Rams WR Puka Nacua rips refs in since-deleted tweet

Los Angeles Rams star wide receiver Puka Nacua is creating headlines both on and off the field this week.

On the field, Nacua had 12 catches for 225 yards and two touchdowns in the Rams’ 38-37 overtime loss to the Seattle Seahawks on Thursday night.

That performance came one day after he performed a potential touchdown celebration that included an antisemitic undertone and criticized NFL officiating during a livestream.

On Thursday afternoon, Nacua apologized for his actions in relation to the controversial celebration, saying that he does not stand “for any form of racism, bigotry or hate of another group of people.”

As for the NFL officiating, well, he didn’t leave that alone after Thursday’s game. In fact, he added fuel to the fire that could land him a fine from the league.

“Can you say I was wrong,” Nacua posted on X, formerly Twitter. “Appreciate you stripes for your contribution. lol.”

Nacua, 24, has since deleted the tweet, one day after he said on the livestream that “the refs are the worst.”

“These guys want to be … these guys are lawyers. They want to be on TV, too,” Nacua added. “You don’t think he’s texting his friends in the group chat like, ‘Yo, you guys just saw me on ‘Sunday Night Football.’ That wasn’t P.I., but I called it.’”

NFL players and coaches can be fined for publicly criticizing referees and officials.

As for the tweet itself, Nacua dismissed it as being sent in “a moment of frustration after a tough, intense game like that.”

Thursday’s game featured the reversal of what initially was deemed to be an incompletion on a potential game-tying two-point conversion. Replay review deemed it to be a backward pass that led to a fumble that was recovered in the end zone by Seahawks running back Zach Charbonnet.

Nacua has an NFL-high 114 catches for 1,592 yards and eight touchdowns in 14 games this season.

–Field Level Media

Oct 8, 2022; Charlottesville, Virginia, USA; Referee Gary Patterson reviews a call on the field during the game between the Louisville Cardinals and the Virginia Cavaliers during the third quarter at Scott Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

Report: Longtime ACC ref quits due to replay frustration

Upset over how a replay review was handled in last Saturday’s UConn-Syracuse game, Atlantic Coast Conference referee Gary Patterson resigned, ESPN reported on Friday.

An ACC official since 2002, Patterson quit after he served as the head referee of the matchup, a 27-20 overtime win for host Syracuse.

Patterson was slated to referee the Pitt-West Virginia matchup this Saturday, but the ACC said on Friday that Patterson’s crew has been adjusted after his departure.

Late in the first half with UConn ahead 14-3, Syracuse quarterback Steve Angeli had his arm hit as he threw the ball on a first-down play at the Huskes’ 25-yard line. The ball went forward and landed on the turf, and the officiating crew ruled an incomplete pass.

On second down, Angeli’s throw was nearly intercepted, leading to a third-and-10 with 53 seconds left in the half. But Patterson got on the head set after a flag was thrown, announcing that “replay had buzzed in prior to the previous play” after communicating with the ACC command center.

Per the report, several camera angles showed no indication that any on-field official had been buzzed by the replay before the second-down play. A spokesperson for the conference said officials were buzzed from the booth to start a review and added that the ACC internally addressed the situation.

The first-down play was then reviewed to see if Angeli fumbled, but the call of an incomplete pass was upheld.

Per ESPN, officials for UConn and Syracuse were informed that the referee had “not heard” the initial request from the booth before the ball was snapped on second down.

According to the report, the directive to initiate a review came from the ACC command center.

Patterson, who did not respond to ESPN’s requests for comment, was apparently bothered by the ACC forcing a replay after the next play of the drive.

Syracuse recovered to kick a field goal as time expired, going 61 yards on its next seven plays before rallying in the second half.

–Field Level Media

FOX Sports rules analyst Mike Pereira at the broadcaster's Media Day on Feb. 6, 2025 ahead of Super Bowl LIX.

FOX’s Mike Pereira: Theory that refs favor Chiefs ‘a myth’

NEW ORLEANS — Mike Pereira feigned surprise when a flock of reporters huddled around him Thursday.

“What do you all want to talk to me about?” he quipped as Pereira slid into a chair at FOX Sports’ Super Bowl media day.

Predictably, the first question was about his feelings on the conversation about NFL officiating and whether the Kansas City Chiefs receive preferential treatment. The debate has rung loud enough to cause NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to dismiss the idea, while the NFL Referees Association released a statement Tuesday calling such theories “insulting and preposterous.”

