Chiefs
Chiefs vs. Texans
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CHIEFS TAKE ON HOUSTON TEXANS IN NFL’S KICKOFF GAME vs.
For the first time in 50 years, the Kansas City Chiefs returned to the Super Bowl, defeating the San Francisco 49ers 31-20 in Super Bowl LIV in Miami on Feb. 2, 2020. Now, the club prepares to defend its title starting with the NFL’s Kickoff Game at Arrowhead Stadium against the Houston Texans. These clubs last met in the 2019 AFC Divisional Game. Kansas City rallied back from a 24-0 deficit to defeat the Texans 51-31. The Chiefs enter Thursday’s game riding a nine-game win streak (including playoffs). KC’s last loss was at the Titans in Week 10 (32-35). In the final six wins of the 2019 regular season, KC’s defense allowed a league-best 11.5 points per game. In 2019, the Chiefs were crowned AFC Champions after a 35-24 victory over the Tennessee Titans at Arrowhead Stadium, earning the Lamar Hunt Trophy for the first time in franchise history. That game marked the secondstraight season the Chiefs hosted the conference title game. The Chiefs have qualified for the postseason six out of seven seasons under Head Coach Andy Reid and have won four-consecutive AFC West titles. KC has tallied a 32-10 (.762) mark against AFC West opponents since 2013, including victories in 27 of the last 30 meetings (.900). The Chiefs hold a 46-14 (.767) record against AFC opponents dating back to 2015. Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid owns 222 career victories (regular and postseason combined). He ranks sixth on the NFL’s all-time wins list. In seven seasons with the club, Reid has tallied 77 regular season wins, the highest combined win total of any head coach in franchise history in that time frame. NFL/Super Bowl MVP QB Patrick Mahomes has recorded 9,412 yards, 76 touchdowns and only 18 INTs (+58 TD/INT differential) in his career. In 31 games, he’s notched 17 300+ passing yard performances, including seven games in 2019. Mahomes only threw five INTs last season in 484 pass attempts. TE Travis Kelce owns 19 games with 100+ receiving yards and has caught at least one pass in 95 consecutive games. Kelce eclipsed 1,000 receiving yards again last year, becoming the first tight end in NFL history to do so in four-straight seasons. Since entering the league in 2016, WR Tyreek Hill is tied for first among all NFL pass catchers with 53 receptions of 25+ yards. In his sixth NFL season, WR Sammy Watkins has averaged 14.9 yards per catch in his career. WR Mecole Hardman had six TD catches last season, tying the club’s single-season rookie record. He also returned a kickoff 104 yards for a TD in 2019 (12/29). Defensively, last year the Chiefs added several new faces, including Defensive Coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, S Tyrann Mathieu and DE Frank Clark. Mathieu recorded four INTs, 12 passes defensed and 2.0 sacks last season and Clark had one interception, 8.0 sacks, three forced fumbles and one fumble recovery. DT Chris Jones led the team with 9.0 sacks. The Chiefs had 45.0 sacks last season, 16 INTs and 12 forced fumbles. KC forced 23 turnovers in 2019 (16 INTs, seven fumble recoveries). On special teams, K Harrison Butker has made 96 of his 107 career field goal attempts (89.7%) and 138 of 145 PATs (95.2%).
Kansas City Chiefs (0-0) vs. Houston Texans (0-0) Thursday, September 10, 2020 • 7:20 p.m. CT • NBC Arrowhead Stadium • Kansas City, Missouri THIS WEEK’S MEDIA AVAILABILITY Date Sunday, Sept. 6 Monday, Sept. 7 Tuesday, Sept. 8 Wednesday, Sept. 9 Thursday, Sept. 10 Friday, Sept. 11 Saturday, Sept. 12
Practice Coach Media Players 1:20 p.m. Reid 11:45 a.m. 11:45 a.m. 1:20 p.m. Coords. 11:45 a.m. 11:45 a.m. 11:45 a.m. Reid 1:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. No Media Availability Chiefs vs. Texans - Arrowhead - 7:20 p.m. No Media Availability No Media Availability
* All times are approximate and subject to change with little or no notice. All availabilities will be held via Zoom. • Texans Head Coach Bill O’Brien will be available via Zoom on Monday at 1:35 p.m. CT.
BROADCAST INFORMATION TV Coverage NBC (KSHB Local)
Chiefs Radio Network WDAF (106.5 FM)
Play-by-Play: Al Michaels Color: Cris Collinsworth Sideline: Michele Tafoya
Play-by-Play: Mitch Holthus Color: Danan Hughes Sideline: Josh Klingler
Tico Sports (Kansas City) La Mega 1160 AM / 100.5 FM Spanish Radio Broadcast Play-by-Play: Enrique Morales Color: Oscar Monterroso Sideline: Hannah Bassham
Chiefs Pregame & Postgame Show WDAF (106.5 FM) & KCSP (610 AM) Hosts: Art Hains and Dan Israel National Radio Broadcast Westwood One Sports Chiefs Twitter Accounts: @Chiefs @ChiefsReporter @ChiefsPR
CHIEFS MEDIA WEBSITE INFORMATION The Kansas City Chiefs 2020 Media Guide is available on the Chiefs media information website, NFLOMG.com. In 2015, the club introduced an improved interactive online media guide that features an in-game statistics monitoring platform, in addition to the weekly press materials such as transcripts, weekly releases, bios, additional stats and more. The club’s guide is updated weekly throughout the season to reflect the most up-todate information. Media members can also access the Chiefs credential application through the site. To login, the username is chiefsmedia and the password is chiefs.
DID YOU KNOW? Bill Belichick and Andy Reid (13-8; .619) are the only active head coaches who have won at least 10 Kickoff Weekend games. Reid has won five consecutive games on Kickoff Weekend, the longest current streak among active head coaches. The Chiefs have won their past five Kickoff Weekend games, tied for the longest active streak in the NFL (most in the AFC).
