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NFL officiating needs an update !

The Rams got away with one yesterday. We all know it. You hate it...and at the same time we're happy about it...because we'll hear about it for awhile.

The OP has a point. There were bad calls that benefited the Pat's too...a bad "blow to the QBs head" call on their winning drive.

How about the fan noise??? Used to be the QB could motion to the ref they couldn't hear which could lead to a delay of game call on the home team?

Maybe the blown call does end the game...but we don't know that.

Yes!!! The NFL NEEDS TO FIX IT!!!

Game Balls for today. Let's give out 3....

Suh....After being the worst in the league vs the run all year Dallas average about 3 YPC and NO average 1.7 YPC. Makes one wonder why he was on autopilot all year, but, he has come alive in the playoffs.
I honestly think it is the whole line helping in this case. Yes Suh has certainly picked it up. It seems like AD is just playing a little more positional meaning more reward less risk. Staying at home a bit and that is creating a better chance for Suh to do his thing. It is subtle but it is working.
Either way it is really nice to see the guys we picked up to help playing better and the D as a whole helping out the O

Hekker's fake punt.

Yeah that was incredibly ballsy, but not like Bones has never done that. Big credit to Shields for catching that and the move he put on to get the needed first down. Another great pickup by Les! As we remember it was Shields who earlier in the season downed that punt at the 1 vs GB, setting up that safety on the next play and starting the comeback!

Let's give the front office some credit.

Seriously. Even after his great end of season run, Anderson's guaranteed money will be just a fraction of the money handed out at most other positions. Add some nice bonuses for getting over 150 carries or 600 yards and he'd make a great insurance policy for Gurley's knee.
And we should keep Malcolm as well. I know Kelly may be the future but Gurley/CJ/Malcolm are still a great and very young triple threat with depth. Having solid RB's all the time at our disposal just increases McVay's creativity and playbook options. Hell, Suh may come back at a discounted rate as well if we can keep this thing rolling for a couple more seasons!!!

Peter King: 1/21/19

These are excerpts. To read PK slobbering all over his man-crush Tom Brady, click the link below.

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https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.c...-rams-saints-patriots-chiefs-fmia-peter-king/

By Peter King

The NFC Championship

Observations on Rams 26, Saints 23:

The play. Rams 20, Saints 20 … 1:49 left in the fourth quarter … third-and-10 at the Rams’ 13-yard line … Drew Brees throws to the right sideline, near the goal line, and as the ball comes near Saints wideout Tommylee Lewis, Rams cornerback interferes with Lewis, slamming into him near the 6-yard-line. No flag. Saints go crazy. If they make the first down, the Saints could have milked the clock because the Rams had only one timeout left.

But instead, no flag and the ball was incomplete. The Saints kicked a chippy field goal by Will Lutz. The Rams, trailing New Orleans 23-20 just inside the two-minute warning, looked cooked. But they drove to a tying field goal and forced overtime. The question: If the flag gets thrown, which is the logical move in retrospect, does the outcome change? The Saints are convinced it does. We’ll never know.

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Tommylee Lewis and Nickell Robey-Coleman. (Getty Images)

This is a huge moment for officiating. Will side judge Gary Cavaletto or down judge Patrick Turner, or both, be fired, for missing the most obvious pass interference penalty in playoff history? If the call gets made, it’s conceivable and perhaps likely that the Saints would have made the Super Bowl.

The upshot. As soon as this call got made, I heard from a couple of acquaintances/sources about the impact of it. “Al Riveron [EVP of Officiating] is gone,” one said. “He can’t survive this.” Another said the league will have to pay big to bring back Dean Blandino or Mike Pereira (less likely). I think Riveron was on thin ice before Sunday. What the NFL should do, if it decides to dump Riveron, is pay realistic money to get Blandino back from his cushy gig at FOX. He’s a trusted and trustworthy guy.

Expand replay. Don’t expand the number of challenges a coach can have during a game. Just allow him to challenge a terrible call that he curently cannot challenge.

