Foul Play: Chiefs Upset at Refs' MNF No-Call

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Michael82
    Registered User
    • Jul 2002
    • 82328

    Foul Play: Chiefs Upset at Refs' MNF No-Call

    A non-call on Rodney Harrison's end zone interception Monday night has Kansas City fuming.

    But it was the same thing that seems to happen week after week to All-Pro tight end Tony Gonzalez, frustrating the Chiefs to the point they've stopped submitting the weekly officiating critiques the league asks for.

    Chiefs president Carl Peterson has stopped speaking to the officials altogether.

    "They don't call holding or pass interference when Tony is involved," coach Dick Vermeil said Tuesday. "He is a very prolific red zone offensive player and he always gets held, chucked or tackled."

    Trailing 17-10 Monday night, the Chiefs faced third-and-goal from the New England 9 with 54 seconds left in the half. Gonzalez, lined up on the right side of quarterback Trent Green, broke for the end zone. Harrison and linebacker Roman Phifer met him at the line and began bumping and harassing him, then seemed to keep bumping him into the end zone.

    As the ball went sailing toward the three, Phifer's arm appeared to be locked in Gonzalez's. The ball was underthrown and Harrison stepped in front and made the interception in a game the Patriots eventually won 27-19.

    As they pleaded for pass interference Green, Gonzalez and Vermeil were ignored.

    "It makes it tough on us when you don't get a call, especially against the world champions," said Gonzalez, the five-time Pro Bowler who caught seven balls for 86 yards. "If you don't get that call, it means they're going to win. We need that call and it should have been called. It was illegal, but it didn't get called."

    Green, who passed for 381 yards and two touchdowns, said it looked like Gonzalez "was getting mugged."

    A non-call on Rodney Harrison's end zone interception Monday night has Kansas City fuming.
  • finsrclowns
    Registered User
    • Apr 2004
    • 1408

    #2
    Whatever. It was a horrible pass into the teeth of double coverage.
    finsrclowns

    Comment

    • RedEyE
      Registered User
      • Jul 2002
      • 24661

      #3
      I thought that it was pass interfernce too, but the Cheifs should know by now that the Pats are alloted a different set of rules then the rest of the league.

      Comment

      • Jan Reimers
        Thank You, Terry and Kim, for Saving the Bills. Now, Work on the Sabres.
        • May 2003
        • 17353

        #4
        We all know that the Pats can do no wrong. It's their league. The other teams are just playing in it.
        Should have known, way back in 1960 when we drafted Richie Lucas Number 1, that this would be a long, hard ride. But who could have known it would be THIS bad?

        Comment

        • Michael82
          Registered User
          • Jul 2002
          • 82328

          #5
          Originally posted by RedEyE
          I thought that it was pass interfernce too, but the Cheifs should know by now that the Pats are alloted a different set of rules then the rest of the league.
          It was definitely pass interference or at least that new defensive holding.

          Comment

          • Michael82
            Registered User
            • Jul 2002
            • 82328

            #6
            Originally posted by Jan Reimers
            We all know that the Pats can do no wrong. It's their league. The other teams are just playing in it.
            It's sad, isn't it?

            Comment

            • Mad Bomber
              Registered User
              • Jul 2002
              • 12927

              #7
              Originally posted by Jan Reimers
              We all know that the Pats can do no wrong. It's their league. The other teams are just playing in it.
              Sadly, it's been that way for years - it seems they always get the calls (and non-calls) in critical situations. That's why I call the NFL refs "The Brady Bunch" (see avatar)

              Comment

              Working...
              X