Sharp Football Analysis Logo

NFL Referee Assignment for Week 2 & Impact on NFL Betting

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

We tend to only focus on NFL referees after a controversial decision or bad no-call. Yet, each head NFL referee and his respective crew interprets the game differently.

Gaining insight into the way a game will be officiated can have immense value in the betting market.

A referee who calls more penalties for defensive holding and roughing the passer has a far different impact on game flow than a ref who focuses more on offensive holding and false starts.

Referee style one week may hide a team’s weakness (defensive backs), but a different official who leans heavily on calling pass interference will compound that weakness the next week.

Same team. Different outcomes.

Throughout this 2024 NFL season, we’ll help to identify important trends and tendencies by different NFL referees to help you gain an edge when placing a bet .

25OffPromo

NFL Referee Assignment for Week 2

Week 2Referee
Bills at DolphinsBill Vinovich
49ers at VikingsBrad Allen
Buccaneers at LionsAlex Kemp
Giants at CommandersScott Novak
Browns at JaguarsAdrian Hill
Raiders at RavensTra Blake
Jets at TitansAlan Eck
Saints at CowboysShawn Smith
Seahawks at PatriotsCarl Cheffers
Colts at PackersShawn Hochuli
Chargers at PanthersBrad Rogers
Rams at CardinalsJohn Hussey
Bengals at ChiefsAlex Kemp
Steelers at BroncosClete Blakeman
Bears at TexansLand Clark
Falcons at EaglesCraig Wrolstad

Brad Allen’s Impact on 49ers at Vikings

The 49ers head to Minneapolis for the second consecutive year versus a Vikings team off a big road win to open the 2024 season.

Let’s assess the strengths and weaknesses of both teams from a penalty perspective and how the officiating of Brad Allen will potentially impact this game.

Penalty Tendencies:

  • The Vikings were the most penalized team for offensive holding after one week of the season. This is likely an aberration. The Vikings under Kevin O’Connell have been one of the least penalized units for offensive holding over the past two seasons.
  • The 49ers defense ranked last at generating offensive holding on opponents in 2023 and generated no offensive holding penalties versus the Jets in their season opener.
  • The Vikings offense has been a top-three beneficiary of automatic first downs via penalties in O’Connell’s first two seasons as head coach. That strength via penalties continued in their opening game at the Giants.
  • On key third down plays, Brad Allen’s crew have called an NFL-low 37.5% of their penalties on the home team since the start of the 2021 season. That favorable home team trend continued last week in the Seahawks-Broncos game, with a disproportionate amount of third down penalties called on the visiting team.

The Bottom Line:

  • H ome underdogs have performed at an above average rate with Brad Allen officiating, recording a 30-18-1 ATS (61%) record since 2016.

The 49ers find themselves playing in Minnesota for the second consecutive season, this time off a short week after their MNF win versus the Jets.

San Francisco is the superior team, but US Bank Stadium is one of the most difficult venues to operate in for opposing offenses.

The 49ers’ overall talent may get them a win here and help them start the season 2-0, but it will be close, making the Minnesota Vikings +6 points the play in this game.

Bet the Vikings +6

Carl Cheffers’ Impact on Seahawks at Patriots

The Seahawks travel east for their 2024 road opener, taking on the surprising Patriots.

Let’s assess the strengths and weaknesses of both teams from a penalty perspective and how the officiating of Carl Cheffers will potentially impact this game.

  • Carl Cheffers’ crew called an above average 61.5% of their penalties on the offense in 2023. That focus on offense continued in their opening game of 2024, with 60% of their penalties assessed on the offensive side of the ball.
  • The Patriots offense was responsible for 60% of the team’s penalties in Week 1.
  • The Seahawks’ six penalties committed in their opener were all via the offense.
  • The Seahawks have been a heavily penalized road team in recent seasons. They have one of the largest negative home versus road penalty discrepancies in the NFL.
  • Cheffers’ crew has called above average penalties on both wide receivers and tight ends since the start of 2021.
  • Furthermore, Cheffers’ crew has called a below average percentage of their overall penalties on defensive backs since 2021.
  • Home teams are 80-52 on the moneyline (61%) since the start of the 2016 season with Carl Cheffers officiating.
  • Home underdogs like the Patriots are 22-12-2 ATS (65%) with Cheffers since 2016.

We have two defensive-minded head coaches in this game with a crew inclined to disproportionately penalize the offenses.

Points will be at a premium, and the offensive-challenged Patriots will be more than happy to play a game in the teens. The Cheffers’ crew may be the ideal group to make that a reality.

The Seahawks have the overall talent edge, but it’s a long trip for a team that’s been heavily penalized on the road in recent seasons.

This contest may well be decided on a late field goal, making the New England Patriots +3.5 points the play.

Bet the Patriots +3.5

Clete Blakeman’s Impact on Steelers at Broncos

The Steelers play their second consecutive road game to start the season in one of the NFL’s most difficult environments.

The assigned referee is one that Pittsburgh has not fared well with in recent seasons.

Let’s assess the strengths and weaknesses of both teams from a penalty perspective and how the officiating of Clete Blakeman’s crew will potentially impact this game.

  • The Broncos defense was heavily penalized in Week 1 at the Seahawks, including twice for defensive pass interference. 
  • The Steelers offense generated zero beneficial penalties via passing plays in their opener in Atlanta.
  • The Steelers offense was responsible for five of the team’s nine penalties in their season opener. That percentage is above average for Pittsburgh based on recent seasons. What’s interesting is the penalty numbers were similar to the Bears offensive penalty numbers of 2023 with Justin Fields at quarterback.
  • The Broncos’ homefield advantage and crowd noise have consistently generated above average offensive pre-snap penalties on visiting teams. Expect the crowd to be a major factor on Sunday and the Steelers to be playing from behind the chains due to pre-snap infractions.
  • Home teams have performed well with Blakeman officiating in recent years, going 28-22-1 ATS (57%) since the start of the 2021 NFL season.
  • The Steelers have struggled with Blakeman officiating over the past decade. Pittsburgh is 3-10 on the moneyline and 4-9 ATS. As favorites, the Steelers are just 2-5 ATS with Blakeman.

The Broncos performed well in a difficult road environment with a rookie quarterback in their season opener at Seattle.

They benefit from a significant home crowd advantage in this contest versus a less than dynamic Steelers offense.

Points will be at a premium in a matchup with both head coaches looking to play risk-averse football.

An outright win by the home underdogs is a strong possibility in a 17-16 type contest, making the Broncos +2.5 points the play.

Bet the Broncos +2.5

2024 NFL Referees Stats & Their Historical Betting Trends

A comprehensive breakdown for every NFL Referee working games for the 2024 season, plus a deeper look at their penalty-calling historical trends, statistics, and how it may impact betting opportunity plus the pace of gameplay.

Adrian Hill: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 43-39 ATS in true home games with Adrian Hill, including a career best 12-5 ATS in 2023
  • Adrian Hill is 45-36-1 Under in his career
  • In Divisional games, Hill is 14-8-1 Under in his career

Alex Kemp: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 47-50-1 ATS in Kemp’s career
  • Divisional home teams are 14-18 on the moneyline and 13-19 ATS in Alex Kemp’s career
  • Kemp is 16-16i in Divisional game totals for his career, including 2-2 in 2023

Alan Eck: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams were 13-3 on the moneyline and 11-5 ATS in 2023, Alan Eck’s first season as a head referee
  • Alan Eck was 10-6 Under in 2023

Bill Vinovich: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • True home teams are 42-54-4 ATS with Vinovich since 2018 went just 5-10-2 ATS with Vinovich in 2023 
  • Bill Vinovich is 61-38-2 Under since 2018, including 11-7 Under in 2023 

Brad Allen: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 74-53-1 on the moneyline with Brad Allen since 2016
  • Home teams are 69-56-3 ATS in those same games since 2016
  • Brad Allen is 73-55 Under since 2016

Brad Rogers: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 39-37 on the moneyline and 38-38 ATS in Brad Rogers’ career 
  • Brad Rogers is 43-33 Over the total in his career
  • Brad Rogers is 18-10 Over in career Divisional games

Carl Cheffers: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 79-52 on the moneyline since 2016 with Cheffers officiating
  • Home teams are 67-62-2  ATS with Cheffers since the start of the 2016 NFL season
  • Divisional home teams are 29-18 ATS with Carl Chaffers since 2016

Clay Martin: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Clay Martin is 46-43-3 Under in his career. Martin was 11-4-2 Over in 2023
  • True home teams in Clay Martin’s career are 47-44 on the moneyline & 37-52-2 ATS  
  • Divisional home teams are 13-15 on the moneyline & 9-19 ATS.with Clay Martin officiating

Clete Blakeman: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 61-67-3 ATS with Blakeman since the start of 2016
  • Divisional home teams are 24-22 on the moneyline since 2016
  • Blakeman is 23-23 on divisional totals including 4-3 under in 2023