CHIEFS COMMUNICATIONS STAFF CONTACT INFORMATION Ted Crews Brad Gee Luke Shanno Cydney Ricker Jordan Trgovac Jordan Colquitt Tristan Vitale
Chiefs
Vice President of Communications Director of Football Communications Corporate Communications Manager Manager of Football Comm. & Admin. Communications Assistant Communications Seasonal Assistant Communications Seasonal Assistant
(816) 920-4359 (816) 920-4349 (816) 920-4351 (816) 920-4352 (816) 920-4353 (816) 920-4403 (816) 920-4355
tcrews@chiefs.nfl.com bgee@chiefs.nfl.com lshanno@chiefs.nfl.com cricker@chiefs.nfl.com jtrgovac@chiefs.nfl.com jcolquitt@chiefs.nfl.com tvitale@chiefs.nfl.com
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CHIEFS VS. TEXANS 2019 TEAM COMPARISONS Chiefs Texans Record .................................................. 12-4 .......................................10-6 Division Standing ................................ 1st (AFCW) ................ 1st (AFCS) Turnover Margin (NFL Rank) .............. +8 (T-7th) ...................... 0 (T-15th) Offense (NFL Rank) Net Yards Per Game ............................ 379.2 (6th) ................ 362.0 (13th) Yards Per Play...................................... 6.22 (2nd) ................... 5.70 (12th) Points Per Game .................................. 28.2 (5th) .................... 23.6 (14th) Possession Average............................ 29:27 (19th) ........... 30:02 (T-14th) Net Rushing Yards Per Game ............. 98.1 (23rd) .................. 125.6 (9th) Net Passing Yards Per Game ............. 281.1 (5th) ................ 236.4 (15th) Had Intercepted/Yards......................... 5/23 ......................................14/92 Sacks Allowed/Yards ........................... 25/-192 (T-3rd)....... 49/-300 (25th) Fumbles/Lost ....................................... 20/10......................................20/8 Third Down Pct. ................................... 47.6% (1st) ................ 43.5% (8th) Red Zone TD Pct. ................................. 54.0% (20th) .............. 64.2% (7th) Giveaways ............................................ 15 (T-3rd) ....................... 22 (18th) Defense (NFL Rank) Net Yards Per Game ............................ 349.6 (17th) .............. 388.3 (28th) Yards Per Play...................................... 5.36 (13th) ...................6.09 (31st) Points Per Game .................................. 19.3 (7th) .................... 24.1 (19th) Net Rushing Yards Per Game ............. 128.2 (26th) .............. 121.1 (25th) Net Passing Yards Per Game ............. 221.4 (8th) ................ 267.3 (29th) Intercepted By/Yards ........................... 16/141................................12/302 Sacks For/Yards................................... 45/-338 (11th) ..... 31/-215 (T-26th) Opponent Fumbles/Lost ..................... 20/7......................................16/10 Third Down Pct. ................................... 37.1% (12th) ............ 48.5% (31st) Red Zone TD Pct. ................................. 50.9% (T-9th) .......... 71.4% (32nd) Takeaways ............................................ 23 (T-10th) .................. 22 (T-15th) Special Teams (NFL Rank) Punts-Average Yards (Gross) ............. 43.4 (28th) .................. 45.6 (12th) Punts-Average Yards (Net) ................. 40.3 (23rd) .................... 43.5 (3rd) Punt Returns-Average Per .................. 6.9 (19th) ........................ 9.7 (5th) Punt Returns-Average Per Allowed ... 4.7 (3rd) ...........................3.4 (1st) Kickoff Returns-Average Per .............. 25.1 (6th) .................... 22.0 (19th) Kickoff Returns-Avg. Per Allowed...... 19.6 (4th) ..................... 18.6 (2nd) Field Goals Made/Attempted .............. 34/38 (6th) ............. 20/25 (T-17th) Penalties (NFL Rank) Penalties Against/Yards ...................... 107/1,029 (15th) ..111/892 (T-20th) Opp. Penalties Against/Yds ................ 116/844 (T-7th) .. 109/859 (T-16th)
CHIEFS VS. TEXANS 2019 IND. COMPARISON Chiefs
Texans PASSING YARDS Mahomes ............................4,031 Watson ................................. 3,852 Moore .................................659 RUSHING YARDS Dam. Williams.....................498 Hyde ..................................... 1,070 McCoy ................................465 Watson .................................... 413 RECEIVING YARDS Kelce...................................1,229 Hopkins ................................ 1,165 Hill.......................................860 Fuller V .................................... 670 Watkins ...............................673 Stills......................................... 561 Hardman .............................538 Akins ....................................... 418 POINTS SCORED Butker .................................147 Fairbairn .................................. 100 Hardman .............................42 Watson ...................................... 48 Hill.......................................42 binson Hopkins ..................................... 44 Fells........................................... 42 Dam. Williams.....................42 INTERCEPTIONS Mathieu ...............................4 Gipson Sr. .................................. 3 Thornhill ..............................3 Mercilus ....................................... 2 Breeland .............................2 Reid ............................................. 2 Sorensen ............................2 Roby ............................................ 2 Ward ...................................2 Addae .......................................... 2 Three Tied ..........................1 Joseph......................................... 1
Jones ..................................9.0 Clark ...................................8.0 Ogbah .................................5.5 Okafor .................................5.0 Kpassagnon........................4.0
SACKS Mercilus .................................... 7.5 Watt .......................................... 4.0 J. Martin ................................... 3.5 Scarlett ..................................... 3.5 Omenihu................................... 3.0
DEFENSIVE TACKLES Hitchens..............................88 Cunningham ............................ 137 Wilson .................................81 McKinney ................................ 101 Mathieu ...............................75 Reid ........................................... 78 Ward ...................................74 Reader ...................................... 52 KICKOFF RETURNS (AVG.) Hardman .............................27 (26.1) Carter .............................. 14 (22.0) PUNT RETURNS (AVG.) Hardman .............................18 (9.3) Carter ................................ 22 (9.7) FIELD GOALS Butker .................... 34/38 (89.5%) Fairbarin ..................20/25 (80.0%) PUNTS (GROSS/NET AVG.) Colquitt .................. 48 (44.3/40.3) Anger....................... 45 (46.5/44.5)
CHIEFS VS. BUCCANEERS SERIES HISTORY CHIEFS VS. TEXANS SERIES HISTORY • The Kansas City Chiefs will take on the Houston Texans for the 13th time in the history of the two charter AFL franchises. The Chiefs own a 7-5 (.583) advantage over the Texans all-time, including a 30-0 Chiefs win in the 2015 AFC Wild Card Game and a 51-31 victory in last year’s AFC Divisional Game. • Kansas City and Houston met in Week 6 of the 2019 regular season, with Houston’s 31-24 victory giving Kansas City its second loss of the season. Following the Week 6 loss to the Texans, the Chiefs went 8-2 (.800) to close out the regular season. • Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid is 8-2 (.800) all-time (reg and postseason) against the Texans, including a 5-2 (.714) mark at the helm of the Chiefs. Dating back to 2013, Reid’s teams have averaged 29.0 points per game in the team’s seven total games against the Texans, including the two playoff victories.
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CHIEFS VS. TEXANS SERIES HISTORY (LAST 10 GAMES) Date Result Of Note 11/20/2005 W, 45-17 KC: Green: 3 passing TDs; Warfield: INT ret. for a TD. 9/9/2007 L, 3-20 HOU: Johnson: 142 rec. yards and a rec. TD. HOU: Foster: 2 rush. TDs; KC: Cassel; 3 pass. TDs. 10/17/2010 L, 31-35 10/20/2013* W, 17-16 KC: Smith: 2 total TDs; Hali: 2.5 sacks (-29 yards). KC: Smith: 243 pass. yds and 3 TDs; Kelce: 2 rec. TDs. 9/13/2015 W, 27-20 1/9/2016^ W, 30-0 KC: Davis: 106-yard opening KO return TD. 9/8/2016 L, 12-19 HOU: Novak: 4-of-5 FGs made; Santos: 4 FGs made. 10/8/2017 W, 42-32 KC: Smith: 342 pass. yards and 3 TDs; West: 2 rec. TDs. 10/13/2019* L, 24-31 HOU: Hyde: 116 rush. yds, 1 TD; KC: Mahomes: 3 pass. TDs. 1/12/2020#* W, 51-31 KC: Outscored Texans 51-7 after starting down 24-0. *at Arrowhead Stadium ^AFC Wild Card Round #Divisional Round
Chiefs
CHIEFS HEAD COACH ANDY REID
TEXANS HEAD COACH BILL O’BRIEN
Reid is in his 29th NFL season, 22nd as a head coach and eighth with the Chiefs. In seven seasons with the club, he’s tallied 77 wins, more victories than any other head coach in franchise history in that timeframe. In 2019, Reid led the Chiefs to their first Super Bowl appearance and victory in 50 years, bringing the Lombardi Trophy back to Kansas City for the first time since 1969. Additionally, the Chiefs 35-24 victory over the Tennessee Titans in the AFC Championship game brought the Lamar Hunt Trophy to Kansas City for the first time. Under Reid, the Chiefs have made the playoffs six of seven seasons, including a 12-4 record, the number two seed and a bye in 2019. The Chiefs have played in two-consecutive AFC Championship home games.The club earned four straight AFC West titles (2016-19) for the first time in franchise history. In 2015, the Chiefs won their first playoff game since 1994, defeating the Texans 30-0. The team finished 11-5 after a 1-5 start in 2015. It was the greatest turnaround in a single-season in NFL history. In 2013, Reid led the Chiefs to an 11-5 record marking the greatest singleseason turnaround in franchise history after the team finished 2-14 in 2012. Prior to joining the Chiefs, Reid led the Eagles to a 130-93-1 (.583) regular season record during his 14 seasons as head coach. He led the Eagles franchise to one Super Bowl appearance. When you include his time as an NFL assistant coach, his teams have made the playoffs 21 times (24-19 record), and he has coached in four Super Bowls, eight NFC Championships and two AFC Championships. Reid spent seven seasons as an assistant coach with the Green Bay Packers under Head Coach Mike Holmgren. Prior to joining the NFL ranks, Reid’s final collegiate stop was the University of Missouri (1989-91). Prior to his stint with the Tigers, Reid spent two years working with the offensive line at the University of Texas – El Paso, and before that, he held the same position with Northern Arizona. In 1983, Reid took the position of offensive coordinator and offensive line coach at San Francisco State (1983-85). A tackle/guard at Brigham Young University from 1979-81, Reid entered the coaching ranks as a graduate assistant at BYU in 1982.
