The NFL already admitted days after the Ravens' 27-22 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers last season that it got one call wrong.
Now league officials reportedly wish they had another do-over.
On Tuesday, Pro Football Talk reported that NFL Executive VP of Football Operations Troy Vincent determined that the replay ruling that overturned a key fourth-quarter Teddye Buchanan interception was one of five calls the league wishes it had back from last season.
Aaron Rodgers' pass was batted back to him. He and Buchanan went up to catch the rebound, and the rookie linebacker came away with it. However, a replay review ruled that Rodgers had possession of the ball with a knee down, and Rodgers caught the pass.
While the Steelers ended up punting on that drive, the call resulted in a 50-yard field position swing and allowed Pittsburgh to run more time off the clock.
Ultimately, the game also swung on another instant replay reversal when Isaiah Likely's touchdown catch with minutes left was overturned. That call (and what constitutes a catch) has also reportedly drawn heavy review this offseason from the league.
The Ravens' loss to the Steelers in Baltimore loomed large in deciding the AFC North champion. The NFL already told the Ravens the day after the game that the officials made the wrong call on an attempted Travis Jones field-goal block in which he ran into the long snapper, which opened the door for a Steelers touchdown and four extra points.
Ravens players, including Lamar Jackson, reacted to the news of the NFL admitting it got another call in that critical game wrong:












