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Announcers Dumbfounded as Referees Appear to Let Chiefs Player Get Away with 'Tremendous' Advantage All Game

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The only reason this isn’t a bigger story is because the defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs suffered a stunning 21-20 home loss to the historically moribund Detroit Lions in the NFL kickoff game on Thursday.

But that doesn’t make it any less wildly egregious.

The Chiefs may have suffered one of the more ignominious losses of the Patrick Mahomes era, but it certainly wasn’t because the referees had it out for them.

In fact, as many observers noticed, the refs appeared to be letting the Chiefs get away with a number of illegal tactics, primarily with regards to what Chiefs right tackle Jawaan Taylor was getting away with.

It was bad enough that NBC, the network that aired the opening NFL game, brought in its rule analyst and even he couldn’t defend the referees (of note, NBC’s Terry McAulay is a former referee himself, so he’s not exactly champing at the bit to criticize his fraternity brothers.)

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McAulay blasted the way in which Taylor was allowed to line up so far back of the line of scrimmage (for the unaware, that gives Taylor a massive advantage in setting up in pass protection.)

“To be on the [offensive] line, his helmet has to break the waistline of the center,” McAulay said during the broadcast. “And to be honest, we’ve watched him the whole game, he’s really not remotely close, and it’s really putting the defensive end at a tremendous disadvantage when he can be that far back.”

Did the referees get this wrong?

But it wasn’t just the illegal formation that Taylor appeared to get away with most of the game.

Other observers of the game noticed that Taylor was getting away with a number of false-start penalties. Those should happen when the ball is ready to be snapped, and an offensive lineman moves before the ball is snapped.

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The brazenness of it all left even NBC’s experienced announce crew dumbfounded and grasping for comparisons.

NBC’s Cris Collinsworth even went so far as to quip that Taylor was playing as a slot receiver during the game:

To say that this was an inauspicious start to the NFL season would be a gross understatement.

One of the NFL’s premiere franchises and quarterbacks getting an incredibly generous whistle at home on ring ceremony night against a downtrodden franchise?

It’s easy to see how that narrative could quickly and violently blow up in the NFL’s face, especially after years of accusations that the NFL gave a favorable whistle to the league’s last dynastic team, the New England Patriots.

(And make no mistake, the Chiefs have all the early makings of a dynasty. The last team to make three of four Super Bowls, as the Chiefs have done? The Patriots.)

In a way, then, it probably worked out for the best that the Chiefs suffered a humbling home loss on Thursday.

Had the Chiefs won (or covered the spread, in today’s sports gambling-crazed world), all anybody would be talking about is the referee epidemic in the league.

No league wants to start the season like that, with such a singular focus on the referees. In fact, the Chiefs lost … and it’s still a major talking point the morning after.

For the Chiefs, they’ll have a chance to silence their critics and get back on the winning track on Sept. 17 when they travel to face the Jacksonville Jaguars– which is, ironically, Taylor’s last team.

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Bryan Chai has written news and sports for The Western Journal for more than five years and has produced more than 1,300 stories. He specializes in the NBA and NFL as well as politics.
Bryan Chai has written news and sports for The Western Journal for more than five years and has produced more than 1,300 stories. He specializes in the NBA and NFL as well as politics. He graduated with a BA in Creative Writing from the University of Arizona. He is an avid fan of sports, video games, politics and debate.
Birthplace
Hawaii
Education
Class of 2010 University of Arizona. BEAR DOWN.
Location
Phoenix, Arizona
Languages Spoken
English, Korean
Topics of Expertise
Sports, Entertainment, Science/Tech




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