
Refs admit they made second critical mistake on Broncos’ backward pass call in AFC Championship
NY Post
The Patriots capitalized on a reversed call against the Broncos in their AFC Championship win Sunday, but as one referee explained postgame, there was another error at the scene in Denver.
When discussing the series of events in the second quarter — with an under-pressure Jarrett Stidham flagged for intentional grounding with an incomplete forward pass before the call on the Broncos QB was reversed to a backward pass recovered by the Patriots — referee Alex Kemp was asked if there was “an inadvertent whistle,” with the play being ruled dead even as New England scooped up the ball and took it to the end zone.
“The whistle stopped the play, but it was after the New England player picked up the ball,” Kemp said, according to a transcript.
Had the play kept going, the Patriots would not have seen the touchdown from Patriots linebacker Elijah Ponder negated, and the replay would have been “available to turn the mistaken ruling of a backward pass into an incompletion,” per Pro Football Talk.
New England scored a short time later to tie the game at 7-7. The Patriots then kicked a field goal in the third quarter to take a 10-7 lead they would not relinquish en route to their first Super Bowl since 2019.
Kemp, among the officials who drew the ire of fans over the confusing scene, later expanded on the decision-making behind the call reversal in the second quarter.

SALT LAKE CITY — It’s easy to forget about the quiet, which in Knicks World means Leon Rose. We’re approaching five years — amazingly — since the team president answered questions from the independent media, and I’ve always maintained that’s poor practice because it avoids responsibility. If there’s no public explanation behind a move or a goal, there’s no accountability if it doesn’t work out.












