NFL officiating has been a hot topic this postseason, with many fans accusing referees of favoring the Kansas City Chiefs. During their divisional-round matchup against the Houston Texans, ESPN analyst Troy Aikman openly disagreed with a call benefiting Patrick Mahomes,
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. Aikman received A LOT of attention for questioning the officiating and the league in regard to roughing-the-passer penalties,
The referees’ alleged Chiefs bias has become a hot topic this postseason, with Kansas City being on the right end of some debatable rulings.
Fox Sports will be broadcasting the big game, and they will have their top crew on the call—Kevin Burkhardt and Tom Brady. This will be Brady’s first time calling a Super Bowl, after signing a massive 10-year, $375 million deal with Fox after he retired from playing.
The number of fans complaining about the officials in regards to the Kansas City Chiefs has only grown after the team punched its ticket to a fifth Super Bowl
Troy Aikman, much like everyone else other than Kansas City Chiefs fans, is getting fed up with all of the terrible and, in some cases, shady calls being
Troy Aikman isn’t afraid to say what’s on his mind. The former Dallas Cowboys quarterback turned NFL commentator didn’t hold back when it came to officiating the Kansas City
NFL Hall of Famer, Troy Aikman, discusses Chiefs v. Eagles, plus his thoughts on Patrick Mahomes and the new coach of the Dallas Cowboys. Watch!
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 analyst ...
Troy Aikman was clearly unhappy with the performance from Clay Martin in the Chiefs-Texans division round game.
"Troy has won, lost, bled, sweated, and he's earned his opinion," Buck said. "That's what makes for great, honest TV."
The league is expected to expand replay assist this offseason into plays that could include the quarterback slide, according to ESPN's Adam Schefter.