Tag: comments

  • Former Panthers star Cam Newton refuses to back down from ‘locker room of losers’ comments

    Former Panthers star Cam Newton refuses to back down from ‘locker room of losers’ comments

    Cam Newton, who spent the majority of his 11-year NFL career with the Carolina Panthers, is not backing down from his recent criticism of his former teammates.

    Newton was the first overall selection in the 2011 NFL Draft and said when he arrived in Carolina he entered a locker room of “losers.” 

    The 2015 NFL MVP acknowledged his remarks were “aggressive,” but he remained steadfast in his position that they were “true.”

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    Cam Newton at Michael Rubin’s Fanatics Super Bowl party at Marquee Dayclub Las Vegas at The Cosmopolitan Feb. 10, 2024, in Las Vegas.  (Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty Images)

    “When did we become so sensitive,” the former NFL star said this week during the “4th&1 with Cam Newton” podcast. “When did we become so sensitive to really speaking what the reality is? A locker room full of losers? Aggressive, but it’s true.”

    STEVE SMITH SR. FIRES BACK AT CAM NEWTON FOR CALLING PANTHERS ‘LOSERS’

    The three-time Pro Bowl quarterback made the initial comments during an interview with Colorado football star Travis Hunter.

    Newton told Hunter he has “no way of impacting the game the way a quarterback does.” 

    “I went into a locker room of losers,” Newton said. “Just honest. Guys didn’t know how to win, guys didn’t know how to prepare. They didn’t take themselves serious to realize we was 2-14. There was a lot of 2-14 in the mentality of those guys.”

    Hunter, the reigning Heisman Trophy winner, is projected to be one of the first players selected in April’s draft. Newton was offering Hunter some insight into the pressure the two-way player could face if he becomes this year’s No. 1 pick.

    One of Newton’s former teammates, Steve Smith, took exception to the quarterback’s comments.  

    “53 man locker room – 1 = 52 losers. Wow… breaking news to 89,” Smith wrote on X with an angry emoji.

    Steve Smith and Cam Newton

    The Carolina Panthers’ Steve Smith, left, and Cam Newton share a laugh during the first half of an NFL preseason game against the Pittsburgh Steelers Aug. 29, 2013, in Charlotte, N.C.  (AP Photo/Mike McCarn, File)

    A few hours later, Smith posted, “I’ve watched & listened from a far as U @CameronNewton talk about @Panthers! None of us are perfect. Yes We were 2-14 before you blessed us w ur presence. The way you have talked about @panthers lately I’m very disappointed. I wish u nothing but the very best. I’m done!!!”

    Smith played for the Panthers from 2001-13 and is the most productive receiver to wear a Panthers uniform. He is also a finalist for the 2025 Pro Football Hall of Fame.

    Newton said he has “no quarrel” with Smith and understands why he had an issue with the remarks. Newton did clarify that he was referencing the Panthers’ performance as a whole and not individual players when he made the original comments. 

    “I’m not specifically talking about those guys,” Newton said. “I’m talking about the culture that was there prior to me coming into the locker room. And it was a losers’ mentality.”

    Cam Newton plays in December 2021

    Cam Newton (1) of the Carolina Panthers drops back to pass during the fourth quarter of a game against the Atlanta Falcons at Bank of America Stadium Dec. 12, 2021, in Charlotte, N.C.  (Lance King/Getty Images)

    Newton said the Panthers still had it his first two seasons when they went 6-10 and 7-9.

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    Things started to come together in 2013, when Carolina went 12-4 before losing to the San Francisco 49ers in the playoffs. The 2015 team went 15-1 and earned a spot in the Super Bowl. Carolina came up short in that game, losing 24-10 to the Denver Broncos.

    “Is it me saying that, ‘Oh when I came, I made everything (better)?’” he said. “No. I never said that. What I said was, ‘If you’re getting drafted No. 1, you’re going to a bad football team.’ That’s facts. And that’s the point that I was trying to tell Travis Hunter. 

