Let’s Argue: The Chiefs’ Jack Cochrane is an awesome player

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In our “Let’s Argue” series, our Mark Gunnels considers the hot takes, wacky predictions, and unpopular opinions of Kansas City Chiefs fans from all over the world.


Jack Cochrane is an awesome special teams player​

Jack Cochrane is an awesome special teams player

— Patrick Lillis (@PatrickLillis1) October 29, 2025

This is clearly sarcasm.

There’s no denying that linebacker Jack Cochrane has been a negative on special teams this year. It feels like he gets called for holding every time the Chiefs have a good return.

But whatever it’s worth, he did get an interception at the end of the win over the Washington Commanders.


Someone said, “They have only won playing injury-riddled teams”​

I had someone say "They have only won playing injury riddled teams"

— Loren Godsil (@ldg2456) October 29, 2025

It used to be that people would say anything to discredit the New England Patriots. Now they target Kansas City. This is what happens when you’ve been the standard of winning for seven years.

Before the Chiefs, the Patriots had to deal with it. It just comes with the territory when you’re in this position — and I would strongly advise Kansas City fans to embrace it.

If it’s not the injury excuse, then it’s fans complaining about the officials being in the Chiefs’ favor. Here’s the funny thing: there’s never any consistency.

Injuries? Well, how about wide receiver Xavier Worthy missing multiple games? And the absences of wide receiver Rashee Rice and left tackle Josh Simmons — although in their cases, it’s not injury-related.

We might as well face it: people will keep finding new ways to devalue Kansas City. They do it because they’re envious.


The Chiefs shouldn’t have paid Chris Jones​

Shouldn't have paid Chris Jones (hot take, not my opinion so don't come at me)

— Captain Ron (@ronoldrico) October 29, 2025

This isn’t a hot take.

This is a scorching hot take.

Look… I know a lot of fans just look at raw numbers — and when it comes to defensive linemen, the go-to number is sacks.

A year ago, defensive tackle Chris Jones had only five sacks. Through eight 2025 games, he’s recorded only two.

Yes… those aren’t eye-popping numbers.

But sacks aren’t everything.

Jones is still absorbing double- and triple-teams, which gives the players around him opportunities for one-on-one matchups. As a group, the other players haven’t consistently taken advantage — but defensive end George Karlaftis has 4.5 sacks.

Despite garnering a lot of attention, Jones still consistently pressures opposing quarterbacks. While they may not result in sacks, pressures can — and do — create negative plays. Those can win football games.


On a scale of 1–10, where are the Chiefs right now?​

On a scale of 1-10, with 10 being best, where are the Chiefs right now at this point of the season?

— Ed Helinski 🇺🇸🇵🇱 🌴 (@MrEd315) October 29, 2025

Good question!

Right now, I would give Kansas City a solid 8.

It’s fun to see the offense operating at a high level again. Quarterback Patrick Mahomes is having fun — and why shouldn’t he be? With Rice back in the fold, the two-time MVP finally has his full complement of pass-catchers at his disposal.

Meanwhile — despite being consistently unable to get pressure with four pass rushers — the defense has been very stingy. With the loss of rookie defensive tackle Omarr Norman-Lott, I fully expect general manager Brett Veach to make a move before the trade deadline.

If the Chiefs do make a fairly significant move to bolster the line, they instantly go from an 8 to a 9 — with the potential of becoming a 10.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...986/hot-takes-jack-cochrane-is-awesome-player
 
The Chiefs’ defense welcomes Mike Pennel’s energy back to locker room

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The Kansas City Chiefs gave their defensive line a familiar face this week. On Wednesday, veteran defensive tackle Mike Pennel re-signed with the team after beginning the season with the Cincinnati Bengals.

This marks his third stint in Kansas City.

Defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo was happy to see him back with the team.

“The good thing about Mike is he was here before this season,” he said on Thursday. “So I think it’s probably an easier transition for him than going someplace else.”

Pennel first joined the Chiefs midway through the 2019 season and immediately made an impact, helping anchor the defensive front during Kansas City’s run to Super Bowl LIV. He recorded another midseason return in 2023, playing a rotational role on another Super Bowl–winning defense.

That reliability — stemming from his big-game experience — is a significant reason why Spagnuolo trusts him upon his return.

“We’re glad we got him,” he declared. “Mike’s a fun guy to have around — and a good football player — so we’re happy about that.”

Over his 12-year career, Pennel has appeared in 146 regular-season games, totaling 246 tackles, five sacks and three forced fumbles. During his most recent season with the Chiefs in 2024, he appeared in all 17 games and posted 25 tackles (10 solo), three sacks and one forced fumble.

This time around, Pennel joins a defensive line that ranks in the middle of the pack through the first half of the 2025 season. The Chiefs are 15th in total rushing yards allowed (800) and 18th in yards per carry (4.4). Veteran defensive captain Chris Jones once again leads the position group — but with a need for depth along the line, Pennel was the perfect fit.

“Mike brings a veteran presence,” Jones noted. “Good for the locker room, great guy — like one of my brothers. A lot of good things I can say about him. He just brings positive energy, which I think is something that goes underrated in a football locker room. A good, high-energy guy who keeps everyone fun and happy.”

First look at DT Mike Pennel back with the Chiefs. Club waived DE Malik Herring to make space. pic.twitter.com/0nQpxdjP0d

— Matt Derrick (@mattderrick) October 29, 2025

That positive energy has been Pennel’s calling card throughout his time in Kansas City — which meant that when the team released him before the 2025 season, it was a blow to Jones and his teammates. Jones tried to stay in touch anyway.

“Unfortunately, our contact kind of died off a little bit,” he recalled. “Every now and then, we’d contact each other. It’s difficult when you’re in the season and you’re in the midst of things — [and] he’s playing for a different team.”

Now back with the Chiefs, Pennel reunites with a defensive group that thrives on chemistry. His experience, understanding of Spagnuolo’s scheme and reputation in Kansas City’s locker room make him an ideal late-season addition as the team pushes for another playoff run.

“I was very disappointed, but I understand that [GM Brett] Veach always has a plan,” Jones remarked of Pennel’s release. “Luckily, we were able to bring my guy back.”

For Pennel — who has been with seven teams during his career — the feeling is mutual.

“It has been crazy, man,” he said of his journey on Friday. “You know, [it’s] the NFL experience, though. [I’m] just glad to be back. A lot of trips — [and] a lot of stops — but glad to be here.”

A native of Topeka, Kansas — who successfully battled childhood cancer at Kansas City’s Children’s Mercy Hospital — Pennel is beginning his third stint with his home team.

“My family [members are] long-standing Kansas City Chiefs fans,” he said. “Even though we all bleed red, we bleed a little bit of yellow too for K.C. My family’s here, the doctor who cured me and went through chemo [with] is here. It’s always, you know, attached me here. Everyone knows I love K.C.”

Reminded by reporters that the Chiefs won Super Bowls in the two other years he came on board after the season began — 2019 and 2023 — Pennel was surprised.

“I mean, I didn’t know that. You guys knew that? That’s a fact, there?”

Assured that it was, Pennel adopted a playful tone.

“I don’t knoooow,” he said playfully as the room exploded into laughter.

But then he smiled.

“I don’t know,” he added. “You know, however fate has it.”

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ense-welcomes-mike-pennel-back-to-locker-room
 
Chiefs-Bills Week 9 predictions from Arrowhead Pride

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Before the Kansas City Chiefs’ Week 8 game against the Washington Commanders, every one of our Arrowhead Pride panelists picked Kansas City to win. Our aggregate prediction of a 34-16 win was among the closest of the season, carrying 18 points of error from the 28-7 final. Three-quarters of our contributors thought the Chiefs were on the way to a blowout — while just 36% of our readers thought so.

In Week 9, the Chiefs are on the road to face the Buffalo Bills at Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park, New York. According to
FanDuel Sportsbook, Kansas City is favored by 1.5 points.

Let’s see what the staff — and our readers — think about the matchup.



Nate Christensen (@natech32)​


I have zero doubts that the Chiefs’ offense is going to score this game. The Bills’ defense is bad at all levels, and the Kansas City offense is humming. Whether it’s in the run game, downfield shots or quarterback Patrick Mahomes methodically finding soft spots underneath, the Chiefs will put up yards and points.

But I expect the Bills to do the same. They don’t have the same passing game as Kansas City, but it’s fairly close — and they have a superior running game. They will sustain long drives based on how good their offensive line and running back James Cook are.

I expect a relatively low-scoring version of this game, but both teams will sustain long, efficient drives that limit the number of possessions. Ultimately, Kansas City has the better units on both sides of the ball, so I think they win.

Chiefs 27, Bills 24


John Dixon (@Arrowheadphones)​


Only one of the last six games between these two teams has been decided by more than one score. The Bills are at home — and have won all four of the most recent regular-season matchups. So I’d be a fool to call for the Chiefs to win this one going away, right?

But that’s what I’m going to do. I think what we’ve been seeing in recent weeks is a Kansas City team that is sick and tired of hearing about how it’s past its prime — and that all of its 2024 success came from a combination of luck and NFL favoritism. Petty Patrick Mahomes and his teammates have had enough of this garbage. On Sunday afternoon, they intend to show the whole world — or at least all of it that’s watching CBS — that none of this has been a fluke.

Chiefs 31, Bills 13


Maurice Elston (@MrMauriceElston)​


The Chiefs enter this matchup riding a three-game winning streak — and have won five of their last six. They’ve dominated on both sides of the ball during this stretch, showing the balance and confidence expected of a contender. Last week against Washington, the Chiefs started slow, but made key halftime adjustments. In the second half, they shut Washington out — while the offense erupted once again.

Buffalo, meanwhile, has traditionally had Kansas City’s number in the regular season, which makes this game tricky to call. But this year’s Bills don’t resemble the powerhouse of recent seasons. Quarterback Josh Allen has been forced to play nearly flawless football to give Buffalo a chance, largely because the receiving corps lacks a true difference-maker. Running back James Cook has become the team’s focal point, but he’ll face a disciplined Kansas City defense that’s been stout against the run.

With the linebackers flowing well, safeties attacking downhill — and defensive tackle Mike Pennel returning to bolster the interior — the Chiefs should be able to slow Cook down. They won’t stop him altogether — but if they can hold him under 100 rushing yards, it’s hard to see Buffalo pulling out a win.

