Revisiting 5 of my biggest preseason questions about the Chiefs

2184044905.jpg


In a series of articles published over the summer, I covered the 10 biggest questions facing the Kansas City Chiefs in 2025. During the bye week, I revisited the questions. We’ll look at the other five in a later article.

1. How well will Jaden Hicks replace Justin Reid?


Before the season, it felt like second-year safety Jaden Hicks was a natural replacement for veteran former Chiefs’ safety Justin Reid. Both are long, dense safeties who are best at playing in the box and helping in run support. However, I underestimated the coverage gap between Reid and Hicks. Reid was smart and generally in the right spots. Hicks doesn’t have that experience yet.

After struggling to start the year, Hicks’ role has lightened. He has been on the field for roughly 50% of snaps, but it changes based on the Chiefs’ need for his skill set. Against the Buffalo Bills, Hicks only saw four snaps while defensive back Christian Roland-Wallace (16 snaps) played in dime personnel alongside starting safeties Bryan Cook and Chamarri Conner.

2. Can the Chiefs improve their pass rush this season?


So far, the answer is no, but it’s not significantly better or worse than last year. Defensive end George Karlaftis has had maybe his best season by getting quick pressure more often, while defensive tackle Chris Jones hasn’t played quite as well this year. In my opinion, Jones is lacking in dominant moments.

After Jones and Karlaftis, the Chiefs’ pass rush has been very poor. Two years removed from injury, I was hoping defensive end Charles Omenihu would bounce back, but he hasn’t regained his form. Defensive end Mike Danna is also less impactful than in previous years. Rookie defensive end Ashton Gillotte has some nice moments, but he’s not ready to really contribute. Rookie defensive tackle Omarr Norman-Lott was drafted to replace some of what Kansas City had in former defensive tackle Tershawn Wharton, but he tore his ACL before he could get going.

The Chiefs’ pass rush wins with Jones or Karlaftis — or from a designed pressure by defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. Over the last two years, it has not been a fruitful strategy for Kansas City to rush four.

3. Which 2022 draft pick will have the best contract year?


When I wrote the original piece, Karlaftis had not yet been extended, so he is now disqualified from a contract year. The team has exercised its fifth-year option on cornerback Trent McDuffie, keeping him under contract next season.

For the rest of the class, cornerback Jaylen Watson is having the best year. He continues to be a very good No. 2 cornerback. He’s smart in zone coverage, defends screens and stops the run. On top of that, his length and ball skills make him a positive factor in man coverage. The former seventh-round pick is a great success story. Hopefully, the Chiefs reward him with an extension this offseason.

4. What will be the Chiefs’ best offensive line?​


Before the season, it wasn’t clear what the Chiefs’ best offensive line combination was going to be. Left tackle Josh Simmons was a rookie coming off a major leg injury, veteran tackle Jaylon Moore was signed in free agency and right tackle Jawaan Taylor had competition behind him. In addition, it wasn’t a guarantee that left guard Kingsley Suamataia would play well enough to hold his spot.

Fortunately for the Chiefs, their original starting five of Simmons, Suamataia, center Creed Humphrey, right guard Trey Smith and Taylor proved to be the best. Simmons has been fantastic all season and Suamataia gets better every week. Taylor still has his warts; he continues to have issues with penalties — and with dealing with power — but he’s steadily improved over the course of the year. Simmons’ personal absence is the only reason the starting offensive line has changed at all.

5. Where should Trent McDuffie play this season?


Kansas City’s defensive formation is typically dictated by where McDuffie plays. When he is in the slot, the Chiefs can weaponize him by blitzing him, having him drop to safety or cover a slot receiver one-on-one. The downside is less-effective play from outside cornerbacks; when McDuffie is outside, you have a shutdown corner.

In 2025, it’s been some of both for McDuffie. It typically depends on which opposing receivers are on the field — and on the game situation.

The Chiefs have sometimes put McDuffie in the slot and let rookie cornerback Nohl Williams play on the outside. Williams has played 29% of snaps this season, but recently played 67% snaps against the Bills. The Chiefs put McDuffie in the slot to counter Bills’ receiver Khalil Shakir — and also so he would be in position to blitz quarterback Josh Allen. It wouldn’t be surprising to see this trend continuing after the bye.

When McDuffie is playing outside, safety Chamarri Conner tends to man the slot. Unfortunately, he has struggled to play coverage from that alignment. In Week 1, the Los Angeles Chargers identified Conner as a weakness and picked on him. Since then, Conner has been playing more deep safety — and to his credit, he has held up well.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kansas-city-chiefs-roster/186222/revisiting-5-preseason-questions
 
Chiefs News 11/12: Analyst believes Chiefs will win AFC number 1 seed

gettyimages-1200608487.jpg

The latest​


NFL picks: Predicting every remaining game, final record, playoff outlook for each AFC team | NFL.com

Chiefs’ midseason report card
Projected record through Week 10: 7-2

Kansas City’s actual record: 5-4

Games correct: 5 of 9

I was right about … the Chiefs losing their fifth straight regular-season game to the Bills.

I was wrong about … Week 4 vs. the Ravens. In hindsight, probably a bit overzealous of me to underestimate the reigning AFC champs at home. Even if Lamar Jackson hadn’t exited early with a hamstring injury, the Chiefs were the superior team that Sunday afternoon, outclassing a Baltimore squad that wasn’t quite right out of the gate.

Second-half double down

Despite entering Week 11 three wins shy of the Broncos’ total and sitting third in the division, Kansas City stacks enough victories down the stretch — including both tilts with Denver — to capture its 10th consecutive AFC West title.

Final projection

Record: 13-4 (previous projection: 12-5)

Division finish: 1st (previous: same)

Will the Chiefs make the playoffs? Yes, as the No. 1 seed.

Chiefs vs Broncos: Betting Trend for Week 11 | The Mothership

The Kansas City Chiefs are coming off a bye going into their Week 11 matchup against the Denver Broncos.

Historically, this is a good thing for Andy Reid-coached teams.

Reid is 22-4 coming off a bye as head coach, which is the best record of any coach in NFL history. He was 13-1 after a bye with the Eagles and is 9-3 with the Chiefs.

The Kansas City coach is only 1-2 in games when both teams are coming off a bye, but when his team is coming off a bye and the other team played the week before, Reid is 21-2.

That will be the case this week, as Denver played at Las Vegas on Thursday Night Football in Week 10.

As of Monday’s NFL odds at BetMGM, the Chiefs are a 3.5-point favorite.

Giants’ head coach search might end with the Super Bowl legend they already know | Arrowhead Addict

NFL reporter Ian Rapoport recently spoke about the Giants’ head coaching opening and called it “one of the more coveted head coach openings in the NFL.” That’s due to the presence of young talent already on the roster, including quarterback Jaxson Dart. For Spagnuolo’s sake, it wouldn’t hurt to have such a fearsome front line anchored by Brian Burns, Dexter Lawrence, and Abdul Carter.

“[The Giants] now have, I would say, one of the more coveted head coach openings in the NFL. By the way, general manager Joe Schoen will not only stay on as GM, but run the search,” explained Rapoport in a recent update.

“Among the names I would keep an eye on as the Giants, let’s say, potentially look to kind of regain some of the greatness of the Tom Coughlin era, I would say Steve Spagnuolo and Antonio Pierce, two head coach candidates. Both guys they will look at. Lou Anarumo also has ties to the Giants organization.”

2025 NFL Power Rankings Week 11: The NFC is Much Better Than the AFC | FOX Sports

5-4

Super Bowl odds: +600

Still a dangerous team, but they come out of their bye with a 5-4 record and needing to win now. Big tests are looming, too, at Denver and versus the Colts.

Around the NFL


Source: Eagles’ Jaire Alexander, 28, stepping away from NFL | ESPN

Philadelphia Eagles cornerback Jaire Alexander has decided to step away from football in order to focus on getting right physically and mentally amid his ongoing recovery from offseason knee surgery, a league source told ESPN on Tuesday, confirming a Fox Sports report.

Alexander, 28, informed the Eagles of his decision Tuesday, a day after their victory over the Green Bay Packers on “Monday Night Football.” He did not travel with the team to Green Bay for the game.

Jaguars WR/CB Travis Hunter undergoes season-ending knee surgery | NFL.com

The No. 2 overall pick underwent season-ending knee surgery to repair his LCL, NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reported on Tuesday, per sources informed of the procedure.

There was no additional damage to the injured knee, and Hunter is expected to return to football activities within six months, Rapoport added.

The team later confirmed the news.

It’s a disaster scenario for the Jags, who initially hoped that the knee injury suffered in practice two weeks ago would be a short-term issue. Hunter was placed on injured reserve, ruling him out for at least four contests. Instead, his rookie campaign is over after just seven games.

In case you missed it on Arrowhead Pride


Revisiting 5 of my biggest preseason questions about the Chiefs | Arrowhead Pride

2. Can the Chiefs improve their pass rush this season?

So far, the answer is no, but it’s not significantly better or worse than last year. Defensive end George Karlaftis has had maybe his best season by getting quick pressure more often, while defensive tackle Chris Jones hasn’t played quite as well this year. In my opinion, Jones is lacking in dominant moments.

After Jones and Karlaftis, the Chiefs’ pass rush has been very poor. Two years removed from injury, I was hoping defensive end Charles Omenihu would bounce back, but he hasn’t regained his form. Defensive end Mike Danna is also less impactful than in previous years. Rookie defensive end Ashton Gillotte has some nice moments, but he’s not ready to really contribute. Rookie defensive tackle Omarr Norman-Lott was drafted to replace some of what Kansas City had in former defensive tackle Tershawn Wharton, but he tore his ACL before he could get going.

The Chiefs’ pass rush wins with Jones or Karlaftis — or from a designed pressure by defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. Over the last two years, it has not been a fruitful strategy for Kansas City to rush four.

Social media to make you think

Man went to the opps https://t.co/U6zdO5C1eF

— Ty Hill (@cheetah) November 11, 2025

Follow Arrowhead Pride on Social Media


Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...st-believes-chiefs-will-win-afc-number-1-seed
 
Chiefs’ Andy Reid unsure if Josh Simmons will start against the Broncos

gettyimages-2232003955.jpg


It’s officially been one month since rookie left tackle Josh Simmons took a break from football to deal with a personal matter, and although he is back in Kansas City practicing with the team, Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid is still declining to say whether Simmons will be back in his starting job this Sunday against the Denver Broncos.

