The referees’ alleged Chiefs bias has become a hot topic this postseason, with Kansas City being on the right end of some debatable rulings.
Remember that last regular-season game earlier this month? The post Troy Aikman Clears Air on Blaming Patrick Mahomes & Chiefs for Controversial Officiating With a Strong Message to Refs appeared first on EssentiallySports.
NFL fans were mortified by when referees levied an unnecessary roughness penalty on the Texans in the third quarter of Saturday’s AFC divisional round game against Patrick ... Mahomes and Kansas City — a game the Chiefs went on to win 23-14. Even ...
Troy Aikman was clearly unhappy with the performance from Clay Martin in the Chiefs-Texans division round game.
That was the case again during their game with the Texans when the Chiefs and quarterback Patrick Mahomes benefited from not ... At that point, announcers Troy Aikman and Joe Buck started openly questioning the officials. A frustrated Aikman, who is ...
It would not be surprising if Tony Romo carries added baggage into CBS Sports’ AFC Championship Game booth Sunday evening.
Houston's Henry To'oTo'o was called for an unnecessary roughness penalty after hitting a sliding Mahomes at the end of a play — a hit the officials deemed to be to the head and neck area of the Chiefs star.
The Kansas City Chiefs find themselves once again in the Super Bowl, hoping to become the NFL 's first three-peat NFL xhampions. They do it on the back of a 15-2 regular-season record and despite a subpar statistical season from quarterback Patrick Mahomes - at least by his own standards.
On Saturday it wasn't just disgruntled non-Chiefs fans sounding off. ESPN's Troy Aikman was not happy at all over an unnecessary roughness call on Patrick Mahomes that cost the Houston Texans 15 yards in an AFC divisional-round game at Arrowhead Stadium.
The ESPN analyst cites betting as one reason calls are more scrutinized than ever before. 1. If you were to list the biggest story lines of the NFL’s postseason, Troy Aikman’s performance during the Texans-Chiefs divisional round playoff game on ABC/ESPN would make the cut.
The league is expected to expand replay assist this offseason into plays that could include the quarterback slide, according to ESPN's Adam Schefter.