The Commercial Appeal

Chiefs clearly far ahead of Bucs

- Mike Jones Columnist

TAMPA, Fla. – They called it the “The Black Pearl,” a tip of the hat to Disney’s “Pirates of the Caribbean” and a play off the theme of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and their stadium. The architects of the Kansas City Chiefs’ play? Quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes and tight end Travis Kelce.

They drew it up in practice one day leading up to Sunday’s showdown with the Buccaneers and convinced coach Andy Reid and offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy to add it to the game plan.

And sure enough, the Chiefs broke out “The Black Pearl” – a double reverse that gave Kelce the option to either run the ball or pass to Mahomes in the end zone – on their first trip inside the red zone.

All played out perfectly. The snap to Mahomes, the flip to Tyreek Hill, the flip to Kelce, and the big tight end had an opening to run into the end zone as Reid had instructed him. But on the sideline before the possession, Mahomes had urged his tight end to throw him the pass rather than run, the quarterbac­k confessed. That planted the sliver of hesitation in Kelce’s mind before he threw and gave Bucs cornerback Carlton Davis enough time to swat the ball away, negating a potentiall­y viral highlight.

The Chiefs wound up settling for a field goal to open the scoring of their 2724 victory over the Buccaneers.

By the end of the quarter, Kansas City held a 17-0 lead, Mahomes had passed for 229 yards and two touchdowns, and Hill had seven catches for 203 yards and two touchdowns.

You can get away with early-game exercises in creativity like “The Black Pearl” when your offense boasts such potency and you can score from anywhere on the field, like the 75-yard bomb to Hill, or the 44-yarder that followed, or the 20-yard strike for Hill’s third touchdown of the game.

But “The Black Pearl” was more than just a failed trick play called to humor players. It represente­d the level of trust,

alignment, cohesion and creativity that serve as the lifeblood of the defending Super Bowl champions.

As they moved up and down the field, seemingly at will, racking up a seasonhigh 543 yards against one of the better defenses in the league, Reid, Mahomes and Co. put on a clinic. The Buccaneers found themselves on the receiving end and again were reminded of just how far they have to go (star-studded roster and all) to reach the ranks of the elite.

There’s good, as evidenced by the 417 yards of offense (including 345 passing yards and three touchdowns from Tom Brady) and six plays of 20 yards or more. And there’s great, like the Chiefs’ output, which featured 462 passing yards from Mahomes, a 50% success rate on third downs, 26 first downs, and a textbook display of how to put away the game.

But, in another sign of greatness, the Chiefs still saw room for improvemen­t.

“We played well enough to win,” Mahomes said. “There were times, offensively we could be better… Great thing about football and the NFL is you build and build each week and try to be your best at the end of the season.”

A further improved Chiefs offense sounds terrifying for their opponents, particular­ly a squad like the Bucs, who came from behind and still weren’t good enough.

“We battled back. Unfortunat­ely, left ourselves a big deficit to start, couldn’t convert any third downs,” said Brady, whose team lost its second consecutiv­e game and third in the last four to drop to 7-5. “Poor execution early. … When you play a good offense like that, we’ve got to do a better job and keep them off the field.”

As Buccaneers coach Bruce Arians put it, “Everybody tried to hand us the Lombardi Trophy in August. You don’t just throw guys out there with names. You’ve got to practice. You’ve got to learn to get in sync with each other. That takes time.”

Time and continuity are part of what have transforme­d the Chiefs from entertaini­ng regular-season team to Super Bowl champs — and now favorites to repeat.

Each year since they turned the team over to Mahomes, the Chiefs’ cohesion and chemistry have strengthen­ed. We’ve seen Reid and Bieniemy’s creativity reach new heights. They certainly have their staple plays. But they’re always expanding upon them.

The last three years, they have tailored Reid’s playbook to Mahomes’ strengths. And now, Mahomes has such a strong feel for his teammates’ capabiliti­es and a masterful understand­ing of how to manipulate defenses.

When the Buccaneers landed Brady in free agency and added Rob Gronkowski, Leonard Fournette and Antonio Brown to an already handsome collection of weapons, many expected similar explosiven­ess from them.

But as Sunday’s outcome, last week’s 27-24 loss to the Los Angeles Rams and the blowout defeat to the New Orleans Saints have revealed, this Bucs offense very much remains under constructi­on.

It’s clear that Brady isn’t yet comfortabl­e in this system, and Arians and offensive coordinato­r Byron Leftwich have yet to fully figure out how to blend their playbook with what the three-time MVP does best.

That’s why the Buccaneers struggled early, punting on their first four possession­s of the game and trailing by double digits at halftime before finally stringing together back-to-back scoring drives in the fourth quarter.

“Football is so much about being in rhythm, staying in rhythm and finding rhythm,” Brady said.

Said Arians: “Offensively, we knew this was going to be a work in progress.”

Meanwhile, the coach couldn’t help but admire and respect the work of the Chiefs and marvel at Mahomes’ feats, which included the quarterbac­k running for two first downs and passing for another while directing the game-sealing drive.

“It’s very frustratin­g,” Arians said of the challenge of stopping Mahomes. “Very few guys that I’ve seen in this league or any league can backpedal eight to nine, 10, 11 yards in the pocket and throw a dime 25 yards down the field. He has unbelievab­le skill set. We had a lot of good rushers on him and he just backpedals and slings it side arm or whatever and can read the defense while he does it. … Andy’s going to be coaching ’til he’s about 80.”

 ?? KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes looks to pass against the Buccaneers on Sunday in Tampa, Fla.
KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes looks to pass against the Buccaneers on Sunday in Tampa, Fla.
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