    “You see what I’m saying? For me, everybody is so taken aback, like, ‘Oh, Cam said this.’ Bro, it’s the truth. It’s the truth.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Dems dismiss backlash over Jeffries comments as White House demands apology

    Dems dismiss backlash over Jeffries comments as White House demands apology

    Congressional Democrats are dismissing the White House’s demand for an apology after House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., urged people to “fight” President Donald Trump’s agenda “in the streets.”

    “Right now, we’re going to keep focus on the need to look out for everyday New Yorkers and everyday Americans who are under assault by an extreme MAGA Republican agenda that is trying to cut taxes for billionaires, donors, and wealthy corporations and then stick New Yorkers and working class Americans across the country with the bill,” the Democrat said during a press conference. 

    “That’s not acceptable. We are going to fight it legislatively. We are going to fight it in the courts. We’re going to fight it in the streets,” he continued. 

    ELIZABETH WARREN GRILLED RFK JR ON DRUG COMPANY MONEY, BUT RECEIVED OVER $5M FROM HEALTH INDUSTRY

    The White House has demanded an apology from Jeffries. (Reuters)

    A spokesperson for Jeffries, Christie Stephenson, told Fox News Digital, “The notion that Leader Jeffries supports violence is laughable. Republicans are the party that pardons violent felons who assault police officers. Democrats are the party of John Lewis and the right to petition the government peacefully.”

    She also referred to the comments as promoting “nonviolent protest” on X.

    ‘OVERDOSE EPIDEMIC’: BIPARTISAN SENATORS TARGET FENTANYL CLASSIFICATION AS LAPSE APPROACHES

    “You should really get a quote from one of the violent criminals President Trump just let on the streets. Or the one who immediately got picked up on child pornography charges,” a spokesperson for House Democratic Caucus Chairman Pete Aguilar, D-Calif., told Fox News Digital.

    The lawmakers were likely referencing Trump’s recent move to pardon nearly all defendants with charges related to the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot.

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Minority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., did not immediately provide comment to Fox News Digital.

    TENSION BUILDS AROUND TULSI GABBARD’S CONFIRMATION WITH KEY GOP SENATORS UNDECIDED

    House Democratic Caucus Chairman Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif., speaks at a press conference following a House Democratic Caucus meeting at the U.S. Capitol Building on Jan. 25, 2023 in Washington, D.C.

    Aguilar is chair of the House Democrats.  (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

    Jeffries’ remark was quickly shared by the Trump White House’s rapid response team Friday on X before Republicans began calling for an apology. 

    A senior White House official told Fox News Digital, “Hakeem Jeffries must apologize for this disgraceful call to violence.”

    House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn., also demanded an apology, writing on X, “House Minority Leader [Jeffries] should promptly apologize for his use of inflammatory and extreme rhetoric.”

    “President Trump and the Republicans are focused on uniting the country; Jeffries needs to stop trying to divide it.”

    SCOOP: KEY GOP SENATOR WHO HESITATED ON PETE HEGSETH PUSHES KASH PATEL FOR FBI

    Sen. Tom Cotton in congress hearing

    Cotton called the comments “deranged.” (Tom Brenner/Getty Images)

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    Senate Republican Conference Chairman Tom Cotton, R-Ark., told Fox News Digital in a statement, “The Democratic Leader’s comments are deranged but not unexpected. Senate Republicans are fighting to make America safer and more prosperous while the Democrats remain obsessed with protecting criminal illegal aliens, identity politics, and unhinged attacks on President Trump.”

    On social media, rank-and-file Democratic lawmakers remained silent on the comment from Jeffries. 

