The Province

High-flying Chiefs stand in Seattle’s way

Kansas City’s powerhouse offence has plenty to play for, too, as Seahawks chase playoff berth

- MIKE VOREL

SEATTLE — The Seattle Seahawks can still clinch a coveted playoff berth Sunday at CenturyLin­k Field.

But they’ll have to slow perhaps the NFL’s premier offence to do it.

Here are five things to know about Seattle’s next opponent, the 11-3 Kansas City Chiefs:

CHIEFS MIGHT HAVE THE NFL MVP IN MAHOMES

Allow us to list all of the reasons why. In just his second NFL season and first as Kansas City’s starter, the 23-yearold Patrick Mahomes ranks first in the NFL among starting quarterbac­ks in passing yards (4,543), yards per attempt (8.8), touchdown passes (45) and passes of 20 yards or more (68). He sits a measly second in passer rating (114.8).

Somehow, though, the numbers don’t tell the story. Mahomes seems to be single-handedly revolution­izing the position. Watch the way he extends plays, flicks no-look passes or rears back and uncorks a 70-yard deep ball to a streaking wide receiver.

This is why Andy Reid snatched the Texas Tech alum with the 10th overall choice in 2017. This is why he traded a proven starter in Alex Smith to Washington in the off-season.

Of course, Mahomes also has had to overcome the loss of starting running back Kareem Hunt, who gained 824 yards in 11 games this season before being released when video evidence of a domestic violence allegation surfaced last month. No other Chief has gained more than 246 rushing yards this season.

The Seahawks secondary already has encountere­d Jared Goff, Cam Newton and Aaron Rodgers (and Nick Mullens?) But Mahomes and company will be its most significan­t test this season.

SAFETY BERRY FINALLY BACK FROM INJURY?

One of the NFL’s premier safeties, Eric Berry returned to action against the Los Angeles Chargers last week after missing the first 13 games with a heel injury.

He led Kansas City with six tackles in the first half, but surprising­ly sat out the entire second half and watched his team blow a 14-point fourth-quarter lead in a 29-28 defeat.

After the game, the 29-yearold Berry said the Chiefs simply were limiting his snaps to keep him healthy and he had not re-aggravated the heel injury. Still, this poses the question — with 10 more days to rest — of just how much the Seahawks will see of Berry.

Berry also missed the final 15 regular-season games plus a playoff game last season with a torn Achilles tendon.

The Chiefs certainly need him for the stretch run.

KANSAS CITY MAY OWN NFL’S WORST DEFENCE

Chris Carson and Co. will be pleased to learn the Chiefs allow an average of five yards per carry, which is tied for the worst mark in the NFL. They also allow the most passing yards per game (282.5) and completion­s of 20 yards or more (61) in the NFL this season.

To recap: The Chiefs can’t stop the run and they can’t stop the pass. Granted, Kansas City also is often playing with a lead, which forces its opponents to throw and inflates some of those defensive statistics.

The Chiefs have allowed an opponent passer rating of only 92.8, which sits at 15th in the league (five spots higher than the Seahawks). Plus, the Kansas City defence has one obvious advantage ...

THEY RANK SECOND IN THE NFL WITH 46 SACKS

Sixteen players in the NFL have more than 10 sacks this season. Kansas City has two of them. Third-year defensive end Chris Jones ranks fifth in the NFL with 14 sacks, while linebacker Dee Ford has added 11½ of his own. True to form, Jones picked up 2½ sacks against the Chargers and Philip Rivers last week, while Ford added another as well.

This will be a formidable challenge for an improved Seattle offensive line that has surrendere­d 42 sacks this season, ranking 22nd in the NFL.

CHIEFS STILL HAVE PLENTY TO PLAY FOR, TOO

Despite owning one of the best records in the NFL, Kansas City remains tied with the Chargers for the AFC West lead. The Chiefs hold a divisional tiebreaker with the Chargers, so they can still secure a division title and the AFC’s No. 1 playoff seed with season-ending victories against the Seahawks and Oakland Raiders.

But this means the high-powered Chiefs will be plenty motivated Sunday. If they’re healthy, Mahomes, wide receiver Tyreek Hill and tight end Travis Kelce and Co. will all play.

Seattle won’t be gifted an easy home victory before Christmas.

If they’re going to clinch a wild-card spot, the Seahawks will have to earn it.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, the top NFL MVP candidate, will present a difficult challenge for Seattle’s defence.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, the top NFL MVP candidate, will present a difficult challenge for Seattle’s defence.
 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Pete Carroll will have to make sure his offensive line is up to the task, too, Sunday in Seattle.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Pete Carroll will have to make sure his offensive line is up to the task, too, Sunday in Seattle.

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