happened in Sunday night's Chargers-Steelers game, from Pittsburgh blowing a 23-7 first-half lead, to , to a three-play, three-offsides sequence to end things. Mercifully, Michael Badgley finally converted a 29-yard field goal as time expired to give the the 33-30 win. Perhaps it was fitting that, on an evening with plenty of controversy, those final seconds were also marred by penalties and confusion. With the score tied, Los Angeles got the Harmon Killebrew Jersey ball with 4:10 left in the fourth quarter. Eleven plays and 4:07 later, Badgley was lining up for a 39-yard game-winner. He honked it wide left, which would have sent the game to overtime -- except the were flagged for being offsides. They were flagged twice more for good measure Joe Mauer Jersey , and on the final attempt was so early that he jumped Badgley before he could attempt the kick: Michael Badgley for the win! Sports Daily (@SportsDGI) Shortly after the Chargers prevailed, linebacker tweeted this about Chargers long snapper : Chargers long snapper is notorious for twitching and moving the ball before he snaps. Pointed it out to refs during our game and was told hes been doing it his whole career its not gonna get called. Joe Schobert (@TheSchoGoesOn53) Warren Sharp of broke down the offsides calls: Wondered why there was no analysis of the 3 offsides on the game winning FG last night from the broadcast. Here you go. The simulated snap from the Chargers long snapper drew the Steelers Phil Hughes Jersey offsides Warren Sharp (@SharpFootball) Interestingly, back in Week 7, long snapper L.P. Ladouceur, who has been in the league since 2005, was flagged -- wait for it -- . The penalty meant Dallas kicker would have to attempt a 52-yard field goal to potentially tie the game, instead of a 47-yarder. The ball hit the upright and the Cowboys lost. "Never had that before," Ladouceur said at the time. "I do the exact same thing every time, so when that happens, that's what I was telling the ref: 'I do the exact same thing. Yeah, the guy jumped.' That's what I thought." Which is why we weren't surprised Windt wasn't flagged in Pittsburgh on Sunday night. It's never called. Except for that one time in Week 7 against a player who is in his 14th season. The had an explanation, however. Vice president of officiating, Al Riveron, : "The illegal ball movement by the center causes the defense to come Taylor Rogers Jersey acro s the neutral zone and contact a lineman." There was no evidence of Windt doing that against the Steelers -- and none of the Pittsburgh players suggested as much afterwards -- but Schobert's tweet is noteworthy either way. Here's what wrote after Ladouceur was flagged and it seems just as applicable now: "The bottom line is that the Ladouceur penalty has only made things more confusing. What he did is either a penalty or it's not, which means it should be an easy call for officials, but that's clearly not the case. The officials in Washington only flagged Ladouceur Minnesota Twins Jersey one out of five times on Sunday, which means it wasn't a penalty 80 percent of the time." Put another way: The officials blew a few calls on Sunday night but one of them wasn't the decision to not penalize the Los Angeles' long snapper on the final field goal(s). The Chargers host the Bengals in Week 14 (4:05 p.m. ET, CBS, or , try for free) while the Steelers travel to Oakland (4:25 p.m. ET, Fox, , try for free).