Fans Furious After Refs Nail Mahomes With Controversial Grounding Call and Deny Reid a Challenge
For once, the narrative flipped. In a rivalry where Kansas City is often accused of getting the big whistles, the Chiefs were on the wrong end of a pivotal officiating decision in Buffalo on Sunday: a controversial intentional grounding flag on Patrick Mahomes that officials then ruled unreviewable, nullifying Andy Reid’s challenge and tilting a critical third-quarter sequence.

The sequence that swung the series
– Down and distance: 2nd-and-6 from the Chiefs’ 44-yard line.
– The play: Patrick Mahomes dropped back and released a pass that drew an intentional grounding flag.
– The Chiefs’ contention: Edge rusher Michael Hoecht tipped the ball at the line of scrimmage, which would negate intentional grounding by rule.
– The challenge: Andy Reid threw the red flag to contest the call, citing the tip.
– The ruling: After a conference, officials said the play was not reviewable. The penalty stood, creating 3rd-and-16.
– The aftermath: On the very next snap, Mahomes was sacked by Michael Hoecht and Greg Rousseau for a nine-yard loss, stalling the drive and flipping field position and momentum.
Why the call matters
Intentional grounding hinges on two pillars:
– Was the quarterback under pressure and throwing to avoid a loss without an eligible receiver in the area?
– Were there exceptions that negate grounding, such as the quarterback being outside the tackle box and the ball reaching the line of scrimmage—or the pass being tipped or contacted by a defender?
If the pass was indeed tipped by Hoecht, the grounding flag should not apply. That’s why Reid challenged. The officials’ response—that the play was unreviewable—moved the debate from pure judgment to process: what parts of the action can be checked by replay?
The replay gray area
The NFL’s replay system allows review of elements like:
– Touches of the ball that relate to turnovers, catches, and pass interference (when in an ongoing reviewable scenario).
– QB down-by-contact, line-to-gain, and boundary rulings.
But replay does not permit challenges of most “judgment” penalties, including intentional grounding. The crux here: determining whether a ball was tipped is typically reviewable when it’s material to a reviewable event (e.g., pass interference or a turnover). When the only issue is the penalty itself—intentional grounding—current rules box replay out. That leaves crews to get it right live, or consult quickly on-field.
Result: Even if cameras showed a graze at the line, the crew deemed the penalty structure unreviewable in isolation and kept the flag.
Momentum tax: from 2nd-and-6 to drive-killing 3rd-and-16
The net sequence was brutal for Kansas City:
– Field position: A manageable second down at their own 44 became a behind-the-sticks nightmare.
– Play-calling squeeze: With 3rd-and-16, Buffalo’s pass rush could tee off. Hoecht and Rousseau cashed in with a drive-suffocating sack.
– Psychological swing: Instead of debating scheme, the Chiefs were forced to grapple with a ruling they couldn’t contest—on the road, against a top AFC rival.
Optics in a rivalry of razor-thin margins

Every recent Mahomes-Allen meeting has landed within a one-score window. In that context, officiating decisions are magnified. Buffalo fans have long bristled at “Chiefs-favored” narratives; this time, Bills Mafia can point to a moment when the tables turned. Conversely, Kansas City faithful will argue that the league’s replay framework failed to correct a fixable error.
Both can be true: the call was consequential, and the rulebook’s review limits kept a possible correction off the table.
What the league could clarify
– Tip reviewability: The NFL could explicitly allow review of ball contact at the line when it directly affects a penalty like intentional grounding.
– Automatic booth assist: In high-leverage flags with clear, quick-detectable facts (e.g., a definitive tip), empower the booth to buzz down without a formal challenge path.
– Communication transparency: A prompt pool report or explanation postgame would help frame whether the crew saw no definitive touch or simply lacked authority to review.
Bottom line
– The Chiefs were penalized for intentional grounding on a play they believe was tipped.
– Andy Reid’s attempt to challenge was denied because intentional grounding is not a reviewable judgment penalty under current NFL rules.
– The penalty forced 3rd-and-16; Mahomes was immediately sacked, effectively torpedoing the drive.
– In a rivalry decided by inches, this was a yards-and-momentum swing that could linger well beyond Sunday.
Until the NFL widens replay scope for fact-based components of judgment fouls, teams will remain vulnerable to exactly this kind of officiating dead zone—where a correctable fact collides with an unreviewable flag at the worst possible time.