
Cowboys’ late drive stalled on controversial offensive pass interference in loss
NY Post
It wouldn’t be an NFL week if there weren’t some sort of controversy.
Football fans were fuming over an offensive pass interference called on the Cowboys in a crucial moment of the Dallas’ 44-30 “Thursday Night Football” loss to the Lions in Detroit.
Cowboys tight end Jake Ferguson was called for an offensive pass interference as he was trying to evade Lions linebacker Alex Anzalone to make a catch, even though replays seemed to show the Detroit defender as the one who could have been called for a penalty.
It was unclear where the offensive pass interference had taken place, and with the Cowboys down 37-27 with just under four minutes on the clock, a penalty on the Lions would have put Dallas in a prime position to score a much-needed touchdown.
The call even left Prime Video rules analyst Terry McAuley confused.
“Kirk, I just see him kind of swimming through. I don’t see offensive pass interference,” McAuley said during the broadcast. “He swims through right there, which is perfectly legal and then gets grabbed. I just don’t see offensive pass interference.”

Suddenly, someone had hit a rewind button and everyone had been transported back seven months. It was early spring instead of late fall, it was broiling hot outside the arena walls and not freezing cold. Everyone was back at TD Garden. There were 19,156 frenzied fans on their feet begging for blood, poised for the kill.












