Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Even with AFC title, Chiefs still have room for improvemen­t

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Travis Kelce has spent the better part of a month insisting the Chiefs have yet to put everything together.

They still didn’t in their AFC championsh­ip game win over the Bills.

They came much closer than they have all season, though, and that could be a scary thought for the Buccaneers as they prepare to face the Chiefs in the Super Bowl.

The Chiefs fumbled a punt near their goal line to hand the Bills an early touchdown, dropped a couple of passes, committed a couple of costly penalties and still won in a 38-24 rout.

“I mean, we’ve got room to get better,” said Chiefs coach Andy Reid, parroting the stance of his star tight end. “We had a couple of things that went a little haywhacky, but we stayed the course and did some good things.

We did more good things than bad things.”

The Chiefs plan to spend the time between the AFC title game and the Super Bowl in Tampa, Florida, practicing at their facility near Arrowhead Stadium.

They are tentativel­y planning to depart the day before the game because of the COVID-19 protocols, a big change from a normal year, when they would arrive at the site a week in advance.

It also means a much quieter two weeks to iron out those remaining issues, far away from the harsh glare and the intense spotlight that comes with preparing amid the typical Super Bowl circus.

“The first week is similar to what you had last year. The one thing you’ll minus is the long travel day, the media deal — that thing,” Reid said. “You still have it but it’s right here at home. Where you might lose a day, you don’t necessaril­y lose a day on this. But you still have a tremendous amount of obligation­s to the media and you have to work your schedule around it so it fits. The second week, it’s a little bit of a challenge.”

One the Chiefs have experience­d, though. They returned almost intact from the team that beat the 49ers in the Super Bowl last year.

“I can’t put my finger on it. It’s almost like, a little more exciting,” Kelce said. “I feel like last year, it was a question of whether or not we belonged, and this year, ‘Let’s go out and prove we are who we are.’ ”

What’s working: Every facet of the offense was in synch on Sunday. Mahomes had time in the pocket and was mobile enough on his ailing toe when he was flushed from it. Kelce and Hill made mincemeat of the Buffalo secondary. Clyde Edwards-Helaire and Darrel Williams scored on the ground, a good sign for a team that has struggle to get touchdowns in the red zone.

What needs help: The return game has been iffy for weeks, and two bad plays stood out Sunday. Mecole Hardman’s fumble of a punt gave the Bills an easy touchdown and put the Chiefs in a 9-0 hole, and they were unable to hop on an onside kick late.

Injured: The Chiefs will have to juggle their offensive line after left tackle Eric Fisher tore his Achilles tendon against the Bills on Sunday. That means Mike Remmers likely will shift from right tackle to left, Andrew Wylie will kick out to right tackle from guard, and Stefen Wisniewski will join center Austin Reiter and left guard Nick Allegretti on the interior of the line.

Key number: 17. Reid moved into a tie with Hall of Fame coach Joe Gibbs for fourth on the NFL’s career postseason wins list. The top three: Don Shula, 19; Tom Landry, 20; Bill Belichick, 31.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States