What went wrong with NFL officiating in 2019 … and what comes next?

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A veteran referee turns a routine touchback into a touchdown and reverses his decision only after two alternate officials storm the field to talk him out of it. A questionable interpretation of a new rule stalls a fourth-quarter drive. Centralized replay fails to review a winning touchdown for pass interference. A helmet-to-helmet hit on a starting quarterback goes unaddressed.

Officiating madness during the NFL’s wild-card playoff weekend reinforced the league’s urgent need to “look at everything” involved in what has been a trying season, as executive vice president of football operations Troy Vincent promised he would do last month. League sources expect a significant offseason reckoning that will impact the department’s leadership as well as on-field personnel. At the same time, owners must decide whether to scrap or adjust pass interference review, a process that has dinged the league’s credibility with its confounding application.

“It’s pretty simple,” said ESPN officiating analyst John Parry, who retired last spring after 19 seasons as an NFL official. “The league needs to commit resources and money to this. It needs to commit to the resurrection of the officiating department, the staff, the training and the recruiting. There has to be a commitment of people and money to improve it at every level.”

Seven games remain in the 2019 postseason, during which the NFL will cross its fingers and hope that officials will avoid major incident while under intense public scrutiny. In the meantime, deliberations are underway on the key offseason issues it must address. Let’s preview them, with commentary from Parry and information I’ve compiled in recent weeks.

Leadership shuffling

Al Riveron is completing his third season as the league’s senior vice president of officiating and, similar to a coach or general manager of a disappointing team, has been subject to rumors about his future. According to sources, some in the league office have advocated a campaign to lure back Riveron’s predecessor, Dean Blandino, who works as a Fox Sports officiating analyst as well as a consultant to the NCAA and the XFL.

The current expectation is that Riveron will have a place in the NFL next season but amid a restructured leadership team around and likely above him. The league has already committed to hiring a vice president of training and recruitment, as part of a new collective bargaining agreement it reached with the NFL Referees Association (NFLRA) last fall, and has focused on referee Walt Anderson as a top candidate for that role if he decides to leave the field after this season.

That would give the NFL three executive-level officiating jobs, which also includes the vice president of replay role held by Russell Yurk. There have been discussions about other positions as well, but the primary decision Vincent and commissioner Roger Goodell must make is whether — and whom — to add above Riveron in the organizational chart.

NFL chief football administrative officer Dawn Aponte, a longtime league and team executive with the New York Jets and Miami Dolphins who returned to the league office in 2017, has been involved in some supervisory duties within the officiating department. She could be a central part of any reorganization. Blandino, meanwhile, is an independent contractor for the XFL and thus isn’t barred from outside work. But he was heavily involved in the XFL’s public rollout of its rulebook this week and said, “It’s exciting for me to be able to work with the XFL.”

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Pat McAfee does not like the way the NFL is being officiated right now and considers head of officiating Al Riveron as the root of the problem.

No matter who has ultimate authority, Parry said, the department has grown too large for one person to manage it. He estimated there are at least 400 people working through one chain of command, including not only on-field officials but also chain crews, clock operators, replay officials and more.

“I would think that most corporations, if they had at least 400 people to be managed, would probably have, what, between eight and 20 managers?” Parry said. “The NFL has Al. So it gets what it gets. That’s one guy trying to manage a huge department.”

Best guess of what’s next: Riveron stays with the NFL but either cedes or shares full authority over the officiating department in 2020.


Better training and more accuracy

Parry experienced this season from a new perspective, watching every game on television as well as broadcasting ESPN’s Monday Night Football. There is little doubt, he said, that “there has been a decrease in the skill level of officiating.” His sense, based on two decades in the league, is that the number of preventable missed calls has spiked, many based on mechanical mistakes that can be traced in part to the league’s minimal training program.





Source : ESPN