Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Owners add pass interference to replay review
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March 26, 2019 at 9:28 pm #99318znModerator
Owners add pass interference to replay review
Mike Florio
Owners add pass interference to replay review
The NFL finally has done the right thing.
Pass interference will now be among the plays subject to replay review. It will apply both to offensive and defensive interference. And it will apply to calls and non-calls.
Coaches will be permitted to challenge calls and non-calls of pass interference, and the replay official will initiate the process in the final two minutes of each half and overtime.
The league had resisted making pass interference subject to replay review for years, arguing that it is a “judgment call.” In some situations, however, judgement is horribly exercised.
As owners exited the room, Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said (via Darin Gantt of PFT), “We got better in there.”
Indeed they did. This is the solution for the non-call that marred the NFC Championship, with Rams defensive back Nickell Robey-Coleman wiping out now-former Saints receiver Tommylee Lewis before the ball arrived.
March 26, 2019 at 9:29 pm #99319znModeratorAdamSchefter@AdamSchefter
It doesn’t change the NFC Championshp game, but changes have been made: All offensive and defensive pass interference calls, as well as non-calls, now be challenged, per league source.Andrew Siciliano@AndrewSiciliano
Pass interference replay change received 31 votes. Bengals were the lone detractor.Adam Schein@AdamSchein
Reviewing PI is awful. This is a horrible overreaction. Just terrible. Pass interference is subjective. Games are now going to take forever. Replay has so many flaws and now throw more at us? Refs need to get it right. This is a bad day.Jim Trotter@JimTrotter_NFL
Roger Goodell on expanding replay to include OPI and DPI: “Don’t let perfect get in the way of better. This was a natural evolution.”March 26, 2019 at 9:45 pm #99323znModeratorMike Garafolo@MikeGarafolo
#Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie spoke in the meeting and helped move the needle toward PI replay approval. Lurie said it’s about integrity, NFL should be the “arbiter of truth. People rely on us for accuracy.” Has often been an advocate on replay expansion to correct “human error.”March 26, 2019 at 9:47 pm #99325znModeratorUnder the new PI review rules, Super Bowl LIII could have been very different
Doug Farrar
Under the new PI review rules, Super Bowl LIII could have been very different
It’s not surprising that after one of the worst non-calls in playoff annals, the NFL voted 31-1 to expand replay to include pass interference, whether it’s called or not called on the field. (The Bengals were the lone “No” vote).
It’s quite possible that the Saints, and not the Rams, would have played the Patriots in last season’s Super Bowl had Bill Vinovich’s crew called one of the most obvious and missed double penalties in NFL history. Not only did cornerback Nickell Robey-Coleman commit pass interference on receiver Tommylee Lewis, he also committed a helmet-to-helmet hit, for which he was later fined over $26,000.
As it turned out, the Rams wound up with a bit of weird officiating karma in the Super Bowl. As Michael Giardi of the NFL Network pointed out, this play in which Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore held the arm of receiver Brandin Cooks should have also been pass interference, but it also wasn’t called.
The competition committee said this play should have been interference and the #Rams would have gotten the ball on the 1-yard line. I pointed this out that night (some of you were irritated). It was subtle but by the letter of the law… pic.twitter.com/TdJi2YBnzw
— Michael Giardi (@MikeGiardi) March 27, 2019
If Rams head coach Sean McVay would have been able to challenge the non-call, and it was proclaimed pass interference, the Rams would have had the ball at the New England one-yard line with a chance to tie the game at 10-10, Just as we will never know what might have happened in the NFC CHampionshup game had the officiating been correct, we’ll never know how that would have changed the outcome of the lowest-scoring Super Bowl ever.
The Patriots won, 13-3, but this was the penultimate play of a drive in which McVay’s team had finally started to get things going on offense. Quarterback Jared Goff threw a pass that Cooks should have had the full opportunity to catch, but that didn’t happen. And on the next play, Gilmore intercepted another Goff pass to Cooks, effectively ending the game with 4:24 left in regulation.
The point of this new rule, of course, is not to re-legislate a championship game or a Super Bowl. It is to ensure, as much as possible, that officiating is correct, leading to an honest result to any football game.
It’s too late for the 2018 Saints and Rams, but hopefully, at least one 2019 team will benefit from a rule change that is long, long overdue.