Craig Wrolstad: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 63-63 on the moneyline and 51-73-2 ATS since 2016
  • Home underdogs are 20-36–1 ATS since 2016, including a 3-3-1 ATS in 2023

John Hussey: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 90-41 on the moneyline with John Hussey since 2016
  • Home teams are 79-47-5 ATS with Hussey since 2016
  • Home teams were 14-3 on the moneyline and 13-3-1 ATS with John Hussey in 2023 

Land Clark: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 25-37-1 ATS in Land Clark’s career
  • Clark is 36-26-1 Under the total in his career, although he was 9-7 Over in 2023

Scott Novak: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 27-49-3 ATS (36%) in Scott Novak’s career, the lowest  ATS percentage of any referee since his debut in 2019
  • Divisional home teams are 9-20-1 ATS (31%) in Scott Novak’s career

Shawn Hochuli: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams are 43-51-3 ATS in Shawn Hochuli’s career, including a 9-7-1 ATS record in 2023
  • Shawn Hochuli was 10-7 Under in 2023 and is 54-41-2 Under the total in his career
  • In Divisional games, Shawn Hochuli is 26-11-1 Under the total in his career

Shawn Smith: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams were 3-13 on the moneyline and 4-11-1 ATS with Shawn Smith in 2023
  • Home teams are 42-53-1 on the moneyline and 39-54-3 ATS in Smith’s career
  • Shawn Smith was 11-6 Under in 2023 and is 49-47-1 Under the total in his career

Tra Blake: Referee Penalty Trends & How it may impact betting

  • Home teams 18-13 on the moneyline and 16-15 ATS in Tra Blake’s career
  • Divisional home teams are 7-1 on the moneyline & 6-2 ATS in Tra Blake’s career

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Get Prepared for the 2024 NFL Season

Win today with best in class betting analysis and fantasy insights from experts you trust

A $100 bettor was up $8,022 following Warren’s picks last season.

Fantasy Football

Warren’s book, all-access betting, featured in.

yahoo_logo_grey-new

Sign up for Discounts, Offers, & Appearances

  • Phone This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

NCAA and NFL Referee news

Thursday, Oct. 21

  • Broncos at Browns —  Adrian Hill

Sunday, Oct. 24

  • Panthers at Giants  —  Carl Cheffers
  • Jets at Patriots  —  Brad Rogers
  • Chiefs at Titans  —  Brad Allen
  • Washginton at Packers  —  Ron Torbert
  • Falcons at Dolphins  —  Scott Novak
  • Bengals at Ravens  —  Tony Corrente
  • Lions at Rams  —  Bill Vinovich
  • Eagles at Raiders  —  Clete Blakeman
  • Texans at Cardinals  —  Land Clark
  • Bears at Buccaneers  —  Alex Kemp
  • Colts at 49ers —  Craig Wrolstad

Monday, Oct. 25

  • Saints at Seahawks —  Shawn Hochuli

Advertisement

Nfl reveals announcers for week 17 games, share this article, new york jets at cleveland browns, dec. 28, amazon, 8:15 p.m..

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Announcers: Al Michaels, Kirk Herbstreit, Kaylee Hartung

Detroit Lions at Dallas Cowboys, Dec. 30, ABC/ESPN, 8:15 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Announcers: Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Lisa Salters

Miami Dolphins at Baltimore Ravens, Dec. 31, CBS, 1 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Bill Streicher-USA TODAY Sports

Announcers: Ian Eagle, Charles Davis, Evan Washburn

New England Patriots at Buffalo Bills, Dec. 31, CBS, 1 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

(Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

Announcers: Kevin Harlan, Trent Green, Melanie Collins

Las Vegas Raiders at Indianapolis Colts, Dec. 31, CBS, 1 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

(Photo by David Eulitt/Getty Images)

Announcers: Andrew Catalon, Tiki Barber, Matt Ryan, AJ Ross

Carolina Panthers at Jacksonville Jaguars, Dec. 31, CBS, 1 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Announcers: Spero Dedes, Adam Archuleta, Aditi Kinkhabwala

Atlanta Falcons at Chicago Bears, Dec. 31, CBS, 1 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

(Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

Announcer: Chris Lewis, Jason McCourty, Ross Tucker, Amanda Renner

Los Angeles Rams at New York Giants, Dec. 31, FOX, 1 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports

Announcers: Kevin Kugler, Mark Sanchez, Laura Okmin

San Francisco 49ers at Washington Commanders, Dec. 31, FOX 1 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Kelley L Cox-USA TODAY Sports

Announcers: Adam Amin, Mark Schlereth, Kristina Pink

Announcers:

Arizona Cardinals at Philadelphia Eagles, Dec. 31, FOX, 1 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

James D. Smith-USA TODAY Sports

Announcers: Joe Davis, Daryl Johnston, Pam Oliver

New Orleans Saints at Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Dec. 31, FOX, 1 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

Announcers: Kevin Burkhardt, Greg Olsen, Erin Andrews, Tom Rinaldi

Tennessee Titans at Houston Texans, Dec. 31, FOX, 1 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Troy Taormina-USA TODAY Sports

Announcers: Chris Myers, Robert Smith, Jen Hale

Pittsburgh Steelers at Seattle Seahawks, Dec. 31, FOX, 4:05 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

(AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

Announcers: Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma, Shannon Spake

Cincinnati Bengals at Kansas City Chiefs, Dec. 31, CBS, 4:25 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Announcers: Jim Nantz, Tony Romo, Tracy Wolfson

Los Angeles Chargers at Denver Broncos, Dec. 31, CBS, 4:25 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Announcers; Tom McCarthy, James Lofton, Jay Feely, Tiffany Blackmon

Green Bay Packers at Minnesota Vikings, Dec. 31, NBC, 8:20 p.m.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

(Photo by Al Messerschmidt/Getty Images)

Announcers: Mike Tirico, Cris Collinsworth, Melissa Stark

Want the latest news and insights on your favorite team?

Sign up for our newsletter to get updates to your inbox, and also receive offers from us, our affiliates and partners. By signing up you agree to our Privacy Policy

An error has occured

Please re-enter your email address.

Thanks for signing up!

You'll now receive the top Touchdown Wire stories each day directly in your inbox.

Most Popular

Nfl draft: every quarterback who went no. 1 overall since 1967, the 101 greatest nicknames in football history, the best pro football player to wear every jersey number, the best route combination for every type of coverage, colorado hit with four unsportsmanlike conduct penalties after travis hunter int, the 15 alabama quarterbacks who were drafted by the pros, the nfl's 11 best slot receivers.

Please enter an email address.

Thanks for signing up.

Please check your email for a confirmation.

Something went wrong.

Cookie banner

We use cookies and other tracking technologies to improve your browsing experience on our site, show personalized content and targeted ads, analyze site traffic, and understand where our audiences come from. To learn more or opt-out, read our Cookie Policy . Please also read our Privacy Notice and Terms of Use , which became effective December 20, 2019.

By choosing I Accept , you consent to our use of cookies and other tracking technologies.

Follow The Ringer online:

  • Follow The Ringer on Twitter
  • Follow The Ringer on Instagram
  • Follow The Ringer on Youtube

Site search

  • Fantasy Football Rankings
  • Bill Simmons Podcast
  • 24 Question Party People
  • 60 Songs That Explain the ’90s
  • Against All Odds
  • Bachelor Party
  • The Bakari Sellers Podcast
  • Beyond the Arc
  • The Big Picture
  • Black Girl Songbook
  • Book of Basketball 2.0
  • Boom/Bust: HQ Trivia
  • Counter Pressed
  • The Dave Chang Show
  • East Coast Bias
  • Every Single Album: Taylor Swift
  • Extra Point Taken
  • Fairway Rollin’
  • Fantasy Football Show
  • The Fozcast
  • The Full Go
  • Gambling Show
  • Gene and Roger
  • Higher Learning
  • The Hottest Take
  • Jam Session
  • Just Like Us
  • Larry Wilmore: Black on the Air
  • Last Song Standing
  • The Local Angle
  • Masked Man Show
  • The Mismatch
  • Mint Edition
  • Morally Corrupt Bravo Show
  • New York, New York
  • Off the Pike
  • One Shining Podcast
  • Philly Special
  • Plain English
  • The Pod Has Spoken
  • The Press Box
  • The Prestige TV Podcast
  • Recipe Club
  • The Rewatchables
  • Ringer Dish
  • The Ringer-Verse
  • The Ripple Effect
  • The Rugby Pod
  • The Ryen Russillo Podcast
  • Sports Cards Nonsense
  • Slow News Day
  • Speidi’s 16th Minute
  • Somebody’s Gotta Win
  • Sports Card Nonsense
  • This Blew Up
  • Trial by Content
  • Ringer Wrestling Worldwide
  • What If? The Len Bias Story
  • Wrighty’s House
  • Wrestling Show
  • Latest Episodes
  • All Podcasts

Filed under:

The Winners and Losers of NFL Week 2

Matt LaFleur got a solid game out of Malik Willis. Did anyone have a bigger pro football accomplishment this week?

