In a stunning Thursday Night Football thriller at Paycor Stadium, the Cincinnati Bengals edged the Pittsburgh Steelers 33-31, snatching a vital AFC North victory amid fierce debate over officiating. Joe Flacco’s veteran poise guided a comeback, but shadows of controversy loomed large.

The Steelers surged to an early 10-0 lead, powered by Aaron Rodgers’ precision throws and stout defensive stands, only for momentum to shift dramatically in the second quarter as Bengals receivers exploited deep routes. Fans buzzed with frustration over pivotal moments that altered the game’s trajectory.
As the Bengals clawed back with two quick touchdowns, questions arose about defensive coverage lapses and timely flags that seemed to favor Cincinnati’s explosive offense. Social media erupted, with Pittsburgh supporters decrying a pattern of decisions that tilted the scales.
Hall of Fame offensive tackle Anthony Muñoz, whose legendary career anchored Bengals lines through two Super Bowl runs, broke his silence in a fiery post-game interview, labeling the night’s calls as “a blatant series of rigging that robbed the Steelers of their rightful win.”
Mike Tomlin falls to 0-7 on Thursday Night Football in road divisional games.
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Muñoz elaborated, “I’ve seen tough breaks in my 13 years, but tonight’s penalties were engineered to protect the home crowd—pass interference ignored on Ja’Marr Chase’s 45-yard score, and that phantom holding on Donte Jackson that killed a Steelers drive.”
Diving deeper, the first flashpoint came on Cincinnati’s opening touchdown: officials overlooked clear pass interference as Chase shoved Joey Porter Jr. into the end zone, allowing Flacco’s lob to stand unchallenged and ignite a 14-10 Bengals lead.Another contentious spot unfolded late in the third quarter, when a disputed roughing-the-passer call on T.J. Watt extended a Bengals third-down chain, paving the way for Tee Higgins’ 29-yard dagger that flipped the scoreboard to 24-20 and sapped Pittsburgh’s spirit.
The coup de grâce arrived in the fourth: referees waved off an obvious false start on Bengals left tackle Orlando Brown Jr. during a crucial two-minute drill, enabling Flacco’s game-sealing field goal setup. Muñoz fumed, “These weren’t errors—they were scripted to steal the game.”
League officials have yet to respond, but the uproar echoes broader 2025 officiating woes, with Clay Martin’s crew under scrutiny for inconsistent flags. As Steelers faithful demand reviews, Muñoz’s voice amplifies calls for transparency in a season defined by razor-thin margins.