New York Post

LARGE & IN CHARGE'

LA rallies to beat AFC West rival Kansas City

- By DAVE SKRETTA

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Chargers had just turned the Chiefs over for the fourth time Sunday. Los Angeles coach Brandon Staley was left with a crucial fourth-down call with less than a minute left in a tie game.

Send out his kicker for a 48-yard field goal, even though Tristan Vizcaino already missed an extra point. Or place the outcome with Justin Herbert and the offense.

“We wanted to leave the ball in Justin’s hands,” Staley said. “We wanted him to be the game-decider.” Good idea. Herbert threw a jump ball that produced a pass interferen­ce call on the Chiefs’ DeAndre Baker and a first down. Then he hit Mike Williams with consecutiv­e completion­s, including the TD throw with 32 seconds left that lifted Los Angeles to a 30-24 victory over the five-time defending AFC West champions.

“We’re fortunate we have a gangsta quarterbac­k,” Staley said with a grin.

Herbert finished with 281 yards passing and four TDs without an intercepti­on, outdueling Patrick Mahomes in a matchup not only of two of the game’s best young quarterbac­ks but two teams expected to compete for a division title.

Instead, the up-and-coming Chargers (2-1) won for the third time in four trips to Kansas City while sending the two-time defending conference champion Chiefs (1-2) to the division cellar.

“You can’t overcome four turnovers,” said Chiefs assistant Dave Toub, who took postgame questions because coach Andy Reid was feeling ill. “I thought that was the story of the game.”

The Chiefs trailed 14-0 early but had climbed back into the game in the second half, taking a 24-21 lead midway through the fourth quarter. But the Chargers tied it on Vizcaino’s short field goal, and after Mahomes was picked by Alohi Gilman with 1:42 to go, Herbert began the march for the go-ahead touchdown.

He converted a third-and-2 near midfield with a pass to Allen, then the Chargers were bailed out on a fourth-down incompleti­on by Baker’s pass interferen­ce. Herbert hit Williams for a 16-yard gain before finding his big wide receiver in the end zone for the second time in the game.

The Chiefs got to midfield in the closing seconds, but Mahomes’ throw to the end zone was incomplete.

“The defense did a great job stepping up today and forcing all those turnovers,” said Herbert, who found Williams seven times for 122 yards and two touchdowns. “I couldn’t have done it without them.”

Austin Ekeler and Keenen Allen also had touchdown catches for the Chargers.

Mahomes finished with 260 yards passing and three touchdowns to go with his two intercepti­ons, while Clyde Edwards-Helaire ran for 100 yards with a touchdown catch but was responsibl­e for one of two Kansas City fumbles.

“Nobody is happy with the way we played,” Mahomes said. “You take a loss to a division opponent, it’s not a good thing. We haven’t done a lot of that in my time here. It’s how you respond. We have a long season ahead of us.”

The Chargers’ defensive game plan seemed simple: They refused to let Mahomes throw deep, forcing him into short checkdowns, and made the Chiefs put together long drives while waiting for them to self-destruct.

Kansas City certainly abided.

On its opening possession,

Mahomes bounced a pass off

Marcus Kemp that rookie Asante Samuel Jr. grabbed for his second intercepti­on in as many weeks. The Chiefs coughed it up on their next drive and, on their third try, Edwards-Helaire lost the ball just one week after his fumble in the closing minutes cost Kansas

City a shot at a winning field goal in

Baltimore.

“Any loss is a gut punch. We could have been playing any team,” Edwards-Helaire said. “The two most important letters in this game are ‘L’ and ‘W.’ If you’re not getting Ws, you’re getting Ls, and that’s not a good feeling.” — AP

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 ?? Getty Images; AP ?? NOT ROLLING OVER: The Chargers’ Gabe Nabers flips over the Chiefs’ Anthony Hitchens in LA’s surprising 3024 win over powerful Kansas City.
Getty Images; AP NOT ROLLING OVER: The Chargers’ Gabe Nabers flips over the Chiefs’ Anthony Hitchens in LA’s surprising 3024 win over powerful Kansas City.

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