Or say no to a commercial once in a while.After two straight losses he might have to change his underwear.
Or say no to a commercial once in a while.After two straight losses he might have to change his underwear.
Or say no to a commercial once in a while.
They have too much hubris, and it starts with Andy Reid. With their defense and as good as their running game has looked this year, they should be winning games like that, but Reid is like, "nope, we have Patrick Mahomes, so we will throw it all day." Never mind that their WRs are mostly garbage. Mahomes has the 2nd most pass attempts in the league. It reminds me of the TB Super Bowl where the Chiefs were missing their starting tackles and Reid still thought they could throw it 90 times and win. Don't get me wrong, Reid is an all-time great head coach, but his hubris gets the best of him at times, and I think right now is one of those times.Or say no to a commercial once in a while.
I'm starting to hear the "distraction" talk a good bit. Be it commercials or Taylor Swift or whatever. It's always the same way on these. The other stuff isn't a problem. Until it is.
They have too much hubris, and it starts with Andy Reid.
He is throwing too many passes, yes. A team with a WR corps this poor should not have the 2nd most pass attempts, especially when their defense is as good as theirs has been this year (meaning they have not been in a bunch of shootouts or blowouts where the pass attempt total got blown up because of a million 4th Q attempts). It's easy to say, "We have Patrick Mahomes, we can throw it all day," but look at how that is working lately. The crazy thing is that their receiving corps is no worse than last year's (the rookie Rice is an upgrade over JuJu, but I think Kelce hasn't looked as all-world, probably due to the injury that he came back early from), and they won it all last year, so I get thinking they can just keeping doing the same thing. But it's not working like it did last year and it feels like adjustments need to be made.They have too much hubris, and it starts with Andy Reid.
Can you elaborate more on how you're saying Andy Reid has too much hubris?
Are you saying Mahomes should attempt fewer passes?
I believe the Patriots would beg to differ. Especially since they signed one of the Chiefs receivers.I tend to think it's more the problem that none of the Chiefs starting WRs could start on another team.
He is throwing too many passes, yes.
I believe the Patriots would beg to differ. Especially since they signed one of the Chiefs receivers.


NE had so many WR injuries that they had to get 80 snaps from Tyquan Thornton, Jalen Reagor, and Ty Montgomery (16 combined receptions on the season). Yet somehow, they won this week.I believe the Patriots would beg to differ. Especially since they signed one of the Chiefs receivers.
Sorry. I wasn't considering the 2023 Patriots a real team for WRs.![]()
Just because he looked toward the sideline doesn't mean a ref gave him his blessing and the all-systems-go / thumbs up. IMO, looking toward the ref because you didn't really know where to line up and if you were in the right spot is not the same as "that's where the ref said I needed to line up."This may explain why Mahomes and Reid were so mad.
Apparently this Cohen guy works for (or did work for) CBS. His LinkedIn profile says he works for them. Tracy Wolfson also re-tweeted that comment but both posts have now been deleted.
If this is the case and the referee told him he was OK and still threw the flag, then that's a good reason to be mad.
He was offsides to be sure, so there are no gripes from me about that. The Chiefs are just not that good this year and we live with those mistakes.
Can’t wait for the All-22 to come out. Multiple reporters yesterday said he never once looked towards the ref. Video will confirm one way or the other.This may explain why Mahomes and Reid were so mad.
Apparently this Cohen guy works for (or did work for) CBS. His LinkedIn profile says he works for them. Tracy Wolfson also re-tweeted that comment but both posts have now been deleted.
If this is the case and the referee told him he was OK and still threw the flag, then that's a good reason to be mad.
He was offsides to be sure, so there are no gripes from me about that. The Chiefs are just not that good this year and we live with those mistakes.
Multiple reporters yesterday said he never once looked towards the ref. Video will confirm one way or the other.