Pereira, FOX Sports’ rules analyst and a longtime referee himself, said, “I’m sad it’s a story.”

With announcing tandem of Kevin Burkhardt and Tom Brady absent from Thursday’s session while preparing for their game-day duties, Pereira’s was a highly sought-after opinion.

At issue is the notion that the Chiefs, and specifically three-time Super Bowl champion quarterback Patrick Mahomes, are given favorable treatment when it comes to penalties called (or not called) in-game.

“I’m sad it’s a story,” Pereira said. “It puts more pressure on the officials. They’re not going to referee any different, but they know it’s a story going into the game.”

Sitting next to Pereira, former NFL head of officiating Dean Blandino struck a similar chord. He noted that any sense of preferential treatment by a referee would lead to bad grades, which would in turn cost coveted playoff assignments.

Blandino added that referees scout both teams for upcoming games, looking for tendencies similar to how teams scout each other’s offenses and defenses. He called on the NFL to provide more transparency around the officiating giving the increased scrutiny that comes with social media.

“The league has been slow to adapt to how we consume our news,” he said. “It’s naive of me to say the (referees) don’t hear any of it. The really good officials do a good job of blocking out that noise.”

Blandino acknowledged that Philadelphia and Kansas City present particularly difficult challenges, beginning with their mobile quarterbacks. The Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes “does a good job of pushing the envelope” when it comes to skirting the sideline, while the Eagles’ Jalen Hurts is the driving force behind the “tush push” that Blandino called “a difficult play to officiate.”

That Pereira and Blandino were as prominent as anyone in a room that included the likes of Michael Strahan, Rob Gronkowski, Jimmy Johnson, Howie Long and Terry Bradshaw speaks volumes to the microscope fans and the media are focusing on the officials.

Pereira was firm in his stance that no team — including the Chiefs — will receive preferential treatment from head referee Ron Torbert’s crew come game day.

“While I understand it, it’s a myth,” he said. “I feel badly for the officials, and I feel badly for the game.”

–Derek Harper, Field Level Media

Jan 18, 2025; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) slides against Houston Texans linebacker Henry To'oTo'o (39) during the fourth quarter of a 2025 AFC divisional round game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images

Refs union rejects idea they’re aiding Chiefs: ‘Insulting’

After Roger Goodell dismissed the idea that the league’s officiating crews give deference to the Kansas City Chiefs, the NFL Referees Association released a statement Tuesday calling such theories “insulting and preposterous.”

The release from NFLRA executive director Scott Green began by thanking the commissioner for his comments Monday “about our members’ unwavering dedication to fairness and maintaining the integrity of the game.”

At issue is the notion that the Chiefs, and specifically three-time Super Bowl champion quarterback Patrick Mahomes, are given favorable treatment when it comes to penalties called (or not called) in-game.

Green, speaking on behalf of the referees’ union, no doubt sees the situation differently.

“Officiating crews do not work the same team more than twice each regular season,” Green said. “It is insulting and preposterous to hear conspiracy theories that somehow 17 officiating crews consisting of 138 officials are colluding to assist one team.

“NFL Officials are graded every week, on every single play of each game. These grades are the determining factor as to who receives postseason assignments. The NFLRA commends its members, who all strive to do exactly what all 32 NFL Teams do, which is to excel at their jobs so that they are working the last game of the season — the Super Bowl.”

Theories were given some credence during the AFC divisional round, when ESPN color commentator Troy Aikman reacted in real time to a poor call against the Houston Texans for a late hit on Mahomes. Not only did the scrambling QB give himself up and slide when two Texans players went for a tackle, the teammates launched into each other — making no contact with Mahomes.

“I could not disagree with that one more,” Aikman said. “And he barely gets hit.”

Goodell said in his State of the NFL press conference Monday that the league likely will expand replay assist to include calls on quarterback slides.

Green attempted to convince fans that while calls can be missed, referees’ integrity was unimpeachable.

“There are many things that fans can worry about over a 17-game season,” Green said, “such as coaching decisions, player injuries, the weather and, yes, even close calls on incredible plays made by incredible athletes. But you can rest assured that on every single down, NFL officials, both on the field and in the replay booth, are doing everything humanly possible to officiate every play correctly.”

Ron Torbert will be the head referee for Super Bowl LIX on Sunday when the Chiefs face the Philadelphia Eagles. It’s his second Super Bowl assignment.

