A major mistake in December led to a major shakeup in the defense and
now a major improvement as the Chiefs showed some defensive chops
Kansas City’s ugliest play all season is proving to be its
saving grace.
In Week 15, the Chiefs lost 29-28 to the Los Angeles
Chargers in brutal fashion. Leading 28-14 with less than six minutes remaining,
Kansas City allowed two touchdowns. On the second one, Los Angeles went for a
two-point conversion. Chiefs cornerback Orlando Scandrick blew his assignment,
allowing for a comically easy game-winning conversion.
The disastrous finish forced Coach Andy Reid and defensive
coordinator Bob Sutton to make changes. Scandrick and safety Ron Parker were
benched after starting all season. Charvarius Ward and Jordan Lucas were
inserted into the lineup. The result was added speed with the trade-off of less
experience.
Prior to his Week 16 start, Ward had played 10 career
defensive snaps. The adjustments have helped the Chiefs to turn their clear
weakness into a burgeoning strength. In Kansas City’s 31-13 win over the Colts
in their AFC Divisional, the Chiefs held Indianapolis to 263 yards. Andrew Luck
was sacked three times even those the assembled group of offensive linemen in
front of him hadn’t allowed one all season. The improved coverage on the back
end forced Luck to hold the ball longer and allowed the Chiefs talented pass
rush to get to him.
The final sack punctuated Kansas City’s effort. Two plays
after Chiefs wide receiver Sammy Watkins fumbled to give the Colts possession
at the Chiefs’ 20-yard line and seeming hope for a comeback, linebacker Dee
Ford tore around Colts right tackle Braden Smith to strip-sack Luck. The ball
was recovered by linebacker Justin Houston to end any ideas for the Colts.
The pass rush has been the one consistent element of Kansas
City’s defense. Defensive tackle Chris Jones, Ford and Houston helped the
Chiefs to a league-best 52 sacks. On Saturday, Jones batted down three passes
and generally won his battle with rookie All-Pro guard Quenton Nelson. Houston
added two sacks and Ford had the aforementioned strip-sack.
Unquestionably, the Chiefs are an offensive team. Ford,
Jones, Houston and the rest of their defensive teammates are taking a backseat
to Patrick Mahomes, Tyreek Hill and Travis Kelce. They might be in the
hatchback.
Regardless, Kansas City was able to stymie a Colts team many
believed would charge up and down the Arrowhead field. Instead, it was a day of
dominance from a group that had authored nothing but porous play against other
top-end quarterbacks.
Philip Rivers, Russell Wilson, Tom Brady, Jared Goff and Ben
Roethlisberger played the Chiefs this season and averaged 368 yards and three
touchdowns. Luck was held to 203 yards on 5.64 yards per attempt with a single
touchdown.
Now Kansas City gets Brady one more time with a trip to
Super Bowl LIII on the line. In their first matchup, the Patriots rushed for
173 yards and threw for 340; all while taking zero penalties and never punting.
Somehow, the Chiefs only lost 43-40 on game-ending field goal.
In the rematch, it stands to reason Mahomes and Co. will
score their points.
If Kansas City’s reinvigorated defense can come anywhere
close to matching Saturday’s performance, the Chiefs will be Super Bowl bound
for the first time since the 1969 season.
TOP 10 DIVISIONAL
ROUND GAMES SINCE AFL-NFL MERGER
The Divisional round has provided games that will forever be
known by titles. The Tuck Rule. The Immaculate Reception. The Sea of Hands.
Ghost to the Post. The list goes on. While the Divisional round remains two
steps from a championship for all the participants, no round has provided more
great contests.
