N.F.L. Officials Face Scrutiny After Packers’ Narrow Victory Over Lions on Thanksgiving

DETROIT — In a Thanksgiving Day thriller that evoked the bitter rivalries of old, the Green Bay Packers edged the Detroit Lions 31-24 at Ford Field, a result that propelled Green Bay to the top of the N.F.C. North and left the home crowd seething over a cascade of disputed calls. But even as the final whistle sounded on Jordan Love’s four-touchdown masterpiece, whispers of officiating lapses began to ripple through the league, prompting the N.F.L. to announce late Thursday that it had launched a formal review of the game’s crew — a rare step that could lead to disciplinary action for referee Ron Torbert and his team.
The Packers, now 8-3-1 and tied for the division lead pending the outcome of Friday’s Bears-Eagles matchup, never trailed in a game marked by high drama and higher stakes. Love, the third-year quarterback who has quietly ascended to stardom this season, completed 18 of 30 passes for 234 yards and those four scores, including a 51-yard bomb to Christian Watson that restored a two-touchdown cushion midway through the fourth quarter. Dontayvion Wicks added six catches for 94 yards and two touchdowns, while the Green Bay defense, led by linebacker Micah Parsons’ two sacks and a game-sealing third-down stop on Lions quarterback Jared Goff, stuffed Detroit on two critical fourth-down gambles.

Yet the victory, Green Bay’s second over Detroit this season after a 27-13 drubbing in Week 1, came laced with controversy that overshadowed the on-field heroics. Lions coach Dan Campbell, known for his aggressive play-calling, twice opted to go for it on fourth down — once at the Packers’ 47-yard line in the third quarter and again deep in Green Bay territory late — only to be rebuffed both times. What irked Detroit’s sideline most, however, were the non-calls that preceded those decisions: a pair of apparent illegal contact penalties on Packers defenders against wide receiver Jameson Williams, who erupted for a career-high 140 yards on seven receptions, including a 47-yard touchdown; and a questionable out-of-bounds spot on a third-quarter completion to tight end Sam LaPorta that denied the Lions a first down and forced the fateful fourth-down attempt.
Video replays, pored over by frustrated Lions players in the locker room, appeared to show Packers cornerback Jaire Alexander tugging at Williams’ jersey on a deep route without drawing a flag — a infraction that, if called, could have extended Detroit’s drive into the red zone. Campbell, his voice gravelly from shouting at the officials, later vented to reporters: “We’re playing our hearts out, and they’re letting them get away with murder downfield. Fourth down? Sure, that’s us. But give us a fair shot first.”
The N.F.L., sensitive to mounting fan discontent over inconsistent enforcement — especially in a season already plagued by debates over pass interference and roughing the passer — moved swiftly. In a statement issued just after midnight, executive vice president of football operations Troy Vincent confirmed that the league’s officiating command center in New York had flagged “several high-profile non-calls for further evaluation” and would convene a panel including former referees and rules experts by week’s end. “Transparency is paramount,” Vincent said. “We review every game, but when the volume and impact of these moments raise questions about competitive equity, we dig deeper.”
Neither Torbert nor his crew — which included umpire Bryan Neale, down judge Derick Bowers, field judge Brad Rogers, line judge Mark Steinker, side judge Eugene Hall, and back judge Scott Helverson — has commented publicly. The N.F.L. Referees Association, in a terse release, urged “patience for a thorough process” and emphasized that midseason reviews rarely result in suspensions without evidence of malfeasance.
For the Lions, now 7-5 and clinging to the N.F.C.’s No. 8 playoff spot, the loss stings deeper than most. All-Pro wideout Amon-Ra St. Brown sat out much of the game with a hamstring tweak, forcing Goff to lean on unheralded contributors like Williams and rookie tight end Isaac TeSlaa, who hauled in a diving 18-yard grab on a crucial third down. Goff finished 20 of 26 for 256 yards and two touchdowns, but his two interceptions — one tipped into the air for a near-pick-six — and the failed fourth-down conversions proved costly. Running back Jahmyr Gibbs, held to 68 yards on 20 carries by Green Bay’s stout front, summed up the mood: “We had ’em. Refs just… didn’t see it that way.”
Packers coach Matt LaFleur, ever the diplomat, sidestepped the brewing storm. “We got the stops we needed, and Jordan was lights-out,” he said, crediting his team’s 3-for-3 conversion rate on fourth downs, including a 16-yard strike to Wicks on fourth-and-5 that sealed the outcome with 1:55 to play. Love, who entered the day with six touchdown passes and zero sacks against Detroit this season, demurred on the officials: “I’m just thankful for the win. Thanksgiving, right?”
The review could yield anything from a stern warning to fines or, in extreme cases, a temporary benching — a fate that befell an entire crew after the 2019 Saints-Rams NFC championship debacle. For now, it adds another layer to a rivalry that needs no embellishment, one that has seen the Lions dominate six of the last eight meetings before Green Bay’s recent resurgence.
As the turkey leftovers cool and Black Friday dawns, the N.F.L. faces a familiar Thanksgiving tradition: piecing together a holiday feast tainted by the aftertaste of what might have been. In Detroit, the asterisk lingers — but so does the fire to make next year’s rematch unforgettable.