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Dean Blandino Eagles Tush Push

Dean Blandino is officially ‘done’ with the Tush Push and Eagles fans should love every second of it

“I am done with the tush push, guys. It’s a hard play to officiate.” That’s Fox rules analyst Dean Blandino after the Eagles again used their signature play to grind the Chiefs into dust in a Super Bowl rematch.

Eagles’ defense clutches up to beat the Chiefs at Arrowhead, 20-17

Imagine that. You go to work, you’re supposed to analyze football, and instead of actually doing your job, you throw your hands up on national television and say, “Nah, too hard for me.”

What an absolute clown show from Dean Blandino:

This is where we’re at, people. The Super Bowl LIX Champion Philadelphia Eagles ran the tush push so effectively, so often, and with so much success that Blandino would rather quit on live TV than talk about it. He’s not even trying to hide it. He straight-up refused to discuss it.

We knew this was coming from the second the game was over.

Warning: Anti-Tush Push propaganda is going to be at an all-time high on Monday

Honestly? I love it.

That’s how you know we’ve broken the NFL. We’ve broken opposing defenses. We’ve broken fanbases and now we’ve broken members of the media. Chiefs Kingdom is on fire, rival fanbases are still screaming that the play should be banned, and now Blandino is sulking in the corner saying it’s “too hard to officiate.”

You’re done? Buddy, you had one job.

Dean Blandino is quite literally a rules analyst. If anyone’s supposed to explain the mechanics, the legality, and the nuance of the play, it’s him.

Instead, apparently Dean Blandino is done because Jalen Hurts and the Eagles have turned a QB sneak into the most unstoppable weapon in football.

It’s pathetic, but it’s also beautiful.

Their pain is our pleasure. The Eagles invented a cheat code, the NFL hasn’t figured out how to stop it, and now even the people paid to talk about it don’t want to anymore.

So go ahead, Dean. Refuse to break it down. Be miserable on the broadcast. The Birds will keep running it, keep winning with it, and keep watching the league melt down over it. That’s the true power of the tush push.

Chiefs players throw hands, hissy fits during 20-17 loss to Eagles

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Comments (2)

  1. Of course cheaters don’t care that they’re NOT called for cheating. It’s the American (and cheaters’) way. Typical.

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