Let’s not forget Greg the Leg. His 48-yard field goal at the end of regulation tied the game at 23. When the Rams got the ball in overtime, Greg Zuerlein, as is his custom, began to kick the ball into the net on the sideline. When the shaky Drew Brees got picked off on the first drive of overtime, the Rams had a shot.

It resulted in a 57-yard field goal try in OT. How amazing it was that the kick went halfway up the net and would have been good from 68 or 70 yards. “I don’t think about that,” Zeurlein said from New Orleans. “An inch or a mile … if it’s good, it’s good. I don’t think about how much it might have been good from. I just knew I hit that one great.”
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The Award Section

Jared Goff, quarterback, L.A. Rams. As I wrote in Week 3 (and I questioned this in Goff’s shaky December), it was “time to start recognizing that Goff is playing really good football under Sean McVay, not just caretaking football.”

Goff entered the day a clear number two quarterback in the game to Drew Brees, but then outplayed Brees. Goff justified being the first overall pick in the 2016 draft by leading his team to the Super Bowl in his third pro season. He finished 25 for 40 for 297 yards, throwing one touchdown and one interception. That included lovely completions of 36, 33 and 39 yards.

Greg Zuerlein, kicker, L.A. Rams. A 24-yard field goal to tie the NFC title game at 20 with 5:03 left to play. A 48-yard field goal to tie the NFC title game at 23 with 15 seconds left to play. A 57-yard field goal to win the NFC title game, 26-23, three minutes into overtime. A performance for the ages for Greg the Leg.

Johnny Hekker, punter, L.A. Rams. How similar are the Saints and Rams? They both just love to run risky fake punts in their own territory. New Orleans did it last week down 14-0, with Taysom Hill bulling ahead for a first-down run. In the title game, the Rams were down 13-0 a minute into the second quarter and had a fourth-and-five at their 30-yard line.

Anytime Hekker steps on the field, the defense should be wary of the fake; he’d thrown from punt formation nine times in the previous three years. Here, he did it again, firing it to right gunner Sam Shields for a gain of 12 and the first down. The Rams went on to score to cut the lead to 13-3. That’s the second Hekker-to-Shields fake-punt conversion this season, and both completions went for 12 yards.
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Numbers Game

This will get lost in the mania over the officiating at the end the NFC Championship Game, and maybe it should. But consider these things about the top seed in the NFC down the stretch of the 2018 season:

• Over their last seven games—five regular season, two postseason—the Saints, with a supposedly great offense, averaged a measly 19.7 points per game and went 4-3 (pockmarked by the huge no-call, of course).

• Last seven games: Saints 138, Foes 137.

• Drew Brees played six of the seven games. In those six, he had no games with three or more touchdown passes. In his first 11 games this year, he had seven games with three or more TD passes.
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I thought it best to let readers vent after the non-call in New Orleans that gave the Rams a valuable assist in their NFC title victory. Some of the reaction from more than 200 emails Sunday night:

Doing it for the fans.From Jack F.: “Tell me the league didn’t want Rams in the Super Bowl 53 for television ratings and fan base rebuilding purposes. How does the league explain the no pass interference call against the Rams near the end of the championship game that hurt New Orleans’s chances to score a touchdown? It can’t.”

No favoritism, just incompetence.From Mark Z.: “As a Saints fan that attended today’s game, we are still in the ‘did-that-really-happen?’ mood. It is hard to believe that anyone with an unbiased view would not call PI, and now the league office admitted to Coach Payton that it was helmet to helmet, too. I do not think the refs favored the Rams, just pure incompetence. How can this multi-billion-dollar business preach fairness yet there is no recourse or accountability for this? Just ‘We blew it.’”

One possible fix.From Kevin Z.: “Give teams three challenges per game, and every play is reviewable. If it adds 10 minutes per game, so be it. (Although coaches could be more frugal in using challenges to hold onto them for more important plays late in the game). It’s a small price to pay to ensure career-altering calls are correct.”