“Yeah, we’ll just see,” Reid told reporters before Wednesday’s practice. “I haven’t even got him out for a practice yet, so let’s see how he’ll jump in and see what he can do and mix it up out there and do… and then we’ll go from there.”

So while it was far from a guarantee that Simmons will start against the Broncos, it was also a long way from ruling him out. One thing Reid has to take into consideration is that backup tackle Jaylon Moore has filled in pretty well in Simmons’ absence — although that has been complicated by right tackle Jawaan Taylor having his ankle banged up during the Chiefs’ Week 9 loss to the Buffalo Bills.

The good news is that both Simmons and Taylor were full participants in Wednesday’s practice. If the Chiefs do need some time to let Simmons work back into form, their hand isn’t being forced.

Still, Reid seemed cautiously hopeful that his tackle would be ready sooner rather than later.

“Let’s just see what kind of shape he’s in,” said Reid. “Get back into the football swing… I’m sure he’s gonna be OK, but we’ll see.”

As for quarterback Patrick Mahomes, he believes the team is “full steam ahead” as it tries to get its season back on track after a disappointing 5-4 start. He has faith that either Simmons or Moore can get the job done.

“We’re super excited to have Josh back and just being back in the building,” he said on Wednesday. “We’ll get him out in the practice field and see where he’s at. But I think you saw with both those guys, they can both play at a very high level — so I think Coach will make that decision as the week goes on. But I have confidence in both of them that they’ll go out there and have success.”

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...-on-josh-simmons-starting-against-the-broncos
 
Chiefs News 11/13: Chiefs are still Super Bowl favorites

gettyimages-1446535394.jpg

The latest​


Super Bowl odds: Here come the Los Angeles Rams! | The Athletic

Before this NFL season started, sportsbooks gave the Los Angeles Rams a roughly 4 percent chance to win the Super Bowl, tied for 10th place on the betting board with their L.A. rivals, the Chargers.

Now they’re in second behind only the perennial odds darlings, the Kansas City Chiefs. The Rams have ridden a 7-2 record to +700 odds, which implies an over 12 percent chance of winning it all. The Chiefs are now at +550, which is a little over 15 percent. If Los Angeles wins their blockbuster NFC West matchup against the equally hot Seattle Seahawks this week, expect those odds to get even shorter.

Of course, week-to-week changes don’t necessarily make a huge difference in the odds, as the Chiefs’ stranglehold on the top spot evidences after their loss to the Buffalo Bills in Week 10 before their bye, putting them at a bizarre 5-4, good for eighth in the AFC, tied with the Jacksonville Jaguars (who, incidentally, beat them in Week 5).

Ex-Chiefs QB coach Mike Kafka is the Giants’ new interim head coach | Chiefs Wire

According to multiple reports, the Giants fired head coach Brian Daboll on Monday, following the team’s 2-8 start and a recent four-game losing streak. New York has promoted Kafka to interim head coach, adding another former Andy Reid assistant to the ranks of head coaches.

“Yes, (the Chiefs are) a great team. It was an awesome experience. But this opportunity was something that was special to me and my family. It wasn’t just something I took on a whim. I wasn’t just going to go to any team. It had to be built the right way with the people, Kafka said during his first press conference in front of New York media in 2022, “I have a lot of great relationships and great people in the Chiefs organization, and I respect them and have a lot of respect for the coaching staff and the guys there.”

NFL Week 11 picks, score predictions: Chiefs edge Broncos, Rams over Seahawks | CBS Sports

The problem with leading the league in sacks when you’re about to face the Chiefs is that Patrick Mahomes almost seems to enjoy getting sacked. Somehow, he plays even better when he gets sacked a few times. Since the start of the 2024 season, Mahomes is 8-1 when he gets sacked three or more times in a game. When he’s facing pressure, that gives him a chance to make something out of nothing on a broken play and as we all know at this point, no one is better at making something out of nothing. There’s a reason his nickname is Homesdini. OK, I’ll admit it, I’m the only one who calls him that.

There is a reason the Chiefs have won nine straight division titles and it’s because they always seem to win games like this. This is the fourth time in five years that the Chiefs have entered Week 11 with at least two losses and every time that happens, we start to write them off, and every time we do that, they respond by going on a run that ends up with them in the Super Bowl.

If the Broncos win, I promise to start trusting them, but I won’t be picking against the Chiefs in a must-win divisional showdown until someone proves they can actually beat them.

PICK: Chiefs 27-23 over Broncos | Chiefs -3.5 | Odds via DraftKings Sportsbook

Ten modern-day NFL stars with the throwback swagger to thrive in ’95 | NFL.com

Patrick Mahomes

Makes magic and directs traffic like: Steve Young

The easy comp here is one that followed Mahomes out of college — Brett Favre. The one that makes more sense involves another Hall-of-Fame quarterback in that era who could make plays with his legs and his arm — Young. Mahomes has become a legend because of moments that drop jaws and leave fans scratching their heads in amazement. What’s often underrated about his game is the cool efficiency that made Young so dangerous. Yes, Mahomes could surely have sliced and diced defenses in the ’90s, but his penchant for managing the game (he ranks third in NFL history with a 101.8 career passer rating) would’ve been just as potent as his superpowered heroics.

Of course, it also helps that the man has three Super Bowl victories under his belt. If you want somebody who can hang with the heavyweights of the day — a group that includes Favre, Young, Troy Aikman, John Elway, Dan Marino, Jim Kelly and Warren Moon — you had better have a guy who knows how to win. That is what separates Mahomes from Buffalo’s Josh Allen, while his durability makes him an easy pick over Joe Burrow. If you’re wondering why Lamar Jackson didn’t make the grade, then think about that decade. Sadly, it is highly unlikely anyone would’ve been open-minded or creative enough to build an offense around his skillset as a QB. Mahomes is the guy, hands down.

2026 NFL Mock Draft: Giants add weapon for Jaxson Dart; Browns target QB, WR | CBS Sports

Round 1 – Pick 17
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 free agency: Early top-25 ranking and predictions | ESPN

15. Jaylen Watson, CB

Current team: Kansas City Chiefs
2025 salary: $3.4 million
Age entering 2026 season: 27

What he brings: Watson isn’t a high-end playmaker, but he has the length to challenge in press, along with the route awareness to play top-down on the ball in zone schemes. Watson has two career interceptions and 22 pass breakups. — Bowen

What we’re hearing: Watson isn’t a marquee name but is one that generated buzz when discussing free agents with teams. “He’ll have a nice market,” an AFC executive said. “He could surprise some people.” The Chiefs’ extension candidates include star corner Trent McDuffie, which could force Watson to go elsewhere during the offseason. — Fowler

Chiefs DL George Karlaftis takes his game to another level this season | Chiefs Wire

The Kansas City Chiefs‘ defense has grown throughout the season, with moments of elite play from their stars, veterans, and rookies. A player they invested in long-term during the offseason is proving, week in and week out, the high value of that decision on the defensive line.

George Karlaftis has been a consistent threat on the defensive line alongside All-Pro Chris Jones. He’s collected 32 combined tackles and five sacks through nine games this season. He has found various ways to apply pressure to opposing quarterbacks and to affect opponents’ offensive game plans.

Last offseason, Karlaftis agreed to a four-year contract extension with the Chiefs, worth up to $93 million. He’s contributed mightily to Kansas City being ranked third in total defense through nine weeks.

Around the NFL


Cowboys official reported Marshawn Kneeland text, asked for welfare check | ESPN

On the night Dallas Cowboys defensive end Marshawn Kneeland died, the team’s director of security, Cable Johnson, called law enforcement to ask for a welfare check on Kneeland and to tell police Kneeland had sent a text saying he didn’t want to go to jail.

“He sent out some group texts that are concerning — probably mental health — but the group texts seemed to be saying goodbye — made some statement about not able to go to prison or to jail,” Johnson told Plano police dispatch, according to audio obtained by ESPN through a public records request.

Kneeland died from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound last week. Police found his body in the early morning last Thursday after he had evaded officers during a pursuit and fled on foot. Police have not said what prompted the pursuit.

In case you missed it on Arrowhead Pride


Can the Chiefs prevent a changing of the guard in the AFC?

If the season ended today, the Kansas City Chiefs wouldn’t make the playoffs — and the Indianapolis Colts, Denver Broncos, and New England Patriots would have the top three seeds.

How is this possible? Am I the only one who can’t believe this?

Before the season began, oddsmakers like FanDuel Sportsbook set the Colts’ win total at 7.5. The Patriots were at 8.5. The Broncos were the “leading contender” of the bunch at 9.5. That was tied with the Cincinnati Bengals, Houston Texans and Los Angeles Chargers for the AFC’s seventh-highest win total.

Football can be unpredictable, of course. But this is flat-out shocking. Is it here to stay?

Call me old school, but I’m hard-pressed to believe a team led by a quarterback like Daniel Jones, Bo Nix or Drake Maye will suddenly emerge as the AFC’s team to beat over teams led by Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen or Lamar Jackson.

Social media to make you think

The NFC & AFC standings going into Week 11. Any surprises? 🧐#NFLonDAZN pic.twitter.com/k5KizZcoml

— NFL on DAZN (@NFLonDAZN) November 11, 2025

Follow Arrowhead Pride on Social Media


Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...s-11-13-chiefs-are-still-super-bowl-favorites
 
Chiefs-Broncos Thursday injury report: 1 more player limited

gettyimages-2217709616.jpg


Each practice day of the season, the Kansas City Chiefs release an official injury report leading up to the next game. In the NFL’s Week 11, the Chiefs face the Denver Broncos on Empower Field at Mile High. Kickoff is set for 3:25 p.m. Arrowhead Time on Sunday.

