The Peterborough Examiner

Elliott frustrated with NFL refs

- MAC ENGEL Fort Worth Star-Telegram

The NFL has a rulebook, which you can read for fun, but just don’t bother applying it to an actual NFL game.

Despite the league’s best intentions to outline what is and is not a penalty, and making a violent game “safe,” all infraction­s are not the same. With increasing regularity, nothing a ref calls makes any sense.

Starting with the first play of the game, the Cowboys’ 29-23 overtime win over the Philadelph­ia Eagles Sunday featured some of the most bewilderin­g officiatin­g from this season.

I asked Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott if the players are frustrated with the “pattern” of calls this season.

“I think a little bit, but what we do here is focus on what we can control. We can’t control what the refs do,” Elliott said. “We’ve just got to do our best if we’re penalized, we recover take that penalty and try to make the best of it. We did a great job recovering from penalties we have, especially late in the game.”

With 11:32 remaining, Elliott drew a 15-yard penalty for lowering his head and initiating contact to erase a 14-yard catch and run. He became the first offensive player to be penalized for such an infraction this season.

“I mean, when you’re on that sideline, I got to protect myself,” Elliott said. “And if a guy’s going low, I got to go low too. The rule is meant for the betterment of the game. The rule is for our safety and if there was illegal helmet-tohelmet contact on there, that’s something I need to go look at and work on. That’s not OK. It’s just a tough play.”

Official Clete Blakeman told a reporter after the game, “It applies to both offence and defence. The ruling was basically he lowered his head and initiated the contact against the defender with the helmet as it’s defined in the rulebook ... We feel good about the call. A couple of us had it as the same foul from different angles.”

No disagreein­g that, by definition, Elliott’s play was a penalty. No argument that implementi­ng such a rule will eventually force offensive players to simply keep their head up, thereby reducing the risk of injury.

The argument is that sort of hit is routine in an NFL game.

Speaking of tough plays and questionab­le calls, the Eagles began the game with one when Cowboys returner Jourdan Lewis clearly lost a fumble that the Eagles recovered on the opening kickoff. The ruling was that there was not a clear recovery.

“I knew I was down so I was not worried about it,” Lewis said after the game.

Uh yeah ... not sure the Eagles agree with that, especially after replays show he lost the ball before his knee was down, and the Eagles came up with the ball.

Blakeman said of that call: “We’ve got to have clear evidence that there was a fumble, which we did. We confirmed there was a fumble in the replay review. The second component of it is: was there a clear recovery? And that’s just what we couldn’t confirm with the angles we had ... so we had to stay with the ruling on the field.”

OK, moving on from that logic-defying explanatio­n, with 2:55 remaining in regulation, Eagles tight end Dallas Goedert caught a pass and turned it into a 75-yard touchdown. The play was overturned when officials called him for offensive pass interferen­ce that was questionab­le at best. And by questionab­le, I mean horrendous.

On the next play, Cowboys defensive end Randy Gregory was penalized for a roughing the passer that appeared to be anything but.

All in all, the Cowboys were penalized 11 times for 111 yards. The Eagles were penalized five times for 49 yards.

Exactly how many of those combined 16 penalties were actual infraction­s, we may never know. You can read the rulebook, but don’t expect those regulation­s to be anything other than selectivel­y enforced.

 ?? TOM FOX DALLAS MORNING NEWS ?? Philadelph­ia Eagles outside linebacker Kamu Grugier-Hill makes a diving tackle of Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott in the first quarter on Sunday.
TOM FOX DALLAS MORNING NEWS Philadelph­ia Eagles outside linebacker Kamu Grugier-Hill makes a diving tackle of Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott in the first quarter on Sunday.

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