No one can say the crowds influenced the officials.
The crews may have been a bit rusty without a preseason, but only two teams ā the Chiefs and Jaguars ā allowed fans into the stadium during the NFLās opening weekend because of the coronavirus pandemic.
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So, no fans were in the stands for the two costliest calls in Week 1: offensive pass interference flags on Cincinnatiās A.J. Green and Dallasā Michael Gallup in the closing seconds of close games.
The flag on Green for pushing off Chargers defender Casey Hayward wiped out his toe-dragging, game-winning touchdown grab from top draft pick Joe Burrows with 7 seconds left in Cincinnatiās 16-13 loss.
That penalty loomed ever larger when Randy Bullockās calf cramped just as he swung for a game-tying field goal that sailed wide right.
āFor one, he was clamping me the whole time,ā Green complained afterward, saying the officials should call it both ways.
Green did extend his left arm for a split second as he gained separation from Hayward for the high grab, although that play seems to happens a lot without a whistle being blown.
Gallupās infraction in Dallasā 20-17 loss to the Rams was much more debatable.
Gallup sped past Rams cornerback Jalen Ramsey, who flopped his head back just as Gallup hauled in Dak Prescottās long pass at the Los Angeles 15-yard line with 21 seconds left.
No flag and the Cowboys get a couple of shots at the end zone and probably at least send the game into overtime with a field goal, provided that Greg Zuerleinās calf didnāt cramp.
Instead, the Cowboys were pushed back all the way to their own 24, and Prescottās final heave fell incomplete.
āI think heās got his arm out there, but I donāt see him forcibly push him off,ā NBC rules analyst Terry McAulay said on the Sunday Night Football broadcast.
Despite those two P.I. calls, what stood out most on opening weekend were all those empty seats save for the cardboard cutouts in 14 NFC cities that would normally have been buzzing with tailgates and fans in face paint.
āIt was definitely different,ā Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford said. āI think the biggest thing was the TV timeouts feel like theyāre forever. Itās just super quiet in there. We had a couple of guys get injured and every time someone got injured theyād turn the noise off in the stadium and it was crazy quiet.ā
The sea of empty seats put Patriots receiver Julian Edelman in a reflective mood.
āHonestly, it reminded me of the times I was back at the College of San Mateo, my junior college,ā Edelman said. āIt was a full love-of-the-game type mentality out there. You could hear the other guys, everybody could hear each other. It was about going out and playing the game that you love. It was obviously unfortunate that we donāt have any fans. That energy and getting to go out there in front of 75,000 people is amazing, but it brought you almost kind of back.
āIt was weird. It brought me back at least to high school, junior college, college. My college, we didnāt really sell out that much, so it felt like that.ā
Aaron Rodgers capitalized on an empty US Bank Stadium in Minneapolis to use his famous hard count as if he were at Lambeau Field during the Packersā 43-34 win over the Vikings, where the Gjallarhorn was silenced for the first time.
Rodgers drew Anthony Barr offside on third-and-5 at the Minnesota 41 late in the third quarter and hit Marquez Valdes-Scantling for 39 yards on the free play. The Vikings also jumped offside twice in the first half on third-and-short to give the Packers first downs on scoring drives.
With a normal crowd, Rodgers is probably using a silent snap count instead.
āGot me today. Got a couple guys,ā Barr said. āHis hard count is very convincing. Heās one of the best in the league at it.ā
Still, Rodgers missed having spectators in the seats.
āIt was more of just a strange feeling with nobody in the stands,ā Rodgers said. āIt doesnāt let you know if a play is a good play sometimes. Youāre so used to: If noise persists, itās probably an incompletion or a good play by the defense; if the noise stops, itās a good play for the offense. There was no noise, so we had to bring our own kind of energy today.
āThe cadence was obviously a big factor. ... Definitely was a weapon for us ... keeping them off balance.ā
With no fans to feed off, players had to tap into their own vibes.
āWeāve got to bring our own energy, bring your own juice,ā Dolphins safety Bobby McCain said after Miamiās 21-11 loss to New England.
Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said there was āenough juice and energy there that it was really funā during Seattleās 38-25 win at Atlantaās empty stadium.
Dolphins quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick said tapping into oneās own energy and riding the emotions of energy shifts wasnāt as easy without fans cheering or jeering.
āYou could still feel those (momentum) shifts,ā Fitzpatrick said. āTheyāre coming from a different place, theyāre coming from the sideline, coming from your teammates. We realized that as the game went on.ā
While Bill Belichick deadpanned that yes, heād seen something like this before with no fans gazing down at the field -- ā practice! ā -- his center, David Andrews, was among those who made the most of this odd circumstance.
āWe have never really run out onto the field without any fans. Heck, even in peewee there were fans,ā Andrews said. āBut I liked the way we went out there and competed and played the game. In some ways, it brings the game back to why you started playing, just to love playing the game. Thereās no fans, it is just a bunch of grown men playing a kids' game.ā
MASKED MEN: The NFL on Monday reminded team personnel on the sidelines about the COVID-19 requirements for wearing face coverings, saying such carelessness or disregard could put the season āat risk.ā
The strongly worded memo from Troy Vincent, who oversees the leagueās football operations, came after Rams coach Sean McVay, among others, was often shown on camera without a face covering.
Broncos special teams coach Tom McMahon didnāt pull up his neck gaiter during pregame warmups Monday night. He was the only coach on the field without a face covering.
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With contributions from AP Pro Football Writer Dave Campbell and AP Sports Writers Tim Booth, Larry Lage and Kyle Hightower.
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Follow Arnie Melendrez Stapleton on Twitter: http://twitter.com/arniestapleton
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