NFL Admits Another Officiating Error, Says It Will Consider Changes to Replay System After Botched Steelers-Packers Call

by abournenesn

Dec 24, 2013

Mike TomlinNFL officiating has been under a very careful microscope this season, as it seems that there have been more errors than usual in 2013. And the league has been forthright in admitting at least some of its errors.

NFL vice president of officiating Dean Blandino went on NFL Newtork’s Total Access on Tuesday, as he does every week, and admitted the officials in the Packers-Steelers game on Sunday made a major error on a crucial blocked field goal.

The Steelers blocked a Packers field goal in the third quarter, leading to a scrum for the loose football along the sideline. During the scramble, Steelers safety Ryan Clark briefly gained possession and, while still on the ground, pitched the ball back unsuccessfully toward his teammate. The ball ultimately rolled toward the sideline, where one Steelers players swatted it out of bounds. The swat earned the Steelers a penalty and, since the officials ruled that the Steelers never fully established possession, almost inexplicably gave Green Bay the ball back. Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin tried to review the play, seeing as Clark appeared to have possession on the play, but was not allowed under NFL rules.

“He’s going to gain control, and it actually looks like he throws a backward pass, so had this been reviewable, I think we could have overturned this,” Blandino said.

The play is not reviewable under the league’s current replay review system, which is just another case for the system to expand and allow coaches more leeway in what plays they can challenge. Blandino seems to agree that the system needs to be changed, even acknowledging that the competition committee should reconsider what should and shouldn’t be reviewable.

“It’s important to remember that this is not reviewable,” Blandino said of the play.” “The ruling on the field of whether Clark possessed it or not is not a reviewable aspect, and that’s something the competition committee has looked at in the past, and I’m sure they’ll continue to look at.”

The competition committee won’t meet until the offseason, meaning teams will need to deal with the current replay review standards at least until the end of this season.

Have a question for Luke Hughes? Send it to him via Twitter at @LukeFHughes or send it here.

Previous Article

Mike D’Antoni Suggests Disgruntled Lakers Fans Should ‘Find Another Team to Root For’

Next Article

Report: Dion Phaneuf’s Contract Extension Could Be Finalized by New Year’s Day

Picked For You