READ TODAY'S STORIES AND E-EDITION
SUBSCRIBE
|
CONTACT US
|
SIGN IN
news
sports
business
scene
opinion
obits
blogs
comics
multimedia
weather
jobs
autos
homes
pets
classifieds
search
OU
|
OSU
|
TU
|
ORU
|
HIGH SCHOOLS
|
THUNDER
|
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
|
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
|
NFL
|
OUTDOORS
|
GOLF
|
PROS
|
ALL
@TWSportsExtra
HOMEPAGES
OU Sooners
OSU Cowboys
TU Golden Hurricane
ORU Golden Eagles
High School Sports
College Football
2012 High School Football Preview
2012 College Football Preview
SPORTS EXTRA BLOGS
OKC Thunder
OU Sooners
OSU Cowboys
TU Golden Hurricane
ORU Golden Eagles
High School Sports
Sports Writer Jimmie Tramel
Outdoors Writer Kelly Bostian
Fantasy Football
Pro Baseball
FOR THE RECORD
Scores, statistics and standings for local and national sports.
LOCAL PROS
Tulsa 66ers
Tulsa Drillers
Tulsa Oilers
Tulsa Shock
Tulsa Talons
Oklahoma City Thunder
ALL SPORTS
Golf
Horse racing
Major League Baseball
Motorsports
NBA
NFL
NHL
Other sports
PHOTOS & VIDEOS
OU photo slide shows
OSU photo slide shows
TU photo slide shows
College football highlights
OUTDOORS
Home page
Kelly Bostian's columns
Kelly Bostian's blogs
Videos
Slide shows
FIND A STORY
Search the World's archives
EMAIL ALERTS
OU Sooners
OSU Cowboys
TU Golden Hurricane
High Schools
SOCIAL MEDIA
Sports Extra on Facebook
@TWSportsExtra
@MGPeters23
@EricBaileyTW
@MikeBrownTW
@GuerinEmig
@BillHaisten
@KellyHinesTW
@JohnEHoover
@JohnKleinTW
@BarryLewisTW
@JimmieTramel
@ThePicker
@kellybostian
@TWfantasyworld
RSS FEEDS
OU Sooners
OSU Cowboys
TU Golden Hurricane
ORU Golden Eagles
High School Football
John Klein Columns
Picker columns
CONTACT US
Editors
Michael Peters
Sports Editor
Patrick Prince
Asst. Sports Editor
Columnists
John Klein
Sr. Columnist
John E. Hoover
Columnist
Writers
Eric Bailey
OU sports, Big 12 sports
Guerin Emig
OU sports
Jimmie Tramel
OSU sports, ORU sports
Kelly Hines
OSU sports
Bill Haisten
TU sports, Thunder
Barry Lewis
High Schools, Drillers
Mike Brown
High Schools, Shock
Kelly Bostian
Outdoors
BUY PHOTOS & PAGES
Buy a published photo by clicking the "Order this Picture" link on the photo. For a full-color page reprint, call 732-8198 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday or
order online
.
ADVERTISE ON SPORTS EXTRA
Learn more about the site.
Your bookmark will appear on your Profile page. Please give it a title,
and short description so that visitors to your page will understand where
the bookmark leads.
Bookmark Title :
Bookmark Text :
An important lesson from Monday: real NFL refs do a pretty good job
Published:
9/25/2012 5:48 PM
Last Modified:
9/25/2012 5:48 PM
Officials offer mixed signals before Seattle receiver Golden Tate was ruled to have scored a touchdown on the last play of Monday's game against Green Bay. JOSHUA TRUJILLO/Seattlepi.com
Rarely does a sporting event -- especially one contested late at night -- dominate the next day's national conversation like Seattle-Green Bay has today.
After three weeks of frustration over the NFL's replacement officials, the worst case scenario finally happened -- a bad call on the final play changed the outcome of a game.
Beyond the embarrassment, last night's folly feeds the "blame culture" of our society, especially when it comes to sports officials.
As a closet message board surfer, I get my fill. A "refs cost us the game" post -- or 30 -- after a close loss is as predictable as the sun coming up the next day.
