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Lobby Okay Sports topic #2681725

Subject: "NFL Officiating" Previous topic | Next topic
legsdiamond
Member since May 05th 2011
79574 posts
Thu Dec-13-18 08:22 AM

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"NFL Officiating"


          

prolly the worst year since 2001 and the tuck rule. Is it Vegas?


http://www.espn.com/blog/nflnation/post/_/id/289455/the-nfls-odd-offensive-holding-blip-what-happened

In the days leading up to Week 13, the NFL sent a video to its on-field officials. It revealed a series of missed offensive holding penalties and delivered a clear and unusual directive. Moving forward, the foul was to be strictly enforced.


You won't believe what happened next.

Officials didn't simply step up enforcement. They threw 42 percent more offensive holding flags (94) than they had in any week since at least 2012. In searching through the ESPN Stats & Information database, I couldn't find a week with more than 66 such calls over that time period.

In Week 14, the rate dropped back to normal range (62). It is not clear if the NFL ordered a reversal of its previous edict, but the numbers do reflect a softer approach. Regardless, the episode represented at least the third instance this season of a massive penalty spike appearing and disappearing with apparent intention, an unusually stark window into how the league manages penalty intensity throughout a season.

The NFL has experienced its usual count of officiating controversies in 2018, most recently a missed call Monday night on an illegally blocked field goal by Seattle Seahawks linebacker Bobby Wagner. But as aggravating as those mistakes are to fans and teams, they are inevitable as long as humans are doing the officiating.

On the other hand, the spikes we have seen this season are unusual and not necessarily the result of judgment errors or poor technique by players. They are intentional, purposeful changes in enforcement. The league has acknowledged some and been silent on others.

It began in the preseason with a two-stage slowdown in calling the new use of helmet rule. The league issued a clarification after officials threw 51 such flags in the first 33 preseason games. There were only 20 calls over the final 32 preseason games, and then just eight in the first 12 weeks of the regular season.

In Week 4, the league announced a clarification to stem a wave of roughing the passer flags. After calling an average of 11.3 per week in the first three weeks, officials slowed its pace by about 45 percent to an average of six per week.

The holding extravaganza was less public, though. Former NFL vice president of officiating Mike Pereira said on Fox Sports during Week 14's Thursday Night Football game between the Tennessee Titans and Jacksonville Jaguars that the league had issued a "point of emphasis" and was "trying to get more holding calls." The league would not confirm this when I inquired.

Nor has the league acknowledged publicly a recent increase in enforcement of the helmet rule. There have been six such calls in the past two weeks, including the first against an offensive player, bringing the season total to 14. The uptick times with public outcry over a missed violation against Dallas Cowboys linebacker Jaylon Smith in Week 13, on a hit against New Orleans Saints tailback Alvin Kamara. (Smith received a $26,739 fine for the hit.)

The motivation behind the holding spike is less clear. Why would the league want to make it harder for linemen to protect quarterbacks in a year of unprecedented passing numbers and improved television ratings?

Entering Week 13, the league was about 10 percent below last season's pace on offensive holding calls. But after 14 weeks, the numbers are almost identical. There have been 691 holding calls this season, compared with 690 calls at this point in 2017.

Is it possible that NFL players are holding at the exact same rate as they did in 2017? Perhaps. But what's clear is that the foul is now being officiated at precisely the same rate.

Considering that offensive holding is the most common NFL penalty at this moment, it's worth pointing out a larger trend. In 2014, NFL officials threw a total of 4,093 flags for all types of penalties.

That number was 4,180 in 2015.

And 4,048 in 2016.

And 4,044 last season.

After 14 games of 2018, the NFL is on pace for 4,071 flags. If the goal is penalty consistency, real or manipulated, the NFL is back on track in 2018.

What to make of this apparent approach? The good news is that the Week 13 spike doesn't appear to have impacted the outcome of any games in an obvious way. The calls were evenly split among winners (47) and losers (47) of games that week.

