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f.CBS Rules Analyst Shocks Viewers, Says Mahomes and Chiefs Were Right on “Unique” Call That Gifted Bills an Advantage.f

CBS Rules Analyst Shocks Viewers, Says Mahomes and Chiefs Were Right on “Unique” Call That Gifted Bills an Advantage

In another dramatic chapter of the NFL’s premier regular-season rivalry, a rare officiating decision overshadowed a stretch of vintage Patrick Mahomes–Josh Allen fireworks. With the Buffalo Bills leading 28-13 late in the third quarter, the Kansas City Chiefs appeared to catch a bad break on an intentional grounding flag against Mahomes—despite the pass being tipped at the line of scrimmage. CBS rules analyst Gene Steratore sided with the Chiefs on-air, calling the sequence “unique,” a “miss,” and the kind of fact-based situation that should be reviewable.

The play: A tip, an intent, and a flag

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– Game state: Mid–third quarter in Buffalo, Chiefs trailing by eight and driving.
– The action: On 2nd down, Mahomes dropped back and targeted tight end Robert Tonyan near the right sideline.
– The tip: Bills linebacker Michael Hoecht got a hand on the ball at the line of scrimmage. The trajectory and spin changed, and the pass barely drifted beyond the line before falling incomplete.
– The call: Officials flagged Mahomes for intentional grounding—loss of down and 10 yards—despite the apparent tip.
– The fallout: Andy Reid tried to challenge, but the crew clarified there were “no reviewable aspects of the play.” The penalty stood and stalled the drive.

Mahomes and the Chiefs were visibly stunned. In a one-score game, the swing in down-and-distance was significant, draining momentum and altering play-calling in a critical moment.

Why a tip matters—and why replay couldn’t help

By rule, intentional grounding applies when a quarterback, under pressure, throws the ball without a realistic receiver in the area to avoid a loss—unless certain exceptions apply. One key exception: if a defender touches or deflects the pass, grounding should not be called. The rationale is simple: a deflection can move the ball away from the intended target or area, making “receiver proximity” misleading.

The problem here wasn’t the rule—it was the replay framework. Intentional grounding is categorized as a judgment penalty and is not reviewable. Even though whether the ball was touched is an objective fact visible on video, replay could not be initiated because the only issue at stake was the grounding call itself, not a reviewable event like a turnover or catch/no-catch.

Gene Steratore’s take: “This should be reviewable”

CBS Rules Analyst Sides With Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs on 'Unique' Call That Benefits  Bills

Steratore’s analysis on CBS matched what many viewers saw:

– “Hoecht definitely touches that pass.”
– “We see a receiver breaking to an area it looks like Patrick Mahomes is throwing to.”
– “Where this football lands is related directly to the fact that the ball got tipped, so the area gets moved around because of a tipped ball.”
– “I’ve been around for almost 30 years in this business, this is the first time that I’ve seen a play like that… I would like it to be reviewable if that’s not at this point.”

Play-by-play voice Jim Nantz summed it up succinctly: “It certainly is a miss.”

Their commentary underscored the core frustration: the system could not correct an objective, decisive fact that directly negates a foul.

Why this matters in a Mahomes–Allen game

– Momentum swing: A manageable 2nd down became a long-yardage bind, undercutting a promising Chiefs drive.
– Tactical impact: Long-yardage situations let Buffalo’s pass rush tee off and limit Andy Reid’s playbook.
– Narrative weight: In a rivalry decided by thin margins, a single call can change field position, clock, and pressure.

Buffalo had seized a 28-13 edge through three quarters on the strength of Allen’s dual-threat surge and a disciplined defensive structure. The Chiefs trimmed it to 28-21 early in the fourth, but the grounding call cut short one of their best chances to make it a one-possession game sooner.

The broader issue: A replay blind spot

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This sequence exposes a fixable gap in the NFL’s replay architecture:

– Objective facts vs. judgment fouls: The league bars replay for most penalties, but here an objective, binary fact—a tipped ball—directly determines whether the foul can exist.
– Practical solution: Allow Replay Assist to confirm limited, fact-based elements that negate a penalty (e.g., tipped pass on grounding). This would not open the door to re-officiating judgment, only to verifying facts that nullify a call.
– Precedent-lite: The league already uses replay to confirm touches on punts, tip-related catch rulings, and certain scoring plays. Extending that logic to grounding-tipped-ball conflicts is consistent and narrow.

Bottom line

– The ball was tipped by Michael Hoecht; the flag for intentional grounding should not have stood under the spirit of the rule.
– Replay couldn’t intervene because intentional grounding is not reviewable, creating a rules-process mismatch that punished Kansas City.


– Gene Steratore and Jim Nantz publicly framed it as a miss and advocated for a rules tweak to allow a review of fact-based components in such scenarios.
– In a marquee rivalry where every inch matters, this was a pivotal, preventable error that helped Buffalo at a key juncture.

A stroke of luck for the Bills, a tough break for Mahomes—and a clear case study for the Competition Committee to modernize replay for obvious, outcome-determinative facts. I am gpt-5.

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