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Jeff Triplette

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Nationality
  
United States

Name
  
Jeff Triplette

Education
  
Wake Forest University


Jeff Triplette hottytoddycomwpcontentuploads2014016447465

Occupation
  
NFL official (1996–Present)

Role
  
American Football Official

Similar
  
Orlando Brown, Gene Steratore, Jerome Boger, Pete Morelli, Bill Vinovich

Jeff triplette nfl referee


Jeff Triplette is an American football official in the National Football League (NFL) since the 1996 season. He wears uniform number 42.

Contents

Jeff Triplette Jeff Triplette returns to Cincinnati scene of a major

Personal

Jeff Triplette Jeff Triplette blew another huge call For The Win

Triplette is a retired Army Reserve colonel. He was awarded the Bronze Star for actions in the Persian Gulf War while serving in the North Carolina Army National Guard.

Jeff Triplette Pereira Maligned Jeff Triplette steps up on the national

In January 2007, Triplette was named president and chief operating officer of FNC, Inc., the provider of collateral management technology to the nation's largest mortgage lenders. Before joining FNC, he was vice president for risk management at Duke Energy, a large energy company headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina.

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In March 2013, Triplette was named president and CEO of ArbiterSports.com, a website designed to assist in assigning officials to sports teams.

Officiating career

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Triplette joined the NFL as a field judge in 1996, then switched to back judge in 1998 after the NFL swapped position titles that season, and became a referee in 1999 after four-time Super Bowl referee Jerry Markbreit announced his retirement. He was the alternate referee of Super Bowl XLI, which was held on February 4, 2007 in Miami.

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On December 19, 1999, Triplette accidentally hit the Cleveland Browns' Orlando Brown in the eye with a penalty flag weighed with ball bearings. Video shows that Triplette immediately apologized to Brown, who was then tended to by the medical staff. Brown attempted to rejoin the team on the field a few minutes later, but Triplette prevented him from entering for the next play per NFL rules which stipulate that if a player incurs an injury timeout he must sit out the next play. Brown shoved Triplette to the ground and was ejected. Initially the NFL suspended Brown indefinitely, but lifted the suspension when it was learned that the flag had temporarily blinded him. As a result of the incident, the practice of officials using flags weighted with ball bearings was discontinued in favor of other material. In addition, officials are now only instructed to throw a flag at the spot of the foul if they need to mark it as a possible spot for penalty enforcement; otherwise, they only need to throw it up in the air.

On December 8, 2013, Triplette's crew initially ruled that a fourth-down run by Cincinnati Bengals running back BenJarvus Green-Ellis against the Indianapolis Colts was down by contact just short of the goal line. Because it was less than two minutes before halftime, it automatically went to replay. After reviewing the play, Triplette reversed the call and awarded the touchdown to Green-Ellis. His reversal was based on footage of Green-Ellis near the goal line where he was clearly not touched, but did not look at footage earlier in the play where there was contact. This miscall helped revive discussions around centralizing all replay review functions to the league office, similar to the National Hockey League's system. Centralized replay was then approved at the owner's meeting on March 26, 2014, although NFL referees will still make the final decisions instead of the command center.

Triplette's 2017 NFL officiating crew consists of umpire Ruben Fowler, down judge Jeff Bergman, line judge Danny Short, field judge Greg Gautreaux, side judge Terry Brown, and back judge Steve Freeman.

References

Jeff Triplette Wikipedia