Santa Fe New Mexican

What’s old is new again

Players are reprising some classic, costly celebratio­ns

- By Arnie Stapleton

NFL players seem to have run out of creative ways to celebrate. Either that, or they’ve decided to pay homage to the players they grew up watching, even if it costs them some funds for injecting fun into the game.

Chiefs receiver Tyreek Hill was the latest to go old school when he commemorat­ed his second touchdown in Week 10 by commandeer­ing the CBS camera like Cincinnati’s Chad Ochocinco once did.

“The celebratio­n just came into my head,” said Hill, whose actions netted an unsportsma­nlike conduct penalty and a coach Andy Reid’s ire. “That was too much,” Reid said. The NFL, which has relaxed celebratio­n rules, might agree.

Hill’s stunt came days after Saints receiver Michael Thomas was fined $30,000 for using a phone as a prop, a la Joe Horn, and Titans safety Kevin Byard was dinged $10,026 for celebratin­g an end zone intercepti­on on the Cowboys’ midfield star logo, just like Terrell Owens did in 2000.

Saints tight end Ben Watson added a little twist to his celebratio­n when

he stuffed the football under his jersey to signal his wife’s pregnancy just like … Ben Watson did, back in 2009.

When Watson, 37, scored against the Rams on Sunday, he let the world know he and his wife, Kristen, are expecting twins by stuffing the ball under the front of his jersey and holding up five fingers on one hand as he often does to honor his five children.

Then he held up two more fingers on his other hand in honor of the twins on the way.

Nine years ago, Watson similarly

stuffed the ball under his jersey after scoring as Kristen was close to full term with their first child, Grace. He was fined shortly thereafter for using the ball as a prop.

“So the cool thing is I will be able to say [to his twins] that, ‘When I did it for Grace, I had to pay. When I did it for you all, the league had changed,’ ” Watson said. “What a difference nine years make.” Not for everyone. Hill was flagged for unsportsma­nlike conduct in Kansas City for taking over the TV camera, just as Thomas was for pulling a flip phone out from under the goal post padding after his fourth-quarter score against L.A.

“Where did he get a flip phone?” Watson said. “I said [to Thomas], ‘Do you even know who Joe Horn is? You must have been in elementary school back then.’ But that was pretty good. I’ve got to give him props on that one.” No pun intended, of course. Byard said Friday his $10,026 fine was worth it because his intercepti­on denied the Cowboys a touchdown and sparked a 28-7 run in Tennessee’s 28-14 win in Dallas on Nov. 5.

Byard said he expected the Cowboys to take offense when he sprinted to the 50-yard line to pose on the star, then began a sort of Irish jig when teammates joined him at midfield.

“I was actually expecting someone to knock my head off,” Byard said. “I was like, if we get enough guys to the 50, we are just going to start dancing on the star.”

Cowboys running back Byron Jones quickly shoved Byard away, playing the part of George Teague, who blasted Owens when he did the

same thing while with the 49ers 18 years ago. “You don’t do that,” Jones said. Byard met with his coach, Mike Vrabel, who had a big problem with his DB’s actions.

Vrabel said he wants players to celebrate with each other and not stand up an opponent.

“It’s not what we want to do,” Vrabel said.

Byard said his over-the-top celebratio­ns are history.

Other takeaways from Week 10 included a stumbling, bumbling Tom Brady, a shoutout from the Rams to Halle Berry and Sean McVay’s decision to train at altitude in preparatio­n for Monday night’s showdown between the Rams and Chiefs, who are both 9-1.

Hail Halle

Jarod Goff was glad it was quiet enough for fans to hear his “Halle Berry” play call Sunday. Even the actress heard it, tweeting him for an explanatio­n.

Goff couldn’t reveal secrets of the audible, which resulted in an 8-yard pass to tight end Tyler Higbee.

All he’d tweet back was, “It’s my favorite play ever.”

On Monday, McVay said, “It’s one of my favorite plays, too, Halle.”

Brady’s bungle

A lot is made of Brady’s arm at age 41 and how he was just 21 of 41 Sunday in a 34-10 loss at Tennessee, where he was held without a TD pass for the second time in three weeks.

But what about his stumble and tumble on a trick play in which he caught the pass only to trip over himself and plop down a yard short of the first-down marker?

Tennessee QB Marcus Mariota later caught a pass on the Titans’ own trick play.

“I wanted to see if ours looked any better than theirs,” deadpanned Vrabel.

 ?? ED ZURGA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, lower right, watches as wide receiver Tyreek Hill climbs behind a television camera following his touchdown during Sunday’s game against the Cardinals in Kansas City, Mo. Hill drew a penalty on his celebratio­n.
ED ZURGA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, lower right, watches as wide receiver Tyreek Hill climbs behind a television camera following his touchdown during Sunday’s game against the Cardinals in Kansas City, Mo. Hill drew a penalty on his celebratio­n.
 ?? BILL FEIG/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas pulls out a cellphone as part of his celebratio­n after his 72-yard touchdown reception in a Nov. 4 game against the Rams in New Orleans.
BILL FEIG/ASSOCIATED PRESS Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas pulls out a cellphone as part of his celebratio­n after his 72-yard touchdown reception in a Nov. 4 game against the Rams in New Orleans.

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