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Chiefs benefit from intentional grounding call against Bengals
Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid watches a reply against the Cincinnati Bengals during the first half at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports

The Cincinnati Bengals’ comeback effort against the Kansas City Chiefs was upended Sunday by what appears to be another bad call from an officiating crew.

With 6:18 to go and the Bengals trailing 22-17, Bengals quarterback Jake Browning was called for intentional grounding on the first play of the drive. The call came even though running back Joe Mixon certainly appeared to be the intended target of the pass.

Browning was hit as he threw, which may have impacted how the ball came out, but he appeared to be preparing to throw before initial contact from the defender. Under those circumstances, grounding should not be called. 

The quarterback was in the tackle box and the ball went past the line of scrimmage, so the only way it could have been intentional grounding was if there was no receiver in the area, and Mixon appeared to be.

At the very least, the play was far less blatant than some other instances of intentional grounding that somehow went uncalled.

The call set the Bengals back ten yards and made it second-and-20, and they would be forced to punt two plays later. The Chiefs wound up winning 25-17.

The Bengals may well have lost anyway, as they struggled to move the ball in the second half. Still, the flag caps off a rough weekend for NFL officials, though at least it was nowhere near as impactful as what happened between the Lions and Cowboys on Saturday.

This article first appeared on Larry Brown Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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