NFL Head Coach: 22nd Year NFL Coach Overall: 29th Year NFL Overall: 222-142-1 (.610) Reg. Season: 207-128-1 (.618) Postseason: 15-14 (.517)
Record w/ KC: 77-35 (.688) Record w/ PHI: 130-93-1 (.583) Record vs. HOU: 6-2 (.750) College: BYU (’81) Hometown: Los Angeles
O’Brien was named the third head coach in Houston Texans history on January 3, 2014. He is currently in his seventh season with the Texans and added the title of general manager on Jan. 28, 2020. O’Brien led the Texans to three-straight winning seasons in his first three years, including back-to-back AFC South Division Championships. He is the 14th coach since 1978 to begin his NFL head coaching career with three consecutive winning seasons and his 28 career victories were the most by any head coach in franchise history through their first three years. The Texans finished the 2019 season with a 10-6 record and the AFC South Division Championship title. Prior to joining the Texans, O’Brien spent two seasons (2012-13) as the head coach of Penn State. He was named the Bear Bryant, Maxwell Football Club and ESPN National Coach of the Year in 2012 after winning more games than any other first-year head coach in the program’s previous 125 seasons. O’Brien’s first NFL coaching experience came with the New England Patriots where he rose from offensive assistant (2007) to wide receivers coach in 2008 and then served as the quarterbacks coach (2009-10). He finished his stint in New England as the offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach in 2011. The Brown University alum began his coaching career at his alma mater in 1993 as a tight ends coach before serving as the inside linebackers coach in 1994. He would continue his collegiate coaching career at Georgia Tech (1995-2002), Maryland (2003-04) and Duke (2005-06). O’Brien was a member of the Brown Bears football team from 1990-92, playing linebacker and defensive end.
NFL Head Coach: 7th Year NFL Coach Overall: 12th Year NFL Overall: 54-48 (.529) Regular Season: 52-44 (.542) Postseason: 2-4 (.333)
BILL O’BRIEN’ S CAREER PATH 1990-94 1993-94 1995-02
ANDY REID’S CAREER PATH 1979-82 1983-85 1986 1987-88 1989-91 1992-98 1999-12 2013-20
BYU. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tackle/Guard (‘79-81) Graduate Assistant (‘82) San Francisco State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Offensive Coordinator/ Offensive Line Northern Arizona. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Offensive Line Texas-El Paso. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Offensive Line Missouri. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Offensive Line Green Bay Packers. . . . . . Tight Ends / Offensive Line (‘92-96) Quarterbacks (‘97-98) Philadelphia Eagles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Head Coach (‘99-00) HC/Exec. V.P. Football Ops (‘01-12) Kansas City Chiefs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Head Coach
97
04
Conference Titles
95 96
19
Super Bowls
Chiefs
04
96 06
97 10
16
2012-13 2014-20
07
19 01
2003-04 2005-06 2007-11
Brown University ................................... Linebacker/DE (‘90-92) Brown University ...............................................Tight Ends (’93) Inside Linebackers (’94) Georgia Tech.................................. Graduate Assistant (’95-97) Running Backs (’98-00) Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks (‘01) Asst. Head Coach (‘02) University of Maryland ....................................... Running Backs Duke University .................Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks New England Patriots ......................... Offensive Assistant (’07) Wide Receivers (’08) Quarterbacks (‘09-10) Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks (‘11) Penn State ............................................................. Head Coach Houston Texans ........................................Head Coach (’14-19) Head Coach and General Manager (’20)
BILL O’BRIEN’S HARDWARE
ANDY REID’S HARDWARE 96
Record w/ HOU: 52-44 (.542) Record vs. KC: 2-2 (.500) College: Brown (‘93) Hometown: Dorchester, Mass.
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Conference Titles
02 17
03
07
09
10
11
18
15
16
18
19
19
Division Titles
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CHIEFS VS. TEXANS CONNECTIONS
WHAT TO WATCH FOR...
Professional • Chiefs DE Frank Clark was teammates with Texans OLB Jacob Martin in 2018 with the Seattle Seahawks, as Texans Offensive Consultant Carl Smith served as Associate Head Coach of the Seahawks.
• As a unit, the Kansas City Chiefs will aim to achieve the franchise’s fifth -consecutive AFC West Division title in 2020, potentially extending a club record for consecutive division titles since the team’s inception in 1960.
• Smith served as Offensive Coordinator of the Jaguars from 2005-06 alongside of Chiefs OL Coach Andy Heck (Asst. OL Coach). • Chiefs S Tyrann Mathieu and Texans RB David Johnson were teammates on the Arizona Cardinals from 2015-17. Personal • Texans T Charlie Heck is the son of Chiefs OL Coach Andy Heck. Former Chiefs • Texans Associate Head Coach Romeo Crennel was the Chiefs Defensive Coordinator from 2010-11. Crennel took over head coaching duties for the final three games of the 2011 season, holding that role through the 2012 season. • Texans C/G Zach Fulton was a sixth-round draft pick by the Chiefs in 2014, spending the following four seasons with the club. • Texans Executive Vice President of Football Operations Jack Easterby served as the Chiefs Team Chaplain for the 2011 and 2012 seasons. Former Texans • Chiefs S Tyrann Mathieu was a member of the Texans for the 2018 season. With Houston, Mathieu matched a career-high with 89 total tackles, including a career-high 3.0 sacks. College • Chiefs President Mark Donovan and Texans Head Coach Bill O’Brien both attended Brown University and both played football for the Brown Bears. Donovan was a QB and captain for the Bears in 1988 and O’Brien was a DE/LB for Brown from 1990-92. • Texans QB Deshaun Watson, DE Carlos Watkins and Chiefs LB Dorian O’Daniel were all teammates at Clemson from 2014-16, helping the Tigers win the program’s first CFP National Championship. • Texans DE Carlos Watkins played with Chiefs WR Sammy Watkins and LB Dorian O’Daniel during his time (2012-15) at Clemson. • Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes and Texans WR Keke Coutee were teammates at Texas Tech from 2015-16. The duo registered 995 yards and 7 touchdowns through the air in that time span. • Chiefs T Mike Remmers and Texans WR Brandin Cooks were teammates at Oregon State in 2011. • Chiefs P Tommy Townsend and Texans DE Jonathan Greenard were teammates at Florida in 2019 where they helped the Gators to a victory in the Orange Bowl. Hometown • Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes (Tyler; Texas Tech) and S Armani Watts (Forney; Texas A&M) are both Texas natives and both played collegiately in the state of Texas.