Expect Kansas City’s offense to remain efficient — and the defense to control the tempo — against a Bills team still searching for its old identity.

Chiefs 30, Bills 21


Mark Gunnels (@MarkAGunnels)​


Before the season began, I had this game as a loss because Buffalo always beats Kansas City in the regular season. But I think this time, it will be different.

Unlike other years, the Chiefs don’t have much room for error. Despite the three-game winning streak, they’re still in third place in the AFC West. And when you couple that with the Bills looking very lackluster on both sides of the ball, I think it’s a recipe for the Chiefs to go get this game. Buffalo’s offense has regressed a lot this year. They don’t have any separators at receiver — so if you can contain James Cook, you pretty much have them where you want them.

On the flip side, I just don’t see how Buffalo will be able to defend all the pass-catchers Patrick Mahomes has at his disposal.

Chiefs 34, Bills 27


Caleb James (@CJScoobs)​


The NFL’s premier rivalry is set for its next chapter. In seasons past, the regular-season version of Chiefs vs. Bills has meant much less to Kansas City, but at third place in the AFC West and seventh in the AFC, this game is teetering on must-win status.

Fortunately, the Chiefs’ offense has hit its stride, scoring at least 28 points in four consecutive games — and Patrick Mahomes is the front-runner for MVP. This week, they’ll face a Bills defense that’s a shell of its former self — and it could lead to a big-time shootout.

The Bills’ defense has been gashed against the run, and while their pass defense is statistically good, it has been aided by poor quarterback play. That won’t be the case this week.

Mahomes is having an MVP-caliber season, wide receiver Rashee Rice is fully back and tight end Travis Kelce is playing with renewed energy. Running back Isiah Pacheco will be out for the game, but this opens the door for rookie Brashard Smith and veteran Kareem Hunt to play extended reps.

Defensively, the name of the game will be to contain Josh Allen and slow down James Cook. The Bills’ offense is elite, and the first team to collect a few stops should win the game.

Chiefs 42, Bills 38


Rocky Magaña (@RockyMagana)​


Listen, I’ve been bullish on the Chiefs all year — even when things were looking rough. I’m not backing down on my prediction that this team wins the Super Bowl — especially now that the offense looks utterly unstoppable. I think the early-season losses were the kick in the pants this team needed to lock in.

They find themselves in the unusual position of being the hunter instead of the hunted. And I don’t know about you, but if I’m the rest of the AFC, I wouldn’t want Mahomes and head coach Andy Reid stalking me in the tall grass. I don’t see the loss of Isiah Pacheco slowing this team down very much.

The Bills have Josh Allen, James Cook and a good coaching staff, but their wide receivers are far from elite — and their defense is hot garbage. This game is going to be a close one, like it always is between these two teams, but the difference this year is that the Chiefs are going to beat the Bills in the regular season and the playoffs.

Chiefs 35, Bills 31


Jared Sapp (@TrumanChief)​


I’m not going to predict a shootout between the league’s best quarterbacks because I expect both teams to lean on the run game and on short passes. I’ll be surprised if there are enough drives — or enough clock stoppages — for either team to exceed 30 points.

The Chiefs’ defense has played well the last few weeks, but Josh Allen and the Bills know defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo’s schemes intimately at this point. I expect Kansas City’s defenders to have some trouble with Allen and running back James Cook — but I expect Buffalo’s defense to have a bit more trouble with Kansas City’s offense.

The Chiefs have been able to afford a somewhat nonchalant attitude about the regular-season version of this rivalry in the last couple of years, but they enter this contest with minimal margin for error. Also, Patrick Mahomes is the clear MVP frontrunner midway through the season. Much of Mahomes’ candidacy, however, will depend on how he performs against his biggest rival. I expect a very focused and efficient performance from the offense against Buffalo’s depleted defense.

Ultimately, I think the Chiefs have significant advantages over the Bills on defense and among pass-catchers. I expect that overall advantage to deliver a Chiefs victory — albeit by the type of narrow score that has defined this rivalry.

Chiefs 28, Bills 24


Matt Stagner (@stagdsp)​


In what is always the game of the year — whether it happens in the regular season or the postseason — I anticipate this being a fun, competitive game down to the wire. Whoever has the ball last generally wins these matchups, so why should this one be any different? Patrick Mahomes is playing at an entirely different level from everyone else in the league. He finally has a full complement of receivers — and while the offensive line is banged up, it has the depth to make it through the season. Add in a defense that’s held its last two opponents to a combined seven points, and everything points to the Chiefs being the better, stronger team — and the one with momentum coming into this contest.

They also might be the hungrier team, coming off a tough Super Bowl loss and a slow start that drew plenty of doubts. These Chiefs were written off by many before the last few weeks, and now they’re starting to show the league what this was supposed to look like. They’re motivated to position themselves for the No. 1 seed — which won’t be easy this season — and taking down the Bills in Buffalo would help.

I expect this to be another Mahomes game, with big plays from wide receivers Xavier Worthy and Rashee Rice — and maybe a little less from tight end Travis Kelce than we’ve seen the last couple of weeks. The matchups in Buffalo don’t really matter. It may come down to this: can the Chiefs play to their ability and keep the ball away from Josh Allen in a game-winning or game-tying situation? I think that this time, they will.

Chiefs 35, Bills 27



With their predictions aggregated, our panelists expect the Chiefs to win 33—26.

What do you think?


2025 Standings

TWLWStafferWLPctErr
11Maurice Elston620.750022.8
22Jared Sapp620.750025.5
33Rocky Magaña530.625022.3
44Caleb James530.625022.8
55John Dixon530.625023.8
66Mark Gunnels530.625025.8
77Matt Stagner530.625029.5
88Nate Christensen440.500025.8

In Week 8, John Dixon and Caleb James led our panelists. Their 30-12 and 33-7 predictions each had 10 points of error. Rocky Magaña’s prediction for 35-13 Kansas City win missed by a total of 14 points.

To calculate a prediction’s points of error, the differences between the prediction and the actual score in point spread, home team score and away team score are added together. For example, a prediction calls for a 17-10 Chiefs win. They end up winning 16-10, so there were two points of error: the point spread was off by one point, the Kansas City score missed by one point and the opponent’s score was predicted correctly. But if the Chiefs lose the game 17-10, there were 28 points of error in the prediction: the point spread was off by 14 (the difference between +7 and -7) and both scores missed by 7.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...bills-week-9-predictions-from-arrowhead-pride
 
Even after loss, Chris Jones thinks the Chiefs will see the Bills again

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On Sunday, the Kansas City Chiefs’ winning streak ended at three games with a 28-21 loss to the Buffalo Bills. After the final whistle, defensive tackle Chris Jones was upfront about the defense’s role in the disappointing defeat — and what work may be in store for him and his teammates during the team’s Week 10 bye.

“There were a lot of missed tackles,” he acknowledged. “Usually, we’ve been doing a really, really good job of getting the tackle, wrapping them up, and solidifying the play. Today, we had a couple of broken tackles, which led to bigger runs… We gave up a few open throws, whether it was miscommunication or just being out of plays. There’s a lot of errors and key components that we can fix on our end. We’ve got a week off to get some guys healthy, look over this game, correct some errors and get back to it.”

With Tuesday’s NFL trade deadline rapidly approaching, there has been speculation that the defensive line might look a bit different after the week off. But Jones believes the talent it needs is already on the roster.

“I don’t think we need to make any drastic changes,” he remarked. “I feel like we have the guys to do it. I think it’s more about being detailed in our work, looking at ourselves in the mirror and holding each other accountable. We’ve got a lot of great guys in this room who take a lot of accountability for their play and their responsibility. So I’m quite sure this week they’re going to get their bodies healthy, focus on their detail work, and come back ready to play better.”

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Still, Jones knows that the team’s current pass rush production is not sufficient — even though the defense recorded three sacks of Bills quarterback Josh Allen on Sunday. He wants to see the defensive line take better advantage of favorable blocking matchups when they happen.

“There’s still room for improvement,” he declared. “I think we had two sacks today. If we plan on winning — especially with the front four on the line — we’ve got to affect the quarterback. We’ve got to. It makes it easier for the defense and it makes it easier for the back end.

“We’ve got to take advantage of one-on-ones. When [you] get a single block, you’ve got to win. You’ve got to win. I think that’s huge going forward. We’ve got to emphasize winning our one-on-ones.”

The Chiefs have now lost their regular-season matchup against the Bills in five consecutive years. In four of those seasons, Kansas City got the last laugh by defeating Buffalo in the postseason. Jones suspects that Sunday’s matchup will once again Round 1 for this season.

“I’m quite sure we’re going to see them again,” he predicted. “This is a very, very good team. They have an MVP-caliber quarterback. They have a great offensive [scheme] — and they’re a well-rounded team.”

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...hris-jones-thinks-chiefs-will-see-bills-again
 
Josh Simmons is back in the Chiefs’ facility

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According to a report from NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, the Kansas City Chiefs’ first-round rookie Josh Simmons is back in the team facility.

Some good news for the #Chiefs, as first-round OT Josh Simmons has returned to the team after dealing with a family issue the past few weeks. KC has a bye this week, serving as a time of re-acclimation.

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) November 3, 2025

In all, Simmons has missed four games of the season.

Taken by the Chiefs out of Ohio State with the 32nd overall pick of the 2025 NFL Draft, Simmons had an immediate impact for the Chiefs, starting at left tackle for the first five games of the 2025 season.

But in the hours before Kansas City’s Week 6 game against the Detroit Lions, we learned that Simmons would miss the game. At the time, it was reported that he was attending to a family matter in California.

Three days later — as the team began its preparations for the Week 7 game against the Las Vegas Raiders — head coach Andy Reid refused to comment on the specifics of the situation.

“As far as the Josh Simmons situation goes, I’m not going to comment on it today,” he said. “[General Manager Brett] Veach is handling everything there — and we’ll leave it at that.”

Reporters were able to get a little bit of information out of quarterback Patrick Mahomes, who owned up to speaking with his left tackle

“I’ll keep conversations between us,” he said. “I’m always praying for him. I pray for all my teammates, so I’m always praying for him. I’ll just keep everything else private between us.”

A week later, Reid was a little more forthcoming.

“There’s communication,” said Reid of Simmons’ absence. “I’m not going to get into all of it. Everything’s positive; it’s not a negative situation. He’s taking care of family.”

That was the first time the team had given any information about what was keeping Simmons off the field.