Share this story

  • Share this on Facebook
  • Share this on Twitter
  • Share All sharing options

Share All sharing options for: The Winners and Losers of NFL Week 2

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Every week this NFL season, we will break down the highs and lows—and everything in between—from the most recent slate of pro football. Welcome to Winners and Losers.

Winner: Matt LaFleur, QB Whisperer

It’s time to put some respect on LaFleur’s name. He resurrected Aaron Rodgers’s career and helped him win back-to-back MVP awards. While all that was happening, LaFleur was developing Jordan Love into a quarterback who’d eventually be worthy of a $220 million contract. But the most impressive coaching job of LaFleur’s career may have come on Sunday, when he coached the Malik Willis–led Packers to an upset win over the Colts.

With the Packers opening the season on a Friday last week, LaFleur and Willis had a few extra days to prepare for the spot start, but the young quarterback was traded to the team only a couple of weeks ago, so the two had plenty of ground to make up. And before the 16-10 win over the Colts, Willis had never thrown for more than 100 yards in an NFL game. He came into the league as a raw passer and had shown only incremental progress over his first few seasons. Crafting a winning plan for the game would take every bit of LaFleur’s skill as a coach. This take from Rex Ryan didn’t age well, but it does a good job of explaining what the Packers coach was up against this week—and you’d be hard-pressed to find anyone who disagreed with Ryan before Sunday afternoon.

"Well, unfortunately, I've seen this Malik Willis play in the NFL, and no way in hell am I taking him. I'm gonna take the Colts." - Rex Ryan ️ pic.twitter.com/mN9zIjcGLO — Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) September 15, 2024

LaFleur’s plan was simple: run the damn football and avoid passing situations at all costs. Now, I’m not sure even the most optimistic Packers fans would’ve seen their team running for 237 yards in the first half, but that’s what happened, and it made the rest of the plan far easier to execute.

LaFleur pulled out all the stops in the run game and leveraged Willis’s legs to good effect early. On the rare occasion that Willis did have to attempt a pass—he finished the game with only 14 attempts—LaFleur kept things simple for his quarterback, either with short screen passes or designed shot plays. Willis wasn’t asked to go through a progression too often. He was given either-or reads, and if there wasn’t a clear answer, he could take off on a scramble. It was quarterbacking made easy, and Willis’s stat line reflected that. He finished the game 12-of-14 for 122 yards and a touchdown. His lone touchdown pass, the first of his three-year career, may have been his most difficult throw of the day.

Malik Willis throws his first NFL TD pass! #INDvsGB pic.twitter.com/c2ALcrhUN6 — Green Bay Packers (@packers) September 15, 2024

The only thing LaFleur didn’t prepare Willis for was what to do when the center barfs all over the ball right before a key third-down snap.

We left it all out there today pic.twitter.com/F54kRdBNWC — Green Bay Packers (@packers) September 15, 2024

Every coach has weak points, and I guess this is LaFleur’s.

Other than that, it was a master class in how to call plays for a limited passer. LaFleur provided Willis with the kind of support he never got in Tennessee, where performances like this never felt possible whenever he got on the field. But LaFleur is proving to be a special coach who seems to have a magic touch with quarterbacks. That’s an invaluable trait in this league, where quarterback play determines most games, and it’s not something we can ignore when discussing the best coaches in the NFL. LaFleur’s name belongs near the top of that list, and the guys ahead of him are headed to Canton.

I don’t know how sustainable a Willis-led offense is for the Packers, but we may not have to find out, as Love is speedrunning his recovery from a knee sprain. Green Bay’s QB1 is targeting a Week 5 return, so we won’t get too much more of Willis. But no matter who’s starting at quarterback, you can be sure LaFleur will have them ready to play.

Loser: Caleb Williams’s Rookie of the Year Campaign

This is not the start to Williams’s career that anyone in Chicago had envisioned. The Bears are 1-1 after dropping an ugly game in Houston. That isn’t a terrible result for a young team playing on the road against a legitimate championship contender, but there’s no way to feel good about what we saw out of Williams and the Bears offense in the 19-13 loss on Sunday night.

Williams was sacked seven times and picked off twice. In a repeat of his disjointed debut against Tennessee, the first overall pick was skittish in the pocket, uncomfortable reading the defense, and generally inaccurate. And unlike in the Week 1 game against Tennessee, Williams didn’t display the flashes of talent that might make such a woeful performance easier to stomach for Bears fans who are desperate for a franchise quarterback to call their own.

It’s still far too early to give up on the ultra-talented Williams, but it’s time we reconsider how much help he’ll get from what was expected to be a strong supporting cast in Chicago this season. The receiving corps has been banged up early, with Keenan Allen missing the game against Houston and Rome Odunze missing practice throughout the week. The offensive line hasn’t played well through two weeks (though, to be fair, Williams doesn’t make his line’s job any easier with his constant movement). And, most concerning, offensive coordinator Shane Waldron doesn’t appear capable of working around any of these issues after he failed to deal with similar problems during his time running Seattle’s offense the last few seasons. The outlook is bleak.

If not for Bryce Young and the inept Carolina offense, Williams would rank dead last in most advanced efficiency metrics. His dropbacks are averaging negative-0.38 expected points added per play with a success rate of just 32.1 percent, per TruMedia. To put those numbers in perspective, Young averaged negative-0.21 EPA per dropback with a 36.5 percent success rate in 2023. The Panthers quarterback has taken his awfulness to an unforeseen level in 2024, but even his historically terrible rookie season was more efficient than what we’ve seen out of Williams through two games.

On Sunday night against a hungry Texans defense, we saw the worst of Williams’s game. He didn’t have much of a pocket to work with, facing pressure on nearly 40 percent of his dropbacks, but when the offensive line gave him time, Williams panicked or just failed to get rid of the ball on time. With the pressure mounting, Williams pressed to make big plays that simply weren’t there and would have thrown the Bears out of the game if not for a valiant effort by the defense. It looked a lot like his final season at USC—only the Trojan defense was so bad it made more sense for Williams to take risks. It was assumed that playing in a more structured offense, with talented players around him, would relieve the playmaking burden Williams had at USC last season. But through two weeks, that hasn’t been the case, and the generational prospect is off to a generationally disappointing start.

Los Angeles Rams v Arizona Cardinals

Winners: Marvin Harrison Jr. and Kyler Murray

Look, I won’t fault anyone for freaking out after Harrison was held to 4 yards on one catch in his NFL debut. The fourth pick in April’s draft was billed as a generational receiving prospect and looked like a UDFA throughout Arizona’s Week 1 loss in Buffalo. Harrison dropped a pass and didn’t create much separation when running vertical routes. It was a bad performance.

But it was only one performance, and it took all of seven days for Harrison to make us forget all about it, dropping 130 yards and two touchdowns on the Rams in Arizona’s 41-10 win. The doubters—if there still are any—will point out that all of his production came in the first quarter and that Murray was 0-for-3 when targeting him after that initial frame, but they’ll have no rebuttal to the highlights Harrison produced on Sunday. Nobody will be questioning Harrison’s hands or big-play ability after he hauled in this touchdown over Tre’Davious White.

MARVIN HARRISON JR.'S FIRST NFL TOUCHDOWN HAS ARRIVED pic.twitter.com/EFquDWaM8V — Arizona Cardinals (@AZCardinals) September 15, 2024

And this 60-yard catch-and-run will answer any questions about Harrison’s speed after he finished with one of the slowest max speeds of any receiver in Week 1, per Next Gen Stats.

Marvin Harrison Jr. we love you pic.twitter.com/GE6a9vVabw — Arizona Cardinals (@AZCardinals) September 15, 2024

The rookie will be just fine if he continues getting service like that from his quarterback. Murray continued his hot start to the season with another big outing. He finished his day with a perfect passer rating after completing 17 of 21 passes for 266 yards and three touchdowns. He also tacked on 59 yards as a runner, bringing his season total up to 116 yards. After two games, Murray is on pace to finish with 3,600 passing yards and nearly 1,000 running yards. Those have been MVP-winning numbers for other dual-threat quarterbacks. If Murray can keep this up, he could find himself in that discussion for the first time since Arizona’s 7-0 start in 2021.

Loser: The Christian McCaffrey–Less 49ers

The 49ers landed on the Week 2 loser list before a down was played in Minnesota on Sunday. The day before San Francisco’s 23-17 loss to the Vikings, the team put McCaffrey on injured reserve, sidelining him for at least four weeks as he works through Achilles tendonitis and calf tightness. The 49ers run game did just fine without McCaffrey in a Week 1 romp over the Jets, with Jordan Mason racking up 147 yards rushing on the ground, but losing the star back for extended time is sure to cause problems eventually. Those problems showed up this week in one key area: explosive plays.