• Head Coach Andy Reid enters 2020 with 222 career wins, with 207 career victories coming in the regular season and 15 in the postseason. With seven victories in the 2020 regular season, Reid would pass Paul Brown (213) for sixth-most regular season wins all-time. With eight victories in 2020, Reid would pass Curly Lambeau (229) for fifth-most total wins all-time. • With the opener against Houston, Reid joins Tom Coughlin as the only head coaches in the Super Bowl era to coach in at least eight seasons with two different teams. • The Chiefs aim for a third-consecutive 12-win season, which would mark the first time in franchise history that the club has recorded three consecutive 12win seasons. KC’s three 12-win seasons since 2016 are tied for the most in the NFL in that time span (New England). • With 9,412 passing yards in 31 career games, QB Patrick Mahomes needs 588 passing yards in his next four games to become the fastest quarterback in NFL history to reach the milestone of 10,000 passing yards (Kurt Warner; 36). • Mahomes needs 24 touchdown passes in his next 12 games to become the fastest quarterback in NFL history to reach the milestone of 100 touchdown passes (Dan Marino; 44). • With 138 passing yards in Week 1, Mahomes would pass Matt Cassell (9,549) for eighth-most passing yards in franchise history. • With 100 receiving yards in Week 1, TE Travis Kelce would tally his 20th career game with 100 yards receiving, which would tie Chiefs Hall of Fame WR Otis Taylor for the second-most in club history (TE Tony Gonzalez; 31). • Kelce looks to extend his streak to 96 consecutive games with a reception, the second-longest streak in franchise history. • Kelce also aims to become the first tight end in NFL history with five consecutive 1,000-yard receiving seasons and three consecutive 1,200-yard receiving seasons. He would also become the first tight end ever with five career seasons with 1,000 receiving yards. • With 81 receiving yards in Week 1, Kelce would pass Henry Marshall (6,545) for fourth-most receiving yards in franchise history. • WR Tyreek Hill is tied for the NFL lead with 53 catches of 25-plus yards since he entered the league in 2016 (WR Julio Jones). Hill is 14 receptions of 25-plus yards away from passing PFHOF TE Tony Gonzalez (66) for the most in Chiefs history (since 1994). • FB Anthony Sherman aims to play in his 113th-consecutive game, the longest active streak among fullbacks or running backs in the NFL. • T Mitchell Schwartz aims to continue his streak of 128 consecutive games started, which is tied for the second-longest active streak among all offensive players. Only Russell Wilson (128) and Philip Rivers (224) have started as many consecutive games. • K Harrison Butker needs 17 points to move into sixth place on the franchise’s all-time scoring list.
• Texans T Roderick Johnson is a native of Florissant, Mo. • Texans T Charlie Heck is a native of Kansas City, Mo.
• With 4 field goals of 50+ yards, Butker would move into second place in franchise history for most field goals of at least 50 yards. • WR Mecole Hardman needs one kickoff return touchdown to become the fifth player in franchise history with multiple career kickoff return touchdowns. • P Tommy Townsend looks to become the first rookie punter to appear in a game for the Chiefs in the last 15 years (Dustin Colquitt; 2005).
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Chiefs
2019 CHIEFS FINAL TEAM STATS & RANKINGS CATEGORY
TOTAL
Total Offense. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 379.2 Rush Offense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98.1 Pass Offense. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281.1 Total Defense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349.6 Rush Defense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128.2 Pass Defense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221.4 Points/Game . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28.2 Opp. Pts./Game. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19.3
2nd 11th 1st 9th 12th 7th 2nd 5th
6th 23rd 5th 17th 26th 8th 5th 7th
2019 CHIEFS FINAL INDIVIDUAL STATS & RANKINGS CATEGORY
PLAYER
Scoring (NK) Rushing Yards Pass. Rating Receptions Rec. Yards Interceptions Punting Avg. Punt Ret. Avg. KO Ret. Avg. Sacks
Hardman / Hill Dam. Williams Mahomes Kelce Kelce Mathieu Colquitt Hardman Hardman Jones
TOTAL 42 498 105.3 97 1,229 4 44.3 9.3 26.1 9.0
T-15th 19th 3rd 4th 1st T-9th 15th 11th 3rd T-10th
T-37th 39th 7th 8th 4th T-13th 27th 16th 5th T-22nd
2019 FINAL AFC WEST STANDINGS Team z - Kansas City Chiefs Denver Broncos Oakland Raiders Los Angeles Chargers
W 12 7 7 5
L 4 9 9 11
Pct. .750 .438 .438 .313
PF 451 282 313 337
PA 308 316 419 345
Streak Won 6 Won 2 Lost 1 Lost 3
CHIEFS 2019 RESULTS Date Sun, Sept. 8 Sun, Sept. 15 Sun, Sept. 22 Sun, Sept. 29 Sun, Oct. 6 Sun, Oct. 13 Thurs, Oct. 17 Sun, Oct. 27 Sun, Nov. 3 Sun, Nov. 10 Mon, Nov. 18 Sun, Nov. 24 Sun, Dec. 1 Sun, Dec. 8 Sun, Dec. 15 Sun, Dec. 22 Sun, Dec. 29
Opponent at Jacksonville Jaguars at Oakland Raiders Baltimore Ravens at Detroit Lions Indianapolis Colts Houston Texans at Denver Broncos Green Bay Packers Minnesota Vikings at Tennessee Titans at LA Chargers (Mex) BYE WEEK Oakland Raiders at New England Patriots Denver Broncos at Chicago Bears LA Chargers
Time Noon 3:05 p.m. Noon Noon 7:20 p.m. Noon 7:20 p.m. 7:20 p.m. Noon Noon 7:15 p.m. ----3:25 p.m. 3:25 p.m. Noon 7:20 p.m. Noon
Network W, 40-26 W, 28-10 W, 33-28 W, 34-30 L, 19-13 L, 31-24 W, 30-6 L, 31-24 W, 26-23 L, 35-32 W, 24-17 ----W, 40-9 W, 23-16 W, 23-3 W, 26-3 W, 31-21
AFC Divisional Playoffs Sun, Jan. 12 Houston Texans
2:05 p.m.
W, 51-31
AFC Championship Game Sun, Jan. 19 Tennessee Titans
2:05 p.m.
W, 35-24
Super Bowl LIV Sun, Feb. 2 San Francisco 49ers
5:30 p.m.
W, 31-20
MCCULLOUGH’S AMAZING STORY Kansas City Chiefs Running Backs Coach Deland McCullough was featured on ESPN’s E:60, highlighting his inspirational journey to discovering his birth parents. The feature, which aired on Sunday, Sept. 2, 2018, documents the life of McCullough, who was adopted at birth, and his search for his biological parents that spanned more than 40 years. That alone makes for a powerful story, but as it turns out, McCullough was already plenty familiar with his biological father – a man he had known since he was a kid, a man that was a mentor and father-figure who goes by the name of Sherman Smith. It’s a story that defies the odds as his father was unaware that he had a son, but still served as an instrumental figure throughout McCullough’s life.
CHIEFS ALL-TIME VS. AFC WEST OPPONENTS Team Denver LA Chargers Oakland
OVERALL (REG. SEASON) Record Pct. Longest Win Streak 65-54-0 .546 11 (1964-1969) 63-55-1 .534 9 (2014-2018) 65-52-2 .555 9 (2003-2007)
Team Denver LA Chargers Oakland
AT HOME (REG. SEASON) Record Pct. Longest Win Streak 40-19-0 .678 14 (1960-1973) 36-24-0 .600 7 (1997-2003) 35-24-1 .592 10 (1989-1998)
Team Denver LA Chargers Oakland
ON THE ROAD (REG. SEASON) Record Pct. Longest Win Streak 25-35-0 .417 5 (2015-Current, 1965-1969) 27-31-1 .466 6 (1972-1977) 30-28-1 .517 7 (2003-2009)
Chiefs
“If you would have told me to pick who my father was, there’s no way I would have picked him because I might have thought I wasn’t worthy for him to be my father,” McCullough said. “I felt like my blessings came full circle because I’d always wanted to be somebody like him.”