“He’s just taking care of business.” added Reid. “That’s the main thing, right here. When you deal with this, that’s what you do. And he’s been very good about communicating it.”

At some later time, Simmons may choose to tell us more. Or this might be all we ever know about the last four weeks of his life.

But as Reid might say, the main thing is… well, the main thing: he’s back with the team — and has the bye week to get back up to speed.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kansas-city-chiefs-roster/185891/josh-simmons-back-in-team-facility
 
Chiefs’ 2025 Bye Week Awards: Who wins top special teams player?

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There are nine games in the books — with eight more to go. The Kansas City Chiefs are taking their bye week in Week 10, so it’s time to dish out some midseason awards.

10 Arrowhead Pride contributors voted to award seven midseason awards. In this post, we’ll reveal our top special teams player to this point of the season.



KR – Nikko Remigio

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VOTING: WR Nikko Remigio (5), P Matt Araiza (2), LB Jeffrey Bassa (1), LS (James Winchester), LB Jack Cochrane (1)


Picking a special teams MVP is always difficult. The plays are the hardest to follow — few fans truly understand the finer points of special teams — and the players change frequently.

But few Kansas City special teams players have drawn more praise from coordinator Dave Toub than the former Fresno State (and California) wideout, who spent his 2023 rookie season on the team’s Reserve/Injured list, began 2024 on the practice squad and has spent all of 2025 on the 53-man roster.

“I’ve gotten used to having him back there,” noted Toub as this season was getting underway. “He just keeps getting better — and he really had a great training camp. He’s become a leader for us, as far as his work ethic and everything he’s about. He’s a great teammate — and he’s a good guy. And I’m happy he’s on the team.”

In early October, Toub raved about him again.

“He’s a guy I can depend on,” he declared. “I call him, ‘the adult in the room.’ He’s the oldest guy back there.”

So far, the 25-year-old Remigio has appeared in 14 games. He’s returned 26 punts for 228 yards (8.8 per return) and 25 kickoffs for 665 yards (26.6 per return).

But he understands that in the NFL, the pressure for performance never subsides.

“If you get too comfortable, you’re gonna get got,” he told reporters during training camp. “I worked too hard to get to this point in my career — to get to Year 3 — to let it slip through my fingers. So, you know, really, I approach every day like I’m an undrafted rookie that barely got a shot to make it to the NFL. [So] I’m scratching and clawing to just get an opportunity.”

“He’s very competitive,” offered head coach Andy Reid during camp. “They’re all competing like crazy for six or seven spots is what you’re looking at. They’re in there battling their tails off to make one of those positions — and Remigio is doing that. I know you know him and how competitive a kid he is. Everything he does, he’s competitive.”

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...2025-bye-week-awards-top-special-teams-player
 
NFL Power Rankings Week 10 Roundup: Chiefs drop after loss in Buffalo

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The Kansas City Chiefs’ climb up the power rankings over the last month comes to a screeching halt heading into Week 10 and the team’s bye week. The 28-21 loss to the Buffalo Bills in Week 9 was accounted for by all power rankings, leading to a drop for the Chiefs in every site’s newest list.

Here’s this week’s sampling:



NFL.com: 6


(Down from 3)

Kansas City’s defense looked slow and reactive in Sunday’s 28-21 defeat at Buffalo, losing the line-of-scrimmage battle and leaving pass catchers running free too often. James Cook became the first running back to rush for more than 100 yards against the Chiefs in 35 games (including the playoffs), and the Bills’ tight ends consistently carved them up for big plays. Patrick Mahomes also had one of his worst games in memory, completing fewer than 50 percent of his passes, taking three sacks and heaving up a late interception. There were big plays from Kansas City, but not nearly enough down-to-down consistency. The Chiefs have the bye to recover before a big showdown at Denver in Week 11, but this loss doesn’t sting any less.

— Eric Edholm


ESPN: 10


(Down from 6)

Following their bye week, the Chiefs will face the current AFC West leader. The easiest way for the Chiefs to regain command in the division is to sweep the Broncos. Kansas City coach Andy Reid, quarterback Patrick Mahomes and the rest of the team should have plenty of motivation too. In the 2024 regular-season finale, the Broncos, needing a win to clinch the conference’s final playoff spot, beat Kansas City 38-0. One could argue the Chiefs, who already had clinched the top seed and rested their starters, didn’t enjoy Broncos coach Sean Payton running up the score.

Nate Taylor


The Athletic: 10


(Down from 4)

Midseason grade:
B-

The underlying stats are still great and point to the Chiefs being just fine for the second half. Their offense ranks fifth in EPA per play and fourth in success rate. But your record matters, and a tough schedule leaves them barely above .500 entering their bye.

— Josh Kendall


Sports Illustrated: 5


(Down from 1)

Sean McDermott is always a trend setter versus Mahomes in the regular season and on Sunday his game plan was masterful. The Bills played a lot of DBs, with five corners and two safeties playing at least 50% of the snaps and, as Arrowhead Pride pointed out, simply called Mahomes’s bluff when it came to all of Kansas City’s pre-snap motion. The result was the worst completion percentage of Mahomes’ career.

— Conor Orr


Pro Football Talk: 14


(Down from 8)

As crazy as it sounds, they may have to scratch and claw to earn a playoff spot.

— Mike Florio


CBSSports.com: 10


(Down from 2)

Losing to the Bills on the road isn’t awful, but think about this: If the playoffs started today, they wouldn’t be a part of them. Weird.

— Pete Prisco


Yahoo! Sports: 3


(Down from 1)

Losing at Buffalo isn’t a terrible outcome. But now the Chiefs have two more losses than the Bills and won’t have the head-to-head tiebreaker either. Kansas City has and can win in January at Buffalo, but that doesn’t mean it’s an easy assignment.

— Frank Schwab


The Sporting News: 7


(Down from 3)

The Chiefs could have made an important statement to the rest of the AFC by stomping Buffalo, but instead they got stampeded for most of the game until some flashes of Patrick Mahomes’ heroics. It was a rare disappointing outing for the previous red-hot defense.

— Vinnie Iyer


USA Today: 8


(Down from 1)

Travis Kelce joined Jason Witten and Hall of Famers Tony Gonzalez and Antonio Gates as the only tight ends with at least 500 receiving yards in 12 seasons. He should consider making all of them groomsmen − and could start considering save the dates for January.

— Nate Davis


FOX Sports: 13


(Down from 8)

I still think they’re a top-10 team. Their losses (to the Chargers, Eagles, Jaguars and Bills) are by a combined 19 points. But they’re 5-4 and need to start actually winning those games at some point.

— Ralph Vacchiano

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...eek-10-roundup-chiefs-drop-after-buffalo-loss
 
Chiefs Playoff Picture: At 5-4, still a good chance for the playoffs

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The Kansas City Chiefs now stand 5-4 after recording a 28-21 road loss to the Buffalo Bills on Sunday afternoon.

Eight games remain in the team’s 2025 schedule. After their Week 10 bye, Kansas City will be on the road to face the Denver Broncos, then host the Indianapolis Colts at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium, play the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium on Thanksgiving evening, return home for matchups with the Houston Texans and the Los Angeles Chargers, travel to Nashville to face the Tennessee Titans, return home for their final regular-season home game against the Broncos and close out the season at Allegiant Stadium against the Las Vegas Raiders.

Let’s take a look at the team’s current playoff picture. As we always do, we’ll use The Athletic’s playoff calculator — an update to the New York Times playoff calculator we’ve used for several years — to help us project what could happen. You can learn more about how it works by clicking here.

The Chiefs’ playoff picture​


As it stands right now, Kansas City has a 78% chance to make the playoffs, a 28% chance to win the AFC West, only a 4% chance to earn the AFC’s single bye, and a 7% chance to win Super Bowl LX.

To be sure, these numbers aren’t particularly encouraging. When we began publishing these playoff summaries on November 8 of last season, the Chiefs were 8-0 — and had a greater than 99% chance to make the playoffs, a 97% chance to win the AFC West, an 82% chance to earn the AFC bye, and a 19% chance to win Super Bowl LIX.

But after Sunday’s 28-21 loss to the Bills dropped the team to 5-4, plenty of fans have assumed Kansas City has no chance to even make the postseason. These probabilities show us there’s still a good chance to make the postseason — and even at two games behind Denver, there’s a fighting chance to win the division, too.

The playoff calculator allows us to assume the outcomes of remaining games and see how it changes the odds. For now, we’ll mostly focus on what’s in the team’s control; it’s still too early for complex scenarios.

Let’s dig in.

How the Chiefs can make the playoffs​


As strange as it may seem, Kansas City is still largely in control of its postseason fate. Winning all of its remaining games virtually guarantees a playoff berth. If the Chiefs win six of their final eight games — even losing once to the Chargers and once to the Broncos — they’d still have a greater than 99% chance to reach the playoffs. In fact, a 6-2 finish would almost certainly keep them in the postseason conversation, no matter which two games they lose.

But it gets significantly harder if Kansas City loses three games. In that case, the probability of making the playoffs drops to a range around 75-80%.

Four losses — a 4-4 record down the stretch — would likely still leave the team with a 35-40% chance to make the playoffs. But going 3-5 the rest of the way would almost certainly end their postseason hopes.

How the Chiefs can win the AFC West​


Finishing the season 8-0 would very likely give Kansas City its 10th straight division crown. Losing one of the two games to Denver — while winning the other seven — would reduce that chance from nearly 100% to a little better than a coin flip. Losing to the Chargers and splitting with Denver leaves only a narrow path to the division title — about one chance in 25. Losing both Broncos games — even if the Chiefs win the other six — eliminates any realistic shot at the crown. Winning the remaining AFC West matchups would definitely help — but even then, any combination of three or more total losses drops Kansas City’s division odds below 50%.

How the Chiefs can get a first-round bye​


The Chiefs’ four losses make it very difficult to earn the AFC’s top seed. Finishing 8-0 gives Kansas City just a 53% chance to secure the bye. The odds drop sharply with a single loss. Even if that loss comes to the Cowboys — an NFC team — the Chiefs’ chances fall below 20%. A single loss to an AFC opponent makes it even less likely. Two losses? Forget about it.

