Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Chiefs country: America rooting against Pats

- BY DAVE SKRETTA

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — It seems football fans everywhere are suddenly on the Chiefs’ bandwagon, enthralled by Kansas City’s record-setting young quarterbac­k and exciting playmakers and hopeful the amiable coach can finally win the big one.

Then again, maybe they’re just fans of anybody facing New England.

The Patriots have dominated the AFC for nearly two decades, and the coachquart­erback combinatio­n of Bill Belichick and Tom Brady will be playing in an eighth consecutiv­e conference title game Sunday night, when New England visits the Chiefs at frigid, hostile Arrowhead Stadium.

But whereas Brady & Co. once instilled awe in their opponents, the Chiefs view their showdown as an opportunit­y for Patrick Mahomes to take the baton as the league’s best quarterbac­k and for Kansas City, seeking its first Super Bowl appearance in 49 years, to surpass the Patriots as the NFL’s “it” team.

“It’ll be huge,” Mahomes said. “When I got here, the goal was to win the AFC title and get to the Super Bowl, then win that. To do that early in my career, it would be a huge thing.”

New England has won five Super Bowls during the Belichick-Brady era. The cruel efficiency with which they’ve sliced up the AFC has made them the bane of fans everywhere but New England and given them a kind of unbeatable aura. It’s not just petty jealousy, though. Many fans have been turned off by Deflategat­e, Spygate and other instances over the years that have saddled the Patriots with a rather unsavory reputation.

Brady has mostly shrugged it off. So has Belichick, who almost embraces the villain role.

“I don’t think about it too much, what people might say or think,” said Brady, whose team is a rare playoff underdog.

On the flip side are the Chiefs, a team that dominated the AFC throughout the 1990s but reached only one conference title game. They were the league’s worst franchise six years ago, when Andy Reid came aboard, but have become a perennial playoff team that was always missing that certain something.

They found it when they drafted Mahomes nearly two years ago.

“He’s a great player on a great team that’s very well coached,” Belichick said. “They have a great scheme and a great system. He’s got a ton of weapons, so he’ll be tough to handle.”

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