NFL needs clarity, consistency with rules enforcement

A series of plays during Week 12 of the NFL season illustrated the difficulty the league has in keeping rules enforcement consistent.

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Sports

November 28, 2023 - 1:13 PM

Minnesota Vikings quarterback Joshua Dobbs (15) is sacked by Denver Broncos safety Kareem Jackson (22) and turns the ball over in the first quarter at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver on Sunday, Nov. 19, 2023. Jackson was subsequently suspended for four games because of the hit. Photo by Elizabeth Flores/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS

DENVER (AP) — When his teammate Kareem Jackson was suspended for a second time last week for the kind of hits the NFL is trying to get rid of, Denver Broncos star safety Justin Simmons lamented the league lacked both consistency and clarity in its rules enforcement.

Week 12 showed Simmons was spot on.

In Buffalo’s 37-34 overtime loss at Philadelphia, Bills quarterback Josh Allen was on both ends of some dubious decisions by referee Shawn Hochuli’s crew.

Allen, who has a habit of throwing his head back after contact, did his best impression of a soccer player flopping on the pitch on the Bills’ opening drive of overtime. It resulted in a roughing the passer penalty on Philadelphia linebacker Nicholas Morrow, moving the ball well within field goal range.

Earlier in the game, Eagles linebacker Haason Reddick got away with a horse collar tackle when he corralled Allen outside the pocket and flung him violently to the ground for a sack.

“Josh Allen was out of the pocket, so there should have been a foul on this play,” CBS rules analyst Gene Steratore said.

In Sunday night’s primetime slot, the Chargers were driving for a touchdown on their opening possession when scrambling Los Angeles quarterback Justin Herbert was hit out of bounds by Baltimore Ravens safety Geno Stone and a yellow flag came out.

Only, the penalty wasn’t on Stone but on Chargers offensive lineman Jamaree Salyer, who came to his quarterback’s defense and drew a 15-yard punishment. So, instead of first-and-goal from the 3, the Chargers faced third-and-19 from the 21 and they settled for a field goal in what would become a 20-10 loss.

After the game, pool reporter Joe Reedy of the Associated Press asked referee Alan Eck why there was no penalty on Stone. Eck said it was a judgment call that Stone committed to and began the hit before Herbert was clearly out of bounds.

“So, the ruling on the field was that the quarterback was trying to gain yardage,” Eck said. “While he was still in bounds, the defender committed to the tackle. And as his foot landed out of bounds, the defender made contact. So, since the defender already committed to the tackle while the quarterback was in bounds, it was deemed a legal hit.”

Eck went on to say Salyer’s “reaction was over the top.”

And in Denver’s 29-12 win over the Cleveland Browns, Simmons’ teammate, outside linebacker Baron Browning, was whistled for unnecessary roughness on what looked to a lot of people like a textbook hit of Dorian Thompson-Robinson even though it knocked Cleveland’s rookie quarterback from the game with a concussion.

Browning didn’t dip his head to hit with the crown of his helmet. He led with his shoulder, targeted the chest and didn’t land on the quarterback.

But when Thompson-Robinson crumbled to the grass at his goal line, his lip bloody, an official ran over to check on him and only then did he throw the flag.

“I didn’t think it was a dirty hit, but they called it, so what can I do,” Browning said of the hit that knocked DTR from the game. “We can’t control everything, but we can control the response and we got a turnover.”

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