Kyle Shanahan’s run game was productive in the box score without its lead back for a second consecutive week. Mason hit the 100-yard mark and found the end zone against Minnesota and now ranks second in running yards after two games. The former undrafted free agent is playing well and picking up a bunch of yards after contact, but he isn’t beating second- and third-level tacklers like McCaffrey did last season. Only 6.3 percent of Mason’s carries have gone for 15-plus yards. McCaffrey’s explosive run rate was double that in 2023, per TruMedia.

McCaffrey’s absence is also being felt in the passing game. It’s been only two weeks, but Brock Purdy’s efficiency numbers are down across the board, and the productivity of the short passing game has been the main difference.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Purdy’s throws to running backs averaged 0.03 EPA per play in 2023. That has dropped to negative-0.28 this season, per TruMedia. And without McCaffrey posing a threat out of the backfield, Minnesota could drop into deeper zone coverages on early downs, when San Francisco’s opponents are typically forced to load up the box. And Shanahan played into Brian Flores’s hands, starting the game with a pass-heavy script. Seven of the first eight offensive snaps were pass plays, and the offense didn’t find a groove until Shanahan started calling more early-down runs, which unlocked the middle of the field. But the 49ers were never able to draw the Vikings secondary closer to the line of scrimmage on first and second down. Purdy averaged nearly 9 yards per throw but attempted only one pass over 25 air yards—and that one just barely made the cut.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

The Vikings forced the 49ers to go on long, painstaking drives. One slipup and the Niners would find themselves in an obvious passing situation, where Flores shines as a defensive play designer—and really plays with the psyche of opposing quarterbacks. With Minnesota’s defense playing on the back foot on early downs, Purdy had plenty of time to read the defense from a clean pocket. But on third down, Flores dialed up the pressure and was able to rattle the 49ers quarterback.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Without McCaffrey on the field, there is more pressure on Purdy to create explosive plays in the passing game. He’s handled that pressure just fine through two weeks, but there will be more games like this over the next month—or maybe longer if McCaffrey’s injuries linger—if the run game doesn’t get more explosive in a hurry.

Loser: Mike McCarthy (Again)

Take it away, Jerry.

Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy and owner Jerry Jones cannot believe what they are seeing. The Cowboys have given up 35 points in the first half, matching the most the Cowboys have ever given up in a first half in team history pic.twitter.com/ItfQquCtso — John Clark (@JClarkNBCS) September 15, 2024

Yeah, that’s the good stuff. It had been too long. But it probably doesn’t feel that way for Jerry Jones, who had a similar look on his face the last time he watched the Cowboys play in his building—a 48-32 playoff loss to the Packers. This latest setback against the Saints hit all the same beats as that one, with the New Orleans offense marching up and down the field and the Cowboys offense struggling to find any breathing room and digging itself into an early hole that Dak Prescott was unable to climb out of.

It has been a theme of the Mike McCarthy era for Dallas to come out flat against a seemingly inferior opponent, so maybe Jerry shouldn’t be so surprised it happened again after an uneventful offseason. One of the few changes to the team came at defensive coordinator, where Mike Zimmer replaced Dan Quinn. Zimmer is a more aggressive play caller than Quinn. And while that increased aggression helped Dallas beat Cleveland in Week 1, we saw the downside of the approach against the Saints. Derek Carr (surprisingly) thrived in the face of the Cowboys’ pressure, and Zimmer couldn’t come up with an adjustment to slow him down. Getting dissected by Carr, whom Zimmer had never lost to before Sunday, might have been the first sign that Zimmer has passed his expiration date as an elite defensive coordinator. The shots of a confused Zimmer searching for answers on the sideline didn’t inspire confidence.

Even if Zimmer’s defense ends up leading to this team’s demise, it will be McCarthy, who has run out of scapegoats after replacing both of his coordinators the past two offseasons, in the hot seat. Last offseason, Kellen Moore got the boot so McCarthy could take over as the chief play caller … but the offense is plagued by all the same issues. Bringing in Zimmer was supposed to get this defense over the hump in the playoffs … but it looks vulnerable in all the same ways it did under Quinn. And with the team now pot committed to Prescott after signing him to a record-breaking deal last week, McCarthy looks like the only viable fall guy for the Cowboys’ inevitable late-season collapse, because, well, Jerry can’t face the real culprit for this mess of mediocrity: himself.

Winners: Chiefs Conspiracy Theorists

Chiefs haters might wake up losers on Monday morning, but the conspiratorial haters convinced there’s a leaguewide plot involving the referees to ensure Kansas City’s success will be buzzing all week after a defensive pass interference call on Bengals safety Daijahn Anthony saved the defending champs from certain defeat.

This was called DPI on fourth and 16 to give the #Chiefs a first down. Sure looks like the defender got there early. Thoughts? pic.twitter.com/UBIXgHs7Mi — Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) September 15, 2024

I love a good officiating controversy as much as the next fan, but it’s a stretch to blame the referees for this one. Anthony interfered with Rashee Rice’s attempt to catch the pass, and had he not made the early contact, it would have been a fairly easy catch for the Chiefs receiver. This loss falls on the Bengals for letting Rice find open space on fourth-and-16.

Before the ref-aided conversion and Harrison Butker’s subsequent game-winning field goal—karma was a clear loser in Week 2—we were headed for another season in which Cincinnati posed the biggest threat to Kansas City’s reign over the AFC. And maybe that should still be the case after the breakthroughs the Bengals offense seemed to make after a pitiful display against New England in the opener. Zac Taylor called more motion than he ever has since taking over the Bengals, and it gave the offense a major boost.

whew, what a set of stats* *way more context probably needed here pic.twitter.com/QNv2vX3dZW — Jake Liscow (@JakeLiscow) September 16, 2024

More importantly, Joe Burrow looked more comfortable in the pocket. He got through his progressions, extended plays, and pushed the ball deep after ignoring that part of the field against the Pats. Burrow still isn’t at the top of his game as he continues to get himself right after last year’s wrist surgery, but this was a step in the right direction, if only for the fact that there weren’t any reports of him struggling to pick up a water bottle.

The Bengals’ pass defense also played well after struggling for most of the 2023 season. It intercepted Patrick Mahomes twice, including this one-handed beauty from the shit-talking Cam Taylor-Britt , and held him to 5.4 yards per dropback in what felt like a throwback to Cincinnati’s past wins over Kansas City. But that’s where the Bengals have changed the most since their Super Bowl run in 2021, which was led by Lou Anarumo’s defense. We’re not seeing these competent displays of pass defense nearly as often, and the run defense has been the worst facet of the team through two weeks. The Chiefs run game averaged 0.11 EPA per attempt with a success rate of 57 percent on Sunday against the Bengals. It doesn’t matter how well you defend the pass—even against Mahomes—if the other team is running with that kind of efficiency.

No matter how bad things get for the Bengals offense, it’s easy to remain confident that the talent of Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase, and Tee Higgins will eventually figure it out. But this defense, outside of Trey Hendrickson, does not have the talent to inspire that kind of confidence. Anarumo’s defense was a key element in Cincinnati’s dominance over Kansas City in the AFC title game two seasons ago. The defense hasn’t been able to regain that form, and until it does, it will be difficult for Cincinnati to regain its spot near the top of the AFC.

Cleveland Browns v Jacksonville Jaguars

Loser: Doug Pederson

Let’s continue the theme of coaches running out of answers and turn our focus to rainy Jacksonville, where Pederson watched his Jaguars fall to 0-2 after losing to the Browns 18-13. While the heavy rain throughout the game helps to explain some of Jacksonville’s issues on offense, there’s no good explanation for how Trevor Lawrence entered halftime averaging just 1.5 yards per attempt.

“I’m at a loss because we’ve been together for a while now, right? We shouldn’t be playing the way we’re playing,” Pederson said after the ugly performance . “We shouldn’t be coaching the way we’re coaching. I take accountability there. It starts with me. Then it goes to the assistant coaches and players. I just know that we’re a better football team than what we played today.”

On paper, the Jaguars are a much better team than they’ve shown over the past two weeks, and Lawrence is a far better quarterback (and is playing a lot better) than his 2024 stat line suggests. We saw that in the second half, when the Jags ratcheted up the tempo and let Lawrence orchestrate the offense from the line of scrimmage. Jacksonville couldn’t quite close the gap after the defense locked up the Browns offense over the final two quarters, but the offense moved the ball consistently.

The Jaguars appeared to be on the comeback trail after a fourth-quarter stop with the deficit cut down to three. But Browns punter Corey Bojorquez struck a blow to the cause with a coffin corner punt that pinned Jacksonville at its 2-yard line. Pederson decided that was a good time to dial up a deep dropback for Lawrence—who was going up against one of the better defensive lines in the NFL while playing behind a suspect offensive line—and he was immediately sacked for a safety.

