Max from Sherwood Park, Alberta, Canada

What do you think about this? For all those iffy calls (like the Matthews roughing the passer), there is a referee in the booth who quickly looks at the replay once or maybe twice. If he deems Matthews did everything correctly then they pick up the flag. They already have that for false starts, don't they? Why not for all subjective calls?

There's an element of subjectivity on practically every play, but it's the referee's job to sort through all that information to keep the playing field even. I have to admit I was wrong, guys. Many of you asked me about officiating during the preseason, and I said I'd start to worry about it once the games mattered. Well, now we see the result.

Rich from De Pere, WI

I'm not sure I have ever seen so many game-changing calls go against one team (Matthews roughing call, Adams interference call, Taylor holding call, non-call against Graham). All four of those were terrible. I know in basketball, coaches will often point out to an official the scoreboard that shows one team is getting a lot more foul calls than the other. Do football coaches ever suggest to a referee that calls seem to be going one way?

Anytime you see a flag on TV, how often do you see the coach talking to the referee? There are conversations between coaches and officials throughout. It's part of the game.

David from Los Angeles, CA

I was watching the end of the Vikings game with a friend who is a Washington fan. Late in the game when Rodgers was sacked and he had already been downed by a Viking, another Viking player came in and also hit Rodgers. My friend's comment was "If Matthews' hit was a penalty, why didn't they throw a flag on the second Viking to hit Rodgers as he had already been tackled?" After all, are they really interested in protecting the QB or determining the outcome?

There's only so much room on the plate and the referees are doing the best they can to balance all the biscuits. On Sunday, we saw several laying around Lambeau Field.

Gene from Midland, GA

Rodgers' injury last year effectively ended playoff hopes. Now, the NFL's obsession with "protecting the QB" birthed yet another subjective foul into the game. Guess the trade-off is: take your lumps being on the receiving end of questionable roughing-the-QB calls, or let the defense pound a QB into a season-ending injury. The Matthews penalty factored into the tie, but it didn't ruin an entire season of chances like what was dealt with Rodgers' injury. We still have hope next week.

The confusion is what concerns me because you have the former head of officiating Dean Blandino saying the dress is blue and Al Riveron saying it's gold. But this isn't an Instagram post. This is a professional sport. We need clarity.

Robert from Pflugerville, TX

Many were commenting about the play that Mike Daniels held up. I think a play that speaks to the effect of the "new" NFL, Kentrell Brice would have lit up Adam Thielen on that touchdown catch a couple of years ago. Thoughts?

I didn't get a chance to talk to Brice during Monday's locker room, but that's how it appeared to the untrained eye.

Toby from River Falls, WI

On Davante Adams' "drop" in the end zone, everyone's talking about catch/no catch, but no one mentioned that should have been a penalty. He's already on his back and the safety comes in and hits him right in the helmet. How was that not a "hit to the head of a defenseless receiver"? His helmet is even half off when he stands up, pretty obvious to me.

It looked like a hit to the head-and-neck area from Harrison Smith, but I don't know. Credit where credit is due – Eric Kendricks made a terrific play on the ball.

Randy from Jonesborough, TN

Always disappointed when the Pack loses (or ties). However, despite the missed opportunities, questionable calls (it is what it is), etc., I'm excited about this team's prospects for the rest of the year. They went toe-to-toe with arguably the best team in the NFC and possible SB winner, according to many pundits and magazines, and did not lose. Our D played well all day, even though they were a bit "gassed" at the end (according to Larry McC.). Go Pack Go!