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THE BEST IN CHIEFS HISTORY
CHIEFS ASSISTANT COACHES
Now in his eighth season as head coach in Kansas City, Andy Reid is the club’s third-longest tenured head coach trailing only Pro Football Hall of Fame Coach Hank Stram (15 years) and Marty Schottenheimer (10 years). In his first seven seasons as Head Coach of the Chiefs, Reid has coached the team to a 77-35 record in 112 regular season games. His 68.6 winning percentage is the top mark in franchise history for any coach in his first seven seasons leading the club. Marty Schottenheimer is second on that list, leading his Chiefs teams to a 72-39-1 (64.7%) record in his first seven seasons. In Reid’s 112 total games with the Chiefs, he has registered a 4115 (73.2%) record at home and a 36-20 (64.3%) record on the road.
OFFENSIVE STAFF
MOST REGULAR SEASON WINS, FIRST 7 YEARS WITH CHIEFS Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4.
Name Yr. 1 Reid 11-5 Schottenheimer 8-7-1 Vermeil 6-10 Stram 8-6
Yr. 2 9-7 11-5 8-8 6-8
Yr. 3 11-5 10-6 13-3 11-3
Yr. 4 12-4 10-6 7-9 5-7-2
Yr. 5 10-6 11-5 10-6 7-7
Yr. 6 12-4 9-7 -7-5-2
Yr. 7 12-4 13-3 -11-2-1
Tot. Rec. 77-35 72-39-1 44-36 55-38-5
Pct. .688 .647 .550 .587
Amongst active NFL head coaches with their current team, Reid is the sixth-longest tenured coach and his 68.6 regular season win percentage is second only to NE’s Bill Belichick (74.1%) amongst head coaches with at least three seasons at the helm.
Eric Bieniemy Offensive Coordinator Joe Bleymaier Pass Game Analyst/Assistant Quarterbacks Andy Heck Offensive Line Mike Kafka Quarterbacks/Pass Game Coordinator Greg Lewis Wide Receivers Corey Matthaei Assistant Offensive Line Deland McCullough Running Backs Tom Melvin Tight Ends Porter Ellett Offensive Quality Control David Girardi Offensive Quality Control
DEFENSIVE STAFF Steve Spagnuolo Defensive Coordinator Matt House Linebackers Brendan Daly Run Game Coordinator/Defensive Line
HE WINS AT HOME AND ON THE ROAD No matter where his team is playing, home or away, Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid is consistent. Through 21 seasons and 336 games, Coach Reid has a similar record on the road as he does at home. Home Record 106-62 (.631)
Road Record 101-66-1 (.604)
Total 207-128-1 (.618)
KEYS TO SUCCESS During the 2018 season, Kansas City had 539 successful plays out of 988 overall attempts for a 54.6 percent success rate on offense, which ranked tied for second in the National Football League. The Chiefs continued the trend in 2019, ranking fourth in the AFC for percentage of successful plays. 2019 AFC LEADERS SUCCESSFUL PLAYS Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Team BAL OAK HOU KC LAC
Successful Play Pct. 54.4% 51.9% 51.3% 51.2% 49.8%
HIGH EFFICIENCY The Chiefs offense under Reid has been efficient in producing quality yardage with their time of possession. In 2018, the Kansas City offense led the league with an average of 6.84 yards per play, 1.24 yards greater than the league average. Last season, the Chiefs offense finished ranked second in the NFL (first in the AFC) in yards per play. 2019 NFL LEADERS, YARDS PER PLAY Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
6
Team DAL KC BAL TEN SF
Off. Yds/Play 6.46 6.22 6.13 6.12 6.02
Britt Reid Linebackers/Outside Linebackers Dave Merritt Defensive Backs Sam Madison Defensive Backs/Cornerbacks Terry Bradden Defensive Quality Control Alex Whittingham Defensive Quality Control Connor Embree Defensive Assistant
SPECIAL TEAMS STAFF Dave Toub Assistant Head Coach/Special Teams Coordinator Andy Hill Assistant Special Teams
MISCELLANEOUS Barry Rubin Head Strength and Conditioning Travis Crittenden Assistant Strength and Conditioning Ryan Reynolds Assistant Strength and Conditioning/Sport Science Greg Carbin Assistant Strength and Conditioning Mike Frazier Statistical Analysis Coordinator Dan Williams Assistant to the Head Coach
Chiefs
2019 CHIEFS FINAL OFFENSIVE RANKINGS Category 10 Play Drives Pct. of 1st Down Plays for 4+ Yards Avg. Yards on 1st Downs 1st and Goal Inside 5 Yard Giveaways 3 and Out Pct. 3rd Down Conversion Pct. 3rd and 4th and 1 Conversion Pct. 3rd and 1 Conversion Pct. 3rd and >6 Conversion Pct. 3rd and 4-6 Yard Conversion Pct. 4th Down Conversion Pct. 4th and >6 Yard Conversion Pct. Avg. Margin of Victory Passer Rating in Blitz Situations Points on 1st Offensive Possession 20+ Yard Completions Pct. of Dropped Passes Field Goal Percentage Avg. Starting Field Position - Away Total First Downs Giveaway Points Allowed Total Giveaways Goal-to-Go Giveaways Kickoff Return Average Pct. of 20+ Yard Kickoff Returns Misc. Touchdowns Scored Net Passing Yards Per Game Offensive Points Scored Offensive Scoring Efficiency Opp. Interception Returns of 20+ Yds Opp. Takeaways Passer Rating Yards Per Game Passing First Downs Made Yards After Catch Pct. of 1st Down Pass Plays of 4+ Yds Passer Rating on Attempts 21+ Air Yds Plays of 10+ Yards Plays of 20+ Yards Punt Returns of 20+ Yards Points on Drives of <4 Plays Turnover Pct. on Drives of <4 Plays Red Zone 3rd Down Conversion Pct. Red Zone Giveaways Rushing Plays of 50+ Yards Total Points Scored Scoring Differential Points Scored Outside the Red Zone Offensive Touchdowns Drives Starting Inside Opp. 20-Yd Line Successful Play Pct. Total Takeaways Times Sacked Points Per Game Total Points in Last 8 Games Touchdown Drives Turnover Differential Yards Per Game Yards Per Play
Chiefs
NFL Rank T-5th 9th 2nd T-1st 2nd 1st 9th 4th 3rd 1st 5th 6th 9th 2nd T-2nd 7th 6th 6th 6th 6th 8th T-3rd T-1st 6th 6th T-6th 5th 5th 2nd T-1st T-3rd 5th 6th 9th 1st 6th 2nd 9th T-6th T-6th T-6th T-4th 10th T-10th T-7th 5th 4th 1st T-7th T-10th 7th T-10th T-3rd 5th 6th T-7th T-7th 6th 2nd
Value 31 drives 49.8% 6.43 yards 0 giveaways 12.8% 47.6% 72.4% 77.3% 33.3% 62.5% 60.0% 50.0% 13.83 points 127.91 rating 54 points 59 completions 4.0% 89.5% 30.2 yard line 350 first downs 50 points 15 giveaways 0 giveaways 25.1 yards 70.3% 4 touchdowns 281.1 yards 421 points 48.8% 0 returns 15 takeaways 104.4 rating 379.2 yards 211 first downs 2,209 yards 56.7% 119.8 rating 221 plays 69 plays 2 returns 55 points 3.0% 41.9% 2 giveaways 2 rushes 451 points +143 points 179 points 46 touchdowns 3 drives 51.2% 23 takeaways 25 sacks 28.2 points 225 points 46 drives +8 379.2 yards 6.22 yards
2019 CHIEFS FINAL DEFENSIVE RANKINGS Category
NFL Rank
Value
Takeaways w/ Opp. 1st and G Inside 5 T-1st
2 takeaways
Avg. Margin of Defeat
5.75 points
2nd
Avg. Opp. Starting Position After Kickoff 6th
24.2 yard line
Opp. Passer Rating in Blitz Situations
74.53 rating
4th
Opp. Points on 1st Poss. of 2nd Half
4th
23 points
Opp. Possessions
2nd
164 possessions
Goal-to-Go Takeaways
1st
4 takeaways
Opp. Passer Rating Inside the 30
2nd
78.4 rating
Opp. Misc. Touchdowns Allowed
T-6th
1 touchdown
Offensive Points Allowed to Opponent
9th
302 points
Opp. Avg. Starting Field Position
7th
27.0 yard line
Opp. Avg. Starting Field Pos. - Away
7th
26.4 yard line
Opp. Kickoff Returns of 20+ Yards Pct. 3rd
43.2%
Opp. Yards Lost on Negative Plays
-445 yards
10th
Opp. Punt Returns of 20+ Yards
T-1st
0 returns
Opp. Red Zone 3rd Down Conv. Pct.
