Did Ref Make A Bad Call By Leaving His Loving Wife?

Amid outcry from close family and friends on both sides of the divide, marriage fans are left wondering whether the decision NFL referee Terry Grier made to leave his loving spouse, Sharon, was a bad call.

Sharon, who had never before been cited with so much as a penalty in her 25-year tenure as a wife, was abruptly ejected from the marriage following a series of illegal use of hands calls after she allegedly interfered with the passes Terry made towards her in bed. 

“Terry made a snap judgment and should have reviewed his decision,” said a longtime friend of the family. “You’re really not supposed to make that call in that situation. I’m not surprised that Sharon threw a challenge flag. Anybody would.”

Terry’s children also objected to the decision. 

“We yelled that he was blind, and needed to get his head out of his ass and open his eyes,” said Terry’s teenage son, Jackson, before Terry deemed the attack an all-out blitz and intentionally grounded the kids.

Sharon, who maintains that she did nothing wrong but sacrifice her body and career to build a family with Terry, entered the NFL’s appeal process where the decision against her was ultimately upheld—though the league acknowledged the rules governing what constitutes a marriage confuse fans of matrimony all the time.

Reached for comment, Terry defended his position, but called Sharon’s newfound enthusiasm for the single life an unnecessary celebration and said the three dates she went on constituted way too many men on the field.