The Philadelphia Eagles seemed to bend the rules a bit during their 20-17 road victory over the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday.Specifically, there were a few instances during short-yardage tush push attempts when guards Landon Dickerson and Tyler Steen appeared to fire off the ball before the snap.Chiefs coach Andy Reid was frustrated that officials didn’t flag those false starts.“If guys are moving early, then you’ve got to call that,” Reid said Monday. “So they’ll go back and look at that and see what their evaluation is of it. It could be different than mine. Mine, I felt like the guys were moving. That’s why I was griping about it on the sideline there with the officials. But sometimes people see things different. So we’ll see where it goes. They’ll have a chance to evaluate it, and I’ll be curious to see what the response is.”Chiefs defensive end Chris Jones also spotted the early movement from the Eagles’ offensive line on tush pushes. After the game, he said it was difficult for officials to get every call correct.“Just because we see it, sometimes the official is 15, 20 feet away. Sometimes they can miss those small things,” Jones said. “We think he jumped multiple times. The official didn’t see it, so it wasn’t called. We’ve just got to go play the next down.”Fox Sports announcer Tom Brady called out one of the missed false starts on the broadcast, saying the play is “awfully impossible to stop” after quarterback Jalen Hurts used it to score on a 1-yard touchdown run to give the Eagles a 20-10 lead in the fourth quarter.