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NFL Suspends Referee Ron Torbert After Missed Illegal Formation Calls in Cowboys-Packers Tie

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Ron Torbert to head Super Bowl LIX officiating crew

Arlington, TX – September 30, 2025

The NFL has suspended veteran referee Ron Torbert and his crew for one week after failing to penalize repeated illegal formations by the Green Bay Packers during Sunday night’s 40-40 tie with the Dallas Cowboys.

Dallas and Green Bay battled through four quarters and overtime in what became the second-highest scoring tie in NFL history. Dak Prescott led a field goal drive in OT, only for Jordan Love to answer late.

With the Packers facing 3rd-and-14 at the Dallas 16-yard line, confusion reigned. Green Bay appeared to line up illegally, yet no flags were thrown. The snap set up a 48-yard, game-tying field goal with one second left.

pic.twitter.com/jhzvG7EQCM — SM Highlights (@SMHighlights1) September 29, 2025

Video reviews showed left tackle Rasheed Walker and left guard Elgton Jenkins off the line of scrimmage. Under NFL rules, such violations should have triggered a 10-second runoff, ending the game in Dallas’ favor.

Fans erupted online. One wrote: “Packers got away with an illegal formation which should’ve been a penalty requiring a runoff.” Another added: “I guess it’s never getting called in that situation, but sure looked illegal.”

 

Former coach Rex Ryan was blunt on ESPN’s Get Up“They’re not even lined up right… the Packers never looked ready for the moment.” He said officials “let things slide” in the chaotic overtime sequence.

On Monday, the NFL confirmed Torbert’s suspension for an “internal officiating review.” The league also fined the Packers $50,000 for formation violations, underscoring its stance on consistency after weeks of mounting officiating controversies.

The tie leaves Green Bay 2-1-1 and Dallas 1-2-1. The Cowboys now shift focus to the Vikings in Week 4 under referee Carl Cheffers, hoping to avoid more officiating drama as playoff hopes remain fragile.

Report: Seahawks Floated in Bold Trade Proposal for Four-Time Pro Bowler
Seahawks Linked to Four-Time Pro Bowler in Bold Trade Proposal A bold trade suggestion could give the Seahawks the defensive spark they need as the NFC West tightens early in the season. John Stevenson·Oct 2, 2025, 2:00 AM Thailand Time IMAGE: Imagn Images Four weeks into the 2025 NFL season, the NFC West has quietly become one of the most competitive and balanced divisions in football. With no team sporting a losing record, it joins the NFC North as one of only two divisions in the league where every team is at or above .500. That balance of power will once again be on display in prime time as the Los Angeles Rams host division rivals the San Francisco 49ers on Thursday night at SoFi Stadium. But while those two teams gear up for another heated West Coast clash, the conversation elsewhere is shifting toward the trade deadline-which hits at 4:00 p.m. ET on November 4. The chatter is building, and one move that's getting some traction involves the surging Seattle Seahawks, who sit at 3-1 and look every bit like a team ready to challenge deep into the season. The suggestion: Seattle goes all-in on an already solid defense by targeting none other than Browns cornerback Denzel Ward. Let’s unpack that. The Seahawks' defense has plenty working in its favor under first-year head coach Mike Macdonald, especially considering how aggressively they’ve played through the first month. But adding a corner of Ward’s caliber could be game-changing. According to the proposal, Seattle would be giving up a second-round pick to land the four-time Pro Bowler-a price that sounds steep at first glance, but one that might be justified given Ward’s pedigree and the current state of the Seahawks’ secondary. One big reason this move makes sense: Riq Woolen, who burst onto the scene in 2022 with a breakout rookie campaign, has taken a step back this season. He’s been on the wrong end of some big plays at critical moments, and while growing pains aren’t unusual, the timing isn’t ideal for a team with playoff aspirations. The defense is good-but in an NFC crammed with high-powered passing attacks, is good going to be enough? That’s where Ward enters the picture. Not only would he provide a stabilizing presence opposite Woolen, but his arrival would also create more flexibility for Devon Witherspoon, Seattle’s rising second-year star. Witherspoon has shown he can impact games from both inside and outside corner roles, and Macdonald-known for his creative pressure schemes from his time with the Ravens-would no doubt appreciate having more chess pieces to work with on the back line. At 28, Ward’s resume already speaks loudly. He’s logged 18 career interceptions-two returned for touchdowns-and six fumble recoveries, with two of those also going to the house. His career totals include 98 passes defensed in 99 games, and this season he's already notched 10 tackles, one interception, and three pass breakups in four starts. That may not scream splashy numbers, but he’s been part of a Browns defense that has been arguably the stingiest in the NFL. Get this: no defense in the league has allowed fewer total yards or rushing yards than Cleveland through four weeks. And only three teams have given up fewer passing yards. That unit isn’t just good-it’s suffocating. So why would Cleveland move a cornerstone player like Ward? Well, the Browns find themselves on the ropes early at 1-3, and they’re already making a quarterback change ahead of this week's matchup with the Vikings. If the front office, led by GM Andrew Berry, decides to retool rather than simply tread water, moving a high-value player like Ward might not be off the table-especially with a second-round pick dangling in front of them. It would be a bold move for both sides. For Seattle, it’s about taking a very good defense and pushing it into elite territory with a win-now mindset. For Cleveland, it would raise questions about their direction, given the defensive dominance they’ve shown amid offensive instability. The trade deadline is still a few weeks out, but deals like this? They don’t just happen on deadline day. Seeds get planted now. And for the Seahawks, if improving a strength means turning a young, aggressive defense into something scarier, it might be a gamble worth making.