The bottom line​


Kansas City’s postseason outlook is far less certain than usual at this point in the year. Still, the Chiefs can make the playoffs — and even win the AFC West — without any outside help. But their margin for error is razor-thin. It’s time for the Chiefs to see how they perform on a tightrope.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...e-at-5-4-still-a-good-chance-for-the-playoffs
 
How the Bills used the Chiefs’ linebackers against them in Week 9 loss

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On Sunday, not a lot went right for the Kansas City Chiefs’ defense during the team’s 28-21 loss to the Buffalo Bills.

The Bills had a rushing success rate of 47% — a mark that would rank among the league’s top three — and a passing success rate of 65%, which would (by far) be the best passing offense ever. Buffalo generated a first down on 45% of its passing attempts and 26% of its rushing attempts. Josh Allen had an 88% completion percentage, averaging an efficient 6.3 yards per attempt. While the running game generated just 4.0 yards per carry, the Bills were able to turn to it whenever they needed. They also went 7 for 12 on third down.

Watching live, I noticed the defense was struggling when its three linebackers — Nick Bolton, Leo Chenal and Drue Tranquill — were on the field simultaneously. So I charted how Kansas City did in those situations.

The results were not great.

PkgTypePlysYdsYds/PlySuccess
Rate
4-3 BaseRun15563.746.7%
4-3 BasePass46817.00.0%
3-3-5Run3258.30.0%
3-3-5Pass68814.750.0%

Note: data excludes any play with a quarterback sneak, as it skews the success-rate and yards-per-play metrics.

Outside of the Chiefs’ base defense against the run, Kansas City really struggled to defend when all three linebackers were on the field.

Let’s take a look at what went wrong.

3-3-5 against the run​


The Chiefs only defended three runs from their nickel alignment, so there’s not too much to pick at.

Writing about the Chiefs struggles when having more linebackers on the field – either in 3-3-5 or 4-3 base

This is 3-3-5 Chiefs get into a 5-1 run here vs. a condensed formation, but Chenal is on the edge, who's giving up length and gets sealed. Once CB gets sealed, edge opens pic.twitter.com/iksella4Li

— Nate Christensen (@natech32) November 5, 2025

This play was an important one during the Bills’ first drive, gaining 17 yards. The Bills are in 11 personnel, go under center and condense the formation. When they do this, it gets Kansas City into a 5-1 defensive front.

In a 3-3-5, teams typically put some of their linebackers on the line of scrimmage — typically on the edge — so offensive linemen can’t climb to the second level. This leaves the MIKE linebacker free to tackle.

Here’s the downside: the linebackers have to set the edge — which Chenal has to do here. While he is outstanding against the run, he doesn’t have long arms. This makes it harder for him to take on blocks when he’s on the edge. He gets pinned inside — and when Jaylen Watson also loses the edge, it leaves way too much space on the sideline.

3-3-5 against the pass​


When the Chiefs defended the pass from the nickel, the Bills were able to get Dalton Kincaid a 23-yard touchdown and a 49-yard chunk play. With both plays, the main issue was poor communication.

On the Kincaid touchdown, I’m not quite sure what the Chiefs were trying to do.

This is 3-3-5 vs. the pass on the first Bills TD. Not really sure what the Chiefs were doing here, not really sure what Conner is really doing. Are they doubling Samuel or Shakir? Not sure, but poor communication gets Tranquill on Kincaid, who gets cooked pic.twitter.com/1T6vrrDFrV

— Nate Christensen (@natech32) November 5, 2025

Chamarri Conner gets caught in no-man’s land, not covering anyone. He’s not over the slot or the outside defender — and he’s well outside the box. It could be Kansas City is running a Cover-1 double on someone — but if they are, it’s not clear Conner knows who he’s doubling.

Whatever it is meant to do, this alignment puts Tranquill on Kincaid — who is too fast and athletic for the linebacker to defend on a slot fade — and there’s no help behind him.

The other play also had some poor communication.

Another long passing play from 3-3-5. This looks like a Tampa 2 to me with Conner dropping down the middle. Chenal doesn't pass his crosser off for him and Tranquill to exchange and Williams gets caught in no man's land on the backside. At least that's how I interpret this pic.twitter.com/l3vAxgRnFx

— Nate Christensen (@natech32) November 5, 2025

The coverage on this sanp appears to be Tampa 2. The Chiefs drop two deep safeties. Conner is the pole runner down the middle, carrying the vertical route from the slot. The Bills run two underneath in-breakers to the strong side and have Kincaid run a deep dig from the back side.

Chenal carries his in-breaker instead of passing it off to Tranquill, who is left in no man’s land covering a large area against Kincaid. Cornerback Nohl Williams is on the back side, but he’s stuck deciding where to drop; he’s too late to get into the dig window — and Kindcaid gets a big chunk of yardage.

4-3 base against the run​


As the game continued, the defense improved at defending the run from its base alignment. It changed its fronts, moving the safeties closer to the line of scrimmage. While these next three plays stand out as poor, Kansas City generally did well while defending the run from its base formation.

The three runs have some commonalities.

Tbh, the Chiefs did a pretty good job defending runs from their base, but these three stood out as not great moments. Bills are in 22 personnel for all and go UC. Chiefs have two safeties deep, so they're outgapped. Chiefs struggled to get off blocks, DTs getting sealed pic.twitter.com/8tdt2tgMjv

— Nate Christensen (@natech32) November 5, 2025

First, the Bills are in 22 personnel — two tight ends and a fullback. Second, the Chiefs have two deep safeties on each play. That means Kansas City is outgapped; there aren’t enough defenders in the box to account for all blockers and gaps. This makes it too easy for Buffalo’s elite, physical offensive line to seal and displace the Chiefs’ defensive tackles.

4-3 base against the pass​


A byproduct of the Bills running so much 22 personnel was that it got defenders creeping more toward the run.

A byproduct of the Bills being in heavy personnel is that after awhile, your players will be more aggressive vs. the run, and that leaves opportunities for players to leak out and get chunks, which happens here. Watson starts to fit the run and set the edge, and a TE runs behind pic.twitter.com/T3TTpYyP4X

— Nate Christensen (@natech32) November 5, 2025

That’s what happens here. Jaylen Watson starts to set the edge, but the Bills leak a tight end behind him. By the time he realizes it, he can’t catch up — and Buffalo gets a chunk of yardage. Buffalo makes a very good play-call that catches the Chiefs.

The bottom line​


Kansas City struggled when putting more linebackers on the field. Against the Bills, that’s a problem. People often think of Buffalo as a spread passing team — but over the last three years, it has completely flipped its identity. It is now a run-first, heavy-personnel offense. The Bills like to put run blockers on the field and maul you. Kansas City’s defense isn’t built to live that way snap after snap — and on Sunday, it showed.

So the Chiefs will need to be more prepared to play in base. Their coverage communication needs to be better — and they must do a better job of holding gaps, getting off blocks and matching numbers in the box.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ow-bills-used-chiefs-linebackers-against-them
 
Steelers poach practice squad defensive tackle; Chiefs make 2 moves

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According to a report from KPRC’s Aaron Wilson, the Pittsburgh Steelers have poached defensive tackle Brodric Martin from the Kansas City Chiefs’ practice squad.

#Steelers signing Brodric Martin off #Chiefs practice squad, per a league source

— Aaron Wilson (@AaronWilson_NFL) November 5, 2025

This follows two practice squad moves Kansas City made on Tuesday. The team signed defensive end Malik Herring — who had been waived from the roster to make room for the signing of defensive tackle Mike Pennel — and created a spot for him on the practice squad by releasing wide receiver Jimmy Holiday.

The 26-year-old defensive tackle was a third-round draft pick for the Detroit Lions back in 2023, but after injuries limited him to just five games over his first two seasons, the Lions waived him just before the final roster cutdown in August. The Chiefs — who had hosted the former North Alabama and Western Kentucky lineman on a top-30 visit before he was drafted — signed him to their initial practice squad after he cleared waivers.

During his time in Kansas City, Martin was elevated for one game — the Week 4 matchup with the Baltimore Ravens — but was ultimately a healthy scratch for that game.

Under NFL rules for signing a player from another team’s practice squad, Martin must now remain on Pittsburgh’s 53-man roster for at least three weeks.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ers-poach-brodrick-martin-chiefs-make-2-moves
 
Chiefs’ 2025 Bye Week Awards: Who wins top defensive rookie?

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There are nine games in the books — with eight more to go. The Kansas City Chiefs are taking their bye week in Week 10, so it’s time to dish out some midseason awards.

10 Arrowhead Pride contributors voted to award seven midseason awards.
In this post, we’ll reveal our top defensive rookie to this point of the season.


CB – Nohl Williams

VOTING: CB Nohl Williams (9), DE Ashton Gillotte (1)


The Arrowhead Pride staff nearly unanimously selected rookie cornerback Nohl Williams as the Chiefs’ top defensive rookie at the bye. The lone dissenting vote went to defensive end Ashton Gillotte.

A third-round pick (No. 85 overall) in the 2025 NFL Draft, Williams arrived in Kansas City with a well-traveled college resume. He spent three seasons at UNLV (2020–2022) before transferring to the University of California, Berkeley, where he closed out his collegiate career with two strong seasons in the Pac-12. That combination of experience and growth helped prepare him for the NFL learning curve — and so far, the rookie has made the most of his opportunity.

Through nine games, Williams has logged 148 defensive snaps. What’s stood out most is his ability to play tight man coverage on the outside — a trait that has brought valuable flexibility to Kansas City’s secondary. With Williams holding up on the perimeter, All-Pro cornerback Trent McDuffie has shifted inside to the slot a lot more this year, where his instincts and versatility are best utilized. That alignment has helped defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo maximize matchups and maintain coverage balance across personnel groupings.

Statistically, Williams has recorded 22 total tackles (10 solo) and three passes defensed. He’s been flagged for just two penalties — still an encouraging figure for a rookie cornerback adjusting to the speed and physicality of the NFL. According to Pro Football Focus, Williams holds an 86.4 coverage grade and an overall defensive grade of 72.6 entering Week 10.

Physically confident and quick to diagnose, Williams fits the mold of what Spagnuolo covets in an outside corner: aggressive in man coverage, capable in zone coverage and unafraid to challenge throws at the catch point. He’s shown poise in high-leverage moments and hasn’t looked overwhelmed by the bright lights — a promising sign for a first-year defensive back.

At just 23 years old, Williams is still growing into his role, but the early impact is undeniable. His emergence has given the Chiefs meaningful depth in the secondary — and a potential long-term answer on the boundary.