March 27, 2019 at 10:36 am #99345znModeratorhammer
i am confident that the Rams offense will benefit from this new rule. The question remains however, will the defense fair better than league average in challenged calls? Some defensive backs are very handsy, clever at using the off hand in pulling or tugging on a receiver just before the attempted catch. The new rule will, depending on the angles available reveal this more frequently than in real time. How will the Rams defenseive backs stack up in technique? Although I watch every game last year I didn’t watch so closely to see who gets away with early contact and who does not. It is hard to detect in real time. A team that comes to mind is the Seattle Seahawks, who’s defensive backs always “seem” to get away with lots of contact and contact while the ball is in the air. I don’t care for the rule or any other rule that slows the game down, but it should be interesting to see the effects of its use and implementation. Coaches will now have to decide when to make the call with a limited number of challenges. It may also effect how officials call pass interference. The let them play mantra at the end of a game or during playoff games should take a hit. Here is hoping that this new rule benefits the Rams more than it hurts them! I would love to see them get a PI call on a challenge to beat the Saints in the playoffs next year.
March 27, 2019 at 2:16 pm #99360wvParticipantSo is the replay on PI only for the last two minutes of each half? Not the whole game?
If so, not really a big change.
w
vMarch 27, 2019 at 3:01 pm #99364znModeratorMarch 27, 2019 at 3:03 pm #99365znModeratorOwners make pass interference, non-calls reviewable
The NFL owners voted on Tuesday evening to approve a rule proposal that allows for offensive and defensive pass interference, including non-calls, to be subject to review.
Coaches can challenge those calls in the first 28 minutes of each half. In the final two minutes of each half, those calls will be subject to a booth review.
This rule change is only for the 2019 season.
Owners passed the provision, 31-1, at the Annual League Meeting in Phoenix on Tuesday night. The Cincinnati Bengals were the lone team to vote against pass interference replay reviews, sources told NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo.
Coaches will still have only two challenge flags.
This decision comes a day after New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton said that the competition committee agreed to an amended rule-change proposal (6B), in which coaches would be allowed to challenge offensive and defensive pass interference even if there was no flag on the play. The rule change that passed on Tuesday night is considered 6C.
The reviewability of pass interference calls and non-calls came to the forefront after the NFC Championship Game in January, when Los Angeles Ramscornerback Nickell Robey-Coleman hit Saints receiver Tommylee Lewis early on a third-down play late in the fourth quarter. No penalty was called on the play. The Rams went on to win the game and make the Super Bowl.
The aftermath prompted outrage from Saints fans, coaches and brass, including owner Gayle Benson, who went as far to release a statement on the non-call.
On Tuesday night, Benson celebrated the rule change.
“This is what I wanted to happen. That’s why I made my statement,” Benson told reporters, per NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport “[The non-call in the NFC title game] will never happen again.”
“We think it was a good change,” Payton told reporters. “We’re trying to address the two fouls that most impact games. … The last three years coaches are being a little bit more judicious with their challenges. I think that will continue especially the minor fact that you now have a more meaningful play you can challenge.
“South of two minutes it’s in replay’s hands, but north of two minutes it’s in your hands. I think it won’t take back the way we watch a game. I just think it’s just two more calls.”
The one-year rule change wasn’t just about pleasing the aggrieved Saints. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell told reporters that it was important that teams came to a consensus on expanding replay review.
“I personally believe it was the fact that every club wanted to get, and the league wanted to get these plays right,” Goodell said at a press conference immediately following the vote. “Replay is to get it right. And ultimately people compromised, I think, on long-held views because they want to get the system right. They want to get the play right.”
The mandate delivered by ownership to approve this expansion of replay review comes as a surprise. As early as the start of the Annual League Meeting, approving review of pass interference calls was considered a “non-starter” on the competition committee, Rapoport reported.
Coaches were reportedly the driving force behind a deeper consideration of the rule proposal, namely Payton, Cowboys coach Jason Garrett, Patriots coach Bill Belichick and Chiefs coach Andy Reid. The latter two reportedly advocated for extending a meeting between coaches and the competition committee on Monday evening to consider and then amend the original proposal.
“Replay has an important tool for us. It wasn’t able to correct something we wanted to have corrected in the past. That to me was the driving force at the end of the day,” Goodell said. “Our job is to get these right and we should use every available means to get them right. Replay is a great means to be able to do that.
“Will this solve every problem? Will this get us to perfect? It’s the old saying, right? Don’t let perfect get in the way of better. This is a very natural evolution and obviously a very positive thing.”
March 27, 2019 at 4:07 pm #99372wvParticipant“…On Tuesday night, Benson celebrated the rule change.
“This is what I wanted to happen. That’s why I made my statement,” Benson told reporters, per NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport “[The non-call in the NFC title game] will never happen again.”
==========================Sigh. I dont wanna be mean and call people idiots, but….its just as likely the new rule will be used AGAINST the Saints in the future….Ya know. Wouldnt that be funny. If the new rule cost them a playoff game next year. What would the moral of ‘that’ story be? 🙂
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