by the Seahawks. He had an intercepti­on that set up Seattle’s first touchdown of the season.

Two-time Pro Bowl running back Le’Veon Bell stayed away from the Pittsburgh Steelers amid public criticism from some of his own offensive linemen. And his replacemen­t starred.

By reporting to the Seahawks last week, albeit begrudging­ly, Thomas assured he won’t miss out on his roughly $500,000 weekly paychecks, although he still wants more

than the $8.5 million he’ll make in 2018, in the final year of his contract.

“During the game I’m not thinking about it,” Thomas said. “I’m out here having fun with BMac (safety Bradley McDougald) and the guys. So, I’m not thinking about it. When I get asked about it, it definitely runs across my mind.”

Bell’s contract dispute triggered teammates to turn on him last week, when center Maurkice Pouncey said, “Honestly it’s a little selfish. I’m kind of (ticked) right now. It sucks that he’s not here. We’ll move on as a team.” That, they did.

On a day quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger struggled throwing three intercepti­ons and fumbling twice, Bell’s sub, James Conner, was steady, scoring two touchdowns, rushing for 135 yards and adding 57 more on five catches as the Steelers escaped Cleveland with a 21-21 tie.

His 192 total yards matched Bell’s best game from last season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States