AP’s 2025 Bye Week Awards


Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...437/2025-bye-week-awards-top-defensive-rookie
 
Chiefs News 11/7: The Chiefs offered a 4th round pick for Breece Hall

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The latest​


NFL midseason predictions: Forecasting every division race, playoff bracket and surprise finish | CBS Sports

1. Chiefs

Current record: 5-4

Projected record: 12-5

Kansas City’s quest to win its 10th straight division title may come down to what happens during its two games against a Denver team that is looking to take the throne. The Chiefs may not be the invincible force that they once were, but they’re still a supremely talented team, led by two-time league and three-time Super Bowl MVP Patrick Mahomes.
The Chiefs edged out the Broncos in these projections based on a better division record.

Super Bowl predictions, midseason update: Seven NFL favorites to win it all in February | NFL.com

2 – Kansas City Chiefs

5 votes · +600

Jeremy Bergman: Chiefs over Eagles. My preseason pick is my midseason pick. Despite the Chiefs’ harried start, there was never a doubt they’d turn it around for a playoff run.

Chad Reuter: Chiefs over Lions. After the Eagles experienced a moment in the sun, the Chiefs rip back the spotlight by winning their fourth Lombardi Trophy in seven seasons.

Dante Koplowitz-Fleming: Chiefs over Seahawks. Mike Macdonald’s defense stymies the Chiefs in the first half with two takeaways and a defensive touchdown, but Patrick Mahomes leads another Super Bowl comeback to earn his fourth Super Bowl MVP.

Anthony Holzman-Escareno: Chiefs over Packers. Patrick Mahomes wins his fourth Super Bowl MVP, inching closer to the ghost of Tom Brady.

Grant Gordon: Chiefs over Rams. Standing strong with my August prognostication … Nope, the Chiefs aren’t done yet. Patrick Mahomes rekindles his deep-flight ways to lead Kansas City to the big game against the Rams, who are buoyed by a tough-as-shoe-leather Matthew Stafford, whose bad back doesn’t hinder his great arm. In the finale, the Chiefs rally for a nail-biting triumph, winning 26-24.

Chiefs at the bye: 3 predictions for the second half of the season | The Athletic

Per TruMedia, the Chiefs have two of the best four backs in the NFL at avoiding negative plays. Isiah Pacheco (7 percent) is best in the NFL when it comes to percentage of runs that are zero or fewer yards, while Kareem Hunt (11 percent) is fourth in the same metric. That’s out of 47 qualified running backs.

It might not be flashy, but it can still be effective. Pacheco and Hunt are both bigger backs who tend to move the pile forward, gaining an extra 2-3 yards on carries that a different back might fail to get.

And that’s why most running-back advanced measures indicate that the Chiefs’ running backs are … fine? Maybe even above average?

Hunt, for instance, averages 0.8 yards over expected per carry per Next Gen Stats’ metrics. That ranks 13th out of 43 qualified running backs, and also is the same total as Baltimore Ravens’ Derrick Henry and the New York Jets’ Breece Hall (a name you might’ve heard a lot lately).

Were Chiefs close to a deal to trade for Jets RB Breece Hall? | ESPN

Surprisingly, the Chiefs stood pat — a decision that was made just minutes before the deadline. The closest the Chiefs came to making a trade was for New York Jets running back Breece Hall. According to a team source, the negotiations between the teams broke down over the compensation for Hall, who is in the final year of his rookie contract. The Chiefs offered a 2026 fourth-round pick for the 24-year-old, who the source says wanted to join another team after fellow teammates cornerback Sauce Gardner and defensive tackle Quinnen Williams were traded Tuesday. The Jets, though, wanted a 2026 third-round pick.

“I think I’ve said this a million times over and over: Breece was not a guy I wanted to get rid of,” Jets first-year coach Aaron Glenn said Wednesday. “I mean, he’s a damn good player.”

Hall, who has recorded 581 rushing yards on 117 attempts, would have been an improvement for the Chiefs’ running attack, which has been the weakest element of the unit. According to the same team source, the Chiefs felt surrendering a 2026 third-round pick — a future player with four years of team control — was more valuable than eight games (and a potential postseason run) from Hall, who will be an unrestricted free agent in the spring.

NFL Quarterback Rankings 2025: A Second-Year Star Is on the Rise | SI

1. Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City Chiefs

Last ranking: 2


Mahomes is once again playing at an MVP level. He’s third in passing yardage (2,349), third in touchdown passes (17) and second in EPA (+71.7), trailing only Drake Maye. However, he’s taken half as many sacks (17) as Maye, avoiding the negative plays. Mahomes has also rushed for 285 yards, 20 first downs and four scores. In a year where so many quarterbacks are worthy of award talk, nobody has been more impressive than Mahomes, who didn’t have his top weapon in Rashee Rice until Week 7.

The Ringer’s 2025 QB Rankings | The Ringer

2. Patrick Mahomes

Nobody gets his team out of a jam like Mahomes. Whether it’s a slow start to a season or a third-down play gone haywire, the Chiefs quarterback always comes through. In 2025, Mahomes has done this by becoming a more decisive playmaker. He almost instantaneously finds weak spots in the defensive coverage—leading to a career-low time to throw—and he takes off as soon as the defense has the coverage advantage, which has him on pace for a career-high scramble rate. We’ve also seen Mahomes’s downfield aggressiveness return this season. His average depth of target is back up over 8 yards for the first time since 2020, before opponents figured out how to put a roof on Kansas City’s deep passing game. There have been some growing pains as Mahomes figures out how to mesh his new style of play (more quick, decisive passes) with the big-game hunting we saw in the first few years of his career. But it’s only a matter of time before Mahomes finds the right balance and reclaims his spot as the NFL’s best quarterback.

Around the NFL


Cowboys DE Marshawn Kneeland dies in apparent suicide at 24 | ESPN

Dallas Cowboys defensive end Marshawn Kneeland died Thursday morning from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot, according to law authorities.

The team put out a statement Thursday but did not mention a cause of death.

“It is with extreme sadness that the Dallas Cowboys share that Marshawn Kneeland tragically passed away this morning. Marshawn was a beloved teammate and member of our organization. Our thoughts and prayers regarding Marshawn are with his girlfriend Catalina and his family.”

Kneeland was 24.

The Cowboys have made counseling resources available to all players, coaches and staff. The players are on their bye week and are not scheduled to practice again until Monday.

Broncos’ pass rush too much for Raiders in defensive struggle | ESPN

It wasn’t artistic, but the Denver Broncos notched their seventh straight victory, outlasting the Las Vegas Raiders 10-7 in a defensive struggle at Empower Field on Mile High.

The Broncos stayed atop the AFC West thanks to a defense that sacked Raiders quarterback Geno Smith six times and held Las Vegas to only 10 first downs. Bo Nix hit Troy Franklin for Denver’s touchdown, while rookie running back Ashton Jeanty‘s touchdown was the only Raiders score. Raiders kicker Daniel Carlson missed a game-tying 48-yard field goal with 4:26 left.

In case you missed it on Arrowhead Pride


After inaction at the trade deadline, are the Chiefs headed to failure?

But the Chiefs’ defensive line definitely needs pass-rushing help. According to Pro Football Focus, Allen was under pressure for just eight of Sunday’s 30 dropbacks. On those, he was 3-for-5 for 45 yards and took three sacks. But when kept clean, he was 20-for-21 for 228 yards and a touchdown.

Sunday wasn’t an outlier. Kansas City has 20 sacks — which ranks 17th — but that feels misleading. According to PFR, only the Las Vegas Raiders, Cincinnati Bengals, Jets, Baltimore Ravens, Carolina Panthers and San Francisco 49ers have lower pressure rates — and no team has fewer hurries.

Why? The short answer is that Chris Jones is no longer playing at a Hall of Fame level — and he’s in the second year of a five-year contract worth more than $150 million. Halfway through the season, Jones has two sacks and 20 hurries. He had 15 sacks and 53 hurries in the season before his current deal was signed.

The Chiefs’ defensive structure depends on Jones sustaining that level of play into his early 30s. Unfortunately, it hasn’t played out that way.

Jones isn’t the only weak spot. Kansas City whiffed on Felix Anudike-Uzomah in the first round — and he’s out for the year. Omarr Norman-Lott’s injury eliminated interior depth, Mike Danna seems to have lost a step and Charles Omenihu hasn’t returned to his 2024 form. Finally, replacing Tershawn Wharton’s 2024 production — nine sacks and 28 hurries — has been more difficult than expected.

Social media to make you think

Talk to your people if a result like this ever feels logical.

I can be “people” if anyone ever needs it. https://t.co/qHh7CECA41

— Ron Kopp Jr (@RonOnChiefs) November 6, 2025

Follow Arrowhead Pride on Social Media


Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...iefs-offered-a-4th-round-pick-for-breece-hall
 
Chiefs’ 2025 Bye Week Awards: Who wins top offensive player?

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There are nine games in the books — with eight more to go. The Kansas City Chiefs are taking their bye week in Week 10, so it’s time to dish out some midseason awards.

For the first time, we have co-winners!



WRs – Xavier Worthy and Rashee Rice​

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VOTING: WR Xavier Worthy (3), WR Rashee Rice (3), TE Travis Kelce (2), C Creed Humphrey (1), LG Trey Smith (1)​


For both of these guys, you could almost argue that proof of their value is in what the team looked like when they weren’t on the field. For Worthy, it was a Week 1 shoulder injury. Rice began the season sidelined with a six-game NFL suspension for his role in a street racing incident.

With both Worthy and Rice out of the lineup, the Chiefs averaged just 15.6 points per game. But in Worthy’s first game back against the Baltimore Ravens, Kansas City scored 37 points. Rice rejoined the mix three weeks later when the Chiefs defeated the Las Vegas Raiders in a 31-0 blowout — a score that would have been higher if Kansas City head coach Andy Reid hadn’t instituted the mercy rule, pulling his starters at the beginning of the fourth quarter.

Since Week 4, the Chiefs’ offense has averaged 30.3 points per game. What’s distinctive about this duo is that while Worthy and Rice play the same position, they are drastically different players — a prototypical “Thunder and Lightning” duo.

Xavier Worthy​


Despite recording the fastest 40-yard dash time in NFL Combine history, Worthy is much more than a deep threat. He has developed his route tree since last season, using his speed to get open on short to intermediate routes as much as on deep shots. Reid loves to send his speedster on long crossing patterns and slants across the field, forcing defenders to cover him over as much area as possible.