Here is the Chiefs’ second official injury report of the week:

Chiefs


PlayerPsInjuryWedThuFriStatus
Isiah PachecoRBKneeDNPDNP
Xavier WorthyWRAnkleLP
George KarlaftisDEThumbLPLP
Trey SmithGBackFPFP
Josh SimmonsTPersonalFPFP
Jawaan TaylorTKnee – AnkleFPFP
Charles OmenihuDEAnkleFPFP
Jaden HicksSPectoralFPFP

Broncos


PlayerPsInjuryWedThuFriStatus
Check back soon for their official injury report

Some notes

  • For the Chiefs, wide receiver Xavier Worthy (ankle) was added to the report as a limited participant in Thursday’s practice. He joined defensive end George Karlaftis (thumb), who was limited on Wednesday and Thursday.
  • As head coach Andy Reid implied on Monday, running back Isiah Pacheco (knee) is still unable to practice. He did not participate on Wednesday and Thursday. It’s looking more and more like he will miss Sunday’s game.
  • All other Kansas City players listed on the report were full participants — including left tackle Josh Simmons and right tackle Jawaan Taylor (knee-ankle).


For the Wednesday injury report, click here.

<!--- NOTES AND OPTIONAL TEXT Check back soon for the XXOppNameXX official injury report. For the Wednesday injury report, click here.
  • For the Broncos, the biggest name on the list is probably star cornerback Pat Surtain II (pectoral), who has missed the last two games. He did not participate on Wednesday — and is not expected to play on Sunday.
  • Starting inside linebacker Alex Singleton (illness) was held out of practice after successful surgery for testicular cancer. While he will not play on Sunday, he is expected to return in a few weeks.
  • Starting running back J.K. Dobbins (foot) also did not participate after being injured in last Thursday’s game against the Las Vegas Raiders. Denver is reportedly considering placing him on its Reserve/Injured list.
  • Three other players did not participate. Reserve tight end Nate Adkins (knee) has already missed two games. Rotational outside linebacker Jonah Elliss (hamstring) missed Thursday’s matchup, in which reserve wide receiver Trent Sherfield (toe) was injured.
  • But there was good news for Denver. Rotational wide receiver Marvin Mims Jr. (concussion) was a full participant for the first time since being injured in Week 8.
--->

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...-thursday-injury-report-1-more-player-limited
 
Chiefs News 11/14: Sunday is a ‘must win’ for the Chiefs

gettyimages-2192554616.jpg

The latest​


NFL Expert Picks for Week 11 of 2025 | SB Nation

As we approach the sprint to the playoffs this week is full of divisional matchups that will go along way to settling the order for the playoffs. Even if these games aren’t impactful right now, they will be when Week 17 rolls around. Of these games the one to really circle is Broncos vs. Chiefs. Denver is leading the division, but haven’t been convincing in the first three quarters of games. Meanwhile Kansas City is desperate for a win to claw their way back in the AFC West and close the gap. This very much feels like a “must win,” for Patrick Mahomes and company.

NFL Week 11 picks: Upset and score predictions, matchup analysis for every game | NFL.com

Why Tom picked the Chiefs: I almost tricked myself into going with the Broncos and their superpowered defense at home. Could Denver’s pass rush keep Patrick Mahomes from getting back into the Master of the Universe groove that helped him power a three-game win streak for K.C.? Sure, maybe. Can Bo Nix give Andy Reid the fifth ever post-bye week loss of his decades-long head-coaching career? That’s a tougher question to answer — unless you need to splash some cold water on any idle thoughts of a Broncos upset, in which case it’s exactly where you want your brain to lead you. All due respect to Nix and Sean Payton for putting together an exciting season so far, but this figures to be the Biggest Test Yet of Denver’s legitimacy. And I would feel a lot better about the Broncos’ chances if I knew they were going to have Patrick Surtain II and J.K. Dobbins on the field, as they did for their only victory to date against a team that is currently in the playoff picture, a four-point squeaker over the ever-angsty Eagles back in Week 5. It feels like everything would have to line up perfectly for Denver to pull this off, and Mahomes and Co.’s fresh-and-rested status kind of takes that scenario off the table from the jump.

2025 NFL rookie report: Best and most disappointing player for every team | CBS Sports

Kansas City Chiefs

Best: OT Josh Simmons, Ohio State (Round 1, No. 32 overall)

Simmons has missed some time this season, so he was not a runaway winner. Cornerback Nohl Williams and running back Brashard Smith have given them good snaps as well. However, knowing Kansas City’s issues at tackle in recent years, Simmons’ flashes suggest those may now be answered.

Most disappointing: DT Omarr Norman-Lott, Tennessee (Round 2, No. 63 overall)

Neither edge rusher Ashton Gillotte nor Norman-Lott have fulfilled the team’s vision. Those two positions were targeted by the team at the trade deadline. Norman-Lott was personally rated more highly, so the expectation is that he would at least supplement the pass rush. After five games, he went on injured reserve and was lost for the season.

NFL picks: Predicting every remaining game, final record, playoff outlook for each AFC team | NFL.com

I was right about … the Chiefs losing their fifth straight regular-season game to the Bills.

I was wrong about … Week 4 vs. the Ravens. In hindsight, probably a bit overzealous of me to underestimate the reigning AFC champs at home. Even if Lamar Jackson hadn’t exited early with a hamstring injury, the Chiefs were the superior team that Sunday afternoon, outclassing a Baltimore squad that wasn’t quite right out of the gate.

Second-half double down

Despite entering Week 11 three wins shy of the Broncos’ total and sitting third in the division, Kansas City stacks enough victories down the stretch — including both tilts with Denver — to capture its 10th consecutive AFC West title

Harrison Butker is quietly putting any early-season concerns behind him | Arrowhead Addict

“[Butker] has had a couple of good games in a row,” said Toub. “That’s great. He’s had a really good practice. I thought it was his best Wednesday practice yesterday. You know, the ball’s flying good right now.

Specifically, Toub pointed to the first practice back from the bye week off and believes it might have helped the team’s hard-working kicker.

“I think the rest might have helped [Butker]. We talk about, ‘You gotta go back to work,’ and he does a lot. I think this break was really good for him, because he looked really good yesterday. Two good games, and hopefully we’ve got this thing righted.”

Around the NFL


Bengals’ Joe Flacco downplays looming demotion for Joe Burrow: ‘I’m honestly not really thinking about it’ | NFL.com

The true messiah — franchise quarterback Joe Burrow — made his way back to the practice field this week and is nearing his highly anticipated return, meaning Flacco will soon head back to the bench as a 40-year-old backup. The clock is ticking on his tenure as Bengals starter, a thankless job that has included an assortment of joys and frustration, but Flacco isn’t wasting time pondering what his future might look like in December.

“I don’t know, I think backups probably do it a good amount where they know like, ‘Hey, this guy’s coming back, he’s got a three-week injury or whatever it is,'” Flacco said, via The Cincinnati Enquirer. “I’m honestly not really thinking about it. It’s not really a part of my process. I really don’t care. It’s this week, and that’s all that matters. And I think to think about that stuff would just be a distraction. So it’s not really something I’m worried about.

Henderson shines as Patriots top Jets to earn best record in NFL | ESPN

New England Patriots rookie running back TreVeyon Henderson has made the most of his opportunity, filling in for injured starter Rhamondre Stevenson, who has missed the past three games because of a toe injury. Henderson’s two touchdown runs and one receiving touchdown helped the Patriots to a 27-14 victory over the New York Jets on Thursday night, sparking a question on whether he might assume a larger role when Stevenson returns.

The Patriots improved to 9-2 with the win, the best record in the NFL, and won their eighth in a row.

Henderson became the second rookie in Patriots history to have multiple rushing touchdowns in consecutive games, joining Curtis Martin, who had a three-game streak and two-game streak in 1995.

Documents: NFL filed grievance against NFLPA to stop report cards | ESPN

The NFL filed a grievance against the NFL Players Association, asking the union to stop its annual team report cards and saying the exercise violates the collective bargaining agreement by airing public criticism of teams, according to documents obtained by ESPN.

The league claims the report cards, which poll players on various aspects of working conditions, violate a CBA clause that says NFL owners and the union must “use reasonable efforts to curtail public comments by club personnel or players which express criticism of any club, its coach, or its operation and policy,” according to an August letter from the league’s management council to NFLPA general counsel Tom DePaso that was obtained by ESPN.

After months of discussions with the league after the letter, the NFLPA alerted its players of the grievance last week and said it’s “moving ahead with this year’s survey,” according to a union email obtained by ESPN.

In case you missed it on Arrowhead Pride


Revisiting 5 of Chiefs’ biggest preseason questions

9. Can Patrick Mahomes master deep passing?

In recent years — without wide receiver Tyreek Hill — quarterback Patrick Mahomes’ effectiveness with deep vertical passes declined. With a new cast of downfield threats, there was hope Mahomes could get back to what he was doing earlier in his career.

The plan seems to be coming along. There has been an increase in explosive passes, but not all of them come from vertical plays downfield. The Chiefs have been using Worthy and Brown on horizontal routes like crossers to have them catch on the run and turn north.

Mahomes has been more aggressive as well. According to Next Gen Stats, Mahomes averages 8.1 intended air yards per attempt this year, tied for 17th of 36 quarterbacks. Last year, Mahomes had the third-lowest mark at 6.3 intended air yards per attempt. The increase shows the Chiefs are attacking downfield.

Thornton has been an upgrade over wide receiver Justin Watson as this team’s sacrificial deep-route runner. Worthy has improved on vertical routes. Against Buffalo, Brown was able to gain 4o yards on a deep corner route. Rice should get more vertical targets as he gets integrated back into the offense. The Chiefs’ ability to sprinkle in vertical passing has helped clear space for the offense.

Social media to make you think

It’s official. Jim, @tonyromo and I will be in KC next week for #chiefs #colts .
That’s 4 straight KC games for us when you include Thanksgiving!

— Tracy Wolfson (@tracywolfson) November 13, 2025

Follow Arrowhead Pride on Social Media


Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ews-11-14-sunday-is-a-must-win-for-the-chiefs
 
Chiefs’ Dave Toub discusses kick returners, Harrison Butker’s progress

gettyimages-2244682177.jpg


The Kansas City Chiefs — who find themselves in the AFC West’s third spot at 5-4 — now have little margin for error heading into Week 11’s road matchup against the Denver Broncos.