It's rare, however, that bad officiating directly costs teams games. When you watch a game between two teams you don't care about, how often do you scrutinize the officiating? Not very often.
Then something like what happened last night occurs, and it feeds everyone's worst perception.
In reality, though, incidents like last night teach us an important lesson about the real NFL referees -- we may complain about them, but they actually do a pretty good job.
If it was easy, the guys out there now could do it.
Through three weeks, it's pretty obvious -- they can't. It's not all their fault, of course. The NFL has put them in a no-win situation fueled by players and coaches taking advantage of guys without the authority to control the game.
NFL games now run longer, there's more chippy (even dangerous) play, more confusion, and after last night, the league's labor dispute with its officials cost Green Bay a win it earned on the field.
There's obviously plenty of blame to go around. The NFL's officials aren't backing off their demands, either.
But at this point, everything is a negotiation. And last night, the locked-out officials gained some significant bargaining power.
A phrase you'll hear a lot between now and the end of this dispute is, "upholding the integrity of the game."
That's code for making sure the game is fair for the gambling public. One fact of football the NFL doesn't like to admit is the game is driven by gambling -- whether it be legal Vegas style, fantasy football, your office pick 'em pool or the bet you place with the bookie down the street.
Last night's missed call caused a $300 million betting swing according to Las Vegas experts. That's a lot of risk if you aren't sure the game is fair.
A safer bet: the NFL and its officials quickly come to an agreement and order is restored.
If not, the NFL is in danger of losing not its integrity, but the financial engine that fuels the game.
Reader Comments
1 Total
Show:
Newest First
Learn About Our Comment Policy
observer 5
(5 months ago)
If an error in the call occurred, it could have been changed by the replay overseers. I think they are employed by the league and not a part of the striking/locked out group.
1 comments displayed
To post comments on tulsaworld.com, you must be an active Tulsa World print or digital subscriber and signed into your account.
To sign in to your account, go to
tulsaworld.com/signin
.
To activate your print subscription for unlimited digital access and to post comments, go to
tulsaworld.com/activate
.
To purchase a subscription, go to
tulsaworld.com/subscribe
.
Submitting your comment, please wait...
The Editor's Desk
Tulsa World Sports Editor Michael Peters
has nearly 20 years of daily newspaper experience. A 1993 graduate of Texas A&M, he worked at papers in Bryan-College Station, Texas, Beaumont, Texas, and Galveston, Texas, before joining the Houston Chronicle as High School Sports Editor in 2008. While in Houston, he coordinated coverage of the 2008 Texas Class 5A state football championships and the 2011 NCAA Men's Final Four.
Follow Michael Peters on Twitter
Subscribe to this blog
Archive
Michael Peters's Blog Archive:
2/2013
1/2013
12/2012
11/2012
10/2012
9/2012
8/2012
7/2012
6/2012
5/2012
4/2012
3/2012
2/2012
1/2012
12/2011
11/2011
10/2011
9/2011
8/2011
7/2011
Michael Peters
mgpeters23
Hurricane avoid low water mark with gutty win RT @
TWSportsExtra
: TU edges Houston in triple OT, 101-92
http://t.co/wMajhgMs
12 hours ago
reply
@
skhanjr
Brutal. All Tulsa has to do is hold onto the ball for five seconds and can't do it.
14 hours ago
reply
RT @
GuerinEmig
: Final word on court storming; It's like autograph seeking. Kids? Have at it. But post-college adults who do it should be ...
16 hours ago
reply
Made it to the Reynolds Center for TU-UH after watching Bedlam on TV. Lets just say the intensity level isn't exactly the same.
16 hours ago
reply
RT @
GuerinEmig
:
#Sooners
stretch it to 45-34,
#okstate
closes to within 45-42. Not sure if Marcus Smart or GIA crowd going to let Pokes ...
18 hours ago
reply
Boone Pickens to Mike Gundy: You got what you wanted. Now you better win more than seven games.
http://t.co/EHIOz4CY
via @
twsportsextra
1 day ago
reply
Join the conversation
Home
|
Contact Us
|
Search
|
Subscribe
|
Customer Service
|
About
|
Advertise
Copyright
© 2013, World Publishing Co. All rights reserved.