Former Rams and Bears offensive tackle Orlando Pace was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday after a tremendous 13-year NFL career.

He played 12 of those 13 seasons in St. Louis and was a member of the Super Bowl-winning squad in 2000. During his nearly 17-minute speech, Pace thanked everyone who helped him along the way to a Hall of Fame career. He also thanked the St. Louis fans.

There was a problem. Any fan who watched the speech on the NFL’s official YouTube channel didn’t see that mention of St. Louis.

Instead, an eight-minute video lives on the NFL’s YouTube channel rather than the full 17-minute speech.

In the full speech, Pace said of St. Louis:

“To the St. Louis Rams fans, I’m so proud to say we brought that city a championship. Thank you for the support that you gave us during that run. No one could ever take that away from you. Thank you.”

Pace was the only Hall of Fame inductee to have his speech cut to under 10 minutes on YouTube. Many St. Louis fans took notice.

Orlando Pace thanked the city of St. Louis in his Hall of Fame speech last night… and the NFL edited it out. What a load of crap. #Rams — Jeremy Karp (@jkarpsportsfan1) August 7, 2016

Orlando Pace thanked the city of St. Louis in his HOF speech, which means the NFL had to edit it out. ZERO chill. https://t.co/4BSML8NZyg — Matt Sebek (@MattSebek) August 7, 2016

The NFL edited out the part of Orlando Pace’s HOF speech where he addresses the fans of St. Louis. https://t.co/g00TyZZBNC — Patrick Karraker (@PatrickKarraker) August 7, 2016

Why did the NFL cut part of Mr. Pace's speech out? The part referencing St. Louis more specifically? 🤔 — Kristi A Go Go (@comeroundfullO) August 7, 2016

From those tweets, it would seem that the league specifically cut out the mention of St. Louis since the team moved to Los Angeles, but that wasn’t the case. The YouTube video ended at the 8:01 mark. The timing was consistent with the full video on NFL.com, but the remaining nine minutes were simply missing.

An NFL spokesperson told For The Win that it was a “technical error,” and NFL Media is in the process of uploading the full version of the speech to YouTube.