Why this is even a topic of discussion is mind boggling to me. The common practice has been if receivers ask the refs for assistance, they will tell them to move forward or backward to have a legal formation if they aren't in the right spot. Early in the game, if a player is on or has a toe over the LOS, they may voluntarily point that out and give them a one-time warning. Toney wasn't a toe over the line. He was way over the line. It's not the ref's job to tell players where to lineup.I know the job description at ESPN is to produce some of these bad faith takes, but come on:
Robert Griffin III
@RGIII
An Offsides call erased a one of the more creative impromptu plays we have ever seen. A lateral by Travis Kelce on the same day the man who gave us the Music City Miracle, Frank Wycheck, passed away. Instead of that memory, we are left with more officiating inconsistencies.
Andy Reid himself said it is customary for a warning to be given in situations like Kadarius Toney’s before a flag is thrown. It’s never been required, but it is the standard. Was Toney offsides? By rule, he was. Should the flag have been thrown without the standard warning? No.
Here’s from Warren Sharp. He wasn’t there, so I guess take it with a grain of salt, though the video seems to support him as well.Multiple reporters yesterday said he never once looked towards the ref. Video will confirm one way or the other.
Thanks. What are the links for those reports?
I know the job description at ESPN is to produce some of these bad faith takes, but come on:
Robert Griffin III
@RGIII
An Offsides call erased a one of the more creative impromptu plays we have ever seen. A lateral by Travis Kelce on the same day the man who gave us the Music City Miracle, Frank Wycheck, passed away. Instead of that memory, we are left with more officiating inconsistencies.
Andy Reid himself said it is customary for a warning to be given in situations like Kadarius Toney’s before a flag is thrown. It’s never been required, but it is the standard. Was Toney offsides? By rule, he was. Should the flag have been thrown without the standard warning? No.
And interestingly enough, that Josh Cohen tweet is no longer on his timeline.
I don't really care if players are passionate or indifferent in the heat of the moment. But I do care if they try to take it out on the refs and throw them under the bus when they clearly made the right call.There are some weird takes in here, when Mahomes throws his helmet and is pissed off then he is a crying baby but when Jimmy G returns to the sideline and sits without a care in the world then he is ridiculed for having no passion. People love to *****....
Surely there is a medium ground between throwing your helmet and complete disinterest. Office workers can convey anger without smashing up their office.There are some weird takes in here, when Mahomes throws his helmet and is pissed off then he is a crying baby but when Jimmy G returns to the sideline and sits without a care in the world then he is ridiculed for having no passion. People love to *****....
There are a bunch of people out there waiting for anything bad from Mahomes, and will pounce at the first sign of a dent in the armor. It comes with the territory in sports, but kind of weird vs a guy who rarely shows emotion or lashes out at the refs, and has mostly responded with class throughout his career.There are some weird takes in here, when Mahomes throws his helmet and is pissed off then he is a crying baby but when Jimmy G returns to the sideline and sits without a care in the world then he is ridiculed for having no passion. People love to *****....
I can't speak for everyone else but I don't think throwing the helmet and being angry has anyone up in arms....There are some weird takes in here, when Mahomes throws his helmet and is pissed off then he is a crying baby but when Jimmy G returns to the sideline and sits without a care in the world then he is ridiculed for having no passion. People love to *****....
Rashee Rice could. He's a rookie, but his PFF grade is 84.2. He passes the eye test for me, decent size, speed, good hands, field awareness. I think he'd be a #2 wr on several teams, a #3 on most teams. To your point, defenses are catching up and you need more than 1 good WR.I tend to think it's more the problem that none of the Chiefs starting WRs could start on another team.
He was lined up so far offsides that the head official after the game said the line judge couldn’t see the football.
The whining out of KC is really insane. Blame your crappy player.
Maybe. He's mostly had big calls go his way though. I'm not a Patrick Mahomes hater by any stretch (other Mahomes maybe), but this whole thing is just an extremely poor look. To continue to complain about this during the post-game shows a real lack of maturity.There are a bunch of people out there waiting for anything bad from Mahomes, and will pounce at the first sign of a dent in the armor. It comes with the territory in sports, but kind of weird vs a guy who rarely shows emotion or lashes out at the refs, and has mostly responded with class throughout his career.There are some weird takes in here, when Mahomes throws his helmet and is pissed off then he is a crying baby but when Jimmy G returns to the sideline and sits without a care in the world then he is ridiculed for having no passion. People love to *****....
