The NFL has to show some elasticity for the good of the game. The officials have to be realistic about the hill they stand on.
Referee Shawn Smith looks on prior to the start of Super Bowl LX between the Seattle Seahawks and the New England Patriots at Levi’s Stadium on Feb. 8, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. Very little moves the needle between the flurry of free agent signings, trades and the draft, but this story deserves your attention.
The most popular American sport, long recession-proof, forever immune to greed’s side effects, is prepared to stain its legacy.Fans started profanity-laced chants at decibels never heard before in NFL stadiums. Players took to social media, demanding the imposters from “Foot Locker” stop ruining the game.on Monday Night Football, pitting the Seahawks against the Packers. Russell Wilson threw a desperation pass to the end zone that Packers safety M.D. Jennings appeared to intercept, pinning the ball to his body as he rolled on top of Seahawks receiver Golden Tate.Upon further review, shared possession was ruled, giving the Seahawks a victory. It was the last game the substitute refs worked. The NFL’s face reached an intolerable shade of rouge. Fourteen years later, the NFL and the NFL Referees Association appear determined to lose credibility again with each blown call.The NFL can give the officials whatever they want, but rich owners did not amass their fortunes by wasting money, unless it is on paying fired coaches and failed quarterbacks.The NFL got its message out this week through ESPN and NFL Network, now under the same umbrella, casting the officials in a poor light for their refusal to want accountability and consequences for underperformance.“Apparently ‘League sources’ are continuing to put out false and misleading information instead of wanting to meet at the negotiating table,” Green said. “The bottom line is our officials work for the wealthiest sports league in America, with profits that far exceed any of the others. That’s normally a point of pride for the NFL. However, our officials are substantially under-compensated when compared to baseball and basketball umpires and referees.” The NFL wisely issued a memo to all teams prohibiting public comment on the talks, so even off-record conversations are scarce this week. The officials are not blameless. They want to be compared to MLB umps and NBA refs, but conveniently leave out that those folks are full-time employees. The NFL officials should be as well. The game is now played by athletes bigger, stronger and faster than ever imagined. The officials’ physical fitness and mental awareness must meet higher thresholds, and that will not happen if they work from August through January. According to the NFL Network, the league offered its game officials a six-year labor deal with 6.45% annual growth rate in compensation. The NFL Referees Association countered with 10% and $2.5 million for marketing fees. The NFLRA asking for marketing money might be the funniest thing I have ever heard in a labor proposal. Who is wearing a referee jersey besides Rob Lowe, sitting in the stands waiting for a FOX cutaway to promote a new TV series? Refs need to get over themselves. Nobody tunes in to see them, despite some wearing schmedium shirts to show off their biceps and microphones to hear themselves talk. They are necessary, but the sport will go out without them. If there was any doubt, think back to COVID-19. The NFL did not miss a single game. Per Sports Illustrated, refs make an average of $205,000, with huge bumps for the crew working the Super Bowl. The job is difficult, no doubt. But good luck finding part-time work for roughly $11,000 per week. So, when the officials make concessions non-starters, it is no wonder the alarm is sounding. Time for Warren Buffett to get the owners in the Casa Grande ballroom and run a cost-benefit analysis on the value of undermining the league’s integrity in a sport in bed with gambling against the price of paying officials. The NFL has to show some elasticity for the good of the game. The officials have to be realistic about the hill they stand on.Good NFL officials are not walking the streets or working college games. Anyone who watched Pac-12 after dark knows all about ref shows.The league will not get caught with its pants down this time around. In 2012, the NFL was caught off guard, forced to pluck unqualified replacements, some of whom were fanboys of specific teams and another of whom was a competitor in the World Series of Poker. It was embarrassing, suggesting that there were no background checks. The officials’ performance reflected carelessness in the process. According to ESPN, the NFL has begun recruiting refs and is prepared to begin training them on May 1, with the CBA set to expire on May 31. At the meetings here, the expectation is that the NFL owners will approve safeguards for games using replacement refs, such as replay enhancements.The NFL is too big to fail. But is failing to reach an agreement with the refs worth putting out a dishonorable product?If September starts with replacements throwing yellow flags, the players and fans will be the ones throwing in the white towel.Denver’s $1 billion road overhaul would cut space for cars, boost public transit. Critics say it will make traffic worse. Denver's $1 billion road overhaul would cut space for cars, boost public transit. Critics say it will make traffic worse.Asking Eric: Friends only want to socialize outside, not at homeDenver is planning major road remodeling projects. Here's where some of them are happening.The Denver Post’s 2026 All-Colorado boys basketball team
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
There’s Only One Way Tom Brady Can Make Another NFL ComebackTom Brady clearly still wants to play in the NFL, but he'll have to make sacrifices to earn that right again.
Read more »
Replacement officials, kickoffs and other rule changes will be discussed at NFL's annual meetingReplacement officials, potential rule changes, artificial intelligence, health and safety issues, international growth and flag football will be among many topics discussed when NFL owners, executives and coaches gather for their annual meeting this week in Arizona.
Read more »
Replacement officials, kickoffs and other rule changes will be discussed at NFL's annual meeting -Replacement officials, potential rule changes, artificial intelligence, health and safety issues, international growth and flag football will be among many
Read more »
Renck: Delusional J.K. Dobbins good for Broncos, but not without insuranceThe truth of this season lies not in the defense, Jaylen Waddle’s fit, a grizzly bear schedule or Bo Nix’s ankle. It is in the backfield. Broncos need insurance for Dobbins.
Read more »
Former BYU Players in the NFL Ahead of the NFL Draft18 former BYU football players are currently on NFL teams. More BYU players will be added to NFL rosters in a few weeks when the NFL Draft takes place. Former B
Read more »
Joey Browner, 6-Time Pro Bowler in 10 NFL Seasons, Dies at 65A six-time Pro Bowl defensive back for the Vikings and Buccaneers died at 65 following 'serious health issues'
Read more »
