Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chiefs benefit from meaningles­s win

- DAVE SKRETTA AP SPORTS WRITER

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs hardly could have envisioned a better way for their regular season to end against the Los Angeles Chargers.

They rested Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce and most of their big-name stars. Their backups played well in their absence, helping the Chiefs to a 13-12 road win over a division rival. Chris Jones even got the sack he needed to trigger a $1.25 million bonus, which the Pro Bowl defensive tackle said he would use in part to buy his fellow defensive linemen Rolex watches.

“I had to beg (Chiefs Coach Andy Reid) for one more series,” Jones said with a smile afterward. “He gave me the finger like, ‘One more and you’re done.’ So I went on the field praying to God like, ‘Oh my God, please.’ ”

It was fun all around for Kansas City (11-6), which had been having very little of it when it was losing three out of four games.

The Chiefs looked better in a win over the Bengals that clinched the AFC West and the No. 3 seed, though, and made their game against the Chargers almost entirely meaningles­s. But now, the reigning Super Bowl champions do have some momentum as the Miami Dolphins prepare to visit for a wildcard game Saturday night.

The teams played earlier this season in Germany and Kansas City held on for a 2114 victory.

“It was good to get the win, for sure,” Reid said after the Chargers game. “I think it uplifts you, especially for those young guys who don’t have a chance to play. To say, ‘Hey, listen, I got in, and not only did I get it, we won the game.’ I think that’s positive.”

Mahomes looked just as invested in the outcome as if he was playing the way he stormed off the bench when Harrison Butker kicked the go-ahead field goal in the final minute. So did the rest of the Chiefs who were sitting out the game.

“Great job,” Mahomes said while breaking down the team in the postgame locker room, “but now it’s time to go.”

WHAT’S WORKING

It was fitting that the Kansas City defense scored the only touchdown on Sunday, when Mike Edwards picked up a fumble and ran it 97 yards the other way. That side of the ball has been bailing out the Chiefs’ mistake-prone offense for much of the season.

WHAT NEEDS HELP

The defensive front when the opposing quarterbac­ks run. Easton Stick’s legs were the most dangerous part of the Chargers’ offense on Sunday, and other QBs have had success scrambling against Kansas City’s otherwise stingy defense.

The Chiefs could face a number of mobile quarterbac­ks in the postseason, beginning with the Dolphins’ Tua Tagovailoa.

STOCK UP

Mecole Hardman hasn’t factored into the offense much since his trade from the Jets, partly due to injuries. But given his increased role with Rashee Rice and other regulars resting, Hardman responded with six catches for 77 yards. And one of them was the kind of contested catch that hardly anybody in a Kansas City uniform has made this season.

“He played hard and it was a good experience for him to get out there,” Reid said. “Kind of getting back into that football shape play after play after play. We’ll see where it goes from there. We know Mecole and we know what he can do.”

NEXT STEPS

The Chiefs have never beaten the Dolphins in three playoff games. That includes a divisional-round double-overtime loss in 1971 that remains the longest game in NFL history, and wild-card games in 1991 and 1994. Both of those games were played in Miami.

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