1. Chargers-Dolphins, 1981 – Double-OT epic when Kellen
Winslow Sr. was carried off
2. Raiders-Patriots, 2001 – The Tuck Rule and Adam Vinatieri launched a dynasty
3. Raiders-Steelers, 1972 – Franco Harris makes the Immaculate Reception
4. Cowboys-Vikings, 1975 – Roger Staubach says a Hail Mary
5. Dolphins-Raiders, 1974 – Clarence Davis in the Sea of Hands
6. Dolphins-Chiefs, 1971 – Garo wins the longest game ever on Christmas
7. Raiders-Colts, 1977 – Oakland wins on the Ghost to the Post
8. Saints-Vikings, 2017 – Stefon Diggs authors the Minneapolis miracle
9. Jets-Browns, 1986 – Bernie Kosar and the Browns escape in double OT
10. Ravens-Broncos, 2012 – Rahim Moore gets lost and the Ravens go on
2. Raiders-Patriots, 2001 – The Tuck Rule and Adam Vinatieri launched a dynasty
3. Raiders-Steelers, 1972 – Franco Harris makes the Immaculate Reception
4. Cowboys-Vikings, 1975 – Roger Staubach says a Hail Mary
5. Dolphins-Raiders, 1974 – Clarence Davis in the Sea of Hands
6. Dolphins-Chiefs, 1971 – Garo wins the longest game ever on Christmas
7. Raiders-Colts, 1977 – Oakland wins on the Ghost to the Post
8. Saints-Vikings, 2017 – Stefon Diggs authors the Minneapolis miracle
9. Jets-Browns, 1986 – Bernie Kosar and the Browns escape in double OT
10. Ravens-Broncos, 2012 – Rahim Moore gets lost and the Ravens go on
Honorable mention: Broncos-Jaguars, 1996, and
Cowboys-49ers, 1972
Owens: 130-89 (.593) in the regular season and 4-8
(.333) in the postseason.
Garrett: 77-59 (.566) in the regular season and 2-3 (.400) in the postseason.
Garrett: 77-59 (.566) in the regular season and 2-3 (.400) in the postseason.
For all of Owens’ greatness, he never won a thing. Food for
thought.
The Big 12 Conference was created in 1994. Since then, no
quarterback from the Big 12 had ever gone on to win an NFL playoff game until
Mahomes did on Saturday.
INFO LEARNED THIS
WEEK
1. OBSERVATIONS
FROM THE DIVISIONAL ROUND
After Kansas City dispatched Indianapolis on Saturday
afternoon, the Rams, Patriots and Saints joined them as the final four teams
still playing for the Lombardi Trophy.
Los Angeles buried Dallas with a devastating rushing attack,
gashing the Cowboys for 273 and three touchdowns, led by backup running back
C.J. Anderson. Anderson, who has gone from obese to O-Beast, notched 123 yards
and two scores. Meanwhile, the Cowboys couldn’t do enough on third down.
Quarterback Dak Prescott was 5-of-9 for 40 yards and took a sack in such
situation, converting only one of 10 opportunities. With Prescott entering the
final year of his rookie deal, Jerry Jones has a major decision ahead of him.
On Sunday, the Patriots opened the action by crushing the
Chargers, 41-28. Los Angeles elected to play zone for much of the day, and Tom
Brady picked them apart to the tune of 343 yards and a touchdown. New England
also rushed for 155 yards and four scores, helping the franchise reach its
eighth consecutive AFC title game.
In the Big Easy, the Saints continue to ride behind a
much-improved defense. Since Week 13, New Orleans has eclipsed 30 points only
once. While that’s a problem, it has been mitigated by a defense which found
itself at midseason. Excluding Week 17 when the Saints played backups, they
haven’t allowed 30 points since Week 9 against the Rams. Of course, Los Angeles
is making its way to the Superdome come Sunday.
2. STEELERS TAKING
BIG RISK IF ANTONIO BROWN GETS TRADED
When Art Rooney II
stated that people don’t change in response to Antonio Brown’s behavior,
that was a tell. Pittsburgh will be moving on from Brown this offseason. The
Steelers are tired of the off-field craziness, which
in the last 12 months includes an alleged furniture toss
off a 14th floor balcony, threatening a reporter, asking for a trade on
Twitter, getting into a shouting match with Ben Roethlisberger, skipping two
Week 17 practices and then leaving that game at halftime.
This summer, Brown becomes a 31-year-old with three years
and $39 million in base salary and roster bonuses left on his deal. That’s all
that some acquiring team would be on the hook for if it traded for Brown,
making him very affordable. While there are undeniable concerns about him
moving forward, there will be a bevy of teams calling Pittsburgh to find out
the price. The Steelers are motivated to move Brown, but it would be surprising
if they took a package that doesn’t include a first-round pick.
