News Page

Main Content

Caught Spitting: Chase Had No Chance at Avoiding Suspension

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
November 19, 2025
Caught Spitting: Chase Had No Chance at Avoiding Suspension

If you’ve watched enough football, you know there are certain things players can say or do that stay on the field, and then there are things that follow you long after the whistle. Ja’Marr Chase found the wrong side of that line on Sunday.

The Bengals star wideout is now suspended one game without pay for spitting on Jalen Ramsey — a sentence that sounds simple on paper but carries a whole lot more weight when you dig into it. It’s not just the money (though losing over half a million dollars for a single Sunday hurts). It’s that this happened in the middle of a season where Cincinnati is already hanging on by dental floss, and now their best offensive weapon is sidelined for something that didn’t even happen during a play.

The league made things official the day after Cincinnati’s 34–12 loss to Pittsburgh. Chase will miss Week 12 against the Patriots — a team that’s rolling. A massive break for New England, a gut punch for Cincinnati.

Chase is appealing, like you’d expect, but unless something shocking happens, this feels pretty locked in — it's going to be hard to explain away the crystal-clear video evidence. The league already showed us how they planned to treat this exact situation back in Week 1.

Everyone Agrees: That’s a Line You Just Don’t Cross

Early in Pittsburgh’s blowout win, the two were already in each other’s faces. At one point they got tangled up, jawed at each other, and drew offsetting unsportsmanlike conduct flags. Ramsey later said Chase took his mouthpiece during that first dust‑up, which fits right in with the way Chase likes to live on the edge.

By the time the fourth quarter rolled around, the game was firmly in hand — Pittsburgh cruising, Cincinnati stuck in neutral, and emotions wearing thin. After a play, Chase and Ramsey ended up face mask to face mask again, helmets pressed together, chirping the way guys do when both of them feel like the other one’s been asking for it all night.

What everyone saw live was Ramsey losing it.

He grabbed Chase’s facemask, swiped at his helmet with a punch, and kept pushing forward even after officials stepped in. The refs tossed Ramsey, he lingered on the field for a minute, and then made the slow walk toward the tunnel while Bengals fans let him have it. On the broadcast, it looked like your classic “DB finally snapped after getting baited one too many times” moment.

After the game, Ramsey gave his version. He said he had no issue with trash talk — in fact, he said he likes it. Swearing, barking, little mind games, all part of the job. But then he drew the line in concrete.

He said Chase spit on him.

For Ramsey, that was it. He basically admitted he stopped thinking about coverages or the score:

I don't give a f*** about football after that, respectfully. I'm always going to be all for trash talking, s*** talking, things like that. I actually enjoy that part of the game. I think that people know that... We were talking s***, which I'm cool with. And then as soon as he spit, it was f*** that... I was still a little too nice if I'm keeping it honest with you.

Chase, for his part, denied everything:

I ain't ever opened my mouth to that guy... I didn't spit on nobody.

Only problem? A Fox sideline cam had it clear as day, and before he even left the stadium, that video was circulating around social media. It showed Chase turning his head and clearly spitting toward Ramsey right before the punch. You can see Ramsey react instantly. There’s no guessing, no interpreting shadows, no “maybe he didn’t actually mean to.” The video is about as clear as you’ll ever get in a pile of football bodies.

Once that happened, any hope of this being just a fine evaporated. The NFL almost always takes the video over the quotes at the podium — and in this case, there wasn’t a whole lot to debate.

A Clear Precedent Set in the Season Opener

We all remember the season opener on national TV, banners dropping, fireworks going off — all the bells and whistles the league rolls out to kick off a new year. Right in the middle of all that pageantry, Jalen Carter and Dak Prescott found themselves in one of the strangest “well, that escalated quickly” moments before the first snap of the year.

Prescott stepped to spit on the ground away from the huddle. Totally normal for him, and probably something he’s done a thousand times without anyone thinking twice. The issue wasn’t the act — it was where it landed. The spit hit right near Carter’s feet. And Carter clearly thought Dak sent it his way on purpose.

From there, it went from zero to chaos instantly. Carter fired back — literally — spitting toward Prescott, and this time it did hit the mark. Words were exchanged, and boom: flag, ejection, and one of the fastest exits you’ll ever see. Six seconds into the game — no exaggeration — Carter was gone. Didn’t play a single defensive snap.

A few days later, the league circled back like they always do with these early‑season messes. The fine came out: just over fifty‑seven grand, exactly a game check. And buried in that fine was the real message. The NFL explicitly stated in its disciplinary notice that Carter had effectively served a full one‑game suspension in real time due to the ejection. Without having played a snap, this counted as a game lost. The fine handled the money side.

That moment set the precedent. No ambiguity. No gray area. Spit on someone? You’re losing a game and the paycheck that comes with it.

So by the time Chase and Ramsey had their dust‑up in Week 11, the league didn’t have to scramble or debate what the punishment should be. They already drew the line back in September. And Chase landed on the wrong side of it.

The Worst Week to Lose Your No. 1

All of that is the discipline side. On the football side, the timing could not be much worse for Cincinnati — and that’s putting it gently.

The Bengals are sitting at three and seven, losers of three straight, and already trying to survive without Joe Burrow. It’s veteran Joe Flacco running the show now, which means every drive feels like threading a needle. The margin for error isn’t small — it’s nonexistent. When you’re grinding through a season like this, the last thing you can afford is to lose the one guy who consistently gives your offense life.

Tee Higgins suddenly becomes the de facto No. 1, whether he’s fully healthy or not. The tight ends can’t disappear. The run game, which has floated between “surprisingly solid” and “completely missing,” suddenly needs to become a real factor. And Flacco? He’s now staring down a Patriots defense that knows exactly who’s out and is going to shade all of their coverage to Higgins.

And here’s the part nobody in Cincinnati wants to hear: if the Bengals pick up that eighth loss before Burrow is even ready to return, the entire conversation shifts. It goes from “when will Joe be back?” to “should Joe even come back this season?” Eight losses will be too many to make the playoffs in the AFC this year.

All of it snowballs into a ton of pressure being dumped onto a single game — exactly the kind of situation they didn’t want to be in, especially not against a Patriots team fighting for the No. 1 seed in the AFC. It’s a nightmare matchup at the worst possible time, and Cincinnati is heading into it without the one guy they absolutely couldn’t afford to lose. 

Looking for stories that inform and engage? From breaking headlines to fresh perspectives, WaveNewsToday has more to explore. Ride the wave of what’s next.

Latest Sports

Related Stories