The NFL seems to suppress poor quality arbitration.
The League has dismissed three officials in what Footballzebras.com described as a vice-president of training and development officiating Ramon George “advanced responsibility among the official ranks”, after a playoff series which included several notable arbitrator controversies.
In a difference compared to normal standards, however, the referees received mild landings, sent to university football power conferences due to George’s maneuver, according to the report.
The licensed officials would not have already had such an landing point.
The NFL went from the second year referee James Carter, the third year judge Robin Delorenzo and the trial judge Robert Richardson, according to the report.
Carter was another civil servant during Joker’s round last season, Footballzebras.com speculating that it may be due to injuries, while Delorenzo has won no assignment in the playoffs and Richardson could not arbitrate in the eliminatory series because of his first year state.
These movements come as George pushed to use “data as a performance performance,” a source told The Outlet.
“Culture changes, it changes quickly,” said a manager at Footballzebras.com. “This turns into a competitive environment where everyone is equal. There are no favorites. There is no favoritism. There is none of this; These are performance. “
The article has not mentioned any specific problem with this trio, but the arbitration of the NFL is noted from the microscope this year, in particular with regard to the biases perceived towards the chiefs.
The chiefs benefited from several questionable calls against the Texans during the divisional tour before receiving a generous place on what turned out to be a fourth drop in the game against invoices in the AFC championship match.
The speech of the chiefs has become so incessant that even the NFL commissioner, Roger Goodell, described the alleged favoritism of “ridiculous”, and the NFL Referees Association even published a declaration.
The association noted that it classifies the referees every week.
“The comments of Commissioner Goodell according to which it is” ridiculous “to assume that NFL officials do not do everything possible so that the right calls on each game are perfect,” said Executive Director Scott Green in a press release before the Super Bowl 2025. “The officiating crews do not work more than twice a regular season.”
As the league left these three referees, it is not certain that they have a chance to return to the NFL touch line.
Sources have told Footballzebras.com that they did not know if the three could reintegrate the League development program because the move supported by the League in the ranks of the college is a change of protocol.
The move to the college ranks prevented the union from being involved, according to the report.