Kansas City Chiefs
Offense, defense, special teams: Chiefs are looking good across the board
Kansas City Chiefs

Offense, defense, special teams: Chiefs are looking good across the board

Published Dec. 23, 2019 4:53 p.m. ET

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs were so dominant in all phases of their 26-3 victory over the Chicago Bears on a cold Sunday night at Soldier Field that it was hard for coach Andy Reid to highlight everyone in his postgame news conference.

The Chiefs' redesigned defense, now with veteran pass rusher Terrell Suggs in the mix, held their fifth straight opponent to 17 points or fewer. In fact, it was the second straight game in which Kansas City held an opponent to three points or fewer, the first time it had done that since Weeks 3 and 4 of the 1990 season — a full five years before Patrick Mahomes was born.

Mahomes passed for 251 yards and accounted for three touchdowns in another ho-hum-yet-incredible performance. In doing so, Mahomes became the fastest quarterback to eclipse 9,000 yards passing and hit 75 touchdown passes by reaching the mark in 30 games — four faster than Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino.

Even the special teams were special Sunday night. Harrison Butker connected on a 56-yard field goal, the fourth-longest in franchise history. It was his third 50-plus-yarder of the season, the third-best total in Chiefs history.

“I stood up here and I told you, I think, the last few weeks that I've been impressed with the group,” Reid said. “Everybody contributing and staying aggressive and making plays. I can't say enough about the growth of our defense, and we're staying consistent. It was nice to get the run game going a little bit today, and I think that helps.”

That might be the only area that could use some improvement down the stretch.

Sammy Watkins joined Travis Kelce and Tyreek Hill in having big days through the air, and the offensive line did an admirable job of keeping Khalil Mack and the Chicago pass rush in check. On the other side, Suggs joined Frank Clark and Chris Jones in pressuring the quarterback while safety Tyrann Mathieu was making plays everywhere on the field.

“Offensively, defensively, special teams, I think we are able to wreck a game,” Mathieu said. "We control football games, and that is what we have been trying to do, especially defensively. We have been trying to play aggressively and put teams in bad situations. We have been doing a good job of that."

The Chiefs (11-4) started the season hot, went through a midseason swoon and now appear to be peaking at just the right time. They head into next week's regular-season finale against the Chargers still hopeful of a No. 2 seed in the playoffs and a first-round bye, which would be theirs with a Kansas City win and a New England loss to the Dolphins on Sunday.

Regardless, there is a profound sense of confidence surrounding the Chiefs as the postseason draws near.

“I think we're building. I think that's one of the biggest things you've seen these last six weeks,” Mahomes said. “The defense, you can see the steady improvement every single week and how they're not letting up any week. And then offensively, we're trying to start to get back on track where we were the beginning of the season. I think that comes with a lot of healthy guys getting back in the flow of things and we're kind of building that chemistry that we had at the beginning of the season. So I'm excited that we're moving offense, defense, special teams in the right direction.”

WHAT'S WORKING

The pass game. The run game. The pass defense. The run defense. In short, just about everything is working. The Chiefs have outscored their four opponents 112-31 since the bye week. The most points allowed was 16 to Oakland, and the Chiefs have not scored fewer than 23 during that recent stretch.

WHAT NEEDS HELP

The Dolphins. The Chiefs must take care of business against the Chargers this weekend, but they also need Miami to spring a big upset against New England to jump the reigning Super Bowl champions for the No. 2 seed in the AFC.

STOCK UP

Tight end Travis Kelce has been consistent this season, but he has been particularly good the past few weeks. He had 74 yards receiving against the Bears to reach 1,205 for the season. That made him the first tight end in NFL history to reach 1,200 yards receiving in consecutive seasons.

STOCK DOWN

Running back LeSean McCoy was a healthy scratch Sunday night. The Chiefs have been trying to manage the veteran's workload, but that means McCoy has had a mere six touches the past two weeks combined.

INJURIES

Running back Spencer Ware and cornerback Bashaud Breeland left briefly with shoulder injuries, but both were able to return to the game. That leaves the Chiefs about as healthy as they've been all season heading into Week 17.

KEY NUMBER

7: That's the number of road wins for the Chiefs (7-1), matching the franchise record set during the 1966 season (7-0).

NEXT STEPS

The Chiefs play the Chargers at the same time the Patriots play the Dolphins. If the Chiefs lose or the Patriots win, that means Kansas City will have a home playoff game the following weekend. If they win and the Patriots lose, Kansas City will get a helpful week off before the divisional round.

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