With every moment now so crucial, Kansas City’s special teams unit could easily determine which way the uneven season bounces. So before Thursday’s practice, assistant head coach and special teams coordinator Dave Toub took questions from local reporters — starting with those about his current kick returners.

In Kansas City’s last outing against the Buffalo Billsa 28-21 loss in Week 9 — wide receiver Tyquan Thornton appeared to take over as the preferred kick returner. Thornton returned four kickoffs, while incumbent return man Nikko Remigio handled only one.

Toub was encouraged by what Thornton did in Buffalo, so we should expect to see kickoff alignments featuring him in Denver on Sunday.

“[In Buffalo,] we wanted certain guys to have the ball at certain times,” explained Toub. “So we tried to put guys in a position where we thought they were going to try to kick to us.

“Thornton was really good when we played last time. Four returns — I think he averaged like 32 yards per return. We had a nice counter where he almost popped the second one. So he was promising back there — and then Nikko did a hell of a job blocking. When he didn’t have the ball, he blocked really well — so it was a good combination.”

Toub clearly wants Thornton to be fielding the kicks, but he’s happy to have both players on the field.

“We wanted [Thornton] to have the ball,” he remarked. “Nikko? I felt good with him having it. too. I liked the tandem that we had back there.”

gettyimages-2245203257.jpg

Placekicker Harrison Butker’s early performances have been among the season’s most scrutinized situations. But while the league’s highest-paid kicker missed at least one kick in each of the team’s first four games, he’s missed just one extra point in the five games since then. It’s helped that Kansas City has attempted only four field goals during those five matchups, with no attempt longer than 46 yards.

“He had a couple of good games in a row,” noted Toub. “That was great — and he had a really good practice [yesterday]; I thought it was his best Wednesday practice. The ball was flying good.

“I thought the rest might have helped him. We talked about how you’ve got to go back to work and he did a lot. I thought the break was really good for him because he looked good. He had two good games — and hopefully, we have this thing right.”

Toub feels good about Butker’s accuracy right now — and the spin on his kicks.

“The way the ball was rotating, coming off his foot,” said Toub, “he was banging it. It was true and straight — and you could just tell the difference. It was just a different Wednesday than we had seen, so it was good to see.”

When Kansas City’s special teams takes the field on Sunday, Toub sees an opportunity to play a substantial role in turning the season around.

“Our guys are ready,” he declared. “They’ll be ready for this game for sure. You can feel it already in practice, coming off a bye. They know the urgency. We’ve been there before [and] we have enough veterans. We know where we’re at. We know where we stand — and it’s an important game on the road. We’ll be ready.”

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...sses-kick-returners-harrison-butkers-progress
 
Chiefs News 11/15: This will be the Broncos’ biggest game since Super Bowl 50

gettyimages-2192547628.jpg

The latest​


NFL Week 11 picks, predictions, schedule, odds, fantasy tips | ESPN

What we’re hearing on the Chiefs: DT Chris Jones has recorded two sacks (97th in the NFL) and a pressure percentage of 9% (43rd in the league), but the Chiefs aren’t worried about his slow start. “Chris is always striving to do better every day. That’s what has made him such a good player,” coach Andy Reid said. “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.” — ESPN staff

Denver Broncos take AFC West lead into game against Kansas City Chiefs | USA Today

The Broncos are about to play the franchise’s biggest game in nearly a decade – since another signature defense carried Peyton Manning to a crown in Super Bowl 50 – and there’s great anticipation about whether they will pass this serious litmus test.

No, there’s no parade on tap. The Broncos can’t win the Super Bowl on Sunday.

Yet here come the Kansas City Chiefs.

And not just the typical Chiefs, who have owned the division with nine straight AFC West titles and almost never lose after a bye week. These are the desperate Chiefs (5-4), who have played in the last three Super Bowls but wouldn’t even be in the dance if the AFC playoffs started today. That makes them extra dangerous.

NFL Week 11 schedule rankings: Top 5 Sunday games with the best home crowds | The Athletic

1. Kansas City Chiefs (5-4) at Denver Broncos (8-2)

Our clubhouse leader for a few reasons. It’s hard to not have an amped-up home field amid a seven-game winning streak. Standing in the way of No. 8 is Denver’s dynastic nemesis. K.C. has seized the last nine AFC West titles, and it lifted the Lombardi Trophy three times along that run. There’s a visual synchronicity between the late-afternoon Colorado sunsets and the wall-to-wall orange wrapping Mile High. There’s spiritual alignment with the Broncos’ top-ranked pass rush and the crowd’s bellowing “in-com-plete” refrain. And there’s end-of-the-movie tension whenever Patrick Mahomes is in the building.

At 8-2, Sean Payton’s team is chasing the AFC’s top seed. That’s invaluable, as the Broncos are unbeaten at home through five tries. We can already hear Jim Nantz and Tony Romo straining their voices in the echoing altitude.

Chiefs just got the green light to bring Khalen Saunders back where he belongs | Arrowhead Addict

Khalen Saunders cleared waivers after being released by the Jacksonville Jaguars.

While Saunders has yet to find an official place to land, the Chiefs have to be considered among the favorites, given the need up front and their familiarity with one another. The Chiefs lost second-round pick Omarr Norman-Lott to ACL injury in the first half of the season, and will be reliant upon aging veterans to carry them through the rest of the season and beyond. Those names include Mike Pennel and Derrick Nnadi, among others.

Saunders first entered the NFL as the Chiefs’ third-round choice in the 2019 NFL Draft out of Western Illinois. General manager Brett Veach rolled the dice in that draft when taking Saunders, knowing the leap from the FCS level to the NFL is a massive one. Still, Saunders’ reputation as “The Aaron Donald of the FCS” was enough to interest the Chiefs.

Around the NFL


Bill Belichick says he will not pursue any NFL head-coaching vacancies | NBC Sports

“I have great respect and genuinely care for the New York Giants organization and both the Mara and Tisch families,” Belichick said in a statement released by the program. “The New York Giants played an important role in my life and in my coaching journey. It was a privilege for me to work for the Mara family and be a member of Coach Parcells’ staff for over a decade. However, despite circulating rumors, I have not and will not pursue any NFL head coaching vacancies.

“Since arriving in Chapel Hill, my commitment to the UNC Football program has not wavered. We have tremendous support from the university, our alumni, and the entire Carolina community. My focus remains solely on continuing to improve this team, develop our players, and build a program that makes Tar Heel fans proud. . . . We’re on to Wake Forest.”

In case you missed it on Arrowhead Pride


Chiefs’ Dave Toub discusses kick returners, Harrison Butker’s progress

In Kansas City’s last outing against the Buffalo Billsa 28-21 loss in Week 9 — wide receiver Tyquan Thornton appeared to take over as the preferred kick returner. Thornton returned four kickoffs, while incumbent return man Nikko Remigio handled only one.

Toub was encouraged by what Thornton did in Buffalo, so we should expect to see kickoff alignments featuring him in Denver on Sunday.

“[In Buffalo,] we wanted certain guys to have the ball at certain times,” explained Toub. “So we tried to put guys in a position where we thought they were going to try to kick to us.

“Thornton was really good when we played last time. Four returns — I think he averaged like 32 yards per return. We had a nice counter where he almost popped the second one. So he was promising back there — and then Nikko did a hell of a job blocking. When he didn’t have the ball, he blocked really well — so it was a good combination.”

Toub clearly wants Thornton to be fielding the kicks, but he’s happy to have both players on the field.

“We wanted [Thornton] to have the ball,” he remarked. “Nikko? I felt good with him having it. too. I liked the tandem that we had back there.”

Social media to make you think

Travis Kelce was joined by former #Chiefs TE Blake Bell as they spent their Friday evening watching Kansas High School Football Playoffs between Mill Valley & St. James Academy.

Former teammate Anthony Sherman is an assistant coach for St. James. #ChiefsKingdom pic.twitter.com/gFB3uDnA3j

— Matt Foster (@MattFosterTV) November 15, 2025

Follow Arrowhead Pride on Social Media


Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...-the-broncos-biggest-game-since-super-bowl-50
 
Chiefs-Broncos: 5 things to watch in Week 11’s critical AFC West game

1787701134.jpg


On Sunday afternoon, the (5-4) Kansas City Chiefs will play the (8-2) Denver Broncos on Empower Field at Mile High. Kickoff is set for 3:25 p.m. Arrowhead Time. Now in third place in the AFC West, the Chiefs will take on the division leaders in what will be a critical game in how the playoffs will shape up.

The Broncos are coming off a grimy 10-7 win over the Las Vegas Raiders last Thursday, while the Chiefs are coming off a bye. Before the week off, Kansas City lost on the road 28-21 to the Buffalo Bills — a stinging defeat that pushed the Chiefs out of the current AFC playoff picture.

While Kansas City is having a down year by its own standards, Denver is in the best spot to win the AFC West it’s been in for a decade. We can expect both teams to make their best efforts.

Here are five things to watch

1. The Broncos pass rush


Part of a talented defense, the pass rush is on an all-time tear. With an astonishing 46 sacks halfway through the season, Denver is headed toward breaking the NFL single-season record of 72 set by the 1985 Chicago Bears. This is not just a good unit — it is potentially an all-time unit.

Edge rusher Nik Bonnito leads the way with 9.5 sacks, followed by outside linebacker Jonathan Cooper with 7.5, defensive linemen Zach Allen with 6 and defensive tackle John Franklin-Myers with 4.5. Six other Broncos have more than one sack. Six more have at least half a sack.

The unit wins quickly, disrupts passing lanes and frustrates opposing quarterbacks.

For the Chiefs to find success, the offensive line must hold its own — but the Chiefs also need to find ways to quickly get the ball out of Mahomes’ hands, allowing them to take advantage of the Broncos’ aggressive nature.

2. Keeping a bad offense bad


While Denver’s defense is elite, the offense has been lackluster in recent weeks. The Chiefs should be able to exploit it. The Broncos rank 17th in the league in points per game, averaging 23.5. The rushing attack has been fine — Denver ranks ninth in the NFL with 128.6 rushing yards per game — but over the past few weeks, the offense has had issues under center.

Quarterback Bo Nix is having a decent season, but he has thrown four interceptions in his last three games. In back-to-back weeks, the Broncos have put up just 18 points against the Houston Texans and 10 points versus the Raiders.