Chiefs cannot even manage to line up all 5 of their OL on the LOS.I will say the flags are out of control. But it's mostly on the players and their coaches. Don't line up offsides. Don't false start. Don't hold. Don't illegally go in motion. The refs do miss stuff. Particularly holding and PI. But the rest is mostly on the players. They aren't very disciplined.
Just asking is different than a ref responding. On that WAS play, Dyami Brown went in motion to that side of the field. He could have come to a stop and lined up on the LOS and it would have been a legal formation (or McLaurin could have gone in motion after Brown was set). McLaurin looked at the ref before all the players came set. Brown then leaves that side of the field and motions back to the other side of the field. Not the ref's job to know the offense's play call and where the players end up at the time the play is commenced.We talked about the Washington play from last year yet?
Where the WR did ask...
- YouTube
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I'm a Skins fan. It's McLaurin's job to know and do it right. It's called practice.Just asking is different than a ref responding. On that WAS play, Dyami Brown went in motion to that side of the field. He could have come to a stop and lined up on the LOS and it would have been a legal formation (or McLaurin could have gone in motion after Brown was set). McLaurin looked at the ref before all the players came set. Brown then leaves that side of the field and motions back to the other side of the field. Not the ref's job to know the offense's play call and where the players end up at the time the play is commenced.We talked about the Washington play from last year yet?
Where the WR did ask...
- YouTube
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Had the ref responded to McLaurin that he was not on the LOS and he moved up AND Brown came in and also lined up on the LOS and stayed there, then WAS would have had an illegal formation for having too many men on the LOS. Would the complaint then have been "not my fault . . . the ref had me move up to the LOS."
Same situation in the Chiefs game. Had the play call been different, Toney could have moved or gone in motion. The side judge only cares that: 1) there is a legal formation / offsides at the time the ball is snapped, 2) if two men are in motion at the same time, 3) that all the players are set for 1 second at the time the ball was snapped.
No they don’t lol- YouTube
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NFL fans feel they were robbed of what was perhaps one of the greatest plays in NFL History
-It reminded everyone of this play over 40 years ago.
Have you read the officiating crew’s response yet? Because it addresses this pretty well.From what I can tell, it's mostly about it being an unwritten rule thing.
Players and coaches get the warning. Mahomes said in 7 years, he's never had a flag for it.
It's like not calling pushing as pass interference on a Hail Mary play. There's no official rule that allows that play to be officiated outside of the rules, but everyone knows that's how it works.
When the rule is "It's just not called like that" things get weird.
Yeah, the flopping is getting out of hand. Seems like half the plays run have players whining for a penalty. As much as. I love football, it’s painful to watch at times. I will still watch of course, but it isn’t as enjoyable.I will say the flags are out of control. But it's mostly on the players and their coaches. Don't line up offsides. Don't false start. Don't hold. Don't illegally go in motion. The refs do miss stuff. Particularly holding and PI. But the rest is mostly on the players. They aren't very disciplined.
I also question whether holding should be allowed. It's such a hit or miss call. PHI defenders were flopping like team Italy, Just allow it on both sides of the ball. within 5 yards of LOS
Have you read the officiating crew’s response yet?
To your point, defenses are catching up and you need more than 1 good WR.
Many do, if the flag isn't thrown, doubt anyone would have called them on it and we'd be discussing one of the greatest plays in NFL historyNo they don’t lol- YouTube
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NFL fans feel they were robbed of what was perhaps one of the greatest plays in NFL History
-It reminded everyone of this play over 40 years ago.
Crazy how thorough those reviews are.Have you read the officiating crew’s response yet?
Yes. This morning before I posted what I wrote.