Week 4

Week 4 discipline report

• Calls, Discipline, Week 4
Saturday, October 8, 2011 – 12:30 pm | leave a comment

by Ben Austro

Total through Week 3: 19 fines, $235,000.

Zebra Blog fine meter

$   3 6 0, 0 0 0
FINES 2 8 SUSP 0
  • Patriots defensive lineman Richard Seymour, $7,500 for unnecessary roughness and $7,500 for facemask foul.
  • Patriots safety Patrick Chung, $7,500 for unnecessary roughness.
  • Ravens defensive tackle Haloti Ngata, $15,000 for leading with helmet on a tackle. The hit resulted in a fumble returned for a touchdown, which should have been nullified by penalty.
  • Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey, $7,500 for unnecessary roughness.
  • 49ers tackle Anthony Davis, $25,000, two leg whip penalties.
  • Bears safety Brandon Meriweather, $20,000 for a helmet-to-helmet hit (as a repeat offender).
  • Eagles defensive end Jason Babin, $15,000 for a hit to the quarterback’s neck.
  • Redskins special teamer Niles Paul, $20,000 for hit on a defenseless receiver.

This week: 9 fines, $125,000

Odd ruling saves Cruz from being NY goat

• Controversy, Week 4
Sunday, October 2, 2011 – 11:16 pm | 3 Comments

by Ben Austro

Referee Jerome Boger has his hands full with some controversial calls, most notably, a rarely used call on the Giants drive for the game-winning  touchdown (video). Giants receiver Victor Cruz lands to the turf and walks back to the huddle as if the play was over. However, he was not contacted on the way to the ground, so ordinarily, this remains a live ball. The ruling on the field, as explaned by Boger:

The ruling on the previous play was that the receiver gave himself up by going to the ground. That cannot be challenged. So there is no challenge allowed by Arizona. It is first down, New York.

From the video, it appeared as if the initial ruling was made by headlinesman Jerry Bergman. (Back judge Tony Steratore is shown in a replay covering the play as a fumble, but he did not throw his beanbag marker that would indicate he was ruling it that way.)

From the NFL Rulebook, Rule 7, Section 2, Article 1:

An official shall declare the ball dead and the down ended:

(e) when a runner is out of bounds, or declares himself down by falling to the ground, or kneeling, and making no effort to advance

A player need not slide, as what was commented on some broadcast outlets, in order to qualify for declaring himself down under Item (e), because the criteria for a slide is contained in Item (d).

The fact that Cruz stayed to the ground for a brief period allows this interpretation of declaring himself down to be made. But was he down long enough?

Take another example where a player on the receiving team catches an onside kick. He secures the catch and immediately flops to the ground. Play is over immediately, because the receiver declared himself down. In the case of Cruz’s open-field catch, he must demonstrate an intention to change his status from runner to declared down. In Cruz’s case, we would expect to see him down longer than the hypothetical onside-kick receiver who is never considered a runner.

It is an issue of perception, just like when a player’s forward progress is stopped. Once the official makes that snap judgment that the player is giving himself up, there is no swallowing of the whistle, even if contrary evidence is provided.

Quick calls: Week 4

• Calls, Week 4
Sunday, October 2, 2011 – 10:26 am | 1 Comment

by Ben Austro

Look for updates later in the day. If you see something, you can add a comment to this post or reduce it to 140 characters or less (@footballzebras).

Giants at Cardinals

Victor Cruz’s catch has become its own post.

Jerome Boger’s crew had a simultaneous timeout call from the Giants’ sideline and a coach’s challenge from the Cardinals sideline. (Fox Sports put the tape of the two coaches split screen—it would take a slo-mo replay to determine who was first.) The crew granted both requests, rather than returning the Giants timeout on account of the replay. Fox Sports sideline vagabond Tony Siragusa was able to get a very unusual in-game comment from umpire Carl Paganelli that the on-field ruling was the timeout call came first.

While the split screen only showed the coaches, there were also players on the Giants defensive line calling timeout as well. It is unclear if the officials called the timeout based on a player’s or the coach’s signal.

Steelers at Texans

The Texans had two touchdowns nullified. First, a blocked field goal that was returned for a touchdown (video) had an obvious penalty for illegal block in the back. Clete Blakeman had the full explanation, including the fact that the half ends on the play without the quarter being extended. Then, in the fourth quarter, an interception return for a touchdown was wiped out by a late hit on Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger by Texans J.J. Watt.

Saints at Jaguars

The EverBank Field grounds crew made a glaring error when painting the lines on the field, but ultimately one that would confuse viewers, not the officiating crew.

Each 10-yard increment (with the exception of the 50-yard line) is marked with an arrow pointing towards the nearest goal line. It is essentially for the benefit of television viewers to be able to discern which side of the field is on the screen.

However, the grounds crew placed a fourth of all the arrows pointing the wrong way. On the same yard line, the arrows on either side of the field pointed to opposite ends.

Great googily moogily!

Photo courtesy of Fox Sports Florida.

Week 4 assignments

• Assignments, Week 4
Friday, September 30, 2011 – 10:01 am | 2 Comments

by Ben Austro

SUNDAY, OCT. 2

  • Panthers at Bears:  Terry McAulay
  • Bills at Browns: Gene Steratore
  • Titans at Browns: Pete Morelli
  • Lions at Cowboys: John Parry
  • Redskins at Rams: Walt Coleman
  • 49ers at Eagles: Alberto Riverón
  • Vikings at Chiefs: Bill Leavy
  • Saints at Jaguars: Ed Hochuli
  • Steelers at Texans: Clete Blakeman
  • Falcons at Seahawks: Walt Anderson
  • Giants at Cardinals: Jerome Boger
  • Dolphins at Chargers: Jeff Triplette
  • Broncos at Packers: Scott Green
  • Patriots at Raiders: Tony Corrente
  • Jets at Ravens: Mike Carey

MONDAY, OCT. 3

  • Colts at Buccaneers: Ron Winter

Off: Carl Cheffers

Most assignments confirmed through Football-refs.com.