SEATTLE — Vikings coach Mike Zimmer and the team's sideline were irate after officials picked up a penalty flag after Seattle blocked a field-goal attempt in the fourth quarter of its 21-7 win Monday night.
Dan Bailey's 47-yard attempt was batted down by Seahawks linebacker Bobby Wagner, who hurdled the line by putting his hands on teammates. Referee Brad Allen said there was no foul on the play because Seahawks linebacker Bobby Wagner hurdled the line without touching Vikings blockers.
But Vikings players argued Seahawks defensive linemen were pulling down long snapper Kevin McDermott. Instead of a new set of downs in Seahawks territory, trailing 6-0, it was a turnover that eventually led to a Seattle touchdown. Challenge flag in hand, Zimmer exchanged words with officials after the play.
"I just asked if I could challenge and they said no," Zimmer said. "Quite honestly, I didn't see what happened. I was told what happened. You're not supposed to be able to pull guys down if that's what they did."
Mike Periera, the former NFL VP for officiating, tweeted: "Lots of talk about the Wagner block. The wording in the rule book is NEW this year and is clear. The new wording states, "May not place a hand or hands on a teammate or opponent in an attempt to jump through a gap to block an opponent's kick or apparent kick." Case closed. Foul."
Short issues
One or two yards has felt like a mile long for the Vikings offense. Problems persisted during Monday night's loss in Seattle, where the Vikings moved the chains on just 2 of 10 third-down attempts and failed on two fourth-down tries from one yard away.
The only two short-yardage conversions were quarterback sneaks by Kirk Cousins. Running backs Dalvin Cook and Latavius Murray ran into walls of Seahawks defenders on their attempts.
"It's frustrating," Cook said. "To not execute is frustrating. The fourth-and-1's, all that, we didn't execute. We didn't put it together. We have to go back to the drawing board and figure out what we have to do."