But "strict enforcement" means different things to different officials. Referee Shawn Hochuli's crew, which has the highest penalty rate in the NFL this season, threw 10 holding penalties on the offense in Week 13 (and another 10 in Week 14 for good measure). Games like that aren't fun to watch and feed the perception of officiating "taking over" a game.

Meanwhile, referee Bill Vinovich's crew -- which annually ranks near the bottom of flag frequency -- threw five in Week 13. For the season, Hochuli's crew has thrown nearly four times the number of flags for offensive holding (69) as has Vinovich's (18).

Ultimately, we want consistency from officials in all sports. It can be difficult to achieve among each of the NFL's 121 officials. In the aggregate, however, it is possible.

I wouldn't expect the NFL to say publicly it will enforce rules more strictly in some weeks than others. And not all of this season's spikes can be attributed to the goal of consistency. But in the big picture, the numbers speak for themselves.

****************
TBH the fact that you're even a mod here fits squarely within Jag's narrative of OK-sanctioned aggression, bullying, and toxicity. *shrug*

  

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
RE: NFL Officiating
Dec 13th 2018
1
that called back touchdown in the 4th was straight up NBA
Dec 13th 2018
2
      Yeah that was bad too...
Dec 14th 2018
4
Tonight's game was pretty bad both ways
Dec 14th 2018
3
The defensive holding call was embarrassing
Dec 14th 2018
5
hold call against KC seemed like direct make up for helmet hit
Dec 14th 2018
6

hip bopper
Member since Jun 22nd 2003
7385 posts
Thu Dec-13-18 09:22 PM

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1. "RE: NFL Officiating"
In response to Reply # 0


          

The Eagles-Cowboys play at the beginning of the games was the worst that I’ve seen. It wasn’t a flag, but it was plain the see that the ball was recovered by the Eagles. The refs have made the NFL unwatchable.

  

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Dr Claw
Member since Jun 25th 2003
132214 posts
Thu Dec-13-18 11:02 PM

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2. "that called back touchdown in the 4th was straight up NBA"
In response to Reply # 1


  

          

I'd be 90x more mad about it if Wentz didn't lead them to another TD, but they made a makeup call right after, because they knew they effed up.

  

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hip bopper
Member since Jun 22nd 2003
7385 posts
Fri Dec-14-18 07:09 AM

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4. "Yeah that was bad too..."
In response to Reply # 2


          

They really set the tone at the beginning by missing that call on the fumble recovery. If Eagles get the ball and score, then who knows how that game would’ve played out. Eagles would’ve had a ton of momentum.

  

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Selassie I God
Member since Feb 21st 2006
10355 posts
Fri Dec-14-18 12:12 AM

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3. "Tonight's game was pretty bad both ways"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Phantom defensive holding calls, the non-call of helmet to helmet and the pass interference at the end in the end zone were all terrible, but it went both ways, so...

____
Some will tell you that they love you but they've got an ulterior motive - Oh what a shame
They will tell you that they need you but they've got an ulterior motive - Personal gain

(c) Luciano


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fg0-qndkemo

  

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legsdiamond
Member since May 05th 2011
79574 posts
Fri Dec-14-18 09:17 AM

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5. "The defensive holding call was embarrassing "
In response to Reply # 3


          

It’s sad hearing the announcers try to lie about seeing these calls

I like when they admit they didn’t think it was worthy of a flag but usually they say “there was a bit of a hold”

No... no there wasn’t.

****************
TBH the fact that you're even a mod here fits squarely within Jag's narrative of OK-sanctioned aggression, bullying, and toxicity. *shrug*

  

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smutsboy
Member since Jun 29th 2002
33301 posts
Fri Dec-14-18 09:40 AM

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6. "hold call against KC seemed like direct make up for helmet hit"
In response to Reply # 3


  

          

  

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