With the Houston Texans trailing the Kansas City Chiefs 13–6 in the third quarter of Saturday's AFC divisional round playoff game, Houston running back Joe Mixon was on a mission to pull his team even in the biggest game of the season.
The Minnesota Vikings had their season come to an abrupt end Monday night as they lost to the Los Angeles Rams, 27-9, in their wild-card game that was played in Arizona due to the fires in L.A. The Vikings finished the regular season 14-3 but lost to the Detroit Lions in Week 18,
Late in their divisional round win over the Houston Texans, the Kansas City Chiefs held an 11-point lead. After blocking a Ka'imi Fairbairn field goal attempt, Kansas City got the ball back with 1:46 remaining.
These days, most people know Troy Aikman as ESPN’s lead NFL color commentator, one half of a stellar duo with play-by-play person Joe Buck. But once upon a time, Aikman was a Dallas Cowboys legend, winning three Super Bowls with the franchise in the 1990s as their starting quarterback.
Troy Aikman did not sound like his usual self while calling Monday night's NFC Wild Card playoff game between the Minnesota Vikings and Los Angeles Rams,
Description: Troy Aikman and Joe Buck discuss where the Texans went wrong in their loss to the Chiefs with Scott Van Pelt.
Joe Buck will be on play-by-play. He’ll be joined by Troy Aikman, who will be the analyst. Lisa Salters and Laura Rutledge will be reporting from the sidelines. That’s it! Enjoy the game!
If the fat lady had sung, Joe Buck certainly didn’t hear her. A frustrated Vikings team looked lethargic, dismayed and shocked as they slowly went to the line of scrimmage and were still running the ball Monday while trailing the Rams by 18 with 6:24 remaining.
After enjoying a week off, the number-one-seeded Kansas City Chiefs are back in action this weekend, as they take on the fourth-seeded Houston Texans.
Joe Buck and Troy Aikman noticed how the Vikings seemed to give up despite there being over six minutes. "Just seeing now if they're going to kinda speed things up, which they're not.
NFL announcers have seen huge pay rises over the last few years with the emergence of legendary quarterbacks stepping into the booth alongside them, including Tom Brady's monster deal