Texans cornerback Kris Boyd nearly shoved Houston special teams coach Frank Ross to the ground after the opening kickoff of their divisional playoff game against the Kansas City Chiefs.
Tensions rose on the Houston Texans' sideline during the team's Divisional playoff clash with the Kansas City Chiefs on Saturday. Texans cornerback Kris
Texans cornerback Kris Boyd explains his viral interaction with coach Frank Ross during divisional round loss to Chiefs
Houston Texans cornerback Kris Boyd was seen shoving special teams coach Frank Ross following the opening of the Divisional Round.
After the opening kickoff in Kansas City on Saturday, Houston's Kris Boyd took off his helmet, ran off the field and shoved special teams coach Frank Ross.
After a chaotic opening kick-return sequence, the Houston Texans’ Kris Boyd seemed intent on adding to the confusion as his team tried to upset the Kansas City Chiefs in the divisional round on Saturday.
Texans cornerback Kris Boyd provides explanation, apology for bizarre helmet toss, losing composure, shoving special teams coordinator Frank Ross
Boyd pushed special teams coordinator Frank Ross during the Texans' divisional round playoff game against the Kansas City Chiefs.
The Houston Texans had an eventful start to their divisional round game against the Kansas City Chiefs. It's tough to have a total breakdown on a play, a dumb penalty and a shove from a player to coach all within the first 13 seconds of the game.
The Texans’ Kris Boyd made the tackle and forced a fumble by Nikko Remigio. Rather than trying to recover the loose football, Boyd started to celebrate and headed for the sidelines. The Chiefs recovered the football and Boyd decided to compound his foolishness by shoving special teams coach Frank Ross on the sidelines..
Texans cornerback Kris Boyd nearly shoved Houston special teams coach Frank Ross to the ground after the opening kickoff of their divisional playoff loss to the Kansas City Chiefs on Saturday. The Texans had kicked off and Chiefs returner Nikko Remigio had broken through their coverage,