  • RFK Jr rips Dem senator for pushing ‘dishonest’ narrative on past vaccine comments: ‘Corrected it many times’

    RFK Jr rips Dem senator for pushing ‘dishonest’ narrative on past vaccine comments: ‘Corrected it many times’

    HHS Secretary nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden were involved in a tense exchange on Capitol Hill where Kennedy accused the senator of intentionally misrepresenting his past comments.

    Wyden, the ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee which held a confirmation hearing for Kennedy on Wednesday, pressed the nominee on comments made on podcasts in recent years. 

    During a podcast interview in July of 2023, you said, quote, no vaccine is safe and effective, in your testimony today in order to prove you’re not anti-vax, you note that all your kids are vaccinated, but in a podcast in 2020, you said, and I quote, you would do anything pay anything to go back in time and not vaccinate your kids,” Wyden said to Kennedy. 

    “Mr. Kennedy, all of these things cannot be true. So are you lying to Congress today when you say you are pro-vaccine or did you lie on all those podcasts? We have all of this on tape, by the way.”

    MULTIPLE OUTBURSTS ERUPT AT RFK JR. HEARING: ‘YOU ARE!’

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Sen Ron Wyden (Getty/AP)

    Kennedy took issue with Wyden’s comments and pointed out that the comment about “no vaccine” being safe and effective was said before he was cut off in the interview, with podcaster Lex Fridman, before he could finish. 

    Yeah, Senator, as you know, because it’s been repeatedly debunked, that the statements that I made on the Lex Fridman podcast was a fragment of the statement,” Kennedy responded. 

    “He asked me, and anybody who actually goes and looks at that podcast and will see that he asked me, are there vaccines that are safe and effective? And I said to him, some of the live virus vaccines. And I said, there are no vaccines that are safe and effective and I was going to continue for, every person. Every medicine has people who are sensitive to them, including vaccines.”

    RFK JR. LIKELY TO BE CONFIRMED AS HEALTH SECRETARY, DR. SIEGEL SAYS

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

    President Donald Trump’s nominee to be Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert Kennedy Jr., sits in a meeting with Sen. John Cornyn on Capitol Hill on Jan. 9, 2025. (Jon Cherry/Getty Images)

    Kennedy continued, “He interrupted me at that point. I’ve corrected it many times, including on national TV. You know about this, Sen. Wyden, so bringing this up right now is dishonest.”

    A transcript from the interview with Fridman shows Kennedy saying, “I think some of the live virus vaccines are probably averting more problems than they’re causing. There’s no vaccine that is safe and effective. In fact.” 

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    Ron Wyden

    Sen. Ron Wyden (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

    Kennedy is then cut off and the conversation goes elsewhere. 

    Kennedy has corrected the record on subsequent shows, including in an interview with HBO’s Bill Maher, where he explained he was interrupted and assured the public, “I would never say that.”

    Fox News Digital reached out to Wyden’s office but did not immediately receive a response. 

    Opposition to Kennedy’s nomination has been fierce, with advocacy groups running ad campaigns urging senators to vote against his confirmation.

    “I want to make sure the Committee is clear about a few things. News reports have claimed that I am anti-vaccine or anti-industry. Well, I am neither; I am pro-safety,” Kennedy said in his opening statement in front of the Senate Finance Committee.

    Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report

  • Incoming UK ambassador walks back prior comments on ‘danger’ of Trump: ‘ill-judged and wrong’

    Incoming UK ambassador walks back prior comments on ‘danger’ of Trump: ‘ill-judged and wrong’

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    EXCLUSIVE – Newly appointed U.K. ambassador to the U.S., Lord Peter Mandelson, is readying himself to take up the top job of preserving the “special relationship” long championed by London and Washington, but first he’s looking to set the record straight. 

    In an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital, Mandelson, when asked about previous comments he made regarding the recently re-elected president, including in 2019 when he said President Donald Trump was “a danger to the world,” said his opinion of the president had changed.

    “I consider my remarks about President Trump as ill-judged and wrong,” he said. “I think that times and attitudes toward the president have changed.”