Since defenses have to respect Worthy’s speed, they often cheat to the deeper side of his routes, leaving underneath comeback routes and curl patterns open. This makes Worthy an effective option all over the field.

His 256 receiving yards rank fifth on the team — and he plays bigger than his 5-foot-11, 165-pound frame might suggest. Perhaps the most exciting aspect of Worthy’s game is that he still has room to develop — and get better in areas where he has already excelled.

Rashee Rice​


Let’s be real: the only reason Rice didn’t run away with this award is because he’s only played three games this season — but in that short time, he has amassed 233 yards from scrimmage and scored four touchdowns.

Rice’s biggest strength is… well… his strength. He is a thick-bodied wide receiver who is a menace coming off the line of scrimmage. Due to his playing strength, he wins fast and often — which is why over half of his receiving yards (113) come after the catch.

Rice isn’t going to win any footraces, but he is far from a possession receiver, either. Just like the old saying, once the ball is in his hands, he becomes a running back. Speaking of his hands, he snatches the ball out of the air and excels at catching it in traffic — especially when a collision is imminent.

Rice is a complete player; there’s little he can’t do. The only things that have limited him are injuries and off-the-field problems — but when he’s on the field, he’s one of the most talented players on the roster — if not the entire NFL.



Click here for all of our 2025 Bye Week Awards.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...431/2025-bye-week-awards-top-offensive-player
 
In Week 10’s ‘Reacts’ poll, Chiefs’ fans want pass-rushing improvement

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Each week, we send out questions to the most plugged-in Kansas City Chiefs fans. You can see all of the recent survey results here.

And be sure to check out
FanDuel Sportsbook, the official sportsbook partner of SB Nation.


Chiefs fans’ confidence


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After three consecutive weeks polling 95% or higher, fans of the Kansas City Chiefs dramatically lost confidence in the direction of the team after the 28-21 loss to the Buffalo Bills. With a 5-4 record at the season’s midway point, Chiefs’ fan confidence is at the lowest since fans were polled after the 0-2 start to the year.


What needs to be worked on over the bye?


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Picking from four aspects of the team, Chiefs’ fans voted overwhelmingly for the defense’s pass rush as the area most needing to improve over the bye week. According to Pro Football Reference, the Chiefs rank 26th in team pressure rate.


NFL fans on the trade deadline


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Polled NFL fans believe cornerback Sauce Gardner — acquired by the Indianapolis Colts from the New York Jets before this week’s trade deadline — will make the biggest impact of the midseason trades across football.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/nfl-...0-results-chiefs-fans-want-improved-pass-rush
 
Chiefs’ 2025 Bye Week Awards: Who wins top defensive player?

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There are nine games in the books — with eight more to go. The Kansas City Chiefs are taking their bye week in Week 10, so it’s time to dish out some midseason awards.


CB – Trent McDuffie​

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VOTING: CB Trent McDuffie (5), DE George Karlaftis (3), LB Nick Bolton (1), S Bryan Cook (1)​


McDuffie is one of four Chiefs defenders who play virtually every snap for Kansas City’s defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. Along with Bolton, cornerback Jaylen Watson and safety Chamarri Conner, McDuffie has been a constant presence for a team that ranks fourth in points allowed per game (17.7) and third in passing first downs allowed per game (9.11).

McDuffie is the Chiefs’ Alpha in coverage. Spagnuolo deploys him based on matchups, using him where he fits best. This season, McDuffie leads the team in passes defended (6); no other Chief has more than one. According to PFF, McDuffie has allowed just 8.4 yards per reception — the fourth-fewest among NFL cornerbacks with 300 snaps logged. When targeted, he registers a 78.8 passer rating.

McDuffie has been the primary slot defender in passing situations. Overall, he has spent 25% of his defensive snaps in the slot and 64% outside. That leaves 12% where he aligns closer to the line of scrimmage — and that’s how McDuffie has totaled 47 tackles, the third-most among Kansas City defenders. He has also earned one sack and an interception.

McDuffie has 14 “stops” this year, a metric tracked by PFF to categorize tackles “that constitute a ‘failure’ for the offense.” In that stat, McDuffie ranks 11th among NFL cornerbacks in 2025.

Playing in his contract year, McDuffie hopes to prove he is one of the league’s elite cornerbacks — especially in coverage. In 2025, he’s picked up right where he left off as a two-time All-Pro, continuing a career trajectory that should soon make him one of the league’s highest-paid cornerbacks.



Click here for all of our 2025 Bye Week Awards

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...420/2025-bye-week-awards-top-defensive-player
 
2 big Chiefs thoughts during their bye week

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The Kansas City Chiefs’ bye week is an excellent time to take stock of where the team now stands. Here’s what I’ve been thinking this week.

1. It was entirely predictable that the Chiefs wouldn’t make trades​


It’s unfortunate. The NFL’s trade deadline happened right after the team’s 28-21 road loss to one of its fiercest AFC rivals: the Buffalo Bills. This — along with the team’s unexpected 5-4 record — amped up everyone’s expectations about what general manager Brett Veach needed to do. And to make things even worse, the team’s fans now have a whole extra week to get themselves worked into a lather about what they see as a deliberate lack of action at a critical moment.

But it was never likely the Chiefs would make a significant trade. The team definitely has roster needs to address, but has few resources available to meet them. As our Jared Sapp noted in his “Arrowhead Pride Mailbag” column two weeks ago, the team is already going to be $30 million over the salary cap in 2026 — and that’s with only 35 players under contract. That means the team will need every draft pick it can get to bring young, inexpensive players onto the roster. And it had just $3.3 million in cap space with which to work. That’s enough to deal with the team’s current commitments through the end of the season, but it leaves little for anything else.

A significant part of this cap space problem is from the relatively large number of players the team now has on its Reserve/Injured and Reserve/NFI lists. These 10 players are now occupying $10.1 million in cap space.

For the rest of it, though… Kansas City got into this situation on its own. Based on what we now know, the deal for cornerback Kristian Fulton was a mistake. So was last season’s trade for defensive end Josh Uche — and just before this season started, releasing defensive tackle Mike Pennel.

It’s reasonable to disagree with decisions like these. But once they’ve been made, we shouldn’t be mad that Veach passed on making a trade. Giving the New York Jets a third-round pick (plus $1.6 million in 2025 salary) for running back Breece Hall? Spending a third- or fourth-round pick (and $1.3 million) to get Dre’Mont Jones from the Tennessee Titans? Given the Chiefs’ circumstances, those deals were just too pricey.

We can expect Kansas City to make some other moves. But those will be for players being waived by teams whose seasons have become hopeless. (This is how the team acquired Terrell Suggs in 2019.) These players will be significantly less expensive against the cap — and, of course, won’t require giving up draft picks.

2. Is it possible the Chiefs are done?​


Since Sunday’s loss to the Bills, some have suggested that Kansas City’s season is over — that there’s no way the team can recover from its 5-4 start.

By looking at modern NFL history, it’s possible to reach that conclusion.

Since the 1970 merger, there have been 276 instances where a team had a 5-4 record after its ninth game. Most of these teams didn’t make the playoffs, but 121 (44%) did play in the postseason. Just 46 of these 5-4 teams (17%) won their divisions. Six (2%) went to the Super Bowl. Just two (less than 1%) won the championship.

So it’s true the Chiefs have dug themselves a pretty deep hole. Statistically, less than half of the 5-4 teams from the league’s modern era have made the playoffs — and only a tiny percentage of them have even come close to a championship.

Half of those outliers took advantage of a statistical quirk. On average, the whole league has had five 5-4 teams in each season since 1970. But in 2000 and 2001, there were five 5-4 teams in the AFC alone. In 2002, the AFC had six 5-4 teams. In each one of those parity-driven seasons, the AFC champion was one of those 5-4 teams. The Baltimore Ravens (2000) and New England Patriots (2001) won their Super Bowls, but the Oakland Raiders (2002) fell to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (coached by Jon Gruden, who had been the Raiders’ coach in the previous season) in Super Bowl XXXVII.

Unfortunately, the 2025 Chiefs aren’t that lucky. They are the only AFC team that started the season 5-4.

But that doesn’t necessarily mean you should count them out. Let’s not forget: in the 12 seasons Andy Reid has been the team’s head coach, the team has won 148 games. That leads the league by a lot — 20 more than the Seattle Seahawks in second place and 22 more than the Patriots in third. The team has had winning streaks of at least five games in every one of those seasons. These include 2015 — when the team won 10 straight after beginning the season 1-5 — and 2023, when the Chiefs were 9-6 after being humiliated by the Las Vegas Raiders on Christmas Day. They won six straight to finish that season — and win their second straight Super Bowl.

Those seasons with long winning streaks also include 2021. That year, Kansas City was 5-4 after nine weeks. The team finished 7-1 to end the season 12-5, defeated the Bills 42-36 in overtime — one of the greatest playoff games in NFL history — and then recorded a 27-24 overtime loss to the Cincinnati Bengals in the AFC championship.

And yes… that was another outlier season. Seven AFC teams started the 2021 season 5-4 — including the Bengals.

So make no mistake: it will not be easy for the Chiefs to make the postseason, win the division or get anywhere in January and February. If it succeeds — even partially — it will be remembered as the greatest challenge the franchise has ever overcome.

It reminds me of the old story. A man is walking down the street and falls into a hole. A doctor walks by, so the man asks for help getting out. The doctor tosses down a prescription and walks away. Then a priest comes along. Asked for help, he writes a prayer on a piece of paper and throws it down.

Finally a friend passes the hole. “Hey, Andy,” the man calls out. “Can you help me? I’ve fallen into this hole, and I can’t climb out.” Andy immediately jumps into the hole beside his friend.

“What’s the matter with you?“ the man asks incredulously. ”Now we’re both down here!“

“Yes,” replies Andy. “But I’ve been down here before. And I know the way out.”

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...3/2-big-chiefs-thoughts-during-their-bye-week
 
Chiefs’ 2025 Bye Week Awards: Who wins team MVP?

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There are nine games in the books — with eight more to go. The Kansas City Chiefs are taking their bye week in Week 10, so it’s time to dish out some midseason awards.


