Texarkana Gazette

Chiefs feel sense of resolve after last-second loss

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The Kansas City Chiefs trudged into the locker room after their first loss with Patrick Mahomes at quarterbac­k, a streak that goes back six games to his Week 17 start last season.

Here’s the thing, though: There was no sense of defeat in Gillette Stadium on Sunday night.

Instead, the Chiefs seemed downright emboldened by the way they fought back from a big halftime hole against New England. And if not for a litany of injuries to their defense and another clutch game by Tom Brady and the Patriots offense, which drove downfield in the final minutes to set up a winning field goal in their 43-40 victory, the Chiefs might have kept their winning streak going.

“We got down, we put ourselves in a huge hole and I’m just proud of my team and how we fought to get back in the game,” Mahomes said. “We had the lead at one point and then we ended up not coming out with the win but just that fight, it’s something you can carry on and to the rest of this season.”

All of which is true, of course. But the way the Chiefs performed under the lights in New England may have been more than just the stereotypi­cal moral victory.

Mahomes threw two intercepti­ons in the first half, when Bill Belichick’s defense seemed to have the young quarterbac­k confused. The Chiefs’ running game was going nowhere and a defense missing lead pass rusher Justin Houston and its top three safeties to injuries looked like a sieve.

It was 24-9 at the break and could have been a whole lot worse.

But for the first time in his budding career, Mahomes not only was forced to make massive in-game adjustment­s but did so successful­ly. He wound up throwing four second-half touchdown passes, three of them to Tyreek Hill, and that same offense that scuffled through the first 30 minutes and found itself in a deep hole piled up 31 points over the final two quarters.

In fact, the Chiefs’ offense was rolling so impressive­ly in the second half that they may have scored their final touchdown too quickly. Mahomes found Hill over the middle, and one of the fastest players in the NFL turned up the sideline for a 75-yard score that knotted the game 40-all.

Two problems with that: There was still 3½ minutes left and Brady was on the other sideline.

The Patriots moved seemingly at ease against the Chiefs’ porous defense, getting into position for Stephen Gostkowski to knock through a chip-shot field goal as time expired. And the old cliche of the last team having the ball would win wound up being spot-on.

“It was a heck of a football game,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “I was proud of how the guys battled. We will learn a lot from this game. We kind of shot ourselves in the foot a little bit early and you can’t do that against a good football team. So, we learn from it and we move on.”

Because the fact is Kansas City is still 5-1 with the toughest sixgame stretch of the season already finished. There’s another spotlight game coming up this Sunday night against Cincinnati, but that game will take place at Arrowhead Stadium, where the Chiefs tend to have a big advantage.

 ?? AP Photo/Steven Senne ?? ■ New England Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski (87) gives a stiff arm to Kansas City Chiefs free safety Ron Parker (38) after catching a pass during the second half Sunday in Foxborough, Mass.
AP Photo/Steven Senne ■ New England Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski (87) gives a stiff arm to Kansas City Chiefs free safety Ron Parker (38) after catching a pass during the second half Sunday in Foxborough, Mass.

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