The Morning Call (Sunday)

Chiefs want a quicker start

Unlike last year, offense would prefer to play from ahead

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Chiefs have proven that they can overcome just about any deficit in the postseason.

That doesn’t mean they want to keep doing it. Of all the points of emphasis this weekend, when the Chiefs play the Browns for a spot in their third straight AFC championsh­ip game, perhaps none is as consequent­ial as this: The Chiefs want to start fast on Sunday, something it failed to do in falling behind by double figures in each of their playoff games last season.

“Yeah, our coaches brought it up: ‘Let’s not put ourselves in that same position we did last year,” Chiefs wide receiver Tyreek Hill said this week. “We just have to come out and have the same energy we’ve had all year.”

It would sure make a smoother road to the Super Bowl than the bumpy track they took last year.

The Chiefs began their journey to Miami by falling behind the Texans by 24 points early in the second quarter, thanks in part to a blocked punt returned for a touchdown. But they responded by scoring 41 consecutiv­e points, taking a 28-24 lead into halftime and piling on in the third quarter, eventually coasting to a 51-31 victory at Arrowhead Stadium.

It seemed like deja vu in the AFC title game the following week, when the Titans pounded their way to leads of 10-0 and 17-7 late in the first half. But much like the Chiefs did in the divisional round, Patrick Mahomes and his fleet flotilla of playmakers responded with 28 straight points, cruising in the fourth quarter to a 35-24 victory.

Then came the Super Bowl and probably the toughest deficit, when the 49ers turned a tie game at halftime into a 20-10 lead. It was still that margin when Mahomes hit Travis Kelce for a touchdown with 6:13 left, and the game’s MVP followed with a touchdown pass to Damien Williams with 2:44 to take the lead. And when Williams rolled 38 yards for the clinching touchdown, the Chiefs had scored 21 points in a tick over five minutes for a 31-20 victory.

“I mean, you understand what it takes. That’s the biggest thing,” said Mahomes, who hasn’t played in three weeks after the Chiefs clinched the No. 1 seed and a first-round bye against the Falcons in late December.

“You know it’s not easy. You’ll have to put in a lot of work, but you can do it. Play to the best of our ability and it’ll handle itself.”

For all their success this season, including a franchise-record 14 wins and a fifth straight AFC West title, very little has been a breeze. Mahomes has had to lead three fourth-quarter comebacks, including one against the Falcons, when he found wide receiver Demarcus Robinson with 1:55 left to give the Chiefs a 17-14 victory.

“You can stand there as a coach and tell guys, ‘Hey, listen, it’s going to get faster every step you take. The competitio­n is ridiculous,’ ” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “There might be a player or side to the ball you looked at during the season and you go, ‘Ahh,’ but immediatel­y, today, you’re going to get their best shot, and it’s going to be faster and more aggressive.

“Like I said, you can stand there and say it,” Reid continued, “but for our guys to have experience­d that, that was the most important thing, and we have a majority of the team coming back. Now, it’s important you don’t take it for granted that, ‘Oh, yeah, we’re going to up our game too.’ No, you got to work at it and bust your tail and dedicate yourself, be humble and all those things are important when you get into this. Everybody is going to give you their best shot and then some.”

 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY ?? Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, right, speaks with coach Andy before game against the Broncos on Dec. 6.
JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, right, speaks with coach Andy before game against the Broncos on Dec. 6.

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