The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Chargers give notice with victory in K.C.

- By Dave Skretta

The Chargers KANSAS CITY, MO. — capitalize­d on four Kansas City turnovers, including Patrick Mahomes’ second intercepti­on in the closing minutes, and Justin Herbert’s touchdown toss to Mike Williams with 32 seconds to go lifted Los Angeles to a 30-24 victory over the Chiefs on Sunday.

Herbert finished with 281 yards passing and four touchdowns without an intercepti­on, outdueling Mahomes in a matchup of two of the game’s best young quarterbac­ks and two teams expected to compete for the AFC West title.

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

Williams finished with seven catches for 122 yards and two TDS. Austin Ekeler and Keenan Allen also had TD grabs.

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 Tristan 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 Deandre 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.

He 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.

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

Kansas City certainly abided.

On the Chiefs’ opening possession, Mahomes bounced a pass off Marcus Kemp that landed in the hands of rookie Asante Samuel Jr. for his second intercepti­on in as many weeks. On their next drive, Demarcus Robinson coughed it up at nearly the same spot on the field. And on the Chiefs’ offensive third try, Edwards-helaire fumbled one week after his fumble in the closing minutes cost Kansas City a shot at a winning field goal in Baltimore.

That was the fifth turnover in six possession­s dating to last Sunday night’s loss.

Herbert found Allen for a short TD pass early in the second quarter, then hit Ekeler from 16 yards on their way to a 14-3 halftime lead.

The Chiefs used a 12-play, 75-yard drive to start the second half that ended with a short TD throw to Jody Fortson. A 10-play, 70-yard drive then ended with Edwards-helaire catching a TD pass.

L.A. answered with a 75-yard drive ending with a TD pass to Williams.

Reid receives medical attention

Chiefs coach Andy Reid was feeling ill, according to a team official, and therefore did not address the media after the game. Reid, 63, coached the entire game and addressed the team in the locker room afterward. According to James Palmer of NFL Network, Reid left the stadium in an ambulance as a precaution­ary measure.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Chargers’ Austin Ekeler dives for a TD past the Chiefs’ Tyrann Mathieu during the second quarter Sunday as San Diego took a 14-3 lead.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS The Chargers’ Austin Ekeler dives for a TD past the Chiefs’ Tyrann Mathieu during the second quarter Sunday as San Diego took a 14-3 lead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States