    Peter Mandelson, former Labour MP and European commissioner, speaks to the media following the result of the EU referendum, in London, June 24, 2016. (Reuters/Stefan Wermuth)

    TRUMP’S WORLD LEADERS CLUB: WHO’S IN AND WHO’S LOOKING TO SALVAGE TIES

    “I think that he has won fresh respect,” he added in reference to Trump’s second election as president. “He certainly has from me, and that is going to be the basis of all the work I do as His Majesty’s ambassador in the United States.”

    The incoming ambassador’s comments come amid reports that the U.K.-U.S.’s “special relationship” could be put to the test, and Mandelson’s appointment may be blocked by the White House. 

    Mandelson rejected these claims and said, “I’ve heard nothing from the president or the White House or anyone working for him that suggests that there’s going to be any difficulty about my appointment.”

    But speculation on the reliability of the U.S. in that trans-Atlantic relationship remains high following comments made by officials from Trump’s campaign, as well as by close ally and tech titan Elon Musk.

    Musk, who engaged in a social media spat leveled at British Prime Minster Keir Starmer earlier this month, is not in Trump’s Cabinet, but he has been charged with overseeing the new Department of Government Efficiency.

    Despite the negative social media banter by those who have Trump’s ear, the president and Starmer engaged in an apparently friendly phone call over the weekend – suggesting Trump may look to prioritize the U.S.-U.K. partnership.

    Donald Trump speaking with Elon Musk

    Elon Musk speaks with former President Donald Trump during a campaign event, Oct. 5, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    AS UK REPRESENTATIVE, I WANT TO MAKE OUR ALLIANCE WITH THE US GREAT AGAIN

    “They’re not Siamese twins, President Trump and Prime Minister Starmer, but they’re both pragmatic people. They know where each is coming from, they want to find common ground,” Mandelson said. “I feel very optimistic. I feel very upbeat about the relationship that they’re both going to have.”

    Mandelson is the first non-career diplomat to take up the job as chief U.K.-U.S. liaison in over half a century. That could prove beneficial for Mandelson when up against Trump, who has long strayed from engaging in traditional diplomacy.

    “The president isn’t a career diplomat, and I’m not a career diplomat,” Mandelson said. “I came into politics to change things for the better for people, and so did he.

    “We share a similar, if not identical, outlook on the world and motivation in politics. But I think above all, we believe in something which is really special between our countries,” he added, pointing to the enduring relationship between the U.S. and U.K.

    Mandelson said his chief priorities will be to work with the U.S. on trade, technological developments and defense partnerships – particularly in the face of adversarial powers like China.

    “I think that the United States and Britain, working together, can outsmart and keep ahead of the curve as far as China is concerned,” the incoming ambassador said. “[Trump] wants a dialogue with China, he wants to do deals with China. But he’s also not going to be naive about China. 

    British PM Keir Starmer

    Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer addresses members at the Labour Party in Liverpool, England, on Tuesday. (AP)

    “We face a challenge together from China, and we’ve got to make sure that we are able to deter that challenge or that threat when they’re having aggressive intents toward us,” he added. 

    Mandelson championed the trilateral alliance shared by the U.S., the U.K. and Australia, established with the intent of countering China’s aggression in the Indo-Pacific. 

    “Security in the Euro-Atlantic area depends on making sure that China is kept at bay in its own region,” he said. “China has the right to prosper, to generate higher standards of living for its own people, but not at the expense of others.”

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    Mandelson argued that despite international apprehensions over certain security uncertainties under the Trump administration, the U.K. does not share in these concerns.

    “There are so many threats and challenges the world is facing at the moment. It takes courage, somebody, sometimes, who’s prepared to be argumentative and, indeed, disruptive, not just take business as usual,” he detailed.

    “Frankly, I think President Trump could become one of the most consequential American presidents I have known in my adult life,” Mandelson said. 

