Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Chiefs offense uncharacte­ristically dazzling in upset of Patriots

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, MO. » The Kansas City Chiefs surprised just about everyone with their season-opening win in New England, especially the reigning Super Bowl champs, who had their festive night celebratin­g another Lombardi Trophy spoiled by Alex Smith and Co.

Most surprising, though, was how the Chiefs sprung the upset.

The defending AFC West champions were expected to keep games close this season with their ferocious defense, led by pass rusher Justin Houston and Dee Ford. But it was an offense with Smith under center and youngsters such as Tyreek Hill and rooking running back Kareem Hunt that managed to out-duel Tom Brady and his starstudde­d supporting cast in a 42-27 victory in Foxborough.

“You want to be multidimen­sional, right?” said Smith, who threw for 368 yards and four touchdowns in arguably his best game with the Chiefs. “You want to be able to spread the ball vertically. You want to be able to run, pass and spread it out horizontal­ly as well. You want to be able to be good at all these different things. Inside the tackles, outside the tackles, all those things.

“You want to be well-rounded,” he said. “I think that makes you tough to defend.”

The Chiefs were certainly wellrounde­d. And they were a nightmare to defend.

Smith became just quarterbac­k to throw the second for at least 300 yards with four touchdowns and no intercepti­ons in the nearly two decades that Bill Belichick has been the Patriots’ coach. And it was the first 300-yard passing game by Smith in nearly two years.

Hunt, just the sixth running back to start an opener in franchise history, ran for 148 yards and a touchdown and caught five passes for 98 yards and two more scores. The third-round pick’s 246 yards from scrimmage were the most by a player in his first game in NFL history.

Hill had seven catches for 133 yards, including a 75-yard touchdown catch, in his first game as the Chiefs’ No. 1 wide receiver. His TD catch gave him five consecutiv­e regular-season games with a play of 60 or more yards, the first player in NFL history to accomplish that feat.

Put that trio offensive together and it’s the first time since 2009 that the Chiefs have had a 300yard passer, a 100-yard rusher and a 100-yard receiver in the same game.

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