|
Non-call on TE
Gonzalez leaves Chiefs furious
AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service
KANSAS
CITY, Mo. -- A non-call on Rodney Harrison's end zone interception
Monday night has Kansas City fuming.
But it
was the same thing that seems to happen week after week to All-Pro tight
end Tony Gonzalez, frustrating the Chiefs to the point they've stopped
submitting the weekly officiating critiques the league asks for.
Chiefs
president Carl Peterson has stopped speaking to the officials
altogether.
"They
don't call holding or pass interference when Tony is involved," coach
Dick Vermeil said Tuesday. "He is a very prolific red zone offensive
player and he always gets held, chucked or tackled."
Trailing 17-10 Monday night, the Chiefs faced third-and-goal from the
New England 9 with 54 seconds left in the half. Gonzalez, lined up on
the right side of quarterback Trent Green, broke for the end zone.
Harrison and linebacker Roman Phifer met him at the line and began
bumping and harassing him, then seemed to keep bumping him into the end
zone.
As the
ball went sailing toward the three, Phifer's arm appeared to be locked
in Gonzalez's. The ball was underthrown and Harrison stepped in front
and made the interception in a game the Patriots eventually won 27-19.
As they
pleaded for pass interference Green, Gonzalez and Vermeil were ignored.
"It
makes it tough on us when you don't get a call, especially against the
world champions," said Gonzalez, the five-time Pro Bowler who caught
seven balls for 86 yards. "If you don't get that call, it means they're
going to win. We need that call and it should have been called. It was
illegal, but it didn't get called."
Green,
who passed for 381 yards and two touchdowns, said it looked like
Gonzalez "was getting mugged."
"I've
got to tread lightly here because I can get fined based on what I say,"
he told reporters.
It
seems to the Chiefs (3-7) that opponents are allowed to do just about
everything but reach out and trip Gonzalez from the bench.
"It's
interesting," Green said. "Every week we get letters from the league
saying, `Oops. sorry. We didn't call it.' But that doesn't do us any
good.
"It's
unfortunate that Tony being the player that he is, he doesn't get a
little bit more leeway in that department. And there was no leeway
needed on that play."
Vermeil
said he does not believe anyone is picking on his tight end. But he's
even tried talking to officials before the game.
"I've
gone to the officials and reminded them we have Tony Gonzalez, the best
tight end in football, and he gets held coming off the line of
scrimmage, grabbed and held," Vermeil said.
"Then
he gets hit beyond the 5-yard (zone)."
Infuriating the Chiefs even more is the fact Gonzalez has been called
twice for pushing off.
"And
they were ridiculous calls," Vermeil said. "So I just don't say anything
and I go on. I have to stay away from that."
Coincidentally, it was the Patriots who triggered this season's renewed
emphasis on enforcing the rule that says defenders cannot make any
contact with receivers beyond 5 yards of the line of scrimmage.
"(Colts
president) Bill Polian on the competition committee jumped on the table
because of the way his Colts got beat up (in the playoffs)," said
Peterson. "Why it hasn't happened for Tony, I don't know."
Peterson has even quit speaking to the men in the striped shirts.
"I
don't even talk to them any more. And I know them by their first names,"
he said. "I just stand there on the sideline. They come by and I just
let them walk by."
|