The NFL has suspended Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver DK Metcalf for two games without pay following his physical altercation with a fan during last Sunday's 29-24 win over the Detroit Lions. Metcalf, who grabbed fan Ryan Kennedy's shirt and appeared to swipe at him, plans to appeal the decision, which would sideline him for the final two regular-season games if upheld.
The incident occurred during a second-quarter TV timeout at Ford Field, as detailed in initial reports. Video showed Metcalf approaching Kennedy—wearing a blue wig in the front row—grabbing his shirt and making an upward motion interpreted as a swipe or shove. Officials missed it, so Metcalf continued playing, finishing with four receptions for 42 yards and a key block on the game-winning touchdown.
Announced December 22, the suspension violates NFL policy against player-fan confrontations. It costs Metcalf about $555,556 and would make him miss Week 17 at Cleveland and Week 18 vs. Baltimore. Now with 59 catches for 850 yards and six TDs after trading from Seattle on a four-year, $132M deal, Metcalf has prior history with Kennedy, reportedly notifying security in 2024. Sources claim Kennedy used racial slurs, denied by his attorneys as 'completely false.'
Steelers coach Mike Tomlin declined comment, while ex-Lions WR Golden Tate called it 'unacceptable.' New angles suggest a shove over a punch. The appeal goes to Commissioner Roger Goodell or designee. At 9-6 and AFC North leaders, Pittsburgh could clinch with a Ravens loss.