  • Trump’s Davos comments reignite debanking controversy

    Trump’s Davos comments reignite debanking controversy

    President Donald Trump on Thursday called out one of America’s largest banks during a question-and-answer session with its CEO during the World Economic Forum, accusing the bank of not offering financial services to conservatives and rekindling a dispute over political debanking.

    Trump told Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan during the session, “You’ve done a fantastic job, but I hope you start opening your bank to conservatives, because many conservatives complain that the banks are not allowing them to do business within the bank – and that included a place called Bank of America… They don’t take conservative business.”

    “And I don’t know if the regulators mandated that because of [President Joe] Biden or what,” Trump continued, “But you and [JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon] and everybody – I hope you’re going to open your banks to conservatives, because what you’re doing is wrong.”

    Banks including Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase have disputed allegations that politics contributed to decisions to close bank accounts.

    TRUMP CONFRONTS BANK OF AMERICA CEO FOR NOT TAKING ‘CONSERVATIVE BUSINESS’

    President Donald Trump criticized leading U.S. banks over alleged debarking practices during remarks to the World Economic Forum. (Bill Pugliano/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “We serve more than 70 million clients and we welcome conservatives,” a Bank of America spokesperson told FOX Business. “We are required to follow extensive government rules and regulations that sometimes result in decisions to exit client relationships. We never close accounts for political reasons and don’t have a political litmus test.”

    A JPMorgan spokesperson said in a statement that the bank would “never close an account for political reasons, full stop. We follow the law and guidance from our regulators and have long said there are problems with the current framework that Washington must address.”

    “We welcome the opportunity to work with the new Administration and Congress on ways to remove regulatory ambiguity while maintaining our country’s ability to address financial crime,” the spokesperson said.

    CONSERVATIVE GROUP TAKES AIM AT WALL STREET IN REPORT CLAIMING BIG BANKS HAVE UNDERCUT FIREARMS INDUSTRY

    Brian Moynihan on Mornings with Maria

    Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan was in attendance during Trump’s Q&A at the World Economic Forum. (Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    In recent years, Republican attorneys general have sent letters to banks seeking explanations for debanking decisions involving various conservative organizations or businesses involved in controversial industries, like gun dealers.

    Last year, a group of 16 attorneys general wrote to Wells Fargo about the closure of a Florida gun dealer’s account and said they believe the company used debanking as “a political tool to extend the policies of the Biden administration throughout the country.”

    State financial officers have also raised concerns about debanking practices with Wall Street banks, as a group of more than a dozen state treasurers, auditors and controllers wrote to JPMorgan Chase last year to “convey our concern that the bank is engaged in what appears to be politically motivated debanking of certain industries, individuals, and groups.”

    STATE FINANCIAL OFFICERS CALL ON JPMORGAN CHASE TO ADDRESS POLITICALLY MOTIVATED DE-BANKING

    JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said banks should be able to tell clients more about why they’ve been debanked. (Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “President Trump is right and I’m glad he is bringing light to the unethical and most likely unlawful behavior of some of the nation’s largest financial institutions,” Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen told FOX Business. “For years big banks, including Bank of America, have been debanking and discriminating against conservative and religious groups in favor of the left’s woke agenda.” 

    “As Attorney General, I have been calling them out, demanding answers and action from them and I will continue to do everything I can to hold them accountable and bring their bad behavior to light. It’s refreshing to have a President who recognizes the problem and is joining the effort to stop it.”

    REPUBLICAN AGS DEMAND WELLS FARGO ANSWER FOR ABRUPTLY CLOSING GUN DEALER’S ACCOUNT, OTHER WOKE POLICIES

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    JPM JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. 265.95 +3.11 +1.18%
    BAC BANK OF AMERICA CORP. 46.39 +0.60 +1.31%
    WFC WELLS FARGO & CO. 77.43 -0.11 -0.14%

    Federal laws and financial regulations can prompt banks to close accounts over concerns about things like money laundering or illicit financial activities, and one prominent bank leader thinks that firms should be able to be more forthcoming with clients about why such decisions are made.

