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Sports Illustrated
Sports Illustrated
Sport
Ian Casselberry

NFL Admits Officials Got Key Call Wrong in Jets-Cowboys Game

Upon further review, the NFL has acknowledged that a roughing the passer call made in Week 2’s Jets-Cowboys matchup was incorrect. 

The penalty in question was called during the second quarter on a play by Jets defensive end John Franklin-Myers. On third-and-7 from the Jets’ 11-yard line, Dallas quarterback Dak Prescott threw an incompletion. But Franklin-Myers was flagged for a late hit, resulting in a first down. The Cowboys eventually scored a touchdown on the drive.

However, the NFL admitted to the Jets on Wednesday that Franklin-Myers’s hit was legal and no penalty should have been called, according to the New York Post’s Brian Costello

It’s debatable whether the penalty affected the ultimate outcome, as the Cowboys won, 30–10. But when the call was made, the Jets only trailed 10–7. Rather than being able to hold Dallas to a field goal, New York yielded a touchdown for an 18–7 halftime deficit. 

Jets coach Robert Saleh complained about the penalty to reporters on Wednesday before the NFL conceded that the call was incorrect.

Jets coach Robert Saleh is still upset about a crucial call from his team’s Week 3 loss to the Cowboys.

Vincent Carchietta-USA TODAY Sports

“There’s nothing I can coach to make that different,” said Saleh, per the Post. “He got pulled down. His face hit the hip above the knee, which is still legal. Everything about it was legal.” 

The admission probably provides little consolation for the Jets. Holding Dallas to a field goal could have influenced New York’s momentum. And a six-point deficit versus an 11-point margin may have changed the Jets’ strategy as the game progressed.

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