WHAT TO EXPECT FOR
PATRIOTS-RAMS
What makes for a well-officiated Super Bowl? In the minds of
many, it's a game with minimal flags. On paper, at least, we have a chance for
that outcome in Sunday's Super Bowl LIII.
The Los Angeles
Rams and New England
Patriots tied for the NFL's seventh-fewest penalties during the
regular season (113). Referee John Parry's regular-season crew ranked right in
the middle of the league with an average of 15.8 flags per game, and his first
postseason crew threw 10 during the Rams' 30-22 divisional-round victory over
the Dallas
Cowboys.
Generally speaking, penalty totals in recent Super Bowls
have fallen below season averages. There were only eight last year in Super
Bowl LII, and the average per game since 2010 is 13.3 -- nearly two flags lower
than the regular-season average per game (15.2). Crews that "let them
play," of course, can sometimes lull themselves into a bad spot. Consider
the NFC Championship Game two weeks ago, marred in the fourth quarter when
referee Bill Vinovich's crew failed to penalize Rams cornerback Nickell
Robey-Coleman for pass interference. There are many theories to
explain the missed call, but the simplest is that it was an extension of
allowing physical play from defenders the entire game.
Psychological hurdles aside, let's take a closer look at
what we can glean about the all-star crew Parry will take to Atlanta. It is
made up of highly graded officials from six different regular-season crews and
should be viewed as the best the NFL has to offer. We'll pair their positional assignments with the major fouls each will be
responsible for monitoring.
SUPER BOWL LIII OFFICIATING CREW
POSITION
|
NAME
|
REGULAR-SEASON CREW
|
Referee
|
John Parry
|
--
|
Umpire
|
Fred Bryan
|
Clay Martin
|
Down judge
|
Edgar Camp
|
Shawn Hochuli
|
Line judge
|
Jeff Bergman
|
Alex Kemp
|
Field judge
|
Steve Zimmer
|
Brad Allen
|
Side judge
|
Eugene Hall
|
Carl Cheffers
|
Back judge
|
Terrence Miles
|
Brad Allen
|
ROUGHING THE
PASSER
The scourge of September reappeared in the AFC Championship
Game when the Patriots gained a key first down on a phantom grab of Tom Brady's
face mask by Kansas City
Chiefs defensive end Chris Jones.
The referee is responsible for most fouls involving the quarterback, so it
should be noted that Parry threw the NFL's second-most flags for roughing the
passer during the regular season (11).
Both Super Bowl teams pride themselves on strong pass
rushes, both ranking in the top three in pressure rate -- percentage of
dropbacks in which the quarterback was sacked, hit or put under duress --
during the regular season, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.
The Patriots have been far and away the best at delivering pressure during the
playoff run, with their 44.9 percent rate ranking No. 1 by almost 5 percent.
But the Rams' aggressive pass rush tied for the second-most roughing penalties
this season (six), including two from defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh.
It should consider itself warned.
OFFENSIVE HOLDING
Parry and umpire Fred Bryan will be the primary officials
looking for a foul that experienced a curious one-week blip during
the regular season. Parry's regular-season crew threw 59 flags for offensive
holding, fifth most in the NFL, while Bryan's threw 54 (No. 8).
The player to watch here is Patriots left tackle Trent Brown,
who was penalized seven times for offensive holding during the regular season,
tied for the fourth most in the league. As a team, the Rams were penalized the
fourth-fewest times for holding (21), but left tackle Andrew
Whitworth and center John Sullivan
were flagged four times apiece for it.
PRE-SNAP MOVEMENT
Watching for false starts, encroachment and neutral-zone
infractions will fall to down Judge Edgar Camp, line judge Jeff Bergman and
Bryan, the umpire. You would think that detecting early movement would be an
objective, straightforward endeavor, but there are annually wide gaps in
tolerance among crews for these fouls.
Parry's regular-season crew actually called the fewest (31),
nearly half of the most active crew (Shawn Hochuli, 57). Bergman was part of
Hochuli's crew, but the regular-season crews of Camp and Bryan each ranked in
the bottom half of pre-snap flags. Both teams were quite disciplined in the
regular season; the Rams committed the second-fewest pre-snap penalties (17),
and the Patriots ranked No. 8 (21).
Players to watch here are the Rams' Whitworth and Patriots
right tackle Marcus Cannon,
each of whom was penalized four times for false starts.
PASS DEFENSE
Four officials will share primary responsibility for pass
interference and related penalties. Of that group, one -- Camp, the down judge
-- spent the regular season with a crew that threw a high number of such flags.
Serving with Hochuli, Camp was part of a crew that called the fourth-most
combined penalties for defensive pass interference, illegal contact and
defensive holding (44). It also called nine penalties for offensive pass
interference, the third most.
On the other hand, side judge Eugene Hall was part of
referee Carl Cheffers' crew, which called the fewest combined penalties in pass
defense (27), including only nine for defensive pass interference. The other
two relevant officials, field judge Steve Zimmer and back judge Terrence Miles,
were part of referee Brad Allen's crew, which ranked No. 9 with 38 combined
flags.
The players to watch here are Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore,
who was called for eight combined penalties in pass defense, and Rams
cornerback Marcus Peters,
who was called for six.
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