Once Brown is being shopped, the Seahawks and Packers are at
the front of a long line of teams that makes sense. Seattle has never shied
away from strong personalities, and Russell Wilson could certainly use an elite
target. In Green Bay, the Packers would have a devastating combination between
Brown and Davante Adams.
3. KYLER MURRAY
HEADS TO THE NFL DRAFT
The rookie quarterback class isn’t deep, but it may get more
interesting. Heisman Trophy winner Kyler Murray
is leaning toward declaring for the NFL Draft, surprising many
after he signed with the Oakland A’s as a first-round pick of the MLB Draft in
June. As of Sunday night, the A’s were negotiating with Murray to keep him from
entering the draft.
Last month, five personnel men within the league told
FanSided that Murray is believed to be a potential first-round talent. Listed
at 5-foot-10 and 195 pounds, Murray’s size will be a constant source of
concern. Still, he’s a fantastic athlete who will tantalize teams in need of a
quarterback such as the Giants, Jaguars, Redskins, Dolphins and Broncos.
At this juncture, Murray and Ohio State’s Dwayne Haskins are
the top quarterback prospects. Drew Lock, Will Grier and Daniel Jones.
4. BEARS HOPE TO
MAINTAIN DEFENSE WITH CHUCK PAGANO
After losing a 16-15 heartbreaker in the Wild Card round,
the Chicago Bears suffered another loss last week with the departure of Vic
Fangio. Fangio, 60, left his post as defensive coordinator to become the head
coach in Denver. To replace him, the Bears turned to Chuck Pagano.
Pagano spent last year out of football after being the
Colts’ head coach the previous five seasons. Before that, the cancer survivor
was a defensive coordinator with the Ravens in 2011 following three years as
the secondary coach. Pagano makes sense for Chicago, considering he runs a 3-4
scheme and has experience in the position. However, if there is a concern, it’s
that Pagano isn’t as detail-oriented as Fangio. It was a problem that showed up
often in Indianapolis.
During his only year as coordinator in Baltimore, the Ravens
defense ranked third in both points and yardage allowed.
5. BUCCANEERS LAND
FANTASTIC STAFF LED BY ARIANS
There were eight head coach openings in the NFL this
offseason. All are now filled save Miami, which has zeroed in on Patriots’
defensive coordinator Brian Flores.
Grading hires is a wasted exercise, but it’s hard to see
Tampa Bay landing Bruce Arians as anything but a home run.
Arians’ biggest drawback is his age (66), but that is far
outweighed by his history with quarterbacks. The New Jersey native has coached
Peyton Manning, Ben Roethlisberger, Andrew Luck and Carson Palmer, getting the
first three in their formative years and then extracting the best out of Palmer
in his mid-30s. Now Arians is tasked with fixing Jameis Winston.
Winston has immense promise but his 74 turnovers across his
four seasons have scuttled any real progress. Going into his fifth year,
Winston is a pending free agent. The Buccaneers’ future largely rests on
whether Arians can reach Winston. Not a bad bet by Tampa Bay.
HISTORY LESSON
With the Chiefs set to host their conference championship
game on Sunday, only the Ravens, Texans, Titans and Lions are without that
honor.
PARTING SHOT
Kliff Kingsbury couldn’t win in the Big 12 with Patrick
Mahomes. The Cardinals are betting that he can win in the NFL with Josh Rosen.
Kingsbury, 39, is the product of a strong trend within the NFL.
Teams want innovative offensive minds at the helm with the rules favoring that
side of the ball. Whether that’s a smart play with Kingbury remains to be seen,
considering he was fired this autumn at Texas Tech after going 35-40. In that
vein, how does Kingsbury sell veterans that he knows how to win? If things
don’t start well, he’ll have to do a masterful job keeping them on board.
Still, for all the talk about Sean McVay connections and
Kingsbury’s dashing good looks, this is all about Rosen’s development. Entering
his second season, Rosen’s career in the desert largely rests on whether
Kingsbury can prove his worth.
Ultimately, the Cardinals are hoping that Kingsbury will be
the next whiz kid. If he isn’t, they’ll go back to the drawing board in a few
years, something the franchise has done relentlessly throughout its history.
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