The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Chiefs head to San Francisco, ready to shake off some rust

- By MATT DERRICK

ST. JOSEPH, MO. (AP) >> With only a few practices remaining before breaking training camp, the Kansas City Chiefs take a business trip on Saturday to visit the San Francisco 49ers. For quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, the results in this first preseason outing matter less than the process.

“You always like a score, but at the end of the day, I think if the communicat­ion, the procedures of in and out of the huddle with so many new guys, especially on that offensive line, I think that would be a win for me just throughout this first game,” Mahomes said.

The Chiefs expect to start five new faces on the line protecting Mahomes against the 49ers, starting with left tackle Orlando Brown Jr., who arrived during the offseason via a trade with Baltimore. Free-agent acquisitio­n Joe Thuney at left guard headlines the rest of the group rounded out by three rookies: center Creed Humphrey, right guard Trey Smith and right tackle Lucas Niang.

Offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy he has been pleased with the communicat­ion he’s seen.

“I think more than anything it’s just watching those guys gel together as a unit,” Bieniemy said. “Those guys are giving us some good looks upfront. Those guys are working together. I’m looking forward for them to continue the improvemen­t.”

Brown has drawn the most scrutiny during training camp. Coach Andy Reid said he has been pleased with the 25-year-old lineman, who earned two Pro Bowl nods while primarily playing right tackle with the Ravens.

“He’s working through everything and getting better,” Reid said. “It seems like he has pretty good communicat­ion right there with Thuney. They seem to be doing a decent job.”

Mahomes said he and Brown have been working on building a connection during training camp, learning each other’s tendencies and how best to mesh blocking sets and walking defenders around the pocket where Mahomes wants to work.

“A lot of times you’re on an island out there (at left tackle),” Mahomes said. “You’re going up against usually the defense’s best pass rusher, and for him, he’s trying different stuff, seeing how I’ll like it. We communicat­e, you see us communicat­ing on the sideline. We try to find that right spot so that we go into the season we’re ready to roll.”

The philosophy on the defensive side of the ball for the first game is similar for coordinato­r Steve Spagnuolo.

“You go out to these first games and everybody is doing what I call block tackling, which I don’t like,” Spagnuolo said. “It’s like a swear word. To me, I’m going to be really looking for that, and I’m going to be looking for the operation between whistle and snap. Not snap to whistle as much – I mean, coaches will take care of that – but I’m looking for operation and how guys function.”

Veteran safety Tyrann Mathieu expects his firststrin­g defensive teammates to play fast and smart.

“Obviously you want to see the young guys kind of step up, make plays,” Mathieu said. “I think the most important thing you want to be able to communicat­e. You want to have sound communicat­ion. Obviously, you don’t want any mental errors.”

With only three preseason games this season, that also means fewer snaps for players on the roster bubble. Special teams coordinato­r Dave Toub is grateful preseason games returned this year to help evaluate young talent, especially with the first roster reduction from 90 players to 85 on Tuesday.

 ?? ED ZURGA - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - Kansas City Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes (15) passes during drills at the team’s NFL football training camp in St. Joseph, Mo., in this Saturday, July 31, 2021, file photo.
ED ZURGA - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - Kansas City Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes (15) passes during drills at the team’s NFL football training camp in St. Joseph, Mo., in this Saturday, July 31, 2021, file photo.

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