“Yeah, we knew what we had to do,” Pederson said of the play call after the game. “We had to go 98 yards obviously. We had a chance to push the ball down the field at that time. It just felt like the pocket collapsed a little bit on his left side. Just nowhere to go with the ball. We’ve just got to clean that stuff up.”

That “stuff” could refer to any number of things. Is it the pass protection that can’t hold up in obvious passing situations? The receiving corps that can’t separate? The quarterback, who can’t seem to get out of his own way and isn’t getting any help from his coaches? Is it the play calling? Or is it all of the above?

I’m not sure how to answer that question, and it doesn’t sound like Pederson does either after an 0-2 start to this make-or-break season for him and his coaching staff.

Winner: Derek Carr and Learning to Live a Little

They don’t hand out MVP awards after Week 2, but if they did, Carr would be working on his acceptance speech right now after leading the Saints to another dominant win—this one over the heavily favored Cowboys by a shocking 44-19 score. Lighting up the Panthers is one thing, but carving up this Dallas defense, fresh off a dominant display in Week 1, is an eye-opening result for a quarterback who was widely viewed as a lame duck coming into the season.

No way the Dallas Cowboys letting Derek Carr do this to them in their home stadium pic.twitter.com/sqRFmcdO6F — Hater Report (@HaterReport_) September 15, 2024

OK, that dance was pretty cringe-inducing, but Carr’s game has been anything but through two contests. After throwing for 243 yards on just 16 attempts against the Cowboys, he’s averaging a ridiculous 11.4 yards per attempt, which leads the league by nearly 2 full yards. What’s shocking is how Carr is doing this. We’ve seen him play productive football in the past—he was a legitimate MVP candidate in 2016—but we’ve never seen him play this well when under pressure. That has always been the knock against Carr. Here’s how Joey Bosa once put it after a game in 2021:

“We knew once we hit him a few times, he really gets shook,” Bosa said . “And you saw on [Christian Covington’s] sack, he was pretty much curling into a ball before we even got back there. Great dude, great player ... but we know once you get pressure on him, he kind of shuts down.”

Fast-forward to 2024, and Carr is no longer folding against pressure, thanks in large part to Saints offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak. The first-year OC has developed an offense built around the run game. With Alvin Kamara off to a fast start, defenses are homing in on the run, which takes the teeth out of the pass rush. As a result, Carr has been pressured only seven times through two weeks. We’re not dealing with a meaningful sample size here, but Carr’s numbers under pressure have been mind-blowing. He’s averaging 20.7 yards per dropback, and he’s thrown two deep touchdowns, including this downfield strike to Rashid Shaheed.

CARR TO SHAHEED 70 YARDS : #NOvsDAL on FOX : https://t.co/waVpO909ge pic.twitter.com/GV0MW5cduw — NFL (@NFL) September 15, 2024

I don’t know how long this will last, but this version of Carr is a lot more fun to watch, and I hope he’s here for good. While veteran quarterbacks don’t typically change their playing style this dramatically, Carr finally playing in an offense that doesn’t put so much on his plate could be the key to unlocking this part of his game. What Kubiak is asking of his quarterback is a far cry from the complex offenses Carr’s been in under Jon Gruden and former Sean Payton assistant Pete Carmichael Jr., and it’s brought out the best in him.

If this continues, we’ll have to reconsider what the Saints are capable of this season. Dennis Allen has fielded a top-10 defense by EPA in three of the past five years, and the Saints are fifth in the NFL in that metric this season. The offense won’t maintain this efficiency, and Carr won’t average 20 yards per play under pressure all season, but there’s enough talent here for a good play caller to put together a top-10 offense. And Kubiak looks the part.

Pittsburgh Steelers v Denver Broncos

Loser: Sean Payton’s Reputation

Bo Nix should consider himself lucky to have Payton as his coach. Not because the Broncos coach is making his transition to the NFL any easier. Nix has already thrown more interceptions in two games (four) than he did all of last year at Oregon (three). But the rookie quarterback can always count on Payton to be the center of attention—no matter how bad Nix’s stat line gets.

That will be the case this week after Payton’s bizarre decision to pass up an onside kick attempt after the Broncos cut Pittsburgh’s lead down to seven points with 1:54 left in the game and the Broncos down to their final timeout. Here’s how Payton attempted to explain the decision after the game:

Sean Payton explains the decision: We were hopeful to have 2-3 plays before we went to the end zone. It was just weighing the odds vs. recovering an onside kick or getting the ball back with 26 seconds. So we chose to kick off. https://t.co/eV1KOOxezx pic.twitter.com/Ysxh2259Pv — Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) September 15, 2024

Payton said the decision came down to “weighing the odds versus recovering an onside kick or getting the ball back with 26 seconds.” The Broncos chose the latter option despite knowing they’d have no timeouts remaining for said drive. It’s an unfathomable decision for any coach, but especially for one who won a Super Bowl in New Orleans thanks in large part to an onside kick. If that isn’t a sign that Payton’s days as a difference-making head coach are done, then Nix’s awful start to the season should be.

Winner: Blaming All Your Problems on the Refs

Unlike the Cowboys, the Ravens have someone other than themselves to blame for their shocking Week 2 loss after a questionable defensive pass interference call on Brandon Stephens set the Raiders up for the game-tying score.

Brandon Stephens was called for pass interference on this play pic.twitter.com/ZeZ3ZunfNu — Kevin Oestreicher (@koestreicher34) September 15, 2024

Ravens safety Eddie Jackson could be getting a call from the league office after saying it was a “BS call,” but he has a point. Davante Adams was attempting to push Stephens off him, and the Baltimore corner was simply fighting back. A no-call was the right call in that situation, but NFL referees will never turn down an opportunity to insert themselves into the game if you let them. That was one of several 50-50 calls that seemed to go against Baltimore down the stretch in a game in which it lost 109 yards to penalties while the Raiders were penalized for only 15 yards.

Still, the uneven whistle doesn’t fully explain how the Ravens could lose a home game to a much weaker opponent. The team’s offensive line, which couldn’t block Maxx Crosby all game a week after failing to block Chris Jones, played a bigger role in the loss than the referees did. And none of those calls would have mattered if the defense didn’t let Gardner Minshew complete nine of 13 passes for 126 yards (9.7 yards per attempt) and a touchdown to lead a 10-point turnaround in the fourth quarter. The refs didn’t cause Justin Tucker to miss another field goal—and shouldn’t stop us from asking whether the GOAT is officially past his prime.

The Ravens have several problems they will have to sort out over the next three months if this team is going to launch a proper Super Bowl campaign. The questionable refereeing just helped shine a light on those problems.

Next Up In NFL

Bryce young benched and waiver wire pickups for week 3, rip night review, nfl price check, and card shop origin story with mark gronek.

  • What’s Next After the Trump-Harris Debate? Plus: Tom Brady Week 2 and Anchorman-Producer Meltdowns.
  • Which of the NFL’s 0-2 Teams Need to Panic?
  • Young QB Struggles, Kyler Goes Off, 0-2 Bengals and Ravens, Plus Arch Manning’s Big Day With Todd McShay and Domonique Foxworth
  • “It Wasn’t Supposed to Look Like This”

Sign up for the The Ringer Newsletter

Thanks for signing up.

Check your inbox for a welcome email.

Oops. Something went wrong. Please enter a valid email and try again.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

‘John Wick’ With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, and Shea Serrano

Bill, Chris, and Shea are thinking they’re back after rewatching the 2014 action-thriller hit ‘John Wick’

2024 Democratic National Convention: Day 2

The Future of Maryland With Angela Alsobrooks

Angela Alsobrooks, a Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, joins Bakari to talk about her relationship with Kamala Harris, why her Senate race appears to be so close, and more

Los Angeles Chargers v Carolina Panthers

The guys react to the Panthers benching Bryce Young for Andy Dalton, then give their must-add players at each position ahead of NFL Week 3

Celebrity Sightings In Los Angeles - September 14, 2024

Ben and J.Lo, the Emmys, Taylor Updates, and More

The ladies also discuss some updates on Meghan and Harry amid controversial articles and Harry’s 40th birthday

Cincinnati Bengals v Kansas City Chiefs

Mark Gronek joins Mike and Jesse to talk about launching a card shop, fostering a card community, and more

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

The Return of the Big Oscar Bet and the Best Movies at the Toronto International Film Festival

Sean and Amanda are joined by Adam Nayman to do a speed recap of his favorite (and least favorite) movies out of TIFF

Football Zebras

News Reference Desk

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Disciplinary Action News Week 1, 2024

Hall of Fame News

Officiating crews for the 2021 season

The list of the 17 crews and swing officials for the 2021 NFL season.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Football Zebras has obtained the officiating crew rosters for the 2021 NFL season. This season, there is one new official to replace 6 that retired; those hired in the second wave of hires during the 2020 offseason are being retained as permanent officials. There are also 2 veterans designated as swing officials, who will move between crews through the season. Both of the swing officials are deep wings. There are no new referees this season, breaking a string of at least one referee promotion in each of the previous 3 seasons, with 7 promotions in total.

