San Francisco, CA — The NFL planned for a quiet week after the 49ers’ gritty 20–9 victory over the Carolina Panthers, but instead it found itself staring directly into one of the most heated controversies of the season — and this time, the spark came from none other than Tom Brady. Less than 24 hours after the league issued a heavy fine to 49ers wide receiver Jauan Jennings for a postgame altercation, Brady publicly blasted the NFL for what he called “blatant favoritism that insults every player who steps on the field.”

The incident at the center of the firestorm occurred in the final moments of Monday night’s game. Cameras caught Panthers safety Tre’von Moehrig delivering a low blow — a jab to the groin — against Jennings just before the clock expired. Jennings reacted minutes later with a retaliatory strike to Moehrig’s facemask before teammates rushed in to restrain him. By Tuesday morning, the NFL announced a $12,172 fine against Jennings for unnecessary roughness… but Moehrig?
Not a single fine.
The league did confirm Moehrig’s one-game suspension from a separate ruling, but what infuriated players and fans across the league was that the suspension did not mention the groin punch — the act that triggered Jennings’ retaliation and the postgame chaos. For many, it looked like the NFL had punished only the player who responded, not the one who initiated the conflict. That was all Tom Brady needed to see.
“You don’t protect the guy who threw the first punch and punish the guy who got hit. That’s not sportsmanship — that’s bias,” Brady said in a viral SiriusXM appearance. “If the NFL wants to talk integrity, this ain’t it. Anyone watching that tape knows exactly what happened.”
Brady’s statement hit the league like a sledgehammer. The seven-time Super Bowl champion rarely comments on disciplinary matters, and almost never with this level of conviction. The backlash was immediate: clips of Moehrig’s low blow flooded social media, analysts across ESPN and FOX demanded answers, and 49ers players privately praised Brady for saying what they could not.
Inside the 49ers’ locker room, tensions simmered. Jennings — who avoided suspension and will play Sunday against the Browns — addressed reporters briefly after the ruling. He didn’t escalate the controversy, but he didn’t hide his frustration either. His teammates reportedly felt the league should have acknowledged Moehrig’s role in starting the conflict, especially given the severity of the punch shown in slow-motion replay. Several players described the incident as “cheap,” “dirty,” and “completely avoidable.”

Meanwhile, Panthers officials declined to comment on the league’s decision, and Moehrig himself has remained silent. But former players, officials, and commentators have filled the void. Many pointed out that the ruling appears inconsistent with similar altercations from past seasons, where both the instigator and the retaliator were penalized. It reopened an ongoing conversation about the NFL’s disciplinary transparency — or lack thereof.
The controversy escalated further when a former NFL officiating supervisor told a Bay Area radio show that the league likely avoided mentioning the groin punch in Moehrig’s suspension to prevent setting a disciplinary precedent. Fans interpreted that insight as confirmation of the very favoritism Brady condemned.
And yet, the biggest shock may still be what this means for the 49ers moving forward. Jennings is having a career-best season, leading San Francisco in receptions and touchdowns, and his fiery, physical style has become part of the team’s identity. With the Browns and Seahawks ahead, the Niners can’t afford distractions — but this one is refusing to die down.
Across the NFL, the conversation now extends well beyond just Jennings and Moehrig. It’s become a debate about fairness, accountability, and whether the league is applying discipline evenly across teams. Brady’s intervention only poured gasoline on the flames, giving the 49ers’ side of the story a megaphone that no player or coach could match.

As one former defensive back said on FS1, “When Tom Brady says something’s wrong, every executive in the NFL office pays attention.”
And this time, the message wasn’t just loud — it was unmistakable.