
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania — December 30, 2025 — The Philadelphia Eagles escalated tensions around the league today, as owner Jeffrey Lurie forwarded a massive 100GB evidence package to the NFL, formally contesting the officiating in Sunday’s 13–12 win over the Buffalo Bills at Highmark Stadium — a rain-soaked game overseen by referee Ronald Torbert.
Team representatives describe the submission as a comprehensive compilation of All-22 footage, high-definition slow-motion breakdowns, sideline audio, and player-tracking data, highlighting key sequences involving A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith, Quinyon Mitchell, and Marcus Epps — arguing that a handful of high-leverage flags and no-calls repeatedly flipped field position and nearly erased what the Eagles believed was a defense-driven road win.
In a statement attached to the dossier, Lurie’s message was direct:
“We can live with tough football and tight finishes. What we can’t accept is inconsistency at moments that can define a season. This goes beyond the Eagles — it’s about the integrity of the game.”
The report dives into granular play-by-play analysis, charting alignments, route spacing, leverage, and timing windows to argue that the standard of contact changed snap-to-snap — and often in Buffalo’s favor during pivotal possessions.

One of the earliest flashpoints cited is a missed defensive pass interference moment in the first half, when the Eagles argue A.J. Brown was impeded downfield with no flag, forcing Philadelphia to settle instead of cashing in a bigger scoring opportunity.
From there, the Eagles’ complaint focuses on a sequence of late-game “momentum swings.” In the third quarter, DeVonta Smith’s leaping catch was initially ruled complete, then overturned after a Bills challenge — a reversal the Eagles reportedly cite as a turning point in an already stagnant second-half offense.
The dossier also highlights two critical defensive moments that, in Philadelphia’s view, extended Buffalo drives at the worst possible time.
First: a sack that would have ended a promising Bills series was wiped out by a defensive holding call on Marcus Epps.
Second: on a later third down, Quinyon Mitchell was flagged for a 26-yard defensive pass interference on a play that was otherwise incomplete — a penalty that helped jumpstart one of Buffalo’s few legitimate scoring pushes of the night.
Quantitatively, the Eagles emphasize that the issue isn’t raw penalty totals — it’s timing.
The official logs show Philadelphia and Buffalo finished with similar penalty yardage, but the report argues that the most consequential whistles (and non-whistles) arrived on drive-ending snaps, turning stops into fresh downs and forcing the Eagles’ defense to defend extra plays in a one-score finish.
Privately, the organization insists this isn’t an excuse-making exercise — especially with the Eagles still escaping with the win after holding Buffalo scoreless for three quarters and surviving a final failed two-point try.
The internal message, according to team sources, is that Philadelphia must execute cleaner and finish games earlier — but that “playing perfect” cannot be the league’s solution for inconsistent standards.
The NFL has not issued an official response to the 100GB filing. Still, league observers believe the Eagles’ submission will add fuel to renewed debates over referee accountability, expanded replay, and how officiating crews are evaluated in high-stakes late-season games that can reshape playoff positioning.