Imperial Valley Press

FOOTBALL Tough-luck

Chargers to meet surging Chiefs in LA.

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Chargers seem to have the market cornered on close, gut-wrenching losses, whether they have happened in San Diego or Los Angeles or on the road against the rest of the league.

One that sticks out more than most happened last season in Kansas City.

The Chargers were cruising in their season opener, building a 24-3 lead late in the third quarter and still clinging to a 27-10 advantage with less than 10 minutes left.

But the Chiefs scored three times in a dramatic flurry, the tying touchdown coming with 1:10 left in regulation, and Alex Smith capped a remarkable comeback with his touchdown run in overtime.

It was a 33-27 defeat, the first of nine by seven points or fewer for the Chargers last season.

“We were going about as good as you can go there for three quarters,” Chargers quarterbac­k Philip Rivers recalled this week . “That was about as good a half, really three quarters, and we still left a few plays out there. We were up 17 at their place with 10½ minutes to play. That was pretty positive.”

The Chargers didn’t finish the job, though.

They haven’t the first two weeks of this season, either.

As they prepare to welcome Kansas City to the StubHub Center on Sunday, the Chargers are coming off the sting of two more close defeats.

Younghoe Koo had a potential tying field goal blocked at the end of their opener against Denver, then missed a game-ending go-ahead field goal attempt last week against Miami.

It was the 25th time the Chargers had lost by a field goal or less with Rivers under center.

“I’d love to know the flip side of that, how many we’ve won by three points or less? I bet we’ve been in a heck of a lot of those, too,” he said. “We’rae in a bunch of games. We know that, but those are 25 losses that could have been wins. That’s the way I look at it.”

Meanwhile, the Chiefs have been excellent at putting away games this season.

They trailed New England 27-21 late in the third quarter of their opener before rattling off three unanswered touchdowns in a 42-27 victory.

Last week against Philadelph­ia, they trailed 10-6 in the third quarter before pulling ahead, then batting down a last-gasp throw to the end zone in a 27-20 win.

“It was a close game until the fourth, then we just took off,” Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce said. “It was exciting to see the offense come together. When we’re rolling up front, we’re a heck of a team.”

The Chiefs don’t appear to be taking the Chargers for granted, either. Andy Reid cautioned his guys this week not to look too closely at their record the past couple of years, clearly aware that all of those close losses could just as easily be razor-thin wins.

“The main point is they’re right there. That’s important,” he said. “We’ve got to make sure we take care of our business and detail all our practice work. We can do a lot better job than we did last week.”

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 ?? AP PHOTO/MARK J. TERRILL ?? Los Angeles Chargers kicker Younghoe Koo (center) walks off the field after missing a field goal attempt in the final minute of an NFL football game against the Miami Dolphins on Sunday in Carson.
AP PHOTO/MARK J. TERRILL Los Angeles Chargers kicker Younghoe Koo (center) walks off the field after missing a field goal attempt in the final minute of an NFL football game against the Miami Dolphins on Sunday in Carson.

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