Kansas City Cheating In Playoff Game

© Provided by The Big Lead Xavien Howard and Tyler Boyd battling earlier in the game. | Michael Reaves/Getty Images

Xavien Howard and Tyler Boyd were both ejected from the Cincinnati Bengals - Miami Dolphins game after a shoving match on the sideline. The pair, along with Byron Jones, got tangled up as they went out of bounds and nearly took out a ball boy. Some shoving then took place and Boyd and Howard each made contact with someone else's helmet.

Coaches and referees got in the middle of it to break it up, but enough damage was apparently done to warrant ejections in the eyes of the officials. And they are the only ones who thought this 'fight' was worthy of ejections. This was a pretty weak call on two of the better players in the game.

The Kansas City Chiefs and Atlanta Falcons have released their third and final injury reports of the week on Friday. You can find the injury reports from earlier this week here: Wednesday — Thursday. Check out the injury report for each team, complete with game status designations, down below. The Kansas City Chiefs and New Orleans Saints are the only NFL teams that have clinched playoff spots to this point, but that could change drastically in Week 14. ESPN's Adam Schefter shared the playoff scenarios for the upcoming week of action, and the Buffalo Bills, Pittsburgh Steelers and Green Bay Packers can all secure their postseason spots. So, what did the legendary New England Patriots quarterback want to share with the Kansas City Chiefs' rising star? Brady: Mahomes is 'spectacular' Mahomes joined ESPN's 'NFL Live' set from the 2019 Pro Bowl festivities in Orlando to explain how Brady communicated his respect for the young QB while sharing advice for the future.


Kansas city cheating in playoff game 2019

Video: Tyler Boyd, Xavien Howard ejected during controversial sequence in Week 13 (SMG)

Tyler Boyd, Xavien Howard ejected during controversial sequence in Week 13

Kansas City Cheating In Playoff Game 2020

Kansas City Cheating In Playoff Game

We didn’t get to see Patrick Mahomes.

That alone should tell the NFL that its overtime rules are fundamentally flawed. It was overtime in Patriots-Chiefs, the AFC Championship game, after one of the most thrilling fourth quarters I can remember in an NFL playoff game. The nation was watching. The Patriots won the toss, drove the ball down the field — they do have the best quarterback of all time, which helps — and scored.

With the Kansas City Chiefshaving the No. 2 seed, they don’t play until the divisional round of the playoffs. The Chiefs’ will take on the higher of the AFC’s remaining two seeds in the divisional. KANSAS CITY, Mo. Charles Penn wasn't planning on going to the Kansas City Chiefs' divisional-round playoff game against the Houston Texans this past Sunday.

Then it ended. That was it. Patrick Mahomes, who’d gone toe-to-toe with the greatest coach and greatest QB of all time, didn’t get to touch the football. His team lost the toss, his defense gave up a touchdown, and that was it.

Kansas City Cheating In Playoff Game 2019

For a casual fan, it felt like being cheated. Even for a Patriots fan — which, yes, I grew up in New England — it felt like being cheated. We wanted more football.

Look, these guys get it:

I understand why wanting to limit the length of a game would be a good idea for the regular season. I’d argue they actually don’t go far enough — I’m of the belief games should just end in ties in the regular season. Who cares? Teams have tied multiple times over the last few years and nothing much happens. It’s a weird thing, we laugh, the tie is added to their record and they move on. For the regular season, just end the game in a tie.

But for the playoffs, you can’t end a game without letting both offenses touch the ball. It feels fundamentally unfair, not just to both teams, which sure, but to the fans watching as well. We deserved to see more of this game.

Kansas

Kansas City Cheating In Playoff Games

To the people who argue The Chiefs defense should have stopped the Patriots offense from scoring. Sure. Every defense should stop every offense from scoring every time. Sometimes that doesn’t happen. I’m not sure why Mahomes is being punished for that, when any other time in football, except if a score occurs as time expires, the other team’s offense gets the ball back.

The rule changes helped, but it’s still not enough. And what’s especially infuriating is the solution is right there. College football has the greatest overtime in sports. Their solution with the overtime conundrum was to turn the game into a game of backyard football, and it’s fantastic. Let the teams take turns scoring on each other until we pass out. That’s excellent!

Kansas City Cheating In Playoff Game Today

Even if it’s just giving another quarter of football and letting them play it out, that’s better than the current rules. For the playoffs, make the change. I’m still waiting for Mahomes to get the ball and make something happen.