Nix ranks 27th in the NFL with an 85.7 passer rating, but he poses a threat as a runner, too.

The Chiefs’ defense has sometimes struggled this season. But on Sunday, they need to find a way to force a few turnovers so they can keep a bad offense down.

3. The Chiefs’ tackle situation


Rookie left tackle Josh Simmons returned to the Chiefs during the bye week after missing four for personal reasons.

After a full week of practice, it appears that Simmons is poised to start the game. Given the prowess of the Broncos’ pass rush, his presence will be a plus. Swing tackle Jaylon Moore held his own during while filling in for Simmons — but against the Bills, his limitations were exposed as he struggled against pass rushers like defensive end Joey Bosa.

Before his hiatus, Simmons was on pace to be one of the league’s best rookie offensive linemen. But he has not seen live snaps since Week 5 against the Jacksonville Jaguars. He will be worth monitoring.

The other offensive lineman to watch will be right tackle Jawaan Taylor, who suffered an ankle injury in Buffalo. In that game, Wanya Morris came in to take his place.

Taylor was a full participant in practice all week and had no injury designation on Friday’s injury report, but given his past injury issues — as well as Simmons’ unknown readiness to play again — Moore must be ready to play at a moment’s notice.

4. Attacking the Broncos with speed


Running the ball is often a great method to stifle pass rushers, but the Broncos have a top-10 run defense — and the Chiefs will once again be without starting running back Isiah Pacheco (Knee). To keep the Broncos honest, the Chiefs may look to attack the perimeters and the middle of the field with the offense’s collective speed.

Wide receiver Xavier Worthy (ankle) was a late addition to the injury report on Thursday, but he will be full go for the game. This week, his ability to stretch the defense will be important: he could be a big factor in the jet-sweep game as well as keeping Denver’s edge rushers at bay with the threat of reverse looks and other plays designed to break outside contain.

The Chiefs’ offense is at its best when plays are hitting over the middle of the field, so watch for the unit to attack that area of the field with speed. This week, the coaches need to create quick-passing looks for quarterback Patrick Mahomes that will deploy playmakers between the hashmarks.

5. Andy Reid after a bye


It’s a tale as old as time: Chiefs’ head coach Andy Reid, the league’s best offensive mind, had two weeks to plot and plan for putting up points against the best defense in the league.

With a career 22-4 record after the bye week (and a 6-1 record with Patrick Mahomes), Reid’s squad will need a strong game plan to win the game — and get Kansas City’s season back on track.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...6468/chiefs-broncos-5-things-to-watch-week-11
 
Chiefs-Broncos 5 questions: Is Sunday’s game really a playoff matchup?

gettyimages-2184572932.jpg


On Sunday, the Kansas City Chiefs face the Denver Broncos. We welcome Ian St. Clair of Mile High Report — our sister SB Nation site covering the Broncos— for Five Questions with the Enemy.


1. With the Broncos at 8-2, do their fans think they are a Super Bowl contender?​


After their showing against the Las Vegas Raiders on “Thursday Night Football” — especially on offense, there is a sense that the sky is falling. While the Broncos got the win and improved to 8-2, fans aren’t buying into the offense. The defense is the best in the NFL, but fans feel like Denver can’t keep winning with the offense struggling through the first three quarters. Until the offense demonstrates that it can play consistently over four quarters, fans won’t feel that this is a true Super Bowl contender.

2. The offense has struggled through most games, with Bo Nix periodically making great plays to help the team win. Is he the quarterback the team needs, or will he be the reason the team fails?


Despite what some in the fan base think, Nix is the reason this team has achieved four fourth-quarter comebacks during its seven-game winning streak. He’s also going to be the quarterback who gets the team where it expects to be: an AFC West championship and a deep run in the playoffs. And it’s not just me who believes that. Sean Payton does, too. As long as Payton “Bolieves,” Broncos fans should, too. Can he play better? Absolutely. I also think he will.

3. Do you believe the Broncos and Chiefs have to treat Sunday’s matchup like a playoff game?


From the standpoint of the Broncos, Sunday’s game is the game. Based on the percentages, if Denver wins, it’ll likely win the AFC West.

Current division odds (via CBS Sports)

  • Denver: 52.7%
  • Kansas City: 22.4%

If Denver wins

  • Denver: 70.6%
  • Kansas City: 7.9%

If Kansas City wins

  • Denver: 36.5%
  • Kansas City: 35.2%

(basically a three-way tie, including the Chargers)

Based on that, this is the biggest game for the Broncos since Super Bowl 50.

4. If you could add one Chiefs player (not named Patrick Mahomes) to the Broncos, who would it be?


I’d like to see Chris Jones along the Broncos’ defensive front. The idea of him and Zach Allen together, on top of the best pass-rushing duo in the NFL — Nik Bonitto and Jonathon Cooper — would be incredible to watch.

5. Despite a better record, the Broncos are the underdog on Sunday. What will they have to do to win this game?


I’m a little surprised at the spread — especially with how the Broncos defense has played against Mahomes and Kansas City in recent seasons. This is clearly based on the current showing of Denver’s offense. To win, Denver must play a clean game, minimizing penalties and winning the turnover battle; Mahomes and the Chiefs don’t need any help. Defensively, it must do what it’s done all season. Nix and the offense must start fast, run the football, and make plays in the passing game when they’re there. Another thing I think will help the Broncos is playing at home. Mile High is going to be rocking on Sunday, and it should be a fun game to watch.



Be sure to check out the answers I gave to their questions by clicking here.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ions-is-sundays-game-really-a-playoff-matchup
 
Chiefs’ left guard Kingsley Suamataia left Broncos loss with concussion

gettyimages-2247051196.jpg


The Kansas City Chiefs’ first second-half possession in Sunday’s 22-19 loss to the Denver Broncos ended with an interception deep in the Broncos’ territory. Taking a near-certain three points off the board for the Chiefs — and then watching Denver march down the field for a touchdown — proved costly in a tight game.

It turned out to be more costly than we realized at first.

During the interception return, left guard Kingsley Suamataia took a shot — and left the game. The Chiefs later announced that the second-year pro was in the league’s concussion protocol, ruling him out for the remainder of the game.

But he was the only Kansas City player who was injured in the loss.

“Really, Kingsley was the only one who got hurt,” head coach Andy Reid told reporters after the game. “On the interception there, he hit his head on the turf.”

Suamataia will now need to complete the league’s five-step return-to-play criteria before he can get back on the field. That ultimately requires clearance from an independent neurological consultant not associated with the team. We’ll be closely monitoring his status during this week’s practices, since even limited participation will be a sign that he is progressing through the requirements.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ey-suamataia-left-denver-loss-with-concussion
 
5 things we learned from the Chiefs’ ugly road loss to the Broncos

gettyimages-2246530988.jpg


The Kansas City Chiefs’ just aren’t getting it done this season.

The Week 11 road matchup with the Denver Broncos was as close as it gets to a must-win game in the regular season. But on Sunday afternoon, Denver did what Kansas City couldn’t: move the ball when it mattered. The Broncos were rewarded with a crucial 22-19 victory that put the Chiefs at 5-5 for the season.

Here are five things we learned from a disappointing defeat.


1. The Chiefs aren’t closing out their games​


Sunday’s biggest indictment came from the Broncos’ head coach Sean Payton. With the game tied at halftime, he said he liked his team’s chances to win because Kansas City was a “first-half team.”

Let that soak in. This season, the team is 0-5 in one-score games.

While Sunday’s contest was filled with deflating moments, the worst of them came at the end.

  • With the game tied, quarterback Patrick Mahomes threw an interception in the red zone.
  • The Chiefs led by three points and had the ball with eight minutes left in the game — and went three-and-out.
  • The Chiefs had the ball with the game tied and four minutes left — and went three-and-out again.
  • On a crucial third-and-6 on the final drive of the game, linebacker Nick Bolton was covering Denver’s top wide receiver Courtland Sutton — and gave up the first down.

Whether it is from personnel, coaching or scheme, the Chiefs are no longer a team you have any faith in pulling out a win.

2. The Chiefs need to shake things up​


For the team to play so poorly after its bye week was simply embarrassing. We can argue about the specific changes that should be made, but the team looks (and feels) stale from the top down.

Head coach Andy Reid has earned every single one of his accolades. He deserves to be considered one of the greatest head coaches in the history of the game.

But let’s be honest: the Chiefs organization is filled with a bunch of yes men. There is something to be said about having people around who push you with honest feedback — and challenge you to be better. Much was made about the tension between Reid and former offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy. As football fans like to say, “steel sharpens steel” — and it might be that friction isn’t always a bad thing.

The Chiefs’ coaching staff is made up of old horses with a lot of experience — and there is value in that — but these days, there aren’t a lot of new ideas coming out of Arrowhead. Maybe there should be.

3. There must be some hard conversations at Arrowhead​


At the top of this list is a serious talk that Reid needs to have with special teams coordinator (and assistant head coach) Dave Toub.

The special teams unit has been a penalty-ridden embarrassment in 2025. Toub’s unit exemplifies one of the team’s core problems: its play is sloppy — and there is no accountability. The unit is allowed to continue shooting the team in the foot, while Toub is never close to the hot seat.

I don’t care if Toub is buddies with the head coach. Even if it is a small and symbolic move, the assistant head coach title should be taken away from him.

What about offensive coordinator Matt Nagy? I don’t care how talented Denver’s defense is. Continued mental errors and penalties by players like Jawaan Taylor are inexcusable. Mahomes has to get better at throwing the deep ball — and stop making mistakes when he gets frustrated. If he has more talent at wide receiver than he has ever had before, then why does he still feel like he has to play hero ball on a play-by-play basis? Nagy needs to hold his players accountable, too.

The team also needs someone who will speak up when Reid abandons the running game — someone who can bring him back to center. And if Reid isn’t willing to listen, then that is yet another hard conversation that needs to take place.

I’m not calling for coaching changes. But these issues must be addressed. And we don’t just need conversations. We need answers.

4. The Chiefs need more impact players and fewer role guys​


This roster feels like it was built around the core players of the 2023 championship team.

