Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mahomes has KC back in AFC chase

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Patrick Mahomes followed three of the worst games of his profession­al career with one of his best, throwing for 406 yards and five touchdowns as the Kansas City Chiefs rolled to a 41-14 victory over the Las Vegas Raiders.

It was the third time Mahomes had thrown for at least 400 yards and five TDs since he was picked in the 2017 draft, and he became the first player in league history to have at least two of them without throwing an intercepti­on.

Pretty heady stuff. Here’s some more: Hall of Famers Peyton Manning, Dan Marino and Joe Montana are the only other quarterbac­ks with three games of 400 yards and five touchdowns.

“We obviously hadn’t offensivel­y played the way we wanted to,” Mahomes acknowledg­ed, “but we found ways to get wins. Guys have just been steady with the process of getting better and better. I thought pregame we felt that energy and guys wanted to be on ‘Sunday Night Football’, playing in a stadium like (Las Vegas) and against a team like that.”

The performanc­e by Mahomes wasn’t stunning by itself; he’s had five games with at least five touchdown passes, and he’s thrown for thousands of yards. But the fact that it followed a few consecutiv­e duds certainly raised some eyebrows.

The streak began against the Titans, when his long touchdown streak ended while throwing an intercepti­on and getting sacked four times in a 27-3 rout. He followed with a dink-and-dunk performanc­e against the Giants that included a TD pass and another pick in a narrow win, then a win over Green Bay in which he threw for just 166 yards with a score.

Some people were wondering whether the 2018 league MVP had lost his mojo. His confidence was shaken, his footwork was a mess. Some even suggested he was irreparabl­y broken and that the Chiefs’ championsh­ip window had closed.

Mahomes put those naysayers to rest on Sunday night in Las Vegas.

“He comes to work every day, trying to get better, and this was when things were smooth and when we were winning a lot of games,” Chiefs Coach Andy Reid said.

“He always says, ‘Let’s be great,’ and he reminds the huddle of that and believes in that. ‘Let’s be great today. Let’s be great today.’ He’s always saying that, and so even during the tough times — it’s easy to kind of curl up and put yourself in a corner during the tough times, but he kept that mentality.”

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