By ROB MAADDI
AP Pro Football Writer
Travis Kelce and Kadarius Toney had combined to make the play of the season to give the Kansas City Chiefs a late lead when the celebration quickly turned to silence.
An offside penalty on Toney negated the score.
Anytime thereâs a big play in an NFL game, announcers are quick to point out whether a yellow flag has been thrown. Fans canât get too excited until they hear on television or see in person that thereâs no penalty on the play. Players often hesitate to celebrate.
The quality of officiating in the NFL is inconsistent. But thatâs nothing new. Itâs been that way for decades. Even with instant replay, plenty of calls are missed.
It seems every week thereâs at least one blown call or non-call in an important spot that helps change the outcome of a game.
Fans whine. Players and coaches complain. The league sometimes admits mistakes and admonishes referees. Then, it happens again the following week and the week after that.
Overall, penalties are up this year but not by much. Entering Sunday nightâs Eagles-Cowboys game, an average of 14.4 penalty flags were thrown per game. It was 13.1 last season.
The NFC East prime-time showdown started out like a flagfest with a national television audience watching. Officials threw eight flags in the first quarter and 17 total penalties were accepted in Dallasâ 33-13 victory over Philadelphia.
In Kansas City, the game-changing call wasnât popular but it was accurate. Regardless, officiating is dominating headlines instead of the players' performance on the field.
With the Chiefs trailing the Buffalo Bills 20-17 and under two minutes left, Kelce caught a pass over the middle from Patrick Mahomes and then threw the ball backward across the field to Toney, who ran the final 25 yards to finish off the 49-yard backyard touchdown.
However, Toney had clearly lined up offside. Itâs a call officials rarely made before this season. There have been 13 offensive offside penalties in 2023, including a few against Philadelphia on the âtush pushâ play. There were only seven total in the previous three seasons combined.
The Chiefs hadnât noticed that referees are calling offensive offside more frequently.
Mahomes was fuming on the sideline, screaming at officials and had to be held back. Even coach Andy Reid uncharacteristically pointed out his displeasure with the call unprovoked after the game.
âI never use any of this as excuses, but normally I get a warning before something like that happens in a big game,â Reid said. â(Itâs) a bit embarrassing in the National Football League for that to take place. ... Normally, yeah, if itâs even close you get a warning. The head coach gets a warning, I mean that normally â I donât know, I didnât have a protractor out there. But itâs a bit embarrassing.â
Referee Carl Cheffers said officials will give coaches alignment advice if theyâre asked.
âBut ultimately, they are responsible for wherever they line up,â Cheffers told a pool reporter. âAnd, certainly, no warning is required, especially if they are lined up so far offsides where theyâre actually blocking our view of the ball. So, we would give them some sort of a warning if it was anywhere close, but this particular one is beyond a warning.â
Cheffers wasnât sure if any warnings for offside were issued during the game but it didnât matter in this case.
âIf itâs egregious enough, it would be beyond a warning,â he said. âSo really regardless of whether or not he was warned at other times during the day, if it was an egregious alignment to where he was over the ball â whether he had warnings or not â it would still be a foul.â
Last week, referees missed an obvious pass interference by the Packers against Chiefs wide receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling near the 5-yard line in the final minute of Green Bayâs 27-19 win.
âI know as fans you want to see the guys on the field decide the game and thatâs why last week I didnât say anything about the flag that didnât get called on Marquez,â Mahomes said. âI mean, theyâre human, they make mistakes but itâs every week weâre talking about something and all I can do is go out there and give everything I have. ... Itâs just tough to swallow.â
Itâs always tougher on the team that loses.
In this case, the call was right. Still, it's too bad the penalty stole the spotlight from Josh Allen,