The only problem is that some of them just aren’t the same players they used to be. Kansas City is paying for past performance — not for what these players will do in the future — and it’s hurting them.


Someday, all of these players will be in the team’s Ring of Honor. But they’re being paid for being yesterday’s legends — not for winning games today.

The Chiefs need to be drafting the stars of tomorrow, instead of accessories for guys who have lost a step.

5. Tyquan Thornton is awesome​


In a game with few bright spots, wide receiver Tyquan Thornton continues to prove that he needs more playing time. He routinely exhibits the kind of gritty effort that is sorely missing from this team.

INTERCEPTED@Broncos pick off Mahomes in the red zone👀 pic.twitter.com/sLoB6xM3rj

— NFL on CBS 🏈 (@NFLonCBS) November 16, 2025

The Chiefs look like a former champion who has been in so many brawls that all the fight has gone out of them. Somehow, they need to find the dawg that used to be part of their collective identity. Thornton is showing them what that looks like.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...hings-we-learned-from-week-11-loss-to-broncos
 
Chiefs Playoff Picture: Making postseason still in the team’s control

gettyimages-2242013572.jpg


The Kansas City Chiefs are now 5-5 after Week 11’s bitter 22-19 road loss to the Denver Broncos.

Seven games remain in the team’s 2025 schedule. On Sunday, Kansas City will 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 57% chance to make the playoffs (down from 75% a week ago), a 10% chance to win the AFC West (25% last week), less than a 1% chance to earn the AFC’s single bye (down from 4%), and a 4% chance to win Super Bowl LX (down from 7%).

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • Coming soon: New, improved notifications system!

One week ago, these numbers weren’t encouraging. But Sunday’s loss has pushed them down the mountainside. While the team still has a better-than-even chance to make the postseason, the Chiefs’ opportunity to claim a 10th-straight AFC West title is on life support — and they can pretty much kiss the No. 1 seed goodbye.

Kansas City was not only unable to help itself over the weekend, but also had no assistance from any other team. If the season ended today, the Chiefs would be in the AFC’s ninth spot; just seven qualify for the playoffs. In Week 11, only one of the eight teams ahead of Kansas City — the Chargers — had the courtesy to lose a game. Unfortunately, they lost to another team in front of the Chiefs: the Jacksonville Jaguars.

And oh, yes… the Colts didn’t win, either — but that was because they were on their bye week.

The playoff calculator allows us to assume the outcomes of remaining games and see how it changes the odds.

Let’s take a look.

How the Chiefs can make the playoffs​


Yes… Kansas City is still in control of making the dance. Winning all of its remaining games will give the team a playoff berth. Losing their matchups with either the Colts or the Cowboys only causes the Chiefs to miss the postseason in about 1% of cases. Losing one game to any other AFC team would make Kansas City miss the playoffs in no more than 6% of all scenarios.

Losing two games makes it more difficult to make the postseason — but not impossible. Dropping games to Indianapolis and Dallas would give the Chiefs about a three-in-four shot at the playoffs — but most other sets of two losses would give Kansas City something around a 50/50 opportunity to make the dance.

How the Chiefs can win the AFC West​


The team no longer controls its own destiny in the division race. But winning out would give Kansas City a 57% chance to win its 10th straight division title. On top of that 7-0 finish, the Chiefs would need the Chargers to lose not only to the Chiefs in Week 15, but also drop a matchup to either the Raiders, Eagles, Cowboys, Texans or Broncos. Then Denver would have to lose to Kansas City in their Week 17 rematch — and have two losses among their games with the Commanders, Raiders, Packers, Jaguars or Chargers.

As you can see, that’s not impossible. But it’s not terribly likely, either — which is why winning out only gives Kansas City about a three-in-five chance to take the division. Both Los Angeles and Denver will have byes in Week 12, so we’ll have to wait a week before either team can give the Chiefs any breathing room.

How the Chiefs can get a first-round bye​


Too much has gone wrong. If the team makes the playoffs, it will almost certainly have to play in the Wild Card round. Even if Kansas City wins out, there’s only about a 1-in-25 chance it will hold the No. 1 seed.

The bottom line​


The Chiefs’ postseason chances are looking more and more grim. But the team can make the playoffs without any outside help — and taking care of its own business would give it a decent chance to once again win the division. But that’s the problem: in the last two weeks, it hasn’t been easy for Kansas City to take care of business.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ture-making-postseason-still-in-teams-control
 
NFL Power Rankings Week 12 Roundup: Chiefs drop after loss to Broncos

gettyimages-2247035670.jpg


The Kansas City Chiefs22-19 loss to the Denver Broncos in Week 11 felt like a dagger to the Chiefs’ hopes for a division title. It also made a significant impact on the perception of them across the NFL: every site moved Kansas City down in the latest power rankings ahead of Week 12.

Here’s this week’s sampling:



NFL.com: 15


(Down from 7)

Hearing Patrick Mahomes almost acknowledge that the AFC West is gone was downright shocking. Yeah, he’s speaking reality, and of course Kansas City could make the playoffs as a dangerous wild-card team. But to hear Mahomes all but admit defeat in the Chiefs’ quest for a 10th straight division title was jarring to my ears. They’re ninth in the AFC playoff picture, and they’re staring at four straight pretty tough games, starting with the Colts at Arrowhead and the Thanksgiving game in Dallas four days later. We’re so used to the Chiefs coming out of the bye week razor sharp, but they never looked completely dialed in against Denver, even after taking the lead early in the fourth quarter. There’s still a playoff-caliber roster here, but multiple losing streaks in a single season is an identity crisis for Kansas City.

— Eric Edholm


ESPN: 13


(Down from 12)

Who’s under the most pressure:
Coach Andy Reid

The Chiefs have plenty of talent on their roster, and this season was supposed to be about the offense returning to a dominant unit. But Reid’s game plans in the past two games, losses to the Bills and Broncos following a bye week, have been perplexing. Reid needs to get quarterback Patrick Mahomes in rhythm quicker, and his playcalling needs to be more balanced and diverse to outwit opposing defenses over the second half.

Nate Taylor


The Athletic: 16


(Down from 12)

A suggestion
: Start sweating

The three teams currently in the AFC wild-card positions — the Chargers, Bills and Jaguars — have a win over Kansas City this year, and Sunday’s loss dropped the Chiefs four games behind the Broncos in the AFC West. Plus, the 8-2 Colts — coming off a bye, no less — are up next. The streak of 10 straight trips to the postseason is in jeopardy.

— Josh Kendall


Sports Illustrated: 15


(Down from 11)

Column on the Chiefs being at .500 and possibly missing the playoffs…and why that’s all a good thing.

— Conor Orr


Pro Football Talk: 18


(Down from 13)

Forget about the AFC West. That Week 6 Monday night loss to the Jaguars could be the thing that keeps them out of the playoffs entirely.

— Mike Florio


CBSSports.com: 14


(Down from 10)

The division title is probably out of their reach, so it’s time to focus on winning games and getting into the playoffs. Right now, they would be out.

— Pete Prisco


Yahoo! Sports: 10


(Down from 5)

The Chiefs still aren’t getting enough big plays. They had one 61-yard gain to Tyquan Thornton but no other play of more than 21 yards. It would be nice to have a running back who could make a big play, but all they have are plodders. Maybe getting Xavier Worthy involved would help.

— Frank Schwab


The Sporting News: 16


(Down from 12)

The Chiefs don’t need to be in full panic mode yet, but they can probably say good bye to their shot at 10 consecutive division titles and may need to run the table, starting with the mighty Colts in Week 12, just to ensure a wild card.

— Vinnie Iyer


USA Today: 9


(Down from 8)

Their luck had to run out at some point. There’s a case to be made that this year’s K.C. roster is better than last year’s. But last year’s Chiefs were 12-0 in one-score games, while this year’s squad is 0-5 in such scenarios. Those rested Colts come to Arrowhead on Sunday.

— Nate Davis


FOX Sports: 16


(Down from 13)

They are still loaded with talent and experience and every one of their losses has been to a playoff-bound team by one score. But the reality is they are what their 5-5 record says they are.

— Ralph Vacchiano

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...fl-power-rankings-week-12-roundup-chiefs-drop
 
Chiefs Kingdom in Broncos Country: My experience in Denver

gettyimages-2247037153.jpg


Arrowhead Pride’s Dakota Watson was in the stands for the Kansas City Chiefs22-19 loss to the Denver Broncos on Sunday. We asked him to report on his experience in Colorado’s mile-high city.



I wanted this article to be different. I hoped to write about the Chiefs reclaiming AFC West glory. I hoped to write about the Broncos’ fans leaving their own stadium with their heads low — and doubts about both their second-year quarterback and their place in the AFC playoff picture.

I hoped for what we used to believe was a given: head coach Andy Reid’s dominance after a bye week.

Instead, it was I who left the stadium with my own doubts about a Chiefs team that has spoiled me with their dominance over the past eight seasons. It was I who struggled to defend the performance of an inept Chiefs’ offense to the Denver faithful around me. It was I who just tried to hold my head low and get as far away from Empower Field at Mile High Stadium as fast as humanly possible, while I heard chants of “Chiefs suck” rain down around me.

While the team’s performance has sometimes been difficult to watch this season, my doubts and frustration about this Chiefs team did not stop me from traveling roughly 600 miles to Denver, Colorado for what felt like the renewal of one of the great NFL rivalries.

The stadium experience​

IMG_7583-rotated.jpeg

Mile High is the sixth stadium in the NFL that I have visited. Overall, I would rate the stadium as positive and right in the middle of the pack among personal experiences. It was Denver’s “Salute To Service” game. Throughout the day, there were great moments honoring the men and women of the United States military.

The public transit options to arrive or depart the stadium are strong. We utilized the RTD (Regional Transportation District) public rail system, which was very affordable and easy to use — even though the train was naturally crowded after the game. As much as I love GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium, the public transportation options in Kansas City are lacking compared to other cities — but on the other hand, that contributes to Arrowhead’s amazing tailgate atmosphere.

The pregame festivities in the parking lot and areas surrounding the stadium were lacking compared to the Arrowhead experience. There were certainly tailgaters and nice setups, but nowhere near what I’m accustomed to; the smell of barbecue wasn’t strong near the stadium.