6th
30.3%
Opp. Offensive Touchdowns Allowed
T-10th
35 touchdowns
Opp. Two-Point Conversion Pct.
T-8th
33.3%
Opp. Yards per Play in Red Zone
10th
2.62 yards
Opp. 1st and Goal Inside 5 TD Pct.
T-4th
69.2%
Opp. 3rd and 1 Yard Conversion Pct.
3rd
54.5%
Opp. 3rd and >6 Conversion Pct.
6th
21.6%
Opp. 3rd and 4-6 Yard Conversion Pct. 7th
39.0%
Opp. 4th and >6 Conversion Pct.
T-1st
0.0%
Opp. Completions of 20+ Yards
T-8th
46 completions
Opp. Goal-to-Go TD Efficiency
7th
62.1%
Opp. TD Efficiency Inside the 30
10th
43.7%
Opp. Red Zone Touchdown Efficiency
T-9th
50.9%
Opp. Points Outside the Red Zone
4th
58 points
Opp. 1st and Goal Inside the 5 Drives
T-8th
13 drives
Opp. Kickoff Return Average
4th
19.6 yards
Opp. Kickoff Touchback Percentage
2nd
46.4%
Opp. Net Passing Yards per Game
8th
221.4 yards
Opp. Pass Rtg. on Atts. 21+ Air Yards
4th
60.7 rating
Opp. Plays of 20+ Yards
T-10th
55 plays
Opp. Plays of 20+ Yards (past 8 games) T-7th
26 plays
Opp. Punt Return Avg.
3rd
4.7 yards
Opp. Gross Punting Avg.
6th
43.8 yards
Opp. Total Points Scored
7th
308 points
Opp. Touchdown Drives Allowed
T-10th
35 drives
Opp. Passer Rating
5th
80.8 rating
Opp. Passer Rating on 1st Down
4th
80.2 rating
Opp. Passer Rating on 2nd Down
5th
79.9 rating
Opp. Penalties Accepted
T-7th
116 penalties
Opp. Points on 1st Poss. of 2nd Half
4th
23 points
Opp. Points Scored at End of Half
9th
43 points
Opp. Red Zone Successful Play Pct.
6th
40.1%
Red Zone Takeaways
T-1st
6 takeaways
Opp. Drives Starting Inside KC 20
T-9th
2 drives
Opp. Drives Starting Inside KC 50
T-5th
13 drives
Total Takeaways
T-10th
23 takeaways
Total Points Allowed
7th
308 points
Total Points Allowed (past 8 games)
T-2nd
127 points
7
HEAD COACH ANDY REID NOTES REID VIA THE NFL DRAFT - HIS 1ST ROUND PICKS Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid has had 17 first-round selections as a head coach in the NFL. Prior to 2013, Reid’s team selected as high as second overall (1999) and as late as 31st overall (2005) in the first round.
REID CAREER HIGHLIGHTS • Career record of 207-128-1 in the regular season, as well as a 15-14 postseason record. Reid’s 222 combined wins rank sixth-most in NFL history and second among active coaches in regular season and postseason wins. He has defeated all 32 NFL teams as a head coach. Reid owns a .618 regular season winning percentage. • His 77 regular season wins in his first seven seasons with Kansas City are more than any other head coach in franchise history in their initial seven seasons. The Chiefs won four-straight AFC West titles in 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 for the first time in franchise history. KC finished with a 12-4 record for the second year in a row, earning the number one seed in the AFC Playoffs in 2018 and the number two seed in 2019. The Chiefs defeated the Colts, 31-13, on Jan. 12, 2019 to advance to the AFC title game in 2018. The Chiefs defeated the Texans, 51-31, on Jan. 12, 2020 to advance and host the AFC title game for the second year in a row for the first time in franchise history. KC defeated the Titans on Jan. 19 to advance to Super Bowl LIV. The Chiefs defeated the 49ers in Super Bowl LIV for Reid’s first Super Bowl victory as a head coach and KC’s first SB victory in 50 years. • The Chiefs finished 12-4 in 2016, earning the number two seed and a first-round bye in the playoffs. Reid guided Kansas City to it’s first playoff win in 22 years in 2015. The club finished 11-5 after a 1-5 start, the greatest turnaround in a single season in NFL history. • The 2013 Chiefs, led by Head Coach Andy Reid, orchestrated the greatest single-season turnaround in franchise history after an 11-5 finish. In 2012, the team finished 2-14, a +9 turnaround in his first season with the club. During Reid’s 14 seasons in Philadelphia, his teams made the postseason nine times, which ranked third in the NFL behind Indianapolis’ 12 and New England’s 10. • Including his time as an assistant coach, Reid’s teams have now made 21 playoff appearances, as well as four Super Bowl appearances after playing in a combined eight NFC Championships and two AFC Championships. He has four career Super Bowl appearances, won Super Bowl XXXI as an assistant in Green Bay and Super Bowl LIV as a head coach. Reid owns three NFC titles, one AFC title and 13 division titles in his career dating back to his days as an assistant. He mentored Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre while with the Packers along with QB Donovan McNabb with the Eagles.
