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 in the past six seasons. During a divisional contest against between the Chiefs and Houston Texans,
Troy Aikman was on the call for Kansas City’s Divisional Round win against the Houston Texans. The ESPN analyst was not afraid to call out officiating during the game, particularly when it came to flags thrown after Patrick Mahomes was hit.
The referees’ alleged Chiefs bias has become a hot topic this postseason, with Kansas City being on the right end of some debatable rulings.
The ESPN analyst cites betting as one reason calls are more scrutinized than ever before. 1. 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.
Troy Aikman spoke about NFL officiating and how it needs to improve, especially because of the league's partnerships with gambling companies.
Troy Aikman was clearly unhappy with the performance from Clay Martin in the Chiefs-Texans division round game.
Football fans noticed the same concerning-looking thing about Troy Aikman during the Texans-Chiefs playoff game.
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.
ESPN commentator Troy Aikman high on Houston Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud's 24-yard dot to wide receiver Nico Collins, "That's the throw of the day for him."
Troy Aikman "The two Houston players hit each other ... The quarterback’s slide was a quick one, and the two Texans defenders in closest proximity left their feet at practically the same moment Mahomes did. Those defenders — Henry To’oTo’o and ...
The Kansas City Chiefs find themselves once again in the Super Bowl, hoping to become the NFL 's first three-peat NFL xhampions. They do it on the back of a 15-2 regular-season record and despite a subpar statistical season from quarterback Patrick Mahomes - at least by his own standards.
ESPN commentator Troy Aikman in awe of Houston Texans defensive end Will Anderson Jr.'s 8-yard TFL vs. Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Xavier Worthy in red zone.