The stadium feels somewhat dated, although that didn’t dampen the experience. Based solely on my experience, it is surprising that Denver is seeking to build a new stadium. I feel this has more to do with new ownership than the actual quality of the current stadium.

Food and beverage options were strong: there was good local fare, as well as a five-dollar menu that was affordable and higher quality than expected at a stadium. Before the game, the Broncos had a flyover of four F-35 fighter jets as well as a team of skydivers that land in the stadium before each game. It was a unique and exciting experience to see the skills (and nerve) of the skydivers.

With Arrowhead being my home stadium, I have yet to experience crowd noise elsewhere that comes close to what we hear in Kansas City. Admittedly, being in the upper level was a little unnerving with the “stomp” and shaking of the seats and concourse; at that point, I was definitely trusting the building’s structural integrity!

The Broncos build their homefield advantage on the back of the city’s mile-high status. Nearly all videoboard material and clips to fire up the home crowd boast the elevation in Colorado. Speaking as someone who hiked the surrounding areas the day before the game, the altitude is no joke! I feel it truly is an advantage for the home team (although it is something that the Chiefs — being a division opponent — should be accustomed to).

“Chiefs fatigue” is real​

IMG_7578.jpeg

Across the NFL landscape, “Chiefs fatigue” is rampant. Everyone hates a winner, and Kansas City has been king of the AFC West for nearly a decade. This was certainly palpable in Denver — more so than any other city I’ve been to as a visiting fan.

We spent the whole weekend in our Chiefs gear — and we did receive some ribbing from the Denver faithful. From getting threatened to be run over in parking lots (I think she was joking) to being told we were lost (or maybe it was to “get lost”) at restaurants, wearing the Arrowhead in Broncos’ Country does not go unnoticed. After all, this is a rivalry that goes back decades, and Denver used to be the more successful playoff team.

For the most part, the Broncos fans we encountered were respectful and welcoming. We encountered fans who gave us tips on navigating the area and ways to enjoy the pregame festivities, as well as fans who gave the Chiefs their flowers.

However, even with the overall civility, Chiefs fatigue was clearly present. We heard it on local sports talk radio. We felt it in the air each time tight end Travis Kelce caught a reception — and especially when he scored the go-ahead touchdown. (The Broncos’ PA announcer did not mention that Kelce had set Kansas City’s franchise record for touchdowns scored). I could feel the tension in the air from the fans around me when quarterback Patrick Mahomes had the ball in the fourth quarter.

The conspiracy that NFL officiating is favoring Kansas City is alive and well, at least for the group of fans that were around me; it is a real thing despite the horrible or missed calls that happen in every NFL game. The Denver fans near me complained about every call in the Chiefs’ favor — along with every perceived non-call. There was a strong feeling from these fans that the officiating favored Mahomes.

A rivalry renewed​


Walking away from the stadium after the 22-19 defeat, you could feel the excitement in the air from Denver fans. After a game that increased Denver’s opportunity for its first AFC West title since 2015, they truly believe the tide has turned.

I did not meet one person who doubts Broncos’ quarterback Bo Nix. I did hear some criticism of head coach Sean Payton — although he is given a lot of credit for resetting the culture. But it was clear that these fans love their team — and have honest hopes for a Super Bowl in February.

Kansas City dominated Denver by winning 16 consecutive games from 2015 to 2023. Now that the Broncos have won two of the last three — although many fans believe it should have been all three due to last season’s blocked field goal — the rivalry has been renewed.

It’s true: the Broncos have a sizable lead for the division. But Chiefs’ postseason hopes are alive. There is much more football to be played in 2025 — including a rematch at Arrowhead Stadium, where the Broncos have not tasted victory since 2015.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...om-in-broncos-country-my-experience-in-denver
 
Starting today, comments and Feed posts on Arrowhead Pride will have activity notifications

When you post on SB Nation, we don’t want you to miss all the conversations and responses that follow.

So starting today, whenever a user replies to your comment or to your post on the Feed, you’ll see a notification at the top right corner of the page.

And of course, this means that when you engage with other community members, they’ll get an alert too.

Our goal is to create more and better conversations on Arrowhead Pride and elsewhere across the SB Nation network. Anytime someone engages with your comments or Feed posts on another SB Nation community, you’ll see it in your notifications.

For instance, here’s what your notifications might look like on sbnation.com if you were getting replies across Arrowhead Pride, MMA Fighting, and sbnation.com. You will see the same expandable stack of notifications on any site in the network where you were logged in.

Screenshot-2025-11-13-at-1.57.16%E2%80%AFPM.png

If you want to dig into more of how this will work across the network and what’s next, head over to this post on sbnation.com from SB Nation’s Head of Product Ed Clinton.

You can log in or sign up here. Logged in users get fewer ads along with the ability to join the conversation.

Jump into the comment section below or post on The Feed to see notifications in action.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/gene...owhead-pride-will-have-activity-notifications
 
Chiefs-Colts Wednesday injury report: 2 players out, 1 returns

gettyimages-1998881554.jpg


Each practice day of the season, the Kansas City Chiefs release an official injury report leading up to the next game. In the NFL’s Week 12, the Chiefs will host the Indianapolis Colts on GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. Kickoff is set for 12 p.m. Arrowhead Time.

Here is the Chiefs’ first official injury report of the week:

Chiefs


PlayerPsInjuryWedThuFriStatus
Xavier WorthyWRAnkleDNP
Kingsley SuamataiaGConcussionDNP
Isiah PachecoRBKneeFP
Trey SmithGBackFP
Jawaan TaylorTKnee – AnkleFP
George KarlaftisDEThumbFP
Charles OmenihuDEAnkleFP
Jeffrey BassaLBShoulderFP
Jaden HicksSShoulderFP

Colts


PlayerPsInjuryWedThuFriStatus
Tyquan LewisDEGroinDNP
Kenny MooreCBRestDNP
Samson EbukamDEKneeLP
Anthony GouldWRKneeFP
Jaylon CarliesLBAnkleFP
Charvarius WardCBConcussionFP

Some notes

  • For the Chiefs, left guard Kingsley Suamataia did not participate on Wednesday, as he remains in the NFL’s concussion protocol after hitting his head during Sunday’s loss to the Denver Broncos.
  • “Kingsley won’t practice, but he’s doing well,” head coach Andy Reid told reporters before practice. “He had a concussion, but he’s doing pretty good right now.”
  • Wide receiver Xavier Worthy — who has been nursing an ankle injury — also did not participate.
  • “Xavier tweaked his ankle a little bit,” said Reid. “He did the walkthrough [this morning]. We’ll see about practice as we go forward, here.”
  • But running back Isiah Pacheco — who has missed two weeks of practice (and two games) since suffering an MCL sprain in Week 8 — was back as a full participant on Wednesday.
  • For the Colts, rotational defensive end Tyquan Lewis has now missed three games with a groin injury. He did not participate on Wednesday. Neither did veteran cornerback Kenny Moore, who was given a rest day.
  • Veteran rotational defensive end Samson Ebukam was a limited participant after missing the last three games with a knee injury. Reserve wide receiver Anthony Gould — the pride of Leavenworth, Kansas and Salem, Oregon — was a full participant after missing two matchups with a knee injury.
  • Two players on the injury report were designated to return from the Indianapolis Reserve/Injured list on Wednesday: starting cornerback Charvarius Ward (concussion) and second-year linebacker Jaylon Carlies — who started six games as a rookie but has been sidelined with an ankle injury all season. This opens a 21-day practice window that could lead to their return to the active roster. Both were shown as full participants on Wednesday.
  • “He’s closer,” head coach Shane Steichen said of Ward — a former Kansas City player — on Wednesday. “He’s still in the protocol — he’s still got to clear the protocol — but he’ll practice today. He’s been getting some work in on the side with the training staff. Looking forward to getting him back out there this week.”

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans.../chiefs-colts-week-12-wednesday-injury-report
 
What has happened to the Chiefs’ clutch gene this season?

gettyimages-2247093335.jpg


Is winning close games a skill? Is it luck? Or is it a little bit of both?

We all have our opinions on the matter. The Kansas City Chiefs are putting those opinions to the test.

Last season, the Chiefs were 11-0 in one-score games, a stretch that was part of an NFL-record 17 straight victories in such games.

Now that required a bit of good fortune. But it wasn’t all luck… right?

So how can it be that Kansas City has lost all five of 2025’s one-score games?

The Chiefs have lost these matchups in just about every way you can imagine. In the season opener against the Los Angeles Chargers, the defense had no answers for quarterback Justin Herbert — and the offense failed to adjust after wide receiver Xavier Worthy’s injury took him out of the game.

But Kansas City still had plenty of opportunities to get back into the game. In the third quarter, placekicker Harrison Butker missed an extra point that would have tied the matchup at 13. Early in the fourth quarter, the Chiefs’ 2-point conversion failed, ruining a chance to tie the score at 20. Los Angeles scored a touchdown on a seven-minute drive, putting Kansas City down by two scores with just five minutes to play.

A week later, the Philadelphia Eagles came to Arrowhead. Butker missed another kick — a 56-yard field goal — but it was hard to get upset about that after the team failed to capitalize on so many opportunities.

Early in the third quarter, the Chiefs failed on fourth-and-1 from their own 36-yard line — an execution error that immediately resulted in three Philadelphia points. In the fourth, Kansas City had driven deep into Eagles’ territory when safety Andrew Makuba intercepted a tipped pass that he returned 41 yards. That set up the Eagles’ game-winning touchdown. While Kansas City made it interesting by scoring a touchdown with three minutes left, the defense couldn’t get the ball back before time expired.

Then came the road game against the Jacksonville Jaguars. Boy… talk about self-inflicted wounds!

Kansas City committed defensive pass interference on a third-and-15, allowed a 38-yard kickoff return, was penalized for holding on its own 31-yard kickoff return and was flagged for a double-team block on another return. Butker also watched one kickoff land out of bounds for a costly penalty.

As if all of that wasn’t enough, the Chiefs’ defense allowed Jacksonville quarterback Trevor Lawrence to convert two third downs and score two touchdowns on scrambles. Then late in the third quarter, Kansas City was driving to go up by a score when linebacker Devin Lloyd completed a pick-6 that turned a potential 21-14 lead into a 21-14 deficit.

