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NFL Suspends Entire Officiating Crew Led by Craig Wrolstad After Controversial Finish in Seahawks–Buccaneers Game

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October 8, 2025 – Seattle, WA

The NFL has officially suspended referee Craig Wrolstad and his entire officiating crew following the explosive fallout from Sunday’s Seattle Seahawks vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers matchup — a 38–35 thriller marred by a string of controversial calls that fans say “handed the game” to Tampa Bay.

 

According to official NFL.com and ESPN data, the suspended crew — known as Crew 12 for the 2025 season — consisted of:

  • Referee: Craig Wrolstad (#4) – Lead referee, responsible for major penalties such as pass interference and roughing the passer. Known for high penalty frequency (13.5 penalties/game in 2024).

  • Umpire: Brandon Cruse (#45) – Oversaw the line of scrimmage, false starts, and holding infractions.

  • Down Judge: Danny Short (#113) – Marked downfield yardage and sideline progress.

  • Line Judge: Brett Bergman (#91) – Responsible for out-of-bounds and boundary plays.

  • Field Judge: Jeff Shears (#108) – Monitored coverage plays and pass interference calls.

  • Back Judge: Rich Martinez (#39) – Focused on deep coverage and signaling calls.

  • The decision came after widespread outrage over inconsistent officiating in critical moments, which many believe tilted momentum toward the Buccaneers’ comeback. The crew has been accused of enforcing rules unevenly and issuing “late, selective, and phantom calls” in the second half.

    🔥 Controversial Moments Leading to the Suspension

    1️⃣ Illegal Man Downfield (2nd Half, 3rd & 12 – Seahawks Drive)
    The Seahawks were flagged for illegal man downfield on a shovel pass to Kenneth Walker — wiping out a first down and forcing a punt. Moments later, Tampa Bay executed a similar play, but the flag was picked up after brief discussion, allowing their drive to continue. That drive ended in a touchdown by Rachaad White.

    Fans on X called it “ridiculous inconsistency,” arguing that the call was selectively enforced against Seattle.

    2️⃣ Phantom Defensive Holding (4th Quarter – Bucs Comeback Drive)
    On 3rd down deep in Buccaneers territory, officials threw a late flag for defensive holding on Seahawks cornerback Nehemiah Pritchett, gifting Tampa Bay a first down that led to Baker Mayfield’s 11-yard touchdown pass to Sterling Shepard.

    Replays showed minimal contact, with analysts calling it “incidental at best.” PFF later graded the call as “incorrect.”

    3️⃣ Late-Game Holding Calls (Final Minutes)
    As the game tightened, the Seahawks were penalized four times in the final quarter compared to Tampa’s one — including a questionable holding call after a tipped pass

     

    and a weak illegal contact flag during Sam Darnold’s final drive. The penalties set up a deflected interception and the game-winning 39-yard field goal by Chase McLaughlin as time expired.

    “Refs controlled the second half,” one viral post read. “That wasn’t football — that was theater.”

    The Wrolstad crew, which had officiated four of Seattle’s last five games, already had a reputation for overcalling offensive holding and inconsistent man-downfield enforcement. The Seahawks were 2–2 under Wrolstad’s crew entering Week 5.

    NFL Senior VP of Officiating Walt Anderson released a statement Monday night confirming the disciplinary action:

     

    “The league expects consistency, accuracy, and fairness from all officiating crews. After a thorough review of the Seahawks–Buccaneers game, the NFL determined that multiple officiating decisions failed to meet our professional standards.”

    The entire crew will be removed from active assignments indefinitely, pending further internal evaluation.

    For Seahawks fans — and even some Buccaneers supporters — the suspension serves as long-overdue validation after what many called “one of the worst-officiated games of the season.”

    The debate over NFL officiating integrity continues, but one thing is clear: the fallout from Seahawks–Buccaneers has shaken confidence in the league’s officiating more than any game this year.

    Buccaneers Bring 7-Time Pro Bowl Superstar Back to Tampa in a Trade Amid Jalen McMillan’s Injury
    The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are evaluating a veteran addition to their receiver room following rookie Jalen McMillan’s injury: a reunion with Julio Jones, the seven-time Pro Bowler who played in Tampa in 2022. League-connected sources view the scenario as “conditionally feasible” if trade compensation and contract structure align; the club has not issued any official confirmation. From a football standpoint, Jones’s presence could help the Bucs preserve vertical stretch on the boundary, push opposing safeties deeper, and open intermediate windows for the current core. His route recognition, timing, and contested-catch skills still profile as difference-makers in critical situations, preserving the offense’s downfield explosiveness. There are clear risks and constraints if talks advance: age-related snap management, acquisition cost (most plausibly a Day 3 pick with escalators tied to snap rate/playoff results), and the need for cap mechanics such as incentives, void-year proration, or partial 2025 salary retention by the sending club. In the locker room, Jones’s role would need to be defined upfront to protect receiver-room chemistry and provide a mentoring anchor for younger players. On the field, Tampa Bay could lean into more motion (jet/orbit), switch releases, and deep post/over concepts to leverage Jones’s defensive gravity. When opponents “raise the roof” to respect the vertical threat, one-on-one opportunities in the intermediate areas expand for the existing headliners, while the run game benefits from lighter boxes. Market context remains a swing factor. Jones’s current team would likely set a high asking price and only green-light a move if the return serves its short- or midterm plan. For the Buccaneers, the criterion is not name value but net impact on playoff/Lombardi odds this season; absent a meaningful lift, internal promotions and short-term depth options remain the safer path. While the Bucs await fuller diagnostic clarity on McMillan, their personnel plan is expected to revolve around three pillars: protecting the health of the current WR group, maintaining vertical depth in the call sheet, and preserving cap flexibility for the season’s decisive stretch. Although a Julio Jones reunion is fueling discussion, any decision—if it comes—will hew to the principle of proceeding only at the right price and with a clearly defined role, delivering immediate value without overpaying the future.