A highly controversial spot during Sunday’s AFC Championship Game between the Bills and the Chiefs drew immediate scrutiny… and accusations that the NFL was calling games in favor of Kansas City. The outcry was deafening,
As the Kansas City Chiefs prepare for their seventh straight AFC Championship Game, Adam Schefter placed a spotlight on NFL officiating. On Saturday night, Schefter reported that the NFL will consider expanding replay assist to include quarterback slides.
ESPN football insider Adam Schefter angered Chiefs fans (and a former player) with messages about Patrick Mahomes and penalties.
Adam Schefter pointed out some shocking officiating statistics that favor the Kansas City Chiefs during their playoff winning streak.
ESPN NFL insider Adam Schefter came under fire for his reporting this past weekend that the NFL is expected to expand replay assist that could include quarterback slides this offseason.
Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes has been the center of attention heading into Sunday's AFC championship game showdown with the Buffalo Bills not only because of his level of play and his chase for NFL history, but also because some of the calls he has gotten from refs in big playoff games.
While previewing this weekend’s Bills vs. Chiefs AFC Championship game on “Get Up,” reporter Adam Schefter began unbuttoning his co-host’s shirt as fellow studio analyst Harry Douglas told Orvlovsky to “stick his chest out” and “be a man” while making picks for the game.
Schefter opens up to The Athletic's Andrew Marchand about his role, side work he loves doing and his future as a reporter.
It’s not uncommon to see hordes of NFL fans angrily posting about Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs seemingly getting a friendly whistle this postseason. Yet over the weekend, ESPN analyst Adam Schefter appeared to play into that viral narrative when he framed a tweet about NFL replay rules around Mahomes.
Angry football fans want ESPN to discipline NFL insider Adam Schefter following a bizarre tweet about Patrick Mahomes.
The Chiefs hit Allen eight times over the course of the game and didn’t draw a single unnecessary roughness penalty. There were no late hits, no needless shoves out-of-bound when Allen launched his trademark deep throws along the sideline.
ESPN's NFL insider Adam Schefter faced ridicule for using the controversial penalty on Patrick Mahomes as a reference point for a report on possible changes coming to QB slides.