The officiating crew led by Brad Rogers that worked Sunday's Vikings-49ers game at Levi's Stadium has called offensive holding at roughly the median rate for an NFL crew this season. According to NFLPenalties.com, Rogers' crew has called holding an average of 2.82 times per game, good for seventh most among 17 officiating crews.
Rogers' crew called three holding penalties Sunday: two on 49ers guard Laken Tomlinson and one on Vikings guard Oli Udoh. After the Vikings' 34-26 loss, though, coach Mike Zimmer said he'd spent much of the day talking to officials about how they should have called it more on the 49ers.
"I mean, these guys hold all the time," Zimmer said. "So they're grabbing us around the waist, grabbing our backs. The officials, they don't want to call it on every play, but until they start calling it on every play, they're not gonna stop doing it."
A year ago, NFL officials called holding an average of only 1.8 times per game — easily the lowest rate since the league moved the umpire from behind the defensive line to behind the offensive line in 2010.
But after the league emphasized a more balanced approach to holding during the offseason, the penalty was called 2.58 times per game during the first 11 weeks of the season, or roughly in line with the rate it's been called since the umpire positioning switch. And while no team has been called for holding more frequently than the Vikings (an average of 2.18 times per game), only five have benefited from more holding calls.
According to NFLPenalties.com, the Vikings have been the beneficiary of 1.64 holding calls per game, tied with Pittsburgh for the sixth-highest rate in the league. And when on the road, no team has benefited from more holding calls than the Vikings, who've drawn an average of 2.83 holding flags on opponents per game.
That might be due in part to a pass rush that's pressured opposing quarterbacks at one of the league's highest rates this season. But of the top 10 teams in pressure rates this season, only two (the Vikings and Bills) are among the league leaders in holding calls drawn against opponents. (The 49ers, for what it's worth, have seen holding called against opponents only 0.91 times per game, tied with Tampa Bay for the fifth-lowest average in the league. They've been called for it 1.27 times per game, which puts them 16th in the league.)
So what's the explanation? Holding, as is often said, happens more frequently than officials are likely to call it; they're inclined to throw flags for fouls that have a significant impact on a play. And while the NFL wants well-officiated games, there's also a balance between adjudicating every play and bogging down the game with calls that increase stoppages and have an adverse effect on scoring.