The hiring of only one new official is the fewest number of new hires since the 2013 season , when then-back judge Dale Shaw was the only rookie official hired that season. Six officials have left the field this offseason , including two that opted out of the 2020 season due to coronavirus pandemic.

The NFL has added another woman to the officiating crews with the hiring of line judge Maia Chaka . Additionally, the three centralized replay assistants from the 2020 season, Desiree Abrams, Artenzia Young-Seigler, and Sebrina Brunson, have been assigned to crews for 2021. Also of note, there are two former NFL players on the officiating roster: field judge Nate Jones and umpire Terry Killens.

Senior staff

  • Walt Anderson, senior vice president of officiating training and development —  centralized replay representative
  • Perry Fewell, senior vice president of officiating administration —  centralized replay representative
  • Bret Ayers, director of video technology

Regional officiating coordinators

  • Garth DeFelice
  • Wayne Mackie
  • Doug Rosenbaum
  • Gary Slaughter
  • Rob Vernatchi

Crew members are listed with their years of NFL experience, including the upcoming season, the regional crew they were on last season, the crew they were on in the 2019 season, the college attended, and occupations. A replay official and replay assistant are assigned to each crew, however in the 2020 season, there were no crew assignments for these positions.

* indicates an official who is on the same crew as a prior season. Veteran officials who have changed positions from last season are noted on each crew.

Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 122 Brad Allen 8     Pembroke State non-profit CEO
U 102 Bruce Stritesky 16 * Vinovich Embry Riddle airline pilot
DJ 113 Danny Short 5 * Cheffers North Carolina-Charlotte executive director, global sales operations
LJ 85 Daniel Gallagher 2 * NA Kent State
FJ 15 Rick Patterson 26 * Anderson Wofford banker
SJ 41 Boris Cheek 26 * Corrente Morgan State retired director of operations and management
BJ 38 Greg Yette 12 Torbert * Howard defense contractor
ROCarl Madsen 12HochuliWashington St. Louisoffice furniture rep, retired NFL official (U, 12 seasons)
RALarry Hanson2NACalifornia-San Diegohealth and safety
Substitution: Madsen died following Week 7. Replacement not yet named.
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 34 Clete Blakeman 14     Nebraska attorney
U 110 Tab Slaughter 2 Rogers NA Arkansas State chief operating officer
DJ 8 Dana McKenzie 14 Kemp Corrente Toledo claims adjuster
LJ 10 Julian Mapp 13 Boger Rogers Grambling State software quality assurance tester
FJ 3 Scott Edwards 23 Novak Torbert Alabama environmental engineer
SJ 18 Clay Reynard 2 Cheffers NA California-Davis customer service representative
BJ 46 Perry Paganelli 24 Vinovich * Hope College retired high school administrator
ROChad Adams 4—Torbert (RA)Cincinnatioperations
RAWillie Vizoso4—NovakMiami Dade CollegeIT consultant
Mapp (DJ→LJ), Edwards (SJ→FJ), Adams (replay assistant→replay official) Substitutions: Paul Weidner was originally assigned as replay official for the crew, but is not working this season. Adams was promoted in Preseason Week 3.
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 23 Jerome Boger 18     Morehouse College retired commercial insurance underwriter
U 20 Barry Anderson 15 * Allen North Carolina State builder/developer
DJ 44 Frank LeBlanc 2 Martin NA Lamar Institute of Technology neighborhood services manager
LJ 59 Rusty Baynes 12 * * Auburn-Montgomery general manager, safety services
FJ 22 Steve Zimmer 25 Hussey Allen Hofstra attorney
SJ 120 Jonah Monroe 7 Torbert * Arkansas engineer
BJ 17 Steve Patrick 8 Martin Vinovich Jacksonville State owner, supply company
RORoss Smith3—BogerLSUretired
RAGerald Frye2—NAGannonveterinarian
LeBlanc (LJ→DJ)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 51 Carl Cheffers 22     California-Irvine sales manager
U 33 Tra Blake 2 (swing) NA Central Florida software quality assurance manager
DJ 91 Jerry Bergman 20 Wrolstad Blakeman Robert Morris sales executive
LJ 45 Jeff Seeman 20 Vinovich * Minnesota brokerage sales
FJ 42 Nate Jones 3 Rogers Martin Rutgers firefighter/EMT
SJ 103 Eugene Hall 8 Rogers * North Texas federal agent
BJ 96 Matt Edwards 4 Kemp * Western Michigan healthcare sales
ROAndrew Lambert4—Cheffers (RA)Central Virginia Community Collegebusiness development
RAKirt Shay3—HillXavierteacher
Blake (FJ→U)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 130 Land Clark 4   Hill Sevier Valley Tech chief building official
U 121 Paul King 13 Hill Hochuli Nichols College teacher
DJ 68 Tom Stephan 23 Blakeman Anderson Pittsburg State retired business broker
LJ 40 Brian Bolinger 5 Hussey Allen Indiana State corporate safety director
FJ 72 Michael Banks 20 Blakeman Cheffers Illinois State carpenter foreman
SJ 90 Anthony Flemming 2 Corrente NA Texas A&M-Commerce
BJ 78 Greg Meyer 20 Rogers Hill Texas Christian banker
ROJimmy Oldham14—AllenArkansas Statefinancial advisor
RADesiree Abrams2replay centerNAFlorida A&Mprogram manager
Stephan (LJ→DJ), Bolinger (DJ→LJ), Banks (SJ→FJ), Abrams (centralized replay assistant→booth replay assistant)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 99 Tony Corrente 27     Cal State-Fullerton former college officiating coordinator, retired educator
U 64 Dan Ferrell 19 * (swing) Cal State-Fullerton retired logistics and supply chain executive
DJ 13 Patrick Turner 8 Cheffers Wrolstad Cal State-Long Beach plant manager
LJ 47 Tim Podraza 14 Cheffers * Nebraska business performance consultant
FJ 36 Anthony Jeffries 4 Boger * Alabama-Birmingham medical sales
SJ 58 Don Willard 4 Vinovich Rogers Illinois State physical therapist
BJ 30 Todd Prukop 13 * * Cal State-Fullerton medical sales representative
ROJohn McGrath5—RogersKentuckyretired NFL official (HL, 15 seasons)
RAArtenzia Young-Seigler2replay centerNAPaul Quinn Collegecollege professor
Jeffries (SJ→FJ), Young-Seigler (centralized replay assistant→booth replay assistant)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 29 Adrian Hill 12     Buffalo aerospace software engineer
U 81 Roy Ellison 19 Hussey * Savannah State IT engineer
DJ 24 David Oliver 5 Novak * Baker information systems manager
LJ 75 Mark Stewart 4 Clark * Pittsburg State rancher
FJ 31 Mearl Robinson 5 Clark Vinovich Air Force retired U.S. Air Force instructor
SJ 5 Jim Quirk 12 * * Middlebury financial advisor
BJ 61 Keith Ferguson 22 Wrolstad Anderson San Jose State sales
RORoddy Ames4—BogerColby Collegeattorney
RAJoe Wollan2—NASt. Thomasrecruiting
Oliver (LJ→DJ), Robinson (SJ→FJ), Quirk (FJ→SJ)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 83 Shawn Hochuli 8     Claremont financial advisor
U 77 Terry Killens 3 Martin Torbert Penn State campus security specialist
DJ 134 Ed Camp 22 Hill * William Paterson physical education teacher
LJ 98 Greg Bradley 13 Kemp * Tennessee chemical engineer
FJ 97 Tom Hill 23 * * Carson Newman retired teacher/coach
SJ 125 Chad Hill 4 * Novak Mississippi medical sales
BJ 39 Rich Martinez 8 * * Canisius sales manager
ROTyler Cerimeli4—Hochuli (RA)Arizona Statehigh school officials coordinator
RAMark Bitar2—NASeton Hallteacher
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 35 John Hussey 20     Idaho State sales representative
U 76 Alan Eck 6 Clark * Bloomsburg State tax manager
DJ 53 Sarah Thomas 7 Hochuli Torbert Mobile sales representative
LJ 101 Carl Johnson 18 Hochuli * Nicholls State retired sales manager, former full-time official
FJ 26 Jabir Walker 7 Kemp * Murray State middle school teacher
SJ 56 Allen Baynes 14 * * Auburn realtor
BJ 88 Brad Freeman 8 Boger * Mississippi State sports park director
ROJamie Nicholson4—Hussey (RA)Ferris Stateteacher
RADenise Crudup2—NAWilmingtonaccounts payable analyst
Walker (SJ→FJ)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 55 Alex Kemp 8     Central Michigan insurance agent
U 49 Rich Hall 18 Cheffers * Arizona custom cabinetry
DJ 63 Mike Carr 5 Vinovich * Wisconsin athletic director
LJ 32 Jeff Bergman 29 (opt out) * Robert Morris president and chief executive officer, medical services
FJ 117 John Jenkins 8 Novak * St. Mary’s sales executive
SJ 104 Dale Shaw 9 Boger * Allegheny pharmaceutical sales
BJ 93 Scott Helverson 19 Blakeman Wrolstad Iowa sales, printing and promotions
ROMike Chase5—KempArizona Statesenior portfolio manager
RADurwood Manley3—RogersLubbock Christiansales territory manager
Shaw (FJ→SJ)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 19 Clay Martin 7     Oklahoma Baptist high school administrator
U 11 Fred Bryan 13 Blakeman * Northern Iowa superintendent, juvenile correctional facility
DJ 6 Jerod Phillips 6 Rogers * Northeastern State elementary school teacher
LJ 100 Maia Chaka 1 NA NA Norfolk State health and physical education teacher
FJ 95 James Coleman 17 Torbert Hochuli Arkansas electrical engineer
SJ 73 Joe Larrew 19 (opt out) Blakeman St Louis attorney
BJ 119 Greg Wilson 14 Cheffers * USC retired police officer
ROBrian Matoren17—AndersonFloridawriter/producer
RARandy Campbell2—NAKansas Stateoil and gas
Larrew (FJ→SJ)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 1 Scott Novak 8     Phoenix sales manager
U 128 Ramon George 6 Hochuli * Lenoir-Rhyne financial underwriter
DJ 74 Derick Bowers 19 Martin * East Central sales representative
LJ 65 Walt Coleman IV 7 Rogers * Southern Methodist portfolio manager
FJ 116 Mike Weatherford 20 Martin * Oklahoma State oil and gas business
SJ 118 David Meslow 11 Vinovich Boger Augsburg College sales executive
BJ 111 Terrence Miles 14 * * Arizona State quality control manager
ROMatt Sumstine4—BlakemanPhoenixreal estate
RALarry Hill Jr.2—NAHamptonjudge
Meslow (FJ→SJ)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 126 Brad Rogers 5     Lubbock Christian college professor
U 124 Carl Paganelli 22 Kemp Boger Michigan State retired federal probation officer
DJ 79 Kent Payne 18 Novak * Nebraska Wesleyan agribusinessman
LJ 87 Tom Eaton 2 Wrolstad NA Central Florida
FJ 50 Aaron Santi 7 Wrolstad * Southern Oregon middle school principal
SJ 114 Dominique Pender 2 (swing) NA Howard
BJ 12 Greg Steed 19 Hill * Howard computer systems analyst
ROKevin Brown3—NAPurdueretired air traffic controller
RABob Hubbell2—NATexas A&Msteel sales
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 14 Shawn Smith 7     Ferris State finance
U 92 Bryan Neale 8 * * Indiana sales consultant
DJ 28 Mark Hittner 25 Blakeman * Pittsburg State investment broker
LJ 123 Mike Dolce 2 * NA Grand Valley State wealth management advisor
FJ 109 Dyrol Prioleau 15 * * Johnson C Smith manager, law firm
SJ 107 Dave Hawkshaw 3 Wrolstad * Justice Institute of B.C. firefighter
BJ 105 Dino Paganelli 16 * * Aquinas College educator
ROMike Wimmer19—SmithNYUproducer
RASebrina Brunson2replay centerNAFlorida Atlanticcase specialist
Dolce (DJ→LJ), Brunson (centralized replay assistant→booth replay assistant)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 62 Ron Torbert 12     Michigan State attorney
U 131 Mark Pellis 8 * Cheffers Allegheny financial advisor
DJ 16 Kevin Codey 7 Hill Hussey Western New England middle school physical education teacher
LJ 84 Mark Steinkerchner 28 Smith * Akron vice president
FJ 25 Ryan Dickson 5 Corrente * Utah commercial real estate developer
SJ 7 Keith Washington 14 Hill (swing) Virginia Military Institute program financial analyst
BJ 67 Tony Josselyn 4 (swing) * Eastern Kentucky probation officer
ROSaleem Choudhry4TorbertBaldwin-WallacePro Football Hall of Fame executive
ROMeddie Kalegi NA
Codey (LJ→DJ) Substitution: Kalegi hired and added to crew in Preseason Week 3 to replace Adams, who was promoted to replay official.
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 52 Bill Vinovich 16     San Diego certified public accountant
U 115 Tony Michalek 20 * Rogers Indiana chief executive officer
DJ 106 Patrick Holt 3 Torbert Boger North Carolina State IT manager
LJ 9 Mark Perlman 21 Corrente * Salem teacher
FJ 57 Joe Blubaugh 2 Blakeman NA Pittsburg State regional sales manager
SJ 86 Jimmy Buchanan 13 Smith Blakeman South Carolina State food service director
BJ 82 Jimmy Russell 3 Allen Allen Pasco Hernando State insurance agent
ROMark Butterworth5—VinovichWalshnon-profit COO
RAYvonda Lewis3—AllenPrairie View A&Msystem administrator
Perlman (DJ→LJ)
Yrs2020 crew2019 crewCollegeOccupation
R 4 Craig Wrolstad 19     Washington athletic director
U 54 Steve Woods 5 Novak * Wabash financial advisor
DJ 48 Jim Mello 18 Torbert Allen Northeastern facilities manager
LJ 37 Tripp Sutter 3 Clark * Nebraska biopharmaceutical rep
FJ 43 Terry Brown 16 Kemp * Tennessee court director
SJ 21 Jeff Lamberth 20 Martin * Texas A&M attorney
BJ 27 Grantis Bell 2 Hussey NA West Virginia
ROKevin Stine4—Anderson (RA)Alabama-Birminghamregional sales manager
RAGavin Anderson3—MartinGreen Riverpolice officer
Mello (LJ→DJ), Sutter (DJ→LJ), Lamberth (FJ→SJ)

