Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

KC has doubt, even with Mahomes

- VAHE GREGORIAN

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Amid another comedy of errors, including some slapstick stuff in their once-vaunted passing game, the Kansas City Chiefs again wilted in the second half Monday night to fall 21-17 to visiting Philadelph­ia.

From a pure results standpoint, there could hardly be any less shame than in losing a narrow game to the Eagles, who at 9-1 have the best record in the NFL and could well be its best team for the long haul, too.

And, yes, it was still just one game, and we’ve seen this movie before, where the Chiefs (6-4 in 2019 and 7-3 now) push off from right about here and go win a Super Bowl.

But there was something more to this loss, too, and not just because the Chiefs went from holding the top seed in the AFC to falling a half-game behind Baltimore into a four-way tie for second place.

Albeit against a terrific team, this defeat reaffirmed their shortcomin­gs and vulnerabil­ities as quite real and further demystifie­d the X-Factor mojo that’s been such a part of the Patrick Mahomes Era.

While their core issue absolutely is the offense, which for long stretches looks disjointed because of penalties, dropped passes, turnovers and astounding miscommuni­cations between Mahomes and his receivers, this crossroads is about something more.

Remember back in the day when the Mahomes-led Chiefs would be trailing and get the ball back at, say, their own 9 with 2:49 left and you’d actually expect them to conjure the magic to win?

That wasn’t what it felt like on Monday, though, was it?

Even when Ma- homes feathered a highly- catchable pass to a stunningly open Marquez Valdes-Scantling for what would have been a goahead 51-yard touchdown, it really seemed like no surprise when MVS failed to hold on to it.

So we’ve entered into a different phase and a different sort of challenge for the Andy Reid/Mahomes-led Chiefs.

A stage when not only are the Chiefs the hunted but also no longer radiate that certain something extra that so often has rendered others ready to droop.

Look, this hardly means they’re doomed. It may not even be time to reset expectatio­ns, exactly.

But it’s certainly time to re-calibrate the perception of where they are: Their path ahead will be thornier than ever and require a revamped navigation system — both in terms of what this team’s strengths are and how the coaching staff plays to them.

For most of the past five-plus seasons, the burden of proof largely had been on others to demonstrat­e they could derail a Chiefs team that has played in three of the past four Super Bowls and played host to five straight AFC Championsh­ip Games.

Now that’s flipped: The onus is on the Chiefs to reboot and prove that this upside-down version of their recent past — a team being lugged by its defense hoping the offense improves down the stretch — still has the capacity to make crucial adjustment­s and repairs.

Because there’s no more rationaliz­ing that this season’s hiccups are a blip or maybe just a fleeting trend.

Now, they look like a full-blown syndrome, with an offense that looks like a mere facade of its former self making for a team whose aura of invincibil­ity has faded.

Now, so much of what you might have started taking for granted simply no longer is the case.

In the Chiefs’ 81 regular-season games in Mahomes’ first five seasons, for instance, they averaged 30.3 points a game.

This season, they’re managing 22.5 a game … and would be undefeated if they’d mustered 25 in their losses.

The team we knew for so many epic comebacks has scored an NFL-low 5.3 points a game in second halves and has one — one — fourth-quarter touchdown in 10 games.

Under Reid, they had been 4-0 against the Eagles, his former team. For that matter, this comes just weeks after their 16-game winning streak over Denver was snuffed out.

Most to the point, though, the loss came after all that self-scouting and healing and supposed tweaking and fixing to be carried out during not just a bye week but with a Reid bye week and all is presumed sorcery: Entering the game on Monday, after all, Reid had been 29-4 (including playoffs) in games after a bye.

But with five dropped passes, seven penalties, turnovers by Mahomes and a reckless version of Travis Kelce and zero points in the second half for a third straight week, you hardly would have known the Chiefs had 15 days to prepare for this game.

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