BREAKING: J.J. Watt on NFL fining Joe Mixon twice: ‘What are we doing here?’

J.J. Watt on NFL fining Joe Mixon twice: 'What are we doing here?'
Feb 11, 2024; Paradise, Nevada, USA; CBS analyst J.J. Watt on the field before Super Bowl LVIII between the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Francisco 49ers at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

While many in the NFL world are trying to make sense of the situation involving Joe Mixon and what he did, and more importantly, did not say, J.J. Watt summarized it quite impressively Friday in an X post calling out the league.

For those who missed the bizarre story involving Mixon, the NFL fined the Houston Texans running back for something he allegedly said after the team’s loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in the Divisional Round.

The NFL fined him $25,000 for allegedly saying, “Why play the game if every 50/50 call goes with Chiefs? These officials are trash and bias.” Yet Mixon never said that; former Bengals star T.J. Houshmandzadeh made the remark, which appeared in a media report.

After Mixon complained about the fine on social media (“What’s next? I get fined by them for Connor McDavid cross-checking an opponent in an NHL game?”) the NFL reissued the fine for something else Mixon said that might be construed as mildly critical of the officiating.”

Watt checked in on the issue Friday in a terse X post calling out the NFL. The NFL Today analyst reposted a Pro Football Talk story about the original fine.

“This has not received enough attention,” Watt wrote. “He got fined for something he didn’t say. Publicly complained about it (correctly). Then got fined for that. What are we doing here?”

Mixon’s actual comment that led the NFL to reissue the fine is hardly incendiary: “Everybody knows how it is playing up here. You can never leave it in the refs’ hands. The whole world see, man,” Mixon said.

Mixon’s agent, Peter Schaffer, told Pro Football Talk they would “defend and appeal” the fine.

While Mixon didn’t explicitly call out the officiating in the Chiefs-Texans game, others did. ESPN analyst Troy Aikman disagreed with a key roughing the passer call against Houston. On another play involving an unnecessary roughness penalty for a hit on Patrick Mahomes, Aikman said, “Oh come on,” as the call was announced.

Rules analyst Russell Yurk concurred with Aikman on both calls.

Watt, a former three-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year, joined The NFL Today after retiring in 2022.

 

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