Originally Posted by CadeMeister:
..........god damn. Hammock just joined you Titty, hell, he has over 272,000 posts. You know his parents want his ass out. Jebus. 272,000 posts. Think how many women he could have done…
Originally Posted by New World Order:
That offense today was the offense we had in years' past.
Yeah yeah yeah, Mahomes threw a pick early but other than that, Rice looks like a 1 and Kelce is still good.
We were able to move the ball against Belichick with ease, something Mahomes has struggled to do at times.
Baltimore will choke with their Marty Ball type football and Buffalo won't beat us twice at Arrowhead.
I'm optimistic for the posteason.
New England isn’t a bad defense by any stretch either. They’re one of the best run defenses in football and we didn’t have Pacheco. That made us more one dimensional, and we still moved the ball well. [Reply]
Outside of the 2 turnovers, we flat dominated them on both sides of the ball. They barely had 250 yards of offense while the Chiefs should have had 30 on the road against an elite defense [Reply]
Originally Posted by Pasta Little Brother:
Outside of the 2 turnovers, we flat dominated them on both sides of the ball. They barely had 250 yards of offense while the Chiefs should have had 30 on the road against an elite defense
Had they scored more we would have put up at least 34 [Reply]
Andy didn't find this play. Nagy did. But Andy hired Nagy so we good
Originally Posted by :
Kansas City’s offensive coordinator, Matt Nagy, is a football-history nerd, and he brings ancient plays to coach Andy Reid sometimes. Penn called this play in a game in the forties against Columbia. Nagy saw the grainy footage of it and fell in love. In this particular game, against the defensively astute Patriots, Kansas City was smitten with “Heisman” because the offense was struggling mightily, because even the great Bill Belichick couldn’t have his defense instantly stymie a play it couldn’t even imagine, and because KC had a college option quarterback, Jerick McKinnon, just dying to throw the first touchdown pass of his eight-year NFL career.
“Heisman” had been in the KC gameplan for five straight games but not called; Reid just felt the time hadn’t been right. But in a scoreless game, at the New England four-yard line, on a first-and-goal, Reid thought it made sense. He’d have two more chances on this series to get a TD if it failed.