Swing officials

Note: Swing officials can be assigned to work the opposite wing position.

      Yrs 2020 crew 2019 crew College Occupation
FJ 60 Gary Cavaletto 19 Cheffers Vinovich Hancock general manager, agricultural operations
FJ 80 Greg Gautreaux 19 (opt out) Martin SW Louisiana athletic programs manager

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

NFL–CFL officiating exchange not happening in 2021

3 more officials retire, now totaling 6 this offseason

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Cam Filipe is a forensic scientist and has been involved in football officiating for 12 years. Cam is in his fourth season as a high school football official. This is his ninth season covering NFL officiating for Football Zebras.

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

You may like

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Week 2 photo album, 2024

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Week 2 officiating liveblog

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

NFL issues 22 fines, including 2 unflagged hip-drop tackles and 5 for fighting

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Officiating slightly taps the brakes on illegal formation enforcement

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Rules review video: Holding up a snap for subs, intentional grounding on a spike, and taunting after a first down

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Dead-ball awareness is the first Call of the Week of 2024

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Week 2 referee assignments

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Week 1 photo album – 2024

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Week 1 officiating liveblog

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Small changes in the rules that you might not have been aware of

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Week 1 referee assignments

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Referee assignments for preseason week 3

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Surprisingly few high school football rule changes for 2024

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

The NFL is auditioning potential future referees this preseason

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Preseason is a time for officiating crews to practice emergency crew-of-6

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

6 things I’m looking for in the 2024 NFL season

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Football Zebras launches a weekly podcast: 1st & 25

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

How are officials affected by new Hall of Fame nomination rule changes?

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Rules review video: Fouls on failed 4th downs, hits with the crown of the helmet, and shortening quarters in a blowout

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Rules review video: Targeting with another foul, downing punts, and muffed fair-catch kickoffs

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Rules review video: Touching the pylon, ball carrier down, and targeting with the lights out

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Rules review video: Unconventional handoffs, unnecessary roughness, and roughing the passer

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Rules review video: Scrimmage kick advancement, targeting, and blocking below the waist

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Rules School: Officiating mechanics at the end of the half

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Rules review video: Kick catch interference, invalid fair catch signal, and penalty enforcements

nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

Rules review video: Roughing the kicker, forced touching, and kick catch interference

Latest podcasts.