The loss to the Buffalo Bills was, at least, easier to explain. Kansas City got whooped, plain and simple. The defense had no answers for the Bills’ tight ends and slot receivers. The offense had no answers for the looks Buffalo presented. The Chiefs went 3-for-13 on third down and allowed Buffalo to go 7-for-12. Game. Blouses.

Or at least, it should have been. Kansas City still somehow had plenty of chances to make it a game. Down by seven with more than six minutes left to play, the Chiefs got the ball — but six plays later, the drive ended when quarterback Patrick Mahomes attempted what was essentially an arm punt. The defense then allowed two first downs. Buffalo drained all but 22 seconds off the clock, making Kansas City’s last-gasp effort to tie the game too little and too late.

Then came Sunday’s loss to the Denver Broncos. The Chiefs were 1-for-3 in the red zone with two field goals — which wasn’t going to cut it against Denver’s defense. Even worse, both stalled drives included an offensive penalty in the red zone.

Another stalled drive technically didn’t qualify as a red-zone failure — but it might as well have been. With 10 minutes left in the third quarter — and the game tied at six — the Chiefs had the ball at the Broncos’ 21-yard line when Mahomes threw an interception. A drive that should have netted Kansas City at least three points set up Denver’s first touchdown.

The Chiefs had later opportunities to either take or extend the lead — and failed each time. Midway through the fourth quarter — while leading 19-16 — they went three-and-out. They did it again when the game was tied at 19 with four minutes left. The Broncos scored field goals after each of these drives.

Denver made plays — while Kansas City failed to do so.

This has become the theme of the Chiefs’ season: the team is simply finding ways to lose. Sometimes it’s the special teams. Other times, it’s the defense failing to live up to expectations. But throughout the season, the offense has failed to convert in gotta-have-it drives.

I still believe Mahomes is the world’s best player. But far too often this season, his mistakes have ended crucial drives. Look no further than critical interceptions against the Eagles, Jaguars and Broncos.

The Chiefs’ overall numbers say the team is fine, but I only half-believe them. The offense ranks second in yards per drive and third in points per drive. Oddsmakers still have Kansas City installed as a 3.5-point favorite on Sunday against the AFC’s current No. 2 seed: the Indianapolis Colts.

So all hope is not lost. Don’t forget: Kansas City was 6-4 in 2019 before finishing the season 12-4 and winning the Super Bowl. The 2021 team was 6-4 and finished the season 12-5. The Chiefs started the 2023 season 6-1 before losing five of their next eight games on the way to a 9-6 record — and won the Super Bowl.

Still, this is the latest Kansas City has found itself at or below 0.500 during the Mahomes era. And the Chiefs have their own poor performance in one-score games to thank for that.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...87174/what-has-happened-to-chiefs-clutch-gene
 
Chiefs’ coach praises attitude of Isiah Pacheco — ‘a Tasmanian devil’

gettyimages-1964002682.jpg


In the NFL’s Week 12, the Kansas City Chiefs are hoping to snap a two-game losing streak with a win over the Indianapolis Colts, so the full participation of running back Isiah Pacheco in Wednesday’s practice was welcome news — although he was then a limited participant in Thursday’s session. Before missing the last two games, he was the leading team’s back; this season, he’s averaged more yards per game (41.1) and per carry (4.2) than backup Kareem Hunt.

But as far as running backs coach Todd Pinkston is concerned, Pacheco’s value to the team goes beyond that.

“I have a good room with a lot of leadership, with Kareem and the other guys in there,” Pinkston told local media on Thursday, “but Pacheco brings that energy to the room and on the field. It’s just another piece that we have to the puzzle to get everything we want to get accomplished this season. It’s good to see him back. We’re just taking these baby steps now; we’ll see what happens in the long run.”

Pacheco sprained his MCL in the Week 8 win over the Washington Commanders. The bye week allowed him to miss just two games as he recovered. But both matchups were losses; the offense was missing his energy and speed.

So it was fitting how Pinkston described Pacheco’s relentless nature.

gettyimages-2242235534.jpg

“He and I talk about it all the time as far as it being a walkthrough or a jog-through, but he’s a Tasmanian Devil,” he grinned. “And Taz is never walking — so just think about that.

“That’s a good thing for him. One speed is his only speed — and [Head coach Andy Reid] always emphasizes playing fast. That’s what he does.”

Pinkston knows what Reid looks for in a player: he was a wide receiver for the Philadelphia Eagles during the first five seasons of Reid’s tenure as head coach. He is now in his third season as Kansas City’s running backs coach and has a good feel for what skills the Chiefs’ top offensive mind wants from the position.

“[Being] versatile,” he declared. “Guys that are going to protect the quarterback — and guys that are just going to be themselves. What we have now is guys that can do all three things, if not more. I can remember back when we were in Philly — remember Brian Westbrook, Duce Staley, Correll Buckhalter — those guys can do multiple things, and that’s the type of back Coach is looking for.”

“Versatile” certainly fits rookie back Brashard Smith. The 228th overall selection in the NFL Draft has been deployed in creative ways all season. Pinkston indicated that Smith is “growing” — but is counting on the rookie’s teammates to bring him along.

“What we have to do is continue to trust the guys in the room to get him some good stuff to go by — as far as being a true professional and being a true running back,” explained the coach. “He has done that. We’re just trying not to put too much on him, giving him things he needs to learn so he can go out there, perfect it and play fast.”

Smith is one of three backs the Chiefs have trusted to play an impactful role in the offense. Each player must understand the complexities of the playbook and how to execute run-pass option plays.

“They know the dynamic of the offensive scheme and what we’re trying to attack,” said Pinkston. “For the most part, the guys know if there’s a run play called, run the play. We don’t control what the quarterback does because he has his reads. In this offense — what we’re doing now with the RPO system — it makes defenses have to cover the field. That’s what Patrick has been doing a good job of the last few weeks, so we don’t worry about that… whenever your [name] is called, make the best of your abilities when you get the carry.”

In the 22-19 loss to the Denver Broncos, the running backs didn’t have their names called enough. Hunt averaged 4.5 yards per carry over 13 rushes, the only attempts by any Kansas City running back in the game.

The return of Pacheco — bringing his high energy and top speed with him — could help normalize the Chiefs’ balance between running and passing.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...87235/coach-praises-attitude-of-isiah-pacheco
 
Chiefs trying to clean up offensive miscues before the stretch run

gettyimages-2232000786.jpg


You can argue that in 2025, the Kansas City Chiefs have struggled to maintain their own high standards in all three phases of the game. But the offense has stood out. While it was expected to be more explosive this season, it has sometimes struggled to score — particularly when playing from behind against good teams.

Kansas City is now 0-5 in one-score games — and these offensive problems have contributed to most of them. This was especially true in Week 9’s 28-21 loss to the Buffalo Bills and Sunday’s 22-19 defeat at the hands of the Denver Broncos.

What has led to the offense’s inability to perform when the chips are down?

“I think for us, No. 1, it’s the mindset,” offensive coordinator Matt Nagy told the media on Thursday. “You have to be able to finish — and that’s what we talked about at the beginning of the week when we went back and reviewed the tape.”

The offensive staff also did some self-evaluation during the bye week.

“There’s a few things internally that schematically, we talked through as an offense,” said Nagy. “What [do] we want to do? It’s creating that ownership from the coach’s side of, ‘OK, what plays are we putting in? What are we running?’

“And then when the play is called, there’s a lot that goes into that moment — making sure we have it in the right direction or [we’re] running the right route… There’s so many things that go into it, and I think in that moment when you know you’ve got to finish the game in four minutes — whether it’s tied or whether you’re winning — finishing with the ball in your hands is our job no matter how you do it.

“We didn’t do it — plain and simple — and that’s been our focus. OK, how are we going to get in that situation again and win the game? Stating the obvious: it hasn’t been done much this year, with the 0-5 number that’s out there. So we take that seriously. We understand that, and we all want to make sure that we’re locking in on our jobs.”

One miscue that hurt the Chiefs’ offense early in the game was quarterback Patrick Mahomes missing on a couple of deep shots on the first drive, overthrowing two wide receivers on plays that should have been big gains for Kansas City.

“We’ve got to hit on those when we throw them,” declared Nagy. “We’ve got to make them connect.

“I know we’ve talked about giving a guy an opportunity. Sometimes, we’ll use the phrase, ‘If he’s covered, he’s uncovered.’ So sometimes, [it’s about] being able to give [the receiver] a chance to catch the ball.

“That’s what Pat was upset about with himself: making sure he gives the guy a chance. On both of those — the overthrows — you just don’t have a chance.

love the mentality of what he did. You know, there’s two other throws in that game where we went downtown, and we had a 47-yard defensive pass interference and a 41-yarder. That’s hidden yardage that you’ve got to keep going — but especially early in the game, you’ve got to connect on these.”

Still, making a good throw and giving your guy a shot to make a play on the ball doesn’t mean you have to be perfect. In fact, Nagy says he tells Mahomes he doesn’t have to be perfect.

“He’s one of the most accurate quarterbacks in the history of this game,” noted Nagy. “He’s super accurate. He can make throws that [other] people can’t make. When you’re throwing a ‘post alert’ over the top — which both of those basically were — sometimes [you] just put it in the vicinity and let your guy go make a play. And trust me: right after that series — when we went four-and-out and punted the ball — no one was more pissed off at himself than Pat on that sideline.”

But there’s been more wrong with the offense than Mahomes missing some deep balls. Over the last two weeks, Kansas City’s offensive line has struggled to contain opposing pass rushers and blitzers — especially in key situations. One of those was on a third-and-10 late in Sunday’s fourth quarter. The Broncos’ defensive coordinator Vance Joseph disguised a blitz that Mahomes never saw coming — and it resulted in a sack that ended the Chiefs’ last possession.

“They did a good job with what they pressured,” admitted Nagy. “That was good. They got us on that one, and it’s a credit to them.”

Knowing your problems is one thing. Knowing the solutions is another. Executing those solutions — especially in the final weeks of the season, with everything on the line — is the hardest thing of all.

We’re about what this team is made of.


Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...n-up-offensive-miscues-before-the-stretch-run
 
Back
Top