Yr. No. (Overall) 1999 2 2000 6 2001 25 2002 26 2003 15 2004 16 2005 31 2006 14 2007 -2008 -2009 19 2010 13 2011 21 2012 12 2013 (KC) 1 2014 23 2015 18 2016 -2017 10 2018 -2019 -2020 32
Selection (School) QB Donovan McNabb (Syracuse) DT Corey Simon (Florida State) WR Freddie Mitchell (UCLA) CB Lito Sheppard (Florida) DE Jerome McDougle (Miami) T Shawn Andrews (Arkansas) DT Mike Patterson (Southern California) DT Brodrick Bunkley (Florida State) No First-Round Selection No First-Round Selection WR Jeremy Maclin (Missouri) DE Brandon Graham (Michigan) G Danny Watkins (Baylor) DT Fletcher Cox (Mississippi State) T Eric Fisher (Central Michigan) LB Dee Ford (Auburn) CB Marcus Peters (Washington) No First-Round Selection QB Patrick Mahomes (Texas Tech) No First-Round Selection No First-Round Selection RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire (LSU)
REID’S COACHING TREE Throughout his time in the NFL, Andy Reid has constructed quality coaching staffs to assist him. A number of those assistants have since gone on to coordinator or head coaching responsibilities for other NFL franchises. Below is a list of notable coaches who have come from Andy Reid’s Philadelphia or Kansas City staffs. Coach John Harbaugh Doug Pederson Sean McDermott Matt Nagy Ron Rivera Brad Childress Leslie Frazier Steve Spagnuolo Todd Bowles Pat Shurmur
Team BAL PHI BUF CHI WAS CHI BUF KC TB DEN
Years 2008-present 2016-present 2017-present 2018-present 2020-present 2018-2019 2018-present 2019-present 2019-present Hired in 2020
Position/Former Position Head Coach Head Coach Head Coach Head Coach Head Coach Former MIN HC Former MIN HC Former STL HC Former NYJ HC Former NYG HC
ANDY REID’S HEAD COACHING RECORD Year 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 TOTALS
8
Reg. Season 5-11 11-5 11-5 12-4 12-4 13-3 6-10 10-6 8-8 9-6-1 11-5 10-6 8-8 4-12 11-5 9-7 11-5 12-4 10-6 12-4 12-4 207-128-1
Pct. .313 .688 .688 .750 .750 .813 .375 .625 .500 .594 .688 .625 .500 .250 .688 .563 .688 .750 .625 .750 .750 .618
Postseason 0-0 1-1 2-1 1-1 1-1 2-1 0-0 1-1 0-0 2-1 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 1-1 0-1 0-1 1-1 3-0 15-14
Overall 5-11 12-6 13-6 13-5 13-5 15-4 6-10 11-7 8-8 11-7-1 11-6 10-7 8-8 4-12 11-6 9-7 12-6 12-5 10-7 13-5 15-4 222-142-1
Result 5th in NFC East 2nd in NFC East; reached divisional playoffs 1st in NFC East; reached NFC Championship Game 1st in NFC East; reached NFC Championship Game 1st in NFC East; reached NFC Championship Game 1st in NFC East; reached Super Bowl XXXIX 4th in NFC East 1st in NFC East; reached divisional playoffs 4th in NFC East 2nd in NFC East; reached NFC Championship Game 2nd in NFC East; reached wild card round 1st in NFC East; reached wild card round 2nd in NFC East 4th in NFC East 2nd in AFC West; reached wild card round 2nd in AFC West 2nd in AFC West; reached divisional playoffs 1st in AFC West; reached divisional playoffs 1st in AFC West; reached wild card round 1st in AFC West; reached AFC Championship Game 1st in AFC West; Super Bowl LIV Champions 15 Playoff Berths, 10 Div. Titles, 1 NFC Title, 1 AFC Title, 1 Super Bowl Championship (Super Bowl LIV)
Chiefs
REID AS A HEAD COACH VS. THE NFL
MOST OVERALL WINS; ACTIVE NFL HEAD COACHES
Below is Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid’s record against the NFL as a head coach. He is 207-128-1 in the regular season, as well as 15-14 in the postseason. Reid has 222 total career wins as a head coach.
Andy Reid is one of five active NFL head coaches with over 130 victories. He has 222 overall wins and is one of four active coaches with 10 or more postseason victories (John Harbaugh has 10).
Opponent Reg. Season vs. Denver Broncos 10-6 vs. Kansas City Chiefs 3-0 vs. Oakland Raiders 13-4 vs. Los Angeles Chargers 13-4 vs. AFC West 39-14
Postseason 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
Total 10-6 3-0 13-4 13-4 39-14
vs. Baltimore Ravens vs. Cincinnati Bengals vs. Cleveland Browns vs. Pittsburgh Steelers vs. AFC North
5-1 2-3-1 7-0 4-5 18-9-1
0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-1
5-1 2-3-1 7-0 4-6 18-10-1
vs. Houston Texans vs. Indianapolis Colts vs. Jacksonville Jaguars vs. Tennessee Titans vs. AFC South
6-2 2-5 5-2 1-7 14-16
2-0 1-1 0-0 1-1 4-2
8-2 3-6 5-2 2-8 18-18
vs. Buffalo Bills vs. Miami Dolphins vs. New England Patriots vs. New York Jets vs. AFC East
5-3 5-1 4-4 5-1 19-9
0-0 0-0 0-3 0-0 0-3
5-3 5-1 4-7 5-1 19-12
vs. Dallas Cowboys vs. New York Giants vs. Washington Redskins vs. Philadelphia Eagles vs. NFC East
18-12 16-14 19-11 2-0 55-37
0-1 2-1 0-0 0-0 2-2
18-13 18-15 19-11 2-0 57-39
vs. Arizona Cardinals vs. San Francisco 49ers vs. Seattle Seahawks vs. Los Angeles Rams vs. NFC West
6-7 7-4 4-4 6-3 23-18
0-1 1-0 0-0 0-1 1-2
6-8 8-4 4-4 6-4 24-20
vs. Atlanta Falcons vs. Carolina Panthers vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers vs. New Orleans Saints vs. NFC South
7-3 5-2 4-4 4-3 20-12
2-0 0-1 2-1 0-1 4-3
9-3 5-3 6-5 4-4 24-15
vs. Chicago Bears vs. Detroit Lions vs. Green Bay Packers vs. Minnesota Vikings vs. NFC North
6-5 5-1 4-5 4-2 19-13
1-0 0-0 1-1 2-0 4-1
7-5 5-1 5-6 6-2 23-14
Rk, 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Coach Bill Belichick, NE/CLE Andy Reid, KC/PHI Pete Carroll, SEA/NYJ/NE Mike Tomlin, PIT Sean Payton, NO
Reg. 273 207 133 133 131
Post 31 15 11 8 8
Total 304 222 144 141 139
Reid defeated the Tennessee Titans in 2013, giving him wins against all 32 NFL teams. He became only the sixth head coach in NFL history to accomplish that feat. Below is a look at all the coaches who have done it. Bill Belichick (NE) Bill Parcells (Retired) Tony Dungy (Retired) Andy Reid (KC) Mike Shanahan (Retired) John Fox (Retired)
HEAD COACHES ALL-TIME WINS CHART Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13t. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24t.
Head Coach Don Shula George Halas Bill Belichick Tom Landry Curly Lambeau Andy Reid Chuck Noll Marty Schottenheimer Dan Reeves Chuck Knox Bill Parcells Tom Coughlin Jeff Fisher Mike Shanahan Mike Holmgren Joe Gibbs Paul Brown Bud Grant Bill Cowher Marv Levy Steve Owen Tony Dungy Pete Carroll Mike Tomlin John Fox
Win Total 347 324 304 270 229 222 209 205 201 193 183 182 178 178 174 171 170 168 161 154 153 148 144 141 141
- Playoffs Included * Bold Denotes Active NFL Coaches
REID’S HEADANDY COACHING CAREER WHEN... HEAD COACH REID’S RECORD WHEN... • Scoring on opening drive: 100-33 • Scoring first: 135-45 • Leading at half: 170-32 • Leading after three quarters: 170-30 • Winning time of possession: 128-40-1 • Winning turnover battle: 130-31 • Out-rushing opponent: 127-51-1 • Out-passing opponent: 125-57-1 • Out-gaining opponent: 142-47-1 • 40%+ 3rd down conversions: 113-43 • 50%+ 3rd down conversions: 68-19 • Not throwing an INT: 118-47 • Having a 300-yard passer: 50-29-1
Chiefs
• Having a 100+ yard rusher: 58-29 • Having a 100+ yard receiver: 80-35 • Having two 100+ yard receivers: 10-16 • Having no turnovers: 63-30 • Scoring 20+ points: 180-47 • Scoring 30+ points: 94-16 • Rushing for 150+ yards: 61-26 • Having 20+ first downs: 127-50 • Not allowing a sack: 23-21 • Allowing two or fewer sacks: 137-60-1 • Recording 2+ INTs: 81-27 • Recording 3+ turnovers: 79-21 • Opp. less than 40% on 3rd down: 154-56-1
• Opp. less than 30% on 3rd down: 95-26-1 • Scoring a defensive TD: 51-19 • Recording 3+ sacks: 120-38-1 • Recording 5+ sacks: 48-16-1 • Allowing 17 or fewer points: 137-30-1 • Not allowing a 100-yard rusher: 171-89-1 • Not allowing a 100-yard receiver: 145-87 • Not allowing a 300-yard passer: 186-95-1 • Not allowing a rushing TD: 136-50-1 • Not allowing a passing TD: 61-27 • Not allowing an offensive TD: 35-13 • Having a KR or PR TD: 18-16
9
CHIEFS GENERAL MANAGER BRETT VEACH VEACH IN THE NFL DRAFT AS PERSONNEL MAN Since entering the NFL, Chiefs GM Brett Veach has been a part of personnel staffs that have drafted the below first-round picks.
