Tuesday, September 18, 2012

NFL replacement refs: admirable effort or unacceptable incompetence?

The NFL is sticking by its replacement refs, saying they?re performing admirably. But after a Monday night game in which the refereeing clearly interrupted the game, pressure is building.

By Patrik Jonsson,?Staff writer / September 18, 2012

Denver Broncos head coach John Fox speaks to officials during the first half of an NFL football game against the Atlanta Falcons Monday in Atlanta.

John Bazemore/AP

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With the National Football League?s 121 regular referees literally sitting on the sidelines as the result of a labor lockout, a group of zebra-striped replacements from college football?s lower divisions has been charged with creating order out of the chaos that is an NFL football game.

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After struggling in the preseason and Week 1, the replacement referees were close to disastrous on occasion this past weekend. Week 2 saw the replacements make a string of noticeable and time-consuming errors, including blown and reversed calls, poor management of games where player tempers spiraled out of control, and misapplication of the rules ? all of which noticeably detracted from the natural rhythm of the game.

The NFL, which experimented with replacement players during the 1987 lockout, had high hopes that fans wouldn?t notice much difference with replacement referees this year. But the comedy of errors Sunday and Monday brought the refereeing lockout to the forefront, raising the reputations ? and bargaining leverage ? of the regular referees.

The question is whether the NFL will care. With the league as popular as ever, some experts say it could take a game-changing blunder or a serious injury to force the NFL to meet the referees' demands.

Still, Week 2 will increase pressure on the NFL. ?These missed calls and concern about the sanctity of the game is the best thing that could have ever happened for the NFL referees,? says Marc Edelman, a sports law professor at Barry University in Miami Shores, Fla. ?The NFL?s position here is that the referees are fungible ? [but the refs' Week 2 performance] substantiates that they?re not replaceable. The greater the deviation is between regulars and replacements, the greater the demand is to pay the regular referees more.?

Monday night was a case in point. It took nearly an hour and a half to get the Atlanta Falcons and the Denver Broncos out of the first quarter. Replay officials reversed three on-field calls in the first 30 minutes of the game. Beyond that, the referees gave a fumble recovery to the Falcons despite the fact that a Bronco came out of the pile with the ball ? leading to an on-field shoving match among the players. At another point, the referees mistakenly gave the Broncos 11 yards for what should have been a five-yard penalty.

Michael McCann, a sports law expert at the University of Vermont, gave the replacements' overall Week 2 effort a C-minus.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Qt5Vu9Ys8ks/NFL-replacement-refs-admirable-effort-or-unacceptable-incompetence

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