Right after Sunday's loss, Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll voiced his displeasure with the officials ruling in favor of the Packers on a key fumble recovery in the fourth quarter.

A day later, having watched the tape, Carroll discovered a couple more issues that annoyed him. One was the 52-yard pass interference penalty on Richard Sherman late in the first half. Seahawks defensive lineman Michael Bennett jumped offside on the play, and Carroll contends that it should have been whistled dead before the snap.

"Remember when they got us to jump offsides and then they get the 53-yard pass interference penalty?" Carroll said during his weekly appearance on ESPN 710 Seattle. "That’s a total mistake on the officials’ part. We jump offsides, their offensive line, the right guard and tackle stand up, the play’s dead. That play never happened. It never should have happened. It would have been a 5-yard penalty. It would have been second-and-12 backed up with 30 seconds left. That was a huge deal to us. It never should have gotten to that point. ... That was the biggest play of the game for them, really."

Carroll also disagreed with the officials' decision to toss only linebacker K.J. Wright from the game in the fourth quarter. Wright got tangled up with Packers tight end Richard Rodgers after a run play, and Wright grabbed Rodgers' facemask. Carroll acknowledged that Wright threw Rodgers down, but said Rodgers was the only one who threw a punch.

"K.J. didn’t swing back or nothing, so I don’t know," he said. "I don’t know what to tell you on that one. I can see if they could have called it both ways, but for him to get thrown out when the other guy threw the punch, I don’t know."

The Seahawks got hit with six penalties for 92 yards in the game, while the Packers were whistled six times for 35 yards.

Carroll backtracked on his postgame complaint on Monday. Initially, he said the officials failed to declare possession following a Packers fumble in the fourth quarter.

“In seeing the television copy, I did see Gene [Steratore], who is a great official, jump out of there and point it out, which I didn’t see at game time,” he said. “But my vision was a little clouded, I think.”