Albuquerque Journal

Chiefs-Rams shootout was hardly a pro football classic

- BY BARRY WILNER ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Big 12 conference has come to the NFL.

Without a doubt, the Monday night scoring extravagan­za between the Rams and Chiefs was entertaini­ng. It had more spectacula­r plays and headspinni­ng twists than a game of Madden or a matchup of teams from college football’ s defense challenged conference.

As for it being a pro football classic, no way.

And for those yearning to see a rematch in the Super Bowl, don’t count on it — unless each team finds a consistent defense.

Yeah, we know, there were several big defensive plays that produced points in Los Angeles’ 54-51 victory, the highest-scoring Monday night contest ever and the only time two teams have each exceeded 50 points in the same game. Aaron Donald

might have cemented a second straight NFL Defensive Player of the Year award with his stripsacks of Patrick Mahomes.

There were three picks, though two came when Mahomes was in desperatio­n mode. There were four lost fumbles as each defensive line made its present felt — for a few seconds.

The box score looks as long as one of Andy Reid’s play sheets.

What America saw was Madden 19 at its most frenetic. And that’s exactly what much of the current sporting public covets. Give them receivers running free like deer in a meadow; light shows of points on the scoreboard; announcers fawning over the action while ignoring the quality of performanc­e; and offensive records galore.

This was a home run derby with major league sluggers in a Little League park. It was a hockey shootout with NHL skaters facing amateur goalies. A dunk contest on 9-foot rims. Fantastic fun? For sure. But it can also be seen as an indictment of how the NFL — helped along by college football’s evolution — has headed toward flag football.

How did we get to a point where the third-highest scoring game in NFL history, chock full of flying flags (21 accepted penalties for 195 yards), terrible coverage and some overzealou­s coaching is labeled a masterpiec­e?

“A couple of things are contributi­ng,” says Hall of Fame coach Tony Dungy, now an analyst for NBC. “The skills of the players on offense and the way the coaches are designing things is one. And the practice schedule that has been reduced really favors the offense now.

“You can’t do as much work in the offseason and at training camp, and that hurts the defenses. Quarterbac­ks take their groups and they can get together and throw and work on their timing for two or three weeks. Defenses can’t do that, so they are behind the eight ball from the outset.”

And the rules and officials have evolved to favor receivers and quarterbac­ks.

It comes to fruition weekly. Consider that the NFL has had the most points scored (7,791), most touchdowns (895) and most touchdown passes (570) through 11 weeks in its history. The 54-51 frenzy is the punctuatio­n mark. At least so far. Dungy bemoans the lack of fundamenta­ls on defense.

“A lot of coaches in general go over-scheme so much and designing things and how you play your responsibi­lity and all the things offensive teams can do,” Dungy says. “We have lost sight of the basics, you see the poor fundamenta­ls.”

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