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon appeared on the firm’s “The Unshakeables” podcast and said in a discussion about challenges crypto firms have encountered with debanking that banks are not allowed to tell clients why they were debanked and their accounts closed.

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    “I think we should be allowed to tell you,” Dimon said. “When we report stuff, the federal government should probably know about it and there should be far clearer lines about what we have to do and what we don’t have to do or things like that.”

    FOX Business’ Breck Dumas contributed to this report.

  • ESPN analyst reveals how ex-colleague’s Obama comments became point of contention

    ESPN analyst reveals how ex-colleague’s Obama comments became point of contention

    Sage Steele, in a lawsuit against her former employer, ESPN, accused analyst Ryan Clark of refusing to work with her due to opposing political views.

    Clark admitted recently on “The Michele Tafoya Show” that part of the accusation wasn’t false, but he felt the need to clear the air.

    Tafoya asked Clark about the lawsuit, which alleged Clark refused to work with Steele after she made controversial comments on former NFL quarterback Jay Cutler’s podcast in 2021.

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    ESPN analyst Ryan Clark broadcasts from the field before a game between the San Francisco 49ers and New York Jets at Levi’s Stadium Sept. 9, 2024, in Santa Clara, Calif. (Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images)

    On the podcast, Steele reflected on an appearance on “The View,” in which she said Barbara Walters “ripped me” for saying it was “important” to label herself as biracial.

    Steele said Walters then brought up that former President Barack Obama, who is biracial, chose “Black” when filling out paperwork for a census.

    “I’m like, well, congratulations to the president. That’s his thing. I think that’s fascinating considering his Black dad was nowhere to be found, but his white mom and grandma raised him. But hey, you do you. I’m going to do me,” Steele said on Cutler’s podcast.

    Clark said he disagreed with Steele on many political topics, including her vaccination stance and Colin Kaepernick’s protests, but he had “no issue” with her being a conservative.

    “Sage Steele being a conservative was, like, the worst-kept secret at ESPN,” the former Pittsburgh Steelers defensive back quipped.

    However, her comments on Obama were the “only” thing that “offended” him and prompted him to speak with a producer at ESPN about hosting a segment together.

    Sage Steele at Trump rally

    Sage Steele takes the stage during a Donald Trump campaign rally at Lancaster Airport Nov. 3, 2024, in Lititz, Pa. (Getty Images)

    3 PEOPLE CHARGED WITH SELLING FORGED JASON KELCE MEMORABILIA

    “As a Black man who understands that no matter what President Obama decides to check off as his race, he’s going to be seen as an entire country as a Black man. He’s going to be viewed if policemen say, ‘The suspect is a Black, tall, slender, light-skinned man,’ President Obama would fit that description,” Clark said. 

    “He’s also a man that was married to a Black woman. He was also a man that was raising two young Black daughters. And I felt that was disrespectful to say, ‘Why would someone with that blood running through their veins want to represent that culture?’”

    Clark admitted he told a producer he wanted another host, Matt Barrie, to “conduct my segment.”

    “Because what I know is this … chemistry is a large part of TV. It’s a large part of our ability to be able to entertain. And I didn’t want my discomfort with what she said to show on screen,” Clark said.

    Clark said it was a one-time thing with Steele, and they were able to “work … in a very cordial way” until she left ESPN. He added they no longer speak, “but I obviously wish her all the best in all her endeavors.”

    Ryan Clark at Jags game

    ESPN’s Ryan Clark chats with colleagues on air before a game between the Cincinnati Bengals and the Jacksonville Jaguars Dec. 4, 2023, at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fla. (Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

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    “She now has found a place where, entertainment-wise, she feels like she fits, she feels like she has a voice and she has a passion. And I feel like we all should be entitled to that, whether you agree or disagree.”

