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Green Bay's Aaron Rodgers angered by controversial TD call against Seattle Seahawks

The Green Bay Packers have been left fuming after one of the most controversial decisions in NFL history saw them lose to the Seattle Seahawks and saw most people in the league lose faith with the replacement referees.

Rodgers rages

Quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who was sacked eight times in the first half by a ferocious Seahawks defence, was also in no doubt what the call should have been. "It was awful," he said. "Just look at the replay. And then the fact that it was reviewed, it was awful. That's all I'm going to say about it. "From my vantage point, the referee in the back, I saw him wave over his head, which means he was going touchback. No idea how the other guy said touchdown Golden Tate on the replay. Obviously, he takes his arm off whatever part of the ball he may or may not have had, and they reviewed it and it upheld." Seattle coach Pete Carroll was obviously always going to have a different opinion on the matter: "From what I understood from the officials it was a simultaneous catch. Tie goes to the runner. Good call," he said. There was also a blatant two-handed push from Tate that should have been called as offensive pass interference, which was also missed by the officials, but the Seattle man insisted he caught the ball fairly.
Possession
"I was just trying to keep possession of the ball," said Tate. "The guy who was fighting me for it, he's strong. I was just trying to hold onto it until our guys pulled them off of me. I didn't know if they called touchdown, interception, incompletion. I didn't know what was going on. Couldn't hear anything and I just tried to keep fighting for the ball." Several Packers players took to Twitter to vent their anger, after a group of them watched replays in the locker room after the game and could be heard laughing at the call, and some of them could face sanctions from the NFL for their comments. Wide receiver Greg Jennings was more reserved in his comments to the media, but still made it clear he thought the touchdown should not have stood. "Just watching in the back room, I think if you asked Golden Tate to take a lie detector test and ask him did he catch that ball or did M.D. catch that ball, M.D. caught that," Jennings said. "It was clear as day - at least that is what my eyes saw." One thing is clear, the controversy will only heighten the calls for the replacement referees to be sent on their way and the lockout of the experienced officials to be ended.

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