A routine Monday Night Football showdown between the Philadelphia Eagles and Los Angeles Chargers erupted into one of the most heated officiating controversies of the NFL season — and fans wasted no time accusing the league of “rigging” the game after a stunning missed call that led directly to a fourth-quarter touchdown.

Midway through the final period, with the Eagles facing 3rd-and-1 from their own 48, the offense lined up in what looked like a classic Philadelphia “tush push.” Instead, Jalen Hurts pitched the ball wide to Saquon Barkley, who exploded down the sideline for a 52-yard touchdown that shifted the momentum of the game.
But seconds after social media lit up with praise for the play design and Barkley’s burst, the tone changed dramatically.
Slow-motion replays revealed what many viewers immediately recognized as a clear and blatant holding infraction on left tackle Jordan Mailata. The grab occurred in open space, directly in front of the line judge — but no flag ever hit the turf.
Within moments, angry fans from across the league flooded social media with accusations that the game was being tilted in Philadelphia’s favor.
“Of course the Eagles got away with a hold on that Saquon touchdown, NFL rigged this game for sure,” one fan wrote, echoing dozens of similar posts. Others went even further, calling it proof that the league “wants the Eagles to go as far as possible,” while another declared, “This is so fixed, man.”
Some fans even produced frame-by-frame breakdowns of the play, pointing out Mailata’s extended arm, locked elbow, and jersey grab — the textbook indicators officials are trained to flag.
The Chargers, who had controlled much of the game until that moment, appeared visibly stunned on the sideline as Philadelphia celebrated the touchdown. Television replay analysts suggested it was a missed call, but avoided implying anything beyond officiating error. Fans, however, did not.

“Eagles cheat and win again. Missed the holding. League wants Eagles to go as far as possible. Rigged sport,” one user posted in a message that quickly went viral.
Others criticized the NFL’s officiating experts themselves.
“These rules analysts are awful. No wonder the reffing sucks in the NFL,” another fan wrote, reflecting growing frustration with the league’s inconsistent enforcement of penalties.
The controversy was only amplified by the fact that this is not the first time this season the Eagles have been at the center of officiating debates. Earlier in the year, the NFL reportedly warned game officials to more closely monitor Philadelphia’s offensive line for uncalled false starts — a rare internal notice that added fuel to conspiracy theories.
Monday’s missed holding call did nothing to calm those suspicions.
While rigging accusations are nothing new in the emotionally charged world of NFL fandom, the widespread consensus following this particular play was striking. Even neutral observers — not just Eagles rivals — called the missed call “egregious,” “embarrassing,” and “impossible to miss.”
The NFL has not issued an official statement on the no-call, and the league rarely comments on in-game officiating until its weekly review. But privately, league sources acknowledge that the play will be examined as part of the standard grading process.
Whether disciplinary action or internal correction follows remains to be seen.
For the Eagles, the touchdown provided a crucial spark at a pivotal moment. For the Chargers, it represented a missed opportunity — one overshadowed by questions that now hang over the officiating crew.

And for fans, it reignited a longstanding belief: when controversial calls occur in primetime, when a marquee franchise benefits, and when the stakes are high, suspicions of favoritism are never far behind.
As one viral post summarized the mood of the night:
“If that’s not holding, nothing is. And if the refs can’t see that on national TV… maybe they weren’t supposed to.”