Sunday, November 22, 2015

Washington's Jason Hatcher suggests team's nickname may be impacting officiating

A controversial call in the first half of Sunday's Washington-Carolina game, when a touchdown by cornerback Chris Culliver was called back after he was flagged for unnecessary roughness on Greg Olsen when officials deemed he had a helmet-to-helmet hit on the tight end, swung the momentum of a tie game in the Panthers' favor.
After the loss, one Washington veteran had an interesting theory as to why the key call went against his team, as defensive end Jason Hatcher suggested that perhaps the team's Redskins nickname plays a role in the calls they get or don't get from officials.
“We’ve just got to check ourselves. Everybody got to look theirselves in the mirror," Hatcher said of the loss, which dropped Washington to 4-6. "This is a team sport, and we lost as a team. Everybody got to get they self together, get mentally and physically tougher so we can go in here and win. It’s going to be hard, you know, we fighting against teams and the referees. It just is what it is.


“I’m not saying this out of character to get fined, but it is what it is. I don’t know if it’s about the name or what, but at the same time, we play football too. We work our butt off too. Don’t single us out. At the end of the day, it’s the name. Don’t worry about the name – we players and we work our butt off too. I’m just frustrated with it. We shouldn’t have to be punished for that. It’s been every game, calls after calls that should’ve been made in our favor, but it goes to them. It’s just not right. We in the league too. We’re National Football players. We got a team too. We go out there, and we sweat and work hard too. I don’t give a crap about the name. We are players. We’ve got feelings too, and we want to win too.”
That's seems like a reach worthy of Stretch Armstrong from Hatcher. Bad calls are made in the NFL every day - heck, the officials initially called a Ted Ginn touchdown pass an incomplete pass only to overturn it when the Panthers challenged - and are part of the game.
Washington's play wasn't exactly stellar on Sunday either, as the offense managed just nine first downs and totaled 14 rushing yards on 12 carries, while the defense saw Cam Newton throw a career-high five touchdowns.
And considering the NFL, unlike the federal government, has not pressured Washington to change the name and NFL commissioner Roger Goodell has done nothing but defend the Redskins name, it seems highly unlikely there's a covert plan to undermine Washington because of the team nickname.
Hatcher stuck to his stance on the nickname via Instagram:


Retired referee Mike Carey revealed after his officiating days were done that he asked the league after the 2005 season not to assign him to any more Washington games because he felt the name was offensive, but if he was never on the field for one of the team's games, his opinion couldn't impact his decision-making.

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