Terry Bradshaw Slams ‘Idiots’ In Heated Rant About The Kansas City Chiefs [VIDEO]
This article was originally published on Total Pro Sports.

Terry Bradshaw has probably reached his limit with NFL media talk in 2026.
The Fox Sports analyst and four-time Super Bowl winner spoke openly this week. He criticized people who questioned Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid. Bradshaw said those opinions do not make sense to him.
Bradshaw shared his thoughts on Morning Mayhem on 103.7 The Buzz in Little Rock, Arkansas. Awful Announcing first reported his take. He strongly disagreed with claims that Reid has “lost it” after the Chiefs failed to make the playoffs.
His comments came a few days after the Seahawks defeated the Patriots 29-13 in Super Bowl 60. Bradshaw said he feels excited about the 2026 NFL season. However, he admitted that recent media coverage has frustrated him.
Bradshaw Defends Reid And Backs Seahawks’ Story

Bradshaw said he feels tired of hearing the same teams dominate headlines.
“In the NFL, as a broadcaster, I get tired of the same old, ‘Baltimore, Buffalo, Denver and the Rams and 49ers,’” Bradshaw said. He praised Seattle’s run. “I thought the Seattle story was a really good story. It was good to see defense come back and dominate…and Sam Darnold just never got any respect, he’s Rodney Dangerfield…I was happy for him.”
Bradshaw then turned to Reid and the Chiefs. He said critics ignore the facts.
“I was reading this morning about Andy Reid and the Kansas City Chiefs and ‘has he lost it,’” Bradshaw said. “And I’m like, are you kidding me? He went to five Super Bowls in six years and they’re going, ‘Has he lost it?’ Lost what? I’ll tell you what he lost, he lost a lot of players to injuries.”
He did not stop there.
“Critics are just idiots. Idiots, man. They have no idea what they’re talking about,” Bradshaw said.
Reid owns three Super Bowl titles. He reached five Super Bowls in six seasons before the Chiefs missed the postseason this year. Bradshaw believes that track record should end the debate.
Bradshaw plans to stay on air until he turns 80. He still brings strong opinions. He still backs coaches and players he respects. And in 2026, he wants the media to show more balance.
The Chiefs now look toward a bounce-back season with some great offseason moves.
