Calgary Herald

NFL REACHES TENTATIVE DEAL WITH REFEREES

- BARRY WILNER

The NFL and the referees’ union have reached a tentative contract agreement, ending an impasse that began in June when the league locked out the officials and used replacemen­ts instead.

The NFL said it planned to have regular refs work Thursday night’s Cleveland-Baltimore game.

With league commission­er Roger Goodell at the table, the sides concluded two days of talks at midnight Thursday with the announceme­nt of a tentative eight-year deal, which must be ratified by the union’s 121 members.

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello tweeted “Pleased to report that an agreement has been reached with the NFL Referees Associatio­n. Details to follow.”

The replacemen­ts worked the first three weeks of games, triggering a wave of frustratio­n that threatened to disrupt the rest of the season. After a missed call cost the Green Bay Pack- ers a win on a chaotic final play at Seattle on Monday night, the two sides really got serious.

It was not certain who would work this week’s games, but ESPN reported regular refs will work Thursday night with Baltimore hosting Cleveland.

The union was seeking improved salaries, retirement benefits and other logistical issues for the part-time officials. The NFL has proposed a pension freeze and a higher 401(k) match, and it wants to hire 21 more officials to improve the quality of officiatin­g. The union has fought that, fearing it could lead to a loss of jobs for some of the current officials, as well as a reduction in overall compensati­on.

The NFL claimed its offers have included annual pay increases that could earn an experience­d official more than US$200,000 annually by 2018. The NFLRA has disputed the value of the proposal, insisting it means an overall reduction in compensati­on.

Replacemen­t refs aren’t new to the NFL. They worked the first week of games in 2001 before a deal was reached. But those officials came from the highest level of college football; the current replacemen­ts do not. Their ability to call fast-moving NFL games drew mounting criticism through Week 3, climaxing last weekend when ESPN analyst Jon Gruden called their work “tragic and comical.”

Those comments came during Monday Night Football, with Seattle beating Green Bay 14- 12 on a desperatio­n pass into the end zone on the final play. Packers safety M.D. Jennings had both hands on the ball in the end zone and when he fell to the ground, both Jennings and Seahawks receiver Golden Tate had their arms on the ball.

The closest official to the play — at the back of the end zone — signalled for the clock to stop, while another official at the sideline ran in and then signalled touchdown.

The NFL said in a statement Tuesday that the touchdown pass should not have been overturned — but acknowledg­ed Tate should have been called for offensive pass interferen­ce before the catch. The league also said there was no indisputab­le evidence to reverse the call made on the field.

Fines against two coaches for incidents involving the replacemen­ts were handed out Wednesday.

New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick was docked $50,000 for trying to grab an official’s arm Sunday to ask for an explanatio­n of a call after his team lost at Baltimore. And Washington offensive co-ordinator Kyle Shanahan was tagged for $25,000 for what the league called “abuse of officials” in the Redskins’ loss to Cincinnati on Sunday.

Players were in no mood for apologies from anyone.

“I’ll probably get in trouble for this, but you have to have competent people, ”said Carolina receiver Steve Smith. “And if you’re incompeten­t, get them out of there.”

Added Rams quarterbac­k Sam Bradford: “I just don’t think it’s fair to the fans, I don’t think it’s fair to us as players to go out there and have to deal with that week in and week out. I really hope that they’re as close as they say they are.”

They were. Finally.

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