
Imago
Credits: via @jjwatt on Instagram

Imago
Credits: via @jjwatt on Instagram
Essentials Inside The Story
- Another primetime game led to another rulebook debate.
- J.J. Watt didn't hesitate to disagree with a call made during Chargers vs Eagles.
- Multiple primetime games have been affected by controversial reviews.
It didn’t take long for things to heat up on Monday night during the Philadelphia Eagles‘ clash against the Los Angeles Chargers. The game was barely out of the first quarter when something odd happened. A near-interception from Jalen Hurts was overturned on review, and no matter where this night goes, that call is going to linger. NFL legend J.J. Watt certainly didn’t buy the explanation.
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“Am I the only one that didn’t see “clear and obvious” evidence to overturn that interception? Possible it wasn’t caught? Absolutely. Clear and obvious? Definitely not,” Watt wrote on X.
Hurts had sailed a throw over DeVonta Smith in the second quarter, and Chargers’ safety R.J. Mickens looked like he came down with it. On replay, though, officials ruled he trapped the ball against the turf before fully securing it. Right call or not, the sequence still flipped the field.
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The Eagles punted after the third-down miss, and their offense had yet to find any rhythm against the Chargers’ defense.
LA’s Derius Davis caught the kick with decent field position. But he attempted to cut all the way across the field to try to make a big play. And in the process, he tripped up after losing a good bit of yardage. That was not a good start for the Chargers. But things don’t end here.
Then came one of the strangest turnovers of the season.
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Am I the only one that didn’t see “clear and obvious” evidence to overturn that interception?
Possible it wasn’t caught?
Absolutely.Clear and obvious?
Definitely not.— JJ Watt (@JJWatt) December 9, 2025
Moments earlier, the Eagles had been building momentum with back-to-back chunk plays to Dallas Goedert and A.J. Brown. Suddenly, that drive was gone.
But if this one slips away from the Chargers, fans are going to circle back to that overturned interception and wonder what might’ve been. And honestly, who can blame them? It feels like every primetime game lately comes with its own stack of officiating debates.
Controversy isn’t limited to Chargers-Eagles
Last night may have effectively shut the door on the Kansas City Chiefs’ postseason hopes after their loss to the Houston Texans, but the bigger conversation coming out of Arrowhead wasn’t about playoff math, but the officiating. Again.
The first moment that sent Texans fans into a boil came on an offside flag that wiped out a fourth-and-1 sneak from C.J. Stroud. On replay, it didn’t really look like anyone jumped; maybe an arm drifted forward, maybe not. Either way, it was enough to fuel the sense that something felt off.
That call erased major momentum.

Imago
January 5, 2025, Philadelphia, Pa, U.S.A.: NFL, American Football Herren, USA referee RONALD TORBERT 62 in action during a week 18 game between the Philadelphia Eagles and the New York Giants Sunday, January. 05, 2025 at Lincoln financial Field in Philadelphia, PA. Philadelphia U.S.A. – ZUMAs124 20250105_fap_s124_012 Copyright: xSaquanxStimpsonx
Earlier in the drive, replay assist had already inserted itself into a spot call, overturning the ruling on the field and awarding a first down. Kansas City challenged, and after review, the replay assist was deemed wrong. A rather strange sequence that only heightened the sideline frustration before the offside call even arrived.
And this wasn’t an isolated incident.
Just a couple of nights earlier in the Lions–Cowboys game, Jack Campbell blew through on a blitz, dragged Dak Prescott backward in the end zone, and the play was ruled a safety. After the automatic review, the call was overturned. Detroit went from a 5–3 lead to walking back to the sideline trying to figure out what they had just witnessed.
That’s been the theme all year: no matter how good the matchup, how dramatic the finish, or how well the teams play, the conversation keeps sliding back to officiating. Every week seems to deliver another round of confusion and frame-by-frame breakdowns instead of appreciation for the actual football. It’s pretty sad.
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