USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Refs accused of rigging Super Bowl, but Eagles player admits to penalty

- Chris Bumbaca

A late Philadelph­ia Eagles penalty sent fans and social media into a frenzy, lamenting the referees and accusing the NFL of rigging Super Bowl 57.

But the player called for holding, cornerback James Bradberry, said afterward it was the correct call.

“It was a holding,” Bradberry told reporters in the locker room after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs. “I tugged his jersey. I was hoping they would let it slide.”

The tug didn’t stop fans of the Eagles – and ones who were neutral for the big game – from becoming outraged when the holding call allowed the Chiefs to run out the clock and win the Super Bowl 38-35.

Why did fans call Super Bowl #rigged?

Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs had the ball 15 yards from the end zone with 1:54 on the clock and Super Bowl 57 tied at 35.

On 3rd-and-8, the Kansas City Chiefs quarterbac­k took the shotgun snap and looked left. Philadelph­ia Eagles defensive end Josh Sweat won his pass rush and was breathing down Mahomes’ neck.

The Super Bowl MVP had to get rid of the ball and tossed a prayer to the end zone. Wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster could not run under it. The Eagles, regardless of whether the Chiefs took the lead on a field goal, would get another chance to tie the score — or perhaps put together a game-winning drive.

Then Mahomes pointed. A yellow flag lay on the field. It was on the Eagles.

Ballgame.

The call was holding on Bradberry, who was guarding Smith-Schuster on that play.

The flag resulted in an automatic first down for the Chiefs, meaning they could run the clock. It was the first defensive holding call of the game for both teams.

The Eagles sideline stood in shock. Chiefs running back Jerick McKinnon picked up a first down and slid down at the 1-yard line. Mahomes knelt twice before kicker Harrison Butker came out to finish the job — and drive a stake through the collective heart of Philadelph­ia.

Instant backlash for Super Bowl referees

The call will be the subject of Philadelph­ians’ ire for eternity.

Bradberry – who signed with the Eagles in May on a one-year deal and was a cornerston­e of a secondary that helped the defense finish the regular season fourth in takeaways – put his hands on Smith-Schuster as the receiver turned upfield on his route toward the end zone.

Fox analyst Greg Olsen lamented it was a ticky-tacky call.

Instead of receiving possession with more than 90 seconds on the clock, the Eagles and quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts had eight seconds on the clock after Butker’s 27-yard field goal. It wasn’t enough time, and the Chiefs became Super Bowl champions.

Fans swiftly reacted on social media, calling out the referees and once again accusing the NFL of rigging the Super Bowl.

 ?? ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES ?? NFL referee Carl Cheffers does the coin toss before Super Bowl 57.
ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES NFL referee Carl Cheffers does the coin toss before Super Bowl 57.

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