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Big Ten makes officiating change following controversial penalty in Gophers’ loss to Michigan

MINNEAPOLIS — The Big Ten Conference announced a change to the officiating process following Saturday’s controversial onside kick penalty that allowed Michigan to seal a 27-24 victory over Minnesota.
Michigan led 24-3 going into the fourth quarter, but Minnesota scored three touchdowns to pull within 27-24 with 1:37 left. On the next play, the Gophers recovered the onside kick but were flagged for offsides. Linebacker Matt Kingsbury was called for the penalty.
The Gophers re-kicked following the penalty and Michigan recovered, allowing the Wolverines to run out the clock.
During the FOX broadcast of Saturday’s game, rules analyst Mike Pereira said he didn’t think Kingsbury was offsides. The play was not reviewable and could not be challenged.
The Big Ten later admitted that there was an officiating mistake on the play, saying it was “too tight” to throw a flag in that situation.
The conference also confirmed in a statement that it had received immediate approval for an officiating alignment change on onside kicks. Now, the head line judge and line judge will need to be positioned on the 35-yard line of the kicking team — meaning there will be two views down the line.
It is uncertain if other leagues will be approved for the new alignment by the NCAA. 
Before the change was announced, head coach P.J. Fleck on Monday briefly addressed the situation, confirming he spoke with Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti.
“It took 60-something plays on both sides of the ball to get to that last play,” Fleck said. “Every play tells it’s own story.”
He went on to say that one play doesn’t lose a game, but believes one play can win a game.
Fleck said the team has done a good job of handling Saturday’s loss with class and learning from the game.  
The Gophers host No. 11 USC on Saturday, Oct. 5. USC officially joined the Big Ten conference along with Oregon, UCLA and the University of Washington. 
Kickoff is at 6:30 p.m.
Note: The featured video is from June 7, 2024. 

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