Chargers need to look in the mirror before blaming ref
NFL Spokesman Greg Aiello says that official Ed Hochuli will be given a lower grade following his blown call during the Denver Broncos-San Diego Chargers game last Sunday. A lower grade can result in Hochuli not being allowed to ref the NFL Playoffs and/or 2009 Super Bowl.
“Officials are held accountable for their calls. They are graded on every play of every game,” NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said Monday. “Ed has been an outstanding official for many years, but he will be marked down for this call. Under our evaluation system, an official’s grades impact his status for potentially working the playoffs and ultimately whether or not he is retained.”
The play occurred with the Broncos at the Chargers’ 1-yard line in the final minute. Denver quarterback Jay Cutler dropped back to pass, and the ball slipped out of his hands, bounced off the grass and into the arms of San Diego linebacker Tim Dobbins.
Hochuli ruled it an incomplete pass. Replay ruled it a fumble, but it was spotted at the 10-yard line, where the ball hit the ground, and given to Denver because the rules did not permit possession to be awarded to San Diego because the whistle had blown.
Denver went on to score, convert a two-point conversion and win 39-38.
Hochuli blew the call, plain and simple. And did he cost the Chargers a win? Absolutely. But so did allowing Jay Cutler and the Broncos to march up the field before the blown call and score like they were playing against air. San Diego could have stopped Denver from scoring on fourth down, but they didn’t. They could have stopped them on the 2-point conversion play, but they didn’t. And hey, how they could have stopped the Broncos from scoring 31 first half points, too. But they didn’t.
The Chargers and their fans have every right to be pissed. Hochuli can’t blow the whistle in that situation. He blew it (the call that is, not his whistle). But the bottom line is that one blown call doesn’t make or break an entire game, either. The blame doesn’t fall solely on Hochuli.





That was an interesting comment by Turner after the game. He said that Hochuli came over after the play and said he blew the call. Usually, a head coach just wants the ref to admit he made a mistake, but that’s not enough for Turner.
I guess Norv has never blew a decision in his entire life. It must be nice to be perfect.
oh come on!
if this happened to your team in YOUR city YOU would be upset too. and how devastating is a loss to division rivals, not to mention dropping to 0-2, while they rise 2-0.
yes our defense could have held them back a bit further, but who is to say that the broncos this year, are not a super bowl calibur team? for all we know they could take the spot now, which a healthy cutler, revamped marshall, and the upcoming of eddie royal.
YES IT WAS A BIG DEAL, but no we cannot do anything about that. but to say norv is going too far is not true. His job is to lead us into a win, and how can he do that if there are errors that are so evident, so evident that it took all of 7 seconds for ed hochuli to admit it…..
SO YES it will be 39 – 38 forever, but is norv wrong for pursuing some sort of retaliation? NO. the refs should be able to take back the whistle blowing rule and give us our damn win. after all we deserved it.
so many teams wish for “ONE MORE CHANCE” ” ONE MORE DOWN” but the truth is… it too late, and the broncos were given an unfair advantage to score YET AGAIN. and steal a win.
take it how you want it. i’m set. and so is san diego. we were robbed.
*go bolts!
-dave in sd.