QB – Patrick Mahomes​

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VOTING: QB Patrick Mahomes (10)​


We’ll be fully transparent: most contributors had already cast their vote before Mahomes turned in what was arguably the most frustrating regular-season performance of his career in Week 9’s 28-21 loss to the Buffalo Bills.

That sour note heading into the bye, however, does not wipe away the streak Mahomes had been on after the season’s first two games.

Starting at halftime of Week 3’s contest against the New York Giants, Mahomes had put together one of the best stretches of his career. With half of the season now in the rearview, Mahomes is third in the league with 2,349 passing yards and in a six-way tie for third with 17 touchdown passes. Mahomes’ cumulative stats would be more impressive, however, had he not put himself in a position to watch much of the fourth quarter of Week 4’s contest against the Baltimore Ravens (and Week 7’s shutout of the Las Vegas Raiders) from the bench.

Mahomes has also continued to show his toughness as a runner, putting the offense on his legs when he’s been unable to win with his arm. In 2025, he has rushed for a career-high 31.7 yards per game — and has added four touchdowns on the ground.

While the Chiefs’ record is disappointing at 5-4, Mahomes’ ability for heroics has put the team in a position to tie or take the lead in every game. With some of the league’s best offenses on tap after the bye week, Kansas City will need to replicate the success Mahomes delivered for a month; he’ll need to quickly move past completing fewer than 50% of his passes for the first time in his career against Buffalo.

The sports betting industry is still banking on Mahomes playing at an elite level during the season’s second half. Even after four losses, Kansas City currently tops FanDuel Sportsbook’s odds to win Super Bowl LX. Mahomes ranks third in their odds to win this season’s NFL MVP award.

When the Chiefs return to the field against the Denver Broncos in Week 11, we expect Mahomes to be playing at an elite level. He has a strong chance to end his age-30 season among the NFL’s top 30 all-time passers — and in the top 20 for career touchdown passes.

Enjoy the ride! The best quarterback of his generation still calls Kansas City home.



Click here for all of our 2025 Bye Week Awards

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kansas-city-chiefs-roster/185418/2025-bye-week-awards-team-mvp
 
Chiefs News 11/10: Kansas City almost traded for Seahawks linebacker

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The latest​


Chiefs-Seahawks trade rumor details near deadline deal between Kansas City and Seattle | Sporting News

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, Seattle and Kansas City were close on a trade that centered around Seahawks linebacker Boye Mafe, who was the subject of trade rumors before deadline day.

However, despite the fact that it was believed something would get done, the Seahawks decided to hold on to their veteran linebacker.

“A near deal: At Tuesday’s NFL deadline, the Chiefs made a late strong push to acquire Seahawks linebacker Boye Mafe, per sources,” Schefter reported.

“Some thought the deal would get done; one source even thought it was completed. But right before the deadline, Seattle opted to hold on to Mafe,” he added.

There were no shortage of rumblings the Chiefs were on the lookout for a trade to improve their pass-rush, hence their interest in Mafe.

Patrick Mahomes ‘Extremely Proud’ of Texas Tech amid Push for CFP Bracket Spot | Bleacher Report

During an appearance on ESPN College GameDay before the game, Mahomes gave his take on the Red Raiders’ success so far this season, saying, “Extremely proud. I’ve seen the work day in and day out. I’ve stayed in tune, and the guys have been fighting to get to this moment. Great opportunity to go out there and seize it.”

With the Chiefs on their bye week, Mahomes was in attendance at Jones AT&T Stadium in Lubbock, Texas, to watch one of the most important games Texas Tech has played in years.

The Red Raiders were 8-1 overall and 5-1 in Big 12 play entering Saturday’s game, while BYU was 8-0 overall and 5-0 in conference.

Texas Tech is eighth in the College Football Playoff rankings, just one spot behind No. 7 BYU, meaning the Red Raiders have a legitimate chance to make the CFP field for the first time ever.

A win over BYU would go a long way toward potentially making that a reality, as it would allow Texas Tech to leapfrog the Cougars for first place in the Big 12.

In addition to Mahomes being on hand to watch the game, the Red Raiders were decked out in their all-white “Too Cold” uniforms as part of a collaboration with Adidas and Mahomes.

Former Chiefs Super Bowl champion wide receiver releases new rap album | USA Today

The Kansas City Chiefs have had many players who have gone on to pursue other ventures following their tenure with the team. Former Super Bowl champion Kadarius Toney is the latest to make his mark outside of football with the release of a new rap album.

Toney is continuing his much-discussed music career with the recent release of his rap album titled ‘WARRIOR4LYFE under his artist name ‘Yung Joka’. The former wide receiver has already released three full albums and multiple mixtapes since 2019.

The two-time Super Bowl champion last played in the NFL with the Cleveland Browns in the 2024 season. He was waived before the end of the season after mishaps during his brief tenure on the team.

Around the NFL


Paul Tagliabue, the NFL’s commissioner in an era of massive growth, dies at 84 | The Athletic

“All of us in the NFL are deeply saddened by the passing of Paul Tagliabue, whose principled leadership and vision put the NFL on the path to unparalleled success,” current NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement. “Throughout his decades-long leadership on behalf of the NFL, first as outside counsel and then during a powerful 17-year tenure as commissioner, Paul served with integrity, passion and an unwavering conviction to do what was best for the league.

“During his Hall of Fame NFL career, Paul fostered labor peace with our players, oversaw the expansion of the league to 32 teams, ushered in an era of state-of-the-art stadiums and laid the important groundwork of establishing the league as a global brand.”

Under Tagliabue, the NFL added four teams — the Carolina Panthers and Jacksonville Jaguars (1995), the Cleveland Browns (1999, replacing the previous team with the same name that moved to Baltimore and became the Ravens) and the Houston Texans (2002). He also oversaw multiple relocations beyond the Browns’ move to Baltimore, as the Rams and Raiders both left Los Angeles — for St. Louis and Oakland, respectively — and the Oilers left Houston for Tennessee and were rebranded as the Titans.

NFL Week 10 overreactions and reality checks: Colts’ Jonathan Taylor runaway MVP | CBS Sports

Buffalo’s Super Bowl window has closed

Overreaction or reality
: Overreaction

Maybe the most stunning result from Week 10 was the Buffalo Bills being blown out by the Miami Dolphins, 30-13. This loss was compounded by the Patriots defeating the Buccaneers on Sunday, which extended their lead in the AFC East. Now, Buffalo trails New England by two games in the win column for first place in the division, and is currently losing in the head-to-head tiebreaker. Beyond where Buffalo currently sits in the standings, the jarring result does bring questions about whether or not this team has missed its window for a championship. That would be a bit of a stretch, however. Yes, Buffalo has its deficiencies — including at wide receiver — but with Josh Allen under center, this team still has a championship ceiling, even if that comes via a wild-card entry.

Derrick Henry finally matched his high school stats after 10 years in the NFL | SB Nation

In Sunday’s game against the Minnesota Vikings, Henry gained 20 yards on 75 carries, bringing his season total to 629 rushing yards on 128 attempts. While he was stopped for no gain on his final carry of the afternoon, his 19th rushing attempt against the Vikings picked up three yards.

That carry brought his career total to 12,127 yards over his ten years in the NFL.

A mark that is just three yards more than he gained during his four years in high school.

Lions offense rolls as Dan Campbell takes over playcalling | ESPN

Detroit Lions coach Dan Campbell took over playcalling duties from first-year offensive coordinator John Morton this past week, and it ignited a dominant 44-22 victory over the Washington Commanders on Sunday.

Campbell said he met with Morton for an honest conversation to discuss some changes last Monday, a day after a stunning home loss to the Minnesota Vikings.

Entering Sunday’s game, Detroit ranked among the league leaders in total points per game but was still struggling to find an offensive identity outside of the home run plays.

“Look, it was honest, it was he and I and we were good,” Campbell said of the meeting. “And like I told him, ‘Man I need you … but I feel like this is something that I’m going to do.’

Colts top Falcons in overtime thriller in Germany | NBC Sports

The fans in Germany were treated to a highly entertaining early game on Sunday, with the Colts coming out on top 28-25 in overtime.

Colts running back Jonathan Taylor was the star of the show, carrying 32 times for 244 yards and three touchdowns, including the overtime game-winner.

It was a wild, back-and-forth battle that saw the teams trade touchdowns and the Falcons take a late fourth-quarter lead, only to have Colts kicker Michael Badgley hit a field goal with 25 seconds left in the fourth quarter to tie the game 25-25 and send it into overtime.

After the referee initially botched the overtime coin toss, the Falcons eventually won the re-flip and elected to receive, but their offense couldn’t move the ball and punted after the opening possession. From there the Colts marched the ball down the field, with Taylor doing the bulk of the work and reaching the end zone to win it.

In case you missed it on Arrowhead Pride


Chiefs’ 2025 Bye Week Awards: Who wins team MVP?

VOTING: QB Patrick Mahomes (10)

We’ll be fully transparent: most contributors had already cast their vote before Mahomes turned in what was arguably the most frustrating regular-season performance of his career in Week 9’s 28-21 loss to the Buffalo Bills.

That sour note heading into the bye, however, does not wipe away the streak Mahomes had been on after the season’s first two games.

Starting at halftime of Week 3’s contest against the New York Giants, Mahomes had put together one of the best stretches of his career. With half of the season now in the rearview, Mahomes is third in the league with 2,349 passing yards and in a six-way tie for third with 17 touchdown passes. Mahomes’ cumulative stats would be more impressive, however, had he not put himself in a position to watch much of the fourth quarter of Week 4’s contest against the Baltimore Ravens (and Week 7’s shutout of the Las Vegas Raiders) from the bench.

Mahomes has also continued to show his toughness as a runner, putting the offense on his legs when he’s been unable to win with his arm. In 2025, he has rushed for a career-high 31.7 yards per game — and has added four touchdowns on the ground.

Social media to make you think

Y’all remember the GREATEST game in NFL History?

RAMS: 54
CHIEFS: 51

Both teams were 9-1

Both QB’s threw for 400+ Yards

Both teams scored 50+ points (1st time)

Mahomes: 33/46, 478 Yards, 6 TD’s, 3 INT’s

Goff: 31/49, 413 Yards, 4 TD’s, 0 INT’s

14 Total TD’s scored.. pic.twitter.com/gKVrTlZyQL

— Austin Abbott (@AustinAbbottFF) November 8, 2025

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Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ot-deadline-deal-done-for-seahawks-linebacker
 
How the Chiefs’ aggressive fourth-down calls have helped them in 2025

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Coming out of their bye week, the Kansas City Chiefs are 5-4 on the season, sitting third in the AFC West. So far, this season has shown little of the dominance displayed by the Chiefs since quarterback Patrick Mahomes took over the offense in 2018. Down the stretch, the team will have to fight to make the playoffs.

