Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chiefs rout Chargers 30-13 to seize control of AFC West

- DAVE SKRETTA

CHIEFS 30, CHARGERS 13

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs saw their bandwagon empty during a midseason swoon, fans jumping ship almost as quickly as Kareem Hunt hitting a hole or Tyreek Hill speeding to the end zone.

They never lost faith in each other, though.

The Chiefs instead rallied to beat the Oakland Raiders last week, setting up a crucial AFC West showdown with the Los Angeles Chargers. And in a dominant performanc­e reminiscen­t of earlier this season, the Chiefs rolled to a 30-13 victory Saturday night to seize control of the divisional race.

“It feels good to be back in this position,” said Chiefs safety Ron Parker, who had one of the three intercepti­ons thrown by the Chargers’ Philip Rivers. “We stuck it out as a family the last couple weeks, did a good job of staying together. It would have been easy to fall apart.”

The only way the Chiefs can squander the division and automatic playoff berth is by losing their last two games and the Chargers or Oakland Raiders winning out. “It felt like a playoff game,” Parker said. “This is the closest thing it gets to a playoff game.”

The Chiefs (8-6) got production from their biggest stars: Alex Smith threw for 231 yards and two touchdowns, Kareem Hunt ran for 155 yards and accounted for two touchdowns, Tyreek Hill hauled in a 64-yard touchdown pass and Marcus Peters had a hand in forcing three turnovers.

It all added up to an eighth straight win over the Chargers.

“I didn’t think we played our best. We have to look at ourselves and ask why,” Chargers coach Anthony Lynn said. “We missed tackles. We didn’t execute well on offense. We went back to some dumb penalties we had early in the year. We made this game bigger than it really was.”

The Chargers (7-7) led 1310 early in the second half, but Rivers threw three intercepti­ons — two of them to Peters — and Austin Ekeler coughed up a fumble down the stretch.

That ended their fourgame win streak and quite possibly their playoff hopes.

Rivers finished with 221 yards passing and a touchdown, but has thrown 13 intercepti­ons during the Chargers’ losing streak to the Chiefs. Melvin Gordon added 78 yards rushing and a score.

“We took a step back today,” Lynn said.

The game shaped up as a matchup of teams going in opposite directions: The Chiefs were 5-0 before watching their division lead waste away, while the Chargers started out 0-4 but won seven of their next nine to forge a near-winner-take-all divisional showdown at Arrowhead Stadium. Instead, the Chiefs looked like they did in their Week 3 win over the Chargers. So did the Chargers, for that matter. The Chiefs’ defense, which played so salty last week against Oakland, was buoyed by the return of Peters from a one-game disciplina­ry suspension in helping to build a 10-6 halftime lead.

Rivers eventually got on track, going 5 for 5 for 88 yards on his first drive of the second half, and his 10-yard touchdown pass to trusty tight end Antonio Gates gave Los Angeles its only lead.

One that didn’t last very long. The Chiefs answered with a methodical, 69-yard scoring drive of their own. Hunt supplied most of the work, and he capped the drive by catching Smith’s short TD toss to give the Chiefs a 17-13 lead.

“He’s such a well-rounded football player,” Smith said. “He’s so good in the passing game, has such a good feel, which is so important for a running back.”

Two plays later, Rivers floated a pass downfield and Peters leaped up to make an easy intercepti­on, and his long return set up first-andgoal at the Chargers 6. The Chiefs nearly turned it into another TD when Smith found Hunt again, but the tip of the ball hit the turf for an incompleti­on.

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