The NFL's 'Monday night fiasco': Will the league finally end its referee lockout?

Another bad call by replacement refs decides a close game between the Seahawks and Packers, causing fans nationwide to beg for the real refs to return

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Golden Tate celebrates his winning touchdown after a controversial call made by the NFL's less-than-stellar replacement refs.
(Image credit: George Holland/ZUMA Press/Corbis)

The young NFL season is not going well. Three weeks in, a fierce controversy over the referee lockout — in which the league's professional officials have been replaced by less-experienced substitutes because of a contract dispute — has officially reached its boiling point. In the last play of a "Monday night fiasco" between the Seattle Seahawks and the Green Bay Packers, a bad call by replacement refs essentially robbed the Packers of a victory. The Seahawks, trailing by five points as time expired, heaved a Hail Mary pass toward the end zone. A Seattle receiver shoved one defender out of the way — a fairly obvious penalty that was not called — while Green Bay defender M.D. Jennings appeared to grab the ball for a victory-saving interception. But not so fast. Seattle receiver Golden Tate got a hand on the ball, eventually wrestled it free in a dog pile, and seemingly confused replacement refs deemed the play a touchdown — a game-changing ruling that handed Seattle an upset victory. (Watch the play below.) This is only the latest in a series of widely-criticized decisions made by the replacements refs. Will the NFL and the real referees finally budge on their contract dispute?

Let's hope so: "The NFL should make an extremely generous offer to the referees' union," says Michael Rosenberg at Sports Illustrated. Commissioner Roger Goodell's decision to initiate a referee lockout may not be the "worst mistake a commissioner has made in my lifetime, but it is surely the dumbest." The replacements have given fans a reason to question the integrity of the game, and when "the public has lost faith in the enterprise," there is no game anymore. The lockout has "destroyed three weeks of the NFL season," and while that can't be fixed, the league can still apologize to players and fans for the mistake and salute the real officials — before it's too late.

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