NFL Beast

The Best Damn NFL News Site Ever!


Jim Irsay: NFL admits incorrect calls were made to end Colts, Browns game

3 min read
   

#NFLBeast #NFL #NFLTwitter #NFLUpdate #NFLNews #NFLBlogs

#Indianapolis #Colts #IndianapolisColts #AFC

By: Kevin Hickey

Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay aired out some dirty laundry Tuesday, making it known that the NFL admitted to making incorrect calls at the end of the Week 7 game against the Cleveland Browns.

Irsay also is calling for the league to institute instant replay reviews of all plays during the final two minutes in all games to avoid a similar situation.

“The NFL admits and understands that they did not make the correct calls at end of Sunday’s Colts/Browns Game. I believe we need to institute Instant Replay for all calls, including Penalties, in the last two minutes of All Games.”

At the end of the Week 7 game with the Colts leading 38-33, two penalties were called against Colts cornerback Darrell Baker Jr.—an illegal contact and defensive pass interference penalty on consecutive plays.

While the issue of making incorrect calls is its separate entity, the illegal contact call that was made quite literally saved the game for the Browns. The Colts recovered a fumble on that third-down play that would have ended the game right there.

However, the penalty gave the Browns a first down and a few more chances to score. On the very next play, the defensive pass interference penalty was called. It was egregious. Everyone watching knew the call was incorrect because the ball was not catchable by any stretch of the imagination.

That gave the Browns another first down but this time at the goal line. They eventually scored on a Kareem Hunt touchdown, giving them a 39-38 lead with 0:19 left on the clock.

So the NFL admitted they were wrong, but there is no action to be taken. It’s essentially a situation where the league admits they messed up and teams have to deal with a loss that shouldn’t have been there in the first place.

Another layer added to this mix is that team officials are prohibited from speaking about the discussions that take place between teams and the league about officiating issues. These discussions take place on a weekly basis, per Tom Pelissero of NFL Network.

It’s a tough pill for Colts fans to swallow. Though they have been vindicated in their disgust and outrage over the two blown calls that played a major role in determining the outcome of this game, it doesn’t mean much because nothing changes with the team’s record.

Originally posted on Colts Wire