–Field Level Media

Shannon and Connor O'Hara, the grandchildren of Art McNally's admire their grandfather's bust during the Pro Football Hall of Fame Enshrinement at Tom Benson Stadium in Canton on Saturday, August 6, 2022.

Art Mcnally 0035

Hall of Fame official Art McNally dies at 97

Art McNally, the first NFL game official enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, died at age 97, the organization announced Monday.

Tom McNally, one of the retired official’s four children, said in a news release issued by the Hall of Fame that his father died Sunday of natural causes at a hospital in Newtown, Pa.

The elder McNally was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2022.

McNally began refereeing games among fellow service members when he served in the Marines during World War II, chosen by his peers because he was “the man with the most integrity to do the job,” the Hall of Fame’s news release said.

He joined the NFL’s officiating crew as a field judge in 1959, then served as a referee from 1960-67. He transitioned to the role as supervisor of officials, a job he held until his first retirement in 1991. He is credited with implementing systems to train and evaluate officials, among his achievements.

“Art McNally was a quiet, honest man of integrity,” said Jim Porter, president of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. “To see Art’s decades of service recognized with his enshrinement as part of the Class of 2022 was a special moment for the Hall. His legacy as a strong leader who helped usher in the advanced training of officials and the technology necessary to keep up with a faster and more complicated game will be preserved forever in Canton.”

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell called him “a Hall of Fame person in absolutely every way.”

“Art McNally was an extraordinary man, the epitome of integrity and class,” Goodell said. “Throughout his distinguished officiating career, he earned the eternal respect of the entire football community.”

Post-1991, McNally served as supervisor of officials for the World League of American Football — the precursor to NFL Europe — and then returned to the NFL and worked as assistant supervisor of officiating from 1995-2007. He stayed on with the NFL until 2015 as an officiating observer and trainer.

The officiating command center at NFL headquarters is named “Art McNally GameDay Central.”

–Field Level Media

Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Tyler Boyd catches a touchdown pass in the second quarter.

Syndication The Enquirer

Report: Bengals-Raiders officiating crew done for playoffs

The officiating crew for Saturday’s Las Vegas Raiders-Cincinnati Bengals AFC wild-card game is not expected to work again this postseason, according to a report from ESPN that cited an unnamed league source.

The crew, led by referee Jerome Boger, fell under scrutiny for a few issues, most notably a whistle that was blown during a play that saw Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow throw a touchdown pass to Tyler Boyd in the back of the end zone late in the second quarter.

The report indicated that the officials, an assembly of members from other regular-season crews, as is customary during the postseason, would not receive high grades for the game.

On the play, Burrow was scrambling and released the football just before he stepped out of bounds. Replay indicated that the whistle, which the officials called inadvertent, came while the ball was in the air and just before Boyd made the catch. The defender closest to Boyd appeared to ease up on the play just before the catch was made.

However, the officiating crew “determined that they had a whistle, but that the whistle for them on the field was blown after the receiver caught the ball,” according to Walt Anderson, the league’s senior vice president of officiating, who spoke to a pool reporter after the game.

The Bengals extended their lead to 20-6 with the score, and held on for a 26-19 win thanks to a goal-line interception of Raiders quarterback Derek Carr in the closing seconds.

–Field Level Media

Aug 29, 2019; Jacksonville, FL, USA; NFL umpire Clay Martin (19) walks on the field during the second quarter of the game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Atlanta Falcons at TIAA Bank Field. Mandatory Credit: Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports

NFL ref Martin hospitalized with COVID-19

NFL referee Clay Martin has been hospitalized with COVID-19, his family told the Tulsa World on Saturday.

Martin, 45, was originally pulled from officiating the Pittsburgh-Cincinnati game on Dec. 21 and was reportedly asymptomatic. He has been in quarantine at his home near Tulsa, Okla., since.

“Our family is very appreciative of all the heartwarming messages that we’re receiving. Clay is receiving medical attention at St. Francis. Our family will continue to find peace in our faith, each other and many, many people who we are blessed to call friends,” Martin’s family said in a statement to the Tulsa World.

Adrian Hill will replace Martin on Sunday, the third game Martin has missed.

Martin has been an NFL official since 2015, serving the past three seasons as referee.

Martin is also a high school basketball coach in the Tulsa suburb of Jenks.

–Field Level Media