  • Episode 2: An officiating crisis and illegal formations
  • Episode 1: A new season, a new podcast
  • Episode 0: Introducing 1st & 25: The Football Zebras Podcast

IMAGES

  1. NFL Referee Assignments Week 17: Refs Assigned for Sunday Games

    nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

  2. Week 17 referee assignments

    nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

  3. NFL Referee Assignments Week 17: Refs assigned for each game this week

    nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

  4. Week 17 referee assignments

    nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

  5. Week 17 referee assignments

    nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

  6. NFL Referee Assignments & Stats Week 17

    nfl referee assignments week 17 2021

COMMENTS

  1. NFL Referee Assignments Week 17: Refs assigned for each game this week

    NFL referee assignments for Week 17. Below you will find the referee for each of the Week 17 NFL games. Each ref has their own crew assigned to them from the NFL's officiating roster.Our handy guide will help you find out which officials are on which officiating crews in 2021.. Note: All times Eastern NFL refs for early Sunday games

  2. Week 17 referee assignments

    December 27, 2021. By. Cameron Filipe. Embed from Getty Images. Getty Images Sport Lachlan Cunningham. Clay Martin and his crew will officiate the NFC North clash between the Vikings and Packers this Sunday night in the penultimate week of the 2021 NFL season. Ron Torbert is off this week. Scheduled assignments are subject to change.

  3. Week 17

    Sunday, Jan. 2 Eagles at Washington — Clete BlakemanPanthers at Saints — Jerome BogerBuccaneers at Jets — Alex KempDolphins at Titans — Shawn SmithJaguars at Patriots — Adrian HillRaiders at Colts — Brad RogersChiefs at Bengals — John HusseyGiants at Bears — Shawn HochuliFalcons at Bills — Land ClarkTexans at 49ers — Carl CheffersBroncos at Chargers — Craig ...

  4. NFL Referee Assignments Week 17: Refs Assigned for Each NFL Game This Week

    The remaining 15 NFL ref assignments for Week 17 are listed below. Ahead of the season, each ref has a crew of officials assigned to them from the NFL officiating roster. To see which officials are assigned to which crew, then our guide to the 2022 officiating crews has the full list of pre-season assignments.

  5. Week 17 referee assignments

    Officiating crews for the 2021 season. ... NFL won't allow a holder to elevate a teed kickoff ball. Become a ref; Super Bowl Zebras; 1st & 25 Podcast; Assignments Week 17. ... Assignments Week 17 referee assignments. Shawn Hochuli will officiate the final Thursday night game of the season, as the Cowboys take on the Titans. ...

  6. Week 17

    Sunday, Jan. 1. Cardinals at Falcons — Alex Kemp. Bears at Lions — Adrian Hill. Jaguars at Texans — Scott Novak. Broncos at Chiefs — Tra Blake. Dolphins at Patriots — Brad Allen. Colts at Giants — Craig Wrolstad. Saints at Eagles — Jerome Boger. Panthers at Buccaneers — Brad Rogers.

  7. Assignments

    Officiating crews for the 2021 season. ... Week 1 referee assignments. Shawn Hochuli will be the referee for the first game of the 2024 regular season. 2024 preseason 3 weeks ago. ... UFL Week 6 officiating assignments. 2 future NFL officials working this weekend. 2024 UFL season 5 months ago.

  8. NFL Referee Assignments Week 17: Refs Assigned for Sunday Games

    With 16 games, there will only be one crew without an assignment this week. NFL Referee Assignments for Week 17. All times Eastern and game day Sunday unless stated otherwise.

  9. NFL Referee Assignments & Stats Week 17

    The final week of the 2020-2021 regular season is here! It just seemed like the season started. Week 16 leans went 1-1. I was shocked to see Clete Blakeman's game go under the total. Let me put a bow on the regular season and get into the final weeks NFL Referee Assignments & Stats Report.

  10. NFL Referee Assignment for Week 2 & Impact on NFL Betting

    NFL Referee Assignment for Week 1 & Impact on NFL Betting. By Joe Gibbs Sep 4, 2024. We tend to only focus on NFL referees after a controversial decision or bad no-call. Yet, each head NFL referee and his respective crew interprets the game differently. Gaining insight into the way a game will be officiated can have immense value in the betting ...

  11. Week 7

    Thursday, Oct. 21 Broncos at Browns — Adrian Hill Sunday, Oct. 24 Panthers at Giants — Carl CheffersJets at Patriots — Brad RogersChiefs at Titans — Brad AllenWashginton at Packers — Ron TorbertFalcons at Dolphins — Scott NovakBengals at Ravens — Tony CorrenteLions at Rams — Bill VinovichEagles at Raiders — Clete BlakemanTexans at Cardinals — Land ClarkBears at Buccaneers ...

  12. 2020-21 National Football League (NFL) Officiating Roster

    17 - B Steve Patrick, Oneonta, Ala., 7 18 - S Clay Reynard, San Diego, 1 19 - R Clay Martin, Jenks, Okla., 6 ... Next article NFL: Week 9 referee assignments. Referee. Referee, the world's original sports officiating magazine, educates, challenges and inspires officials at all levels.

  13. Week 2 NFL Referee Assignments: Refs assigned for each game this week

    Week 2 NFL referee assignments. The named official on each of the Week 2 NFL games below is the referee. Each of them has a full team of officials assigned to them from the full officiating roster ahead of the year. You can use our handy guide to find which officials are on which officiating crews.

  14. NFL Referee Assignments Week 7: Refs assigned for each game this week

    NFL referee assignments for Week 7. ... Our hand guide will help you find out which officials are on which officiating crews in 2021. NFL refs for early Sunday games. Cincinnati Bengals at Baltimore Ravens | 1 PM ET ... However, while they are averaging 17.2 flags thrown per game, that is largely driven by throwing 47 flags through the first ...

  15. Week 17 referee assignments

    Officiating crews for the 2021 season. ... NFL won't allow a holder to elevate a teed kickoff ball. Become a ref; Super Bowl Zebras; 1st & 25 Podcast; Assignments Week 17, 2023. ... Assignments Week 17 referee assignments. Alex Kemp heads the crew to start Week 17 in Cleveland. Tweet; Pocket. Reddit; Email;

  16. NFL reveals announcers for Week 17 games

    NFL reveals announcers for Week 17 games. Share this article 23 shares share tweet text email link Barry Werner. December 26, 2023 3:00 pm ET. New York Jets at Cleveland Browns, Dec. 28, Amazon, 8:15 p.m. Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports. Announcers: Al Michaels, Kirk Herbstreit, Kaylee Hartung ...

  17. NFL 2024

    The official source for NFL news, video highlights, fantasy football, game-day coverage, schedules, stats, scores and more. ... Specific dates and start times for the designated Week 17 matchups ...

  18. 2024 Roster of NFL Officials

    Complete 2024 NFL roster of officials. ... The following is the 2024 NFL roster of officials: Referees. Name: Number: Brad Allen: 122: Tra Blake : 3: Clete Blakeman : 34: Carl Cheffers: 51: Land Clark : 130: Alan Eck : 76: ... Every week, officials take the field ready to put months of preparation, training and hard work on display, knowing ...

  19. WATCH: NFL referee turns on jets, outruns 49ers safeties on ...

    Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson's 97-yard touchdown reception in the Vikings' 23-17 win over the San Francisco 49ers was the longest scoring play of Week 2 through Sunday. Yet he ...

  20. NFL Referee Assignments Week 1: Refs assigned for each game this week

    Ahead of Week 1, the NFL announced the ref assignments for the 16 NFL games. The named official on each game is the ref, with each of them having a team assigned to them from the full officiating roster ahead of the year. Here is the list of NFL refs and their assignments for each of the 16 games this week.

  21. Football Zebras

    Football Zebras is covering the officials and rules interpretations for Week 2 in the NFL with live updates. Disciplinary Action 13 hours ago. ... Week 17 photo album, 2023. Photo Gallery 9 months ago. Week 16 photo album, 2023. ... Referee assignments for preseason week 3. Preseason ends with one additional white hat tryout.

  22. Ruh-Roh! Week 17 referee assignment. : r/buccaneers

    Week 17 referee assignment. 🎙️ Discussion ... The NFL releases referee assignments a couple days before games. ... He's the douche that ref'd the 2021 Bucs / Rams divisional game. Gave Brady the personal foul after he got the bloody lip. Can't stand that guy.

  23. The Winners and Losers of NFL Week 2

    He finished his day with a perfect passer rating after completing 17 of 21 passes for 266 yards and three touchdowns. He also tacked on 59 yards as a runner, bringing his season total up to 116 yards.

  24. Week 15 referee assignments

    December 13, 2021. By. Cameron Filipe. Embed from Getty Images. Getty Images Sport Michael Hickey. Shawn Smith will be the referee for the AFC West matchup on Thursday night in Los Angeles between the Chiefs and Chargers. Bye weeks for teams have completed; only Bill Vinovich's crew is off this week. Scheduled assignments are subject to change.

  25. Officiating crews for the 2021 season

    The NFL has added another woman to the officiating crews with the hiring of line judge Maia Chaka. Additionally, the three centralized replay assistants from the 2020 season, Desiree Abrams, Artenzia Young-Seigler, and Sebrina Brunson, have been assigned to crews for 2021. Also of note, there are two former NFL players on the officiating roster ...