Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chiefs’ defense exposed by Jackson

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — It was only fitting that the Baltimore Ravens would put away a comeback victory over the Kansas Chiefs Chiefs by running Lamar Jackson up the middle when Kansas City needed a fourth-down stop to get the ball back.

The Chiefs knew it was coming; the Ravens had been doing it all game.

They still couldn’t stop it. Nor could the Chiefs stop the run the previous week against the Cleveland Browns, though some late-game magic from Patrick Mahomes managed to bail them out in Week 1. But when the Kansas City defense allowed Jackson to scamper for a clinching first down with about a minute left Sunday night, it prevented Mahomes from even getting another chance.

The result was a 36-35 loss that ended the Chiefs’ streak of 14 consecutiv­e victories in the month of September.

“When guys are in position, you have to make the tackle,” Chiefs Coach Andy Reid said. “We have to do a better job getting off blocks. … We knew they were a very good run team. Guys pushed through it and got us in a position to win the game.”

Then there was the fumble that also kept the Chiefs from kicking a potential winning field goal.

While the Browns and Ravens have exposed the Chiefs’ inability to stop the run, and their failure to improve this past offseason in an area that also was a problem last year, the fumble by Clyde Edwards-Helaire following the 2-minute warning rests as much on Kansas City’s coaching staff as it does anyone else.

After the Chiefs took over at their 25 with 3:14 left, Mahomes hit Byron Pringle over the middle for 23 yards. He hit Travis Kelce for 13 yards and again for 7 more, getting the ball to the Baltimore 32.

All of a sudden, Reid and Chiefs offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy put the ball in the hands of a second-year pro who had struggled all game to find running room rather than keep it in the hands of arguably the NFL’s best player.

Edwards-Helaire was promptly stripped of the ball. The Ravens recovered the fumble. Jackson converted on fourth down.

Game over.

“We got into field-goal range pretty quickly there,” Mahomes said, “and then we were pretty much trying to get down close, to let [Harrison] Butker kick the field goal. And dude made a good play. He was getting blocked and threw his hand out and hit it directly on the ball. We were executing; they made a play. You lose games when teams make plays like that.”

You also lose games when you allow an opponent to run for 251 yards and three touchdowns. Or go 4 for 4 in the red zone, 6 for 11 on third downs and convert their only fourth down. Or take the ball out of the hands of your best player.

“We will never point fingers and say it’s just one person’s loss. That is not how we roll at Kansas City,” Kelce said. “We’ll fix it in the four quarters of football. We’ll fix it.”

Kelce finished with seven catches for 109 yards and a touchdown, giving him 8,066 yards for his career. He joined Rob Gronkowski (8,613) and Jimmy Graham (8,350) as the only active tight ends with at least 8,000 yards receiving.

Chiefs safety Tyrann Mathieu had two intercepti­ons, returning one for a touchdown, in his return from the covid-19 list. But he also was whistled for a couple of penalties, though one for illegal use of hands was questionab­le.

“We still have a lot of confidence in ourselves, so I don’t think anything has really happened. We just have to play better and make some plays,” he said. “We just need to get back at it and get our confidence back.”

 ?? (AP/Terrance Williams) ?? Baltimore Ravens quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson (8) runs the ball during the second half Sunday against the Kansas City Chiefs in Baltimore. Jackson had 107 of the Ravens’ 251 yards on the ground in a 36-35 victory.
(AP/Terrance Williams) Baltimore Ravens quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson (8) runs the ball during the second half Sunday against the Kansas City Chiefs in Baltimore. Jackson had 107 of the Ravens’ 251 yards on the ground in a 36-35 victory.

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