Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Beating the Chiefs would give the Raiders a share of the AFC West lead.

- By Vincent Bonsignore

KANSAS CITY, Mo — The cold, wet, dreary conditions that welcomed the Raiders to Kansas City on Friday night seemed appropriat­e for a team still recovering from an inexplicab­le blowout loss to the New York Jets

five days earlier.

By Saturday morning the rain had stopped, the sun nudged the dark clouds aside and the region glistened.

Opportunit­y hung in the air.

A win at 1:25 p.m. Sunday against the Chiefs would pull the Raiders (6-5) into a first-place tie with the Chiefs (7-4) atop the AFC West. That might seem implausibl­e given the humbling loss the Raiders are coming off of and how the Chiefs have dominated them over the last six years and the

well-chronicled struggles of quarterbac­k Derek Carr in cold-weather conditions.

“We’re still good at football,” Carr reminded everybody afterward. “We’re still a good football team.”

It will take much more than good to leave Kansas City with a share of first. In fact it will require a complete reversal of some ugly trends. Whatever margin of error existed against the Los Angeles Chargers and Cincinnati Bengals and Detroit Lions is not available against the Chiefs.

As the Raiders learned in their last meeting against Kansas City on Sept. 15, Patrick Mahomes will take advantage of every mental mistake, miscommuni­cation and unforced error with big-play capability. At one point, the Raiders led 10-0. But Mahomes and the Chiefs crushed their spirit with a 28-0 run over a 14-minute stretch of the second quarter that included touchdown throws of 44, 43, 27 and 39 yards.

The Raiders never recovered in a 28-10 loss.

“A couple of plays we gave up were blown coverages, really,” Raiders defensive coordinato­r Paul Guenther said. “Guys were out of position on a couple of those touchdowns. We just have to stay on top of the receivers, do a good job of the communicat­ion and change of strength and all that stuff.”

It also will require Carr slaying his demons in cold weatherand a in stadium that has been his house of horrors. He is 0-5 with five intercepti­ons against three touchdowns in his last five games there, completing 55 percent and averaging 186 yards passing.

In games where the temperatur­e dips below 40 degrees — and that is the forecast for Sunday — Carr is 0-4 with a 51 percent completion rate with four intercepti­ons against three touchdowns — and he’s averaging 152 yards passing.

Carr has played on some pretty bad teams over the years. It’s impossible to point out his failures at Arrowhead Stadium and in cold weather without also mentioning the lack of help.

This is a different Raiders team, though, with a much better offensive line, a starin-the-making in rookie running back Josh Jacobs and an emerging tight end in Darren Waller. Even without a dynamic No. 1 wide receiver in Hunter Renfrow, who was ruled out for Sunday with a rib injury, Carr has enough of a supporting cast to rise above his cold-weather struggles.

The Chiefs defense offers plenty of vulnerabil­ities, giving up the seventh most yards per game (375.7), the third-most rushing yards per game (143.1) and the 14th most points (23.1). There is legitimate opportunit­y to build a run foundation with Jacobs and for Carr to work off it in play-action pass.

Even in the cold weather. The Raiders were wounded last Sunday against the Jets, but the blow wasn’t fatal. And as the sun glistened above mostly blue skies in Kansas City, the sense of opportunit­y was evident. Seizing it, though, is as much about the Raiders as it will be the Chiefs.

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