October 7, 2024

Justin Fields: Pass to Chase Claypool was ‘definitely’ pass interference

Justin Fields #JustinFields

Chase Claypool caught two passes in his Bears debut. But what he’ll remember most is an incomplete pass.

On third-and-10 with 1:35 to play and the Bears down 35-32 Sunday, quarterback Justin Fields lofted a pass down the left sideline. Dolphins cornerback Keion Crossen had both arms wrapped around Claypool’s midsection and pulled him backward while the receiver tried to jump for the pass. Safety Jevon Hollard hit the receiver soon afterward and the ball fell to the ground.

Claypool, for whom the Bears traded a second-round pick Tuesday, looked for a pass interference flag that never came.

“I felt like I was getting pulled back a little bit,” said Claypool, who caught two passes for 13 yards on six targets, including a pass interference call in the first quarter that gained 28 yards. “But still gotta try to fight through that and get that because you can’t count on someone else. I have to count on myself.”

Claypool thought it was “for sure” pass interference, based on a similar flag given Bears safety Eddie Jackson earlier in the fourth quarter.

“I wasn’t sure during the play,” Fields said. “After I saw it on the (replay) board, it was definitely P.I., for sure. Just missed it. Can’t do anything about it. Just have to move onto the next play.”

Had Claypool gotten the call, the Bears would have had first down at the Dolphins’ 23 — in field goal range to at least tie the game.

Claypool did not get an explanation for the non-call because he was more worried about the next play. The Bears turned the ball over on fourth-and-10 when Equanimeous St. Brown failed to grab a pass.

The Bears were frustrated earlier in the quarter, when quarterback Tua Tagovailoa rolled right and heaved a pass deep to Jaylen Waddle. Jackson sprinted to try to intercept the ball and was flagged for a 47-yard pass interference penalty.

“From my vantage point it looked like it was a clean play,” head coach Matt Eberflus said.

Jackson said an official told him he wasn’t playing the ball.

“I didn’t look at the receiver one time,” he said. “So I don’t know what he’d seen, but I was playing the ball the whole time. Even the guys on the Dolphins sideline told me that was a horrible call.”

Rookie safety Jaquan Brisker couldn’t believe the calls — and non-calls.

“It’s crazy,” he said. “The way certain calls were being called (Sunday), they have to hold certain people accountable.”

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