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  • NFL fines Joe Mixon for comments he didn’t make about referees, then fines him again for ones he did make

    NFL fines Joe Mixon for comments he didn’t make about referees, then fines him again for ones he did make

    The NFL fined Houston Texans running back Joe Mixon for comments he never made about referees during the team’s controversial playoff loss to the Kansas City Chiefs last Saturday. 

    After Mixon and his agent appealed the fine and publicly pointed out that Mixon did not make those comments, the NFL re-issued the fine with comments he did make. 

    The original fine claimed Mixon said, “Why play the game if every 50/50 call goes with Chiefs. These officials are trash and bias.” 

    That statement did not come from Mixon. Former NFL wide receiver T.J. Houshmandzadeh wrote it in a social media post. 

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    Houston Texans running back Joe Mixon, #28, and quarterback C.J. Stroud, #7, celebrate Mixon’s touchdown run against the Dallas Cowboys during the first half of an NFL football game on Monday, Nov. 18, 2024 in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jerome Miron)

    Mixon then went on a social media tirade denying that he made the statement and expressing outrage over the league’s fine.

    The NFL later re-issued the fine with his actual words in its place, which reads “Everybody knows how it is playing up here. You can never leave it in the refs’ hands. The whole world see, man,” according to NBC Sports. 

    League rules prohibit public criticism of officiating “because it calls into question the integrity of, and public confidence in, our game.”

    Officials came under widespread criticism by Texans players and head coach DeMeco Ryans, as well as many media pundits and fans on social media over two questionably roughing the passer penalties that were called against the Texans for hits on Patrick Mahomes last Saturday. 

    COWBOYS EYE EX-JETS HEAD COACH ROBERT SALEH AFTER MOVING ON FROM MIKE MCCARTHY: REPORT

    Patrick Mahomes of the Kansas City Chiefs

    Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, #15, is hit during an NFL football AFC divisional playoff game against the Houston Texans at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on Jan. 18, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Perry Knotts/Getty Images)

    The first penalty came when Houston edge rusher Will Anderson Jr. was called for roughing the passer on a third down in the first quarter. Anderson appeared to push Mahomes in the chest after he had thrown an incomplete pass to tight end Travis Kelce. Anderson was flagged.

    The second penalty came during a Mahomes scramble in the third quarter. He had two blockers on a run and three defenders bearing down on him. He moved to his right and then back to his left when he decided to slide. 

    Head referee Clay Martin explained the calls to a pool reporter after the game, saying one of the controversial calls was a result of “forcible contact to the face mask area,” which warranted a flag. He said there was forcible contact to Mahomes’ “hairline” on another unnecessary roughness call.

    Mahomes himself has defended the referees for the calls when he was asked by reporters Wednesday if he believed referees were giving him preferential treatment. 

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    Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, #15, is tackled by Azeez Al-Shaair, #0 of the Houston Texans, during the first quarter in the AFC Divisional Playoff at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on Jan. 18, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri.

    Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, #15, is tackled by Azeez Al-Shaair, #0 of the Houston Texans, during the first quarter in the AFC Divisional Playoff at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on Jan. 18, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

    “I don’t feel that way,” Mahomes answered. “At the end of the day, the referees are doing their best to call the game as fair and as proper as they possibly can. And all you can do is go out there and play the game that you love as hard as you can and live with the results. … I think that’s what we preach here in Kansas City.

    “You get new referees every year, you get new circumstances, and you never can really tell because every play’s different. And that’s what makes the NFL so special. I feel like I’ve just continued to play the game, and I just try to win. And whatever happens kind of happens.”

    Meanwhile, Kelce refused to speak on the issue when he was asked about it by his brother, Jason Kelce, during their podcast “New Heights” on Wednesday. 

    “I’d like to plead the Fifth,” the tight end said, jokingly referring to his constitutional right to remain silent. 

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