Might only get worse.From Billy Q.: “Gambling, in its many easily accessible forms to come, will only exacerbate the emotions around these game altering blown calls.”

Think of the big picture.From Dean W.: “A single call does not lose games. Great game plan by the Rams to slow the game down and put pressure on Brees when it mattered.”
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Alvin Kamara > Todd Gurley. At least after Halloween of this season. Markedly.
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Block of the Postseason: On the Saints’ first TD of the game, a Drew Brees throw, Mark Ingram had to pick up the blitzer, Rams linebacker Dante Fowler Jr.
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Tough to give backup Saints tight end Dan Arnold a drop on that end-zone miss—he had to reach high to bring it down as he was falling. But the Fargo kid will re-live the one that got away this offseason.
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Caught part of the Westwood One radiocast of Rams-Saints. Interesting sideline report from Ed Werder after a first-quarter series by the Rams. Werder said the sideline was “frantic” in trying to fix communication issues with QB Jared Goff’s helmet. Said he tried on three different helmets trying to get one that would allow him the plays called into his helmet by Sean McVay. Nice reporting.
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Then Kurt Warner, in the booth, late in the first quarter: “Really surprised there wasn’t better preparation [for the noise] by the Rams.”
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Michael Brockers, Michael Brockers. You cannot be undisciplined against the Saints, period. But on fourth-and-two at the Rams 10-yard line? Awful job there.
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What a lovely throw, the 36-yard Jared Goff drop-into-a-bucket to Brandin Cooks late in the first half. Best throw of the day in New Orleans.
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Ndamukong Suh was a major impact player for the Rams. He’s playing well late this season.
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I think it is just amazing that franchise back Todd Gurley will finish the 2018 season in a job-share with C.J. Anderson, cut three times by losing teams in the previous nine months.
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My prediction column from Sept. 3 correctly predicted a Rams-Patriots matchup in the Super Bowl.

Rams open as underdogs in the Super Bowl.

The Patsies are evil!, and they must be destroyed!!!
I like them as underdogs ......we don't want Brady using that disingenuous "we suck" schtick they use wteva they can to there advantage. I hope some of our members of our Super Bowl team of 2001 speak to the Rams players in the locker room about how they were cheated and robbed of a Super Bowl win and a possible ram dynasty and inspire them not only to win for themselves and coach but also on behalf of the past Rams who were cheated. That's just some fodder we will have more.

To quote once more from the Tao Te Ching: "When the battle is joined, the under dog will win!!" That will be the Rams.

I love you guys!

I watched the game mostly alone.

In the fourth quarter, my family came back and my youngest son was among them (formerly known as "the jinx")

I said before I choose my son over the Rams as any good father would do....but I was worried for my Rams.

Well, he not only was our mojo and cheered JUST AS LOUD AS ME, but he also sat with me watching the late game and he hates the Pats as much as I do.

*sniff* I did something right as a parent.

I'm so happy!

And my oldest son who was our good luck charm for the Dallas game has asked off of work for the Super Bowl.

Wife is saying I should buy the NFC Championship shirt.

I dunno. Feels like it might jinx it as opposed to buying the Super Bowl shirt.

I dunno, I'm still giddy right now.

Goff grew up today

Big kudos to our young lad, Mr.Goff. Jared had a heck of a game today, especially in the 4th quarter and into OT.

There is one more thing he needs to do to get into Kurt Warner territory, hit his receivers in stride more often. He had a few throws that were caught, but YAC were limited due to awkward catching positions. Some of his imrprovised throws were great...(Everett). Go Jared, it is fun to watch you grow!!!

So maybe that petition worked after all

Real time and replay showed it was pass interference, however, it is commonly known that referees purposefully call a looser game for the playoffs - let the players play. I saw several non-call face masks. All either side can ask is that the referees are consistent and fair for both sides. If they had called pass interference the final tally for penalties would have been Rams (8-80) and Saints (3-20). Put the shoe on the other foot and decide if that would have stood out just as much as the interference non-call.

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