One thing that will help is that after some early-season struggles, the Kansas City offense appears to be back on track — aided in large part by the team’s fourth-down decision-making.

During Reid’s early seasons with the Chiefs, the team was routinely in the lower third of the league in fourth-down attempts. During Mahomes’ first four seasons as a starter, Kansas City’s highest number of attempts was 16 in 2020. That season, the team converted only nine of those attempts, which also ranked toward the bottom of the league.

But in recent years, all of that has changed.

Increases in attempts and conversions​


By now, most of the NFL has joined the high-risk, high-reward world of fourth-down attempts. Over his career, Reid has typically been one of the league’s more conservative coaches in this area — but this season, he has bucked his own trend.

Chiefs' 4th down numbers the last four seasons:

2022: 9 for 12 – 2nd in %
2023: 10 for 20 – t16 in %
2024: 12 for 17 – 3rd in %
2025: 16 for 20 – 3rd in %

Already converting at a high rate, and we have not seen a Reid-led team this eager to go for it on 4th down situations.

— Caleb James (@CJScoobs) November 5, 2025

Over the last three seasons, the Chiefs have increased the number of times they’ve gone for it on fourth down, staying in step with a league where these aggressive decisions have become more common.

In 2025, however, they’ve outdone themselves. The team has elected to go for it on fourth down 20 times this season. Second to the Carolina Panthers (who have 21 this season), that’s easily Kansas City’s highest rate since head coach Andy Reid arrived in 2013.

The Chiefs’ 16 conversions from these attempts leads the league. And while many teams have depended on variations of the tush push to succeed on fourth down, Kansas City has managed to lead the league without a single quarterback sneak.

Breaking down the snaps​


The Chiefs’ fourth-down attempts have been evenly divided between passes and runs — and the team has converted eight of the 10 plays of each type. This balance has made the team unpredictable in these situations — but it has also leaned heavily on one player: running back Kareem Hunt, who converted all eight rushing first downs. He’s also caught two fourth-down conversions — one of them good for a touchdown.

Wide receivers Hollywood Brown and Xavier Worthy have both collected a pair of fourth-down receptions — and each has also recorded a fourth-down score. Otherwise, Mahomes, the other wideouts (and tight end Travis Kelce) have pitched in to keep the sticks moving.

Success with Hunt​


Hunt became the team’s short-yardage back in 2024. He’s reprised this role in 2025, becoming an important factor in the team’s success.

Kareem Hunt has converted ten of the Chiefs' 16 fourth-down conversions this season. He has definitely been an asset when they need a few tough yards. pic.twitter.com/Oj7r8KlTuV

— Caleb James (@CJScoobs) November 8, 2025

While the offensive tackles have been inconsistent this season, the reliable interior trio of Kingsley Suamataia, Creed Humphrey and Trey Smith — with Mike Caliendo sprinkled in — have provided Hunt with the blocking he’s needed to be nearly automatic in these situations, earning the full trust of the coaching staff.

Hunt might not be the player he once was, but he is certainly making the most of his second act as a premier short-yardage back.

Why now?​


The some extent, Kansas City’s increased aggression on fourth down is due to Reid’s supreme trust in his running back, quarterback and interior offensive line. But the AFC’s postseason race is also a factor. With key divisional games on the horizon (not to mention a crucial Week 12 matchup against the Indianapolis Colts), the team’s newfound aggression is almost out of necessity. The AFC is loaded with talent — and many teams are going all-out to beat the Chiefs so they can capitalize on their own Super Bowl windows.

Reid knows all of this — and also that with its 5-4 record, Kansas City is on the outside looking in. To do the unthinkable — for his team to fight its way back to a fourth consecutive Super Bowl — he knows it will take an extraordinary effort. So his once-conservative approach to fourth-down decision-making has disappeared.

And it’s exactly what the Chiefs need.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ressive-fourth-down-calls-have-helped-in-2025
 
Chiefs News 11/11: As it stands, Chiefs would have the 17th pick in the NFL Draft

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The latest​


2026 NFL Mock Draft: Three top-five QBs and a No. 1 pick nobody saw coming | CBS Sports

17 – Kansas City Chiefs

Avieon Terrell CB
Clemson • Jr • 5’11” / 180 lbs

Jaylen Watson and Joshua Williams are slated to hit free agency after the season. Watson likely returns, but the Chiefs haven’t historically overvalued the position — and a Trent McDuffie extension should be a priority. Aveion Terrell steps in to fill the potential void.

2026 NFL Draft order and updated needs for every team | NFL.com

17 – Kansas City Chiefs

Strength of schedule:
.500

Remaining SOS: .546 (8)

Week 11 opponent: at Broncos

Biggest needs: TE, CB, RB, DL, WR

The Chiefs have not drafted a tight end in the first three rounds since selecting Travis Kelce in 2013, but it might be wise for the team to invest in a young difference-maker at the position in 2026. Kelce, a future Hall of Famer, is in a contract year at 36 years old and Noah Gray, signed through 2027, is a solid backup.

Andy Reid on Chris Jones’ production: ‘We all need to do better’ | Chiefs Wire

During a media availability session on Monday, Chiefs head coach Andy Reid was asked if Jones needed to take his game to another level after Kansas City’s bye week.

Reid made a point to keep from throwing his veteran sackmaster under the bus, and emphasized that his whole team has room for improvement.

“I think we all need to do better,” Reid said, “I would say that. Chris (Jones) is always striving to do better every day. That’s what has made him (Chris Jones) such a good player. Again, he’s the guy that they’re going to focus on and if you’re getting a double team, that’s who’s getting doubled. He’ll get his as we go forward, it’s just important that he stays consistent and keeps working hard.”

Ex-Chiefs safety’s slide continues after Steelers made a telling decision | Arrowhead Addict

Thornhill signed a one-year free-agent deal with Pittsburgh last March to bolster the secondary and provide championship experience for Teryl Austin’s defense. The entire unit has disappointed through the first 9 games for the 5-4 Steelers, and now they’ve singled out Thornhill in the hopes of improving the unit. It also sends a warning shot to other lackluster performers.

The Steelers are filling Thornhill’s spot with the signing of safety Sebastian Castro on waivers following his release from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. As for where Thornhill goes, that’s anybody’s guess.

Teams already familiar to Thornhill are the Kansas City Chiefs, who drafted him in the second round of the 2019 NFL Draft, and the Cleveland Browns, who gave him life-changing money in the form of a three-year deal worth up to $21 million in 2023.

Around the NFL


Giants fire Brian Daboll as head coach, and he had it coming | SB Nation

Daboll was hired to much fanfare in 2022 as part of a culture shift inside the organization. Coming from winning pedigrees in Buffalo, Kansas City, and New England it initially felt like he was the right man to get the job done after winning Coach of the Year honors in his first season, when he led the Giants to a 9-7-1 record, a surprise playoff berth, and a playoff win.

Unfortunately things only went down from there.

Routinely the Giants were underachievers. Never the worst team in the league, but nothing about them inspired any kind of faith. In 2023 the team regressed with a revolving door of quarterbacks to finish 6-11, which got worse in 2024 with a 3-14 record. Every year began with the promise that this would be the time Daboll had the pieces to finally make things work, only to reveal more disappointment.

Bengals’ Joe Burrow practices, hopes to return Thanksgiving Day | ESPN

Burrow said Monday that it will be very meaningful if he can return from a turf toe injury on his left foot for the Thanksgiving Day game against the Baltimore Ravens on Nov. 27. Two years ago, Burrow suffered a season-ending wrist injury during a November prime-time game at M&T Bank Stadium that was also on a Thursday night.

He officially returned to practice Monday in a limited capacity as the team opened his 21-day window to return from injured reserve.

“We’ll see how these next couple weeks go,” Burrow said in his first news conference since the injury. “There’s a lot that goes into it. There’s a lot of variables that you have to consider.”

Nick Sirianni Defends Decision to Go for Controversial 4th Down in Win vs. Packers | SI

Nick Sirianni put his Eagles in a dangerous spot on Monday when he decided to go for it on fourth-and-6 toward the end of the game against the Packers.

After recovering a Packers fumble on fourth-and-1 late in the fourth quarter with about 1:26 remaining, the Eagles, leading 10-7, appeared to be on their way to a victory. The Packers had two timeouts, and managed to stop the Eagles on the first three plays of their final series. Rather than attempt a field goal or punt the football away, the Eagles decided to go for it on fourth-and-6. Quarterback Jalen Hurts threw deep to receiver A.J. Brown, and the pass fell incomplete.

This incompletion gave the Packers the ball back at their own 36-yard line with 27 seconds to go, handing them a good opportunity to gain at least 25 yards and attempt a potential game-tying field goal. Fortunately for the Eagles, the Packers offense that had been dysfunctional for much of the night wasn’t able to generate much else on the final drive. The Packers offense did enough to put kicker Brandon McManus in position to attempt a 64-yard field goal, but on a windy night at Lambeau, it easily missed.

In case you missed it on Arrowhead Pride


How the Chiefs’ aggressive fourth-down calls have helped them in 2025 | Arrowhead Pride

Breaking down the snaps

The Chiefs’ fourth-down attempts have been evenly divided between passes and runs — and the team has converted eight of the 10 plays of each type. This balance has made the team unpredictable in these situations — but it has also leaned heavily on one player: running back Kareem Hunt, who converted all eight rushing first downs. He’s also caught two fourth-down conversions — one of them good for a touchdown.

Wide receivers Hollywood Brown and Xavier Worthy have both collected a pair of fourth-down receptions — and each has also recorded a fourth-down score. Otherwise, Mahomes, the other wideouts (and tight end Travis Kelce) have pitched in to keep the sticks moving.

Social media to make you think

Giving back to the KC community ❤️

At their 6th annual gala, the 15 and the Mahomies Foundation announced that in the past year, they granted over $1.5 million to 27 local charities! pic.twitter.com/s45wFg8Fd6

— Kansas City Chiefs (@Chiefs) November 10, 2025

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Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...efs-would-have-the-17th-pick-in-the-nfl-draft
 
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