USA TODAY US Edition

Pereira understand­s difficulty of job

NFL’s new director of officials Riveron faces scrutiny, pressure

- Jarrett Bell jbell@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports FOLLOW NFL COLUMNIST JARRETT BELL @JarrettBel­l for commentary and analysis from the league.

Mike Pereira chuckled when asked whether he missed his old job.

“I think I can do without those 80-hour workweeks during the season,” Pereira, who served nine years as the NFL’s director of officiatin­g, told USA TODAY Sports last week.

He left the rigors and, well, perks of overseeing the game officials to become the high-profile rules analyst for Fox in 2010 — and now often second-guesses the officials on national TV.

“There’s a shelf life with that job,” added Pereira, 67. “I think I took it right to the edge. The loss of sharpness was evident. In my prime, I could cite the page where you could find something in the rule book, the article and even exceptions to the rules, without looking at rule book. Toward the end, I had to think about it.”

Sure, it was a loaded question. Pereira was speaking from San Sebastian, Spain, a coastal resort town in the Basque Country, winding down from an extended getaway. Clearly in vacation mode, it was after 10 p.m. local time, and he still hadn’t made it to the restaurant for dinner. The intense, highly scrutinize­d regimen of his old job was way in the rearview mirror.

Yet here was the purpose of the reminder: If there’s anyone who can sense the challenge confrontin­g Alberto Riveron, recently named the NFL’s new director of officiatin­g, it’s Pereira.

“It’s the second-hardest job in the league,” Pereira declared. “I’ll give Roger (Goodell) the toughest job. As commission­er, he deals with everything, plus 32 owners. But it’s hard. There’s so much volatility. You don’t make friends in that post. You make enemies.”

The frequency of turnover in the position is hardly lost on Pereira. Riveron, 57, will be the third new officiatin­g chief in eight years, after Dean Blandino and Carl Johnson, raising questions about the organizati­onal consistenc­y. Through Pereira’s final season, the NFL had just three officiatin­g directors — including Jerry Seeman and Art McNally — in 41 years.

Blandino, who headed the department for four years, is a tough act to follow.

“A lot of people in the league will miss Dean,” Periera said. “It makes it very hard for Al. He’s got size 16s he’s got to fill.”

Blandino, who reportedly will soon work for a network, too, earned tremendous respect despite having never worked on the field as a game official, which each director dating to McNally had on his résumé. The relationsh­ips that Pereira developed in communicat­ing with the teams and his ability to explain controvers­ial calls to media and fans, which included a vibrant social media presence, were essential to his role.

Now Riveron will be the ultimate authority as senior vice president of officiatin­g, the transition aided by his years as Blandino’s right-hand man.

“The jury is out,” Pereira said. “How he will relate to the coaches, general managers, the media will be so important.”

In promoting Riveron, the league restructur­ed the officiatin­g hierarchy. Although Riveron is responsibl­e for the entire de- partment, Russell Yurk was named vice president of instant replay and administra­tion and Wayne Mackie became vice president of evaluation and developmen­t. The moves appear to ease some of the burden of responsibi­lity for Riveron.

“Dean was going to do that if he stayed,” Pereira said. “That plan was already in the works. The job has become so much bigger.”

It’s not only tougher, Pereira added, because the league is implementi­ng centralize­d instant replay this year. Exposure has added to the pressure.

“Social media amplifies everything,” Pereira said. “I don’t think there are more mistakes, but more people are talking about it. Before there might have been a mistake somewhere, and it’s, ‘Well, nobody’s going to see it.’ Not anymore. Now a mistake in Buffalo is tweeted by a fan and it’s everywhere. That makes it a lot more difficult.

“There’s more pressure nowadays to be perfect, which is impossible.”

That’s why Riveron’s ability to establish himself as a credible voice in addressing the controvers­ial calls will be a crucial subplot during the coming season.

This while every replay decision will flow through the nerve center at NFL headquarte­rs in New York.

“I get what they’re doing,” Pereira said. “They are trying to speed it up.”

But Pereira is no fan of centralize­d replay, sensing that on-field officials are now less empowered.

“I’m kind of in one of those camps where I feel like it hurts officiatin­g,” he said. “It gives them a bit of a crutch.”

When replay was reinstalle­d in 1999, the prevailing sentiment allowed the calls to remain under the power of the referee, who would review the plays on a monitor at field level. This season, referees will be able to review the plays on a tablet while in communicat­ion with headquarte­rs, but the ultimate decisions will be out of their hands.

Officials have traditiona­lly been viewed as an entity that, while paid by the NFL, operated in a zone that was separate from the teams and the league office.

Now Pereira senses the lines are blurred with rulings to come from league-paid employees who spend their weeks at headquarte­rs.

“There’s no buffer now,” Pereira said.

That, too, he senses, will add to the pressure of the man now in the tough job that burned him out.

 ?? 2014 PHOTO BY TIMOTHY T. LUDWIG, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? NFL referees will ditch the replay booth for tablets this season, and the league will ultimately make decisions from New York.
2014 PHOTO BY TIMOTHY T. LUDWIG, USA TODAY SPORTS NFL referees will ditch the replay booth for tablets this season, and the league will ultimately make decisions from New York.
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