QUICK FACTS ON CHIEFS GM BRETT VEACH • Brett Veach was named the seventh general manager in Kansas City Chiefs history on July 10, 2017. Veach is in his fourth season as an NFL general manager and his 14th year in the National Football League. Prior to being elevated, he previously served as the Chiefs Co-Director of Player Personnel. • In hist first three seasons as the GM, Veach helped the team earn a Super Bowl victory in Super Bowl LIV, one AFC Championship and AFC West titles in 2017, 2018 and 2019, as well as the number one seed in the AFC in 2018 and number two seed in 2019. The Chiefs defeated the Colts, 31-13, to advance to the AFC title game in 2018. KC defeated the Texans, 51-31, to advance and host the AFC title game for the second year in a row in 2019. The Chiefs defeated the Titans on Jan. 19, to advance to Super Bowl LIV. • Veach reports directly to Chiefs Chairman & CEO Clark Hunt, who had this to say upon hiring him; “Brett has a sharp football mind, a tremendous work ethic and a keen eye for finding talent. He’s played a critical role in building our football team.” • He is in his eighth season with the Chiefs after originally joining the club in 2013. He was promoted to Co-Director of Player Personnel prior to the 2015 season after serving two seasons as the club’s Pro and College Personnel Analyst (2013-14).
Yr. No. (Overall) 2007 (PHI) -2008 -2009 19 2010 13 2011 21 2012 12 2013 (KC) 1 2014 23 2015 18 2016 -2017 10 2018 -2019 -2020 32
Selection (School) No First-Round Selection No First-Round Selection WR Jeremy Maclin (Missouri) DE Brandon Graham (Michigan) G Danny Watkins (Baylor) DT Fletcher Cox (Mississippi State) T Eric Fisher (Central Michigan) LB Dee Ford (Auburn) CB Marcus Peters (Washington) No First-Round Selection QB Patrick Mahomes (Texas Tech) No First-Round Selection No First-Round Selection RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire (LSU)
NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS After being named the new GM of the Chiefs on July 10, 2017, Brett Veach immediately started making moves. In his time as a GM, Veach has made a number of significant moves that have contributed to KC’s success. Name K Harrison Butker WR Sammy Watkins LB Anthony Hitchens CB Charvarius Ward S Tyrann Mathieu DE Frank Clark CB Antonio Hamilton T Mike Remmers TE Ricky Seals-Jones DE Taco Charlton G Kelechi Osemele
Date 9/26/17 3/15/18 3/15/18 8/31/18 3/14/19 4/24/19 3/21/20 3/21/20 4/5/20 5/2/20 7/27/20
How Acquired FA - 17 FA - 18 FA - 18 T (DAL) FA - 19 T (SEA) FA - 20 FA - 20 FA - 20 FA - 20 FA - 20
• The Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania, native served as a Southeast Regional Scout for the Philadelphia Eagles (2011-12) after originally joining Philadelphia’s Player Personnel Department as a Pro and College Scout in 2010. Prior to entering the scouting department, Veach was the Assistant to Head Coach Andy Reid for three seasons in Philadelphia (2007-09). • Before joining the Eagles, Veach was the Supervisor of Intercollegiate Athletic Events at his alma mater, the University of Delaware (2005-06). He was a four-year letterman as a wide receiver for the Blue Hens, catching 99 passes for 1,470 yards (14.8 avg.). He left Delaware as the school’s all-time leader in kickoff return yards with 1,558 yards. He was a standout running back for Mount Carmel High School. Wife - Alison; Children - twin sons, Elijah and Wylan, and a daughter, Ella.
VEACH’S NFL RECORD Year 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 TOTALS
10
Reg. Season 8-8 9-6-1 11-5 10-6 8-8 4-12 11-5 9-7 11-5 12-4 10-6 12-4 12-4 127-80-1
Pct. .500 .594 .688 .625 .500 .250 .688 .563 .688 .750 .625 .750 .750 .613
Playoffs 0-0 2-1 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 1-1 0-1 0-1 1-1 3-0 7-8
Overall 8-8 11-7-1 11-6 10-7 8-8 4-12 11-6 9-7 12-6 12-5 10-7 13-5 15-4 134-88-1
Result 4th in NFC East 2nd in NFC East; Reached NFC Championship Game 2nd in NFC East; Reached Wild Card Playoffs 1st in NFC East; Reached Wild Card Playoffs 2nd in NFC East 4th in NFC East 2nd in AFC West; Reached Wild Card Playoffs 2nd in AFC West 2nd in AFC West; Reached Divisional Playoffs 1st in AFC West; Reached Divisional Playoffs 1st in AFC West; Reached Wild Card Playoffs 1st in AFC West; Reached AFC Championship Game 1st in AFC West; Super Bowl LIV Champions 9 Playoff Appearances, 5 Div. Titles, 1 AFC Title, 1 SB Title
Chiefs
CHIEFS QUARTERBACK PATRICK MAHOMES MAHOMES IN CHIEFS RECORD BOOK Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes has already cracked into the Chiefs record books with only 31 games under his belt. Below is a look at different categories where Mahomes cemented his name in Chiefs history. CHIEFS RECORD FOR MOST TD PASSES IN SINGLE GAME Rk. Name 1t. Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes Len Dawson
TDS 6 6 6
Opp. at PIT at LAR DEN
Date Sept. 16, 2018 Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 1, 1964
CHIEFS RECORD FOR TD PASSES IN A SEASON
MAHOMES STARTS HOT Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes earned the NFL’s MVP award in 2018. His 50 TD passes in 2018 tied for the second-best mark in NFL history. MOST TD PASSES SINGLE SEASON Rk. Name 1. Peyton Manning 2t. Patrick Mahomes Tom Brady 4. Peyton Manning
Team DEN KC NE IND
Rk. 1. 2. 3.
Name Patrick Mahomes Len Dawson Len Dawson
Year 2018 1964 1962
Comp. 66.0% 56.2% 61.0%
Yds. 5,097 2,879 2,759
TD 50 30 29
CHIEFS RECORD FOR HIGHEST PASSER RATING IN SINGLE GAME TDS 55 50 50 49
Year 2013 2018 2007 2004
Rk. 1. 2. 3.
Name Alex Smith Steve Bono Patrick Mahomes
Rtg. 158.3 156.6 154.8
Opp. at OAK at SEA at PIT
Date Dec. 15, 2013 Sept. 3, 1995 Sept. 16, 2018
MAHOMES AMONG 2018-19 PASSING LEADERS 2018-19 PASSING YARDS Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Name Matt Ryan Jared Goff Patrick Mahomes Philip Rivers Dak Prescott
2018-19 YARDS PER COMPLETION (MIN. 10 GP) Team ATL LAR KC LAC DAL
Yards 9,390 9,326 9,128 8,923 8,787
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
2018-19 PASSING TOUCHDOWNS Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Name Patrick Mahomes Russell Wilson Matt Ryan Drew Brees Kirk Cousins
Team KC SEA ATL NO MIN
Name Patrick Mahomes Jameis Winston Ryan Tannehill Ryan Fitzpatrick Jared Goff
Team KC TB TEN MIA LAR
Y/C 13.00 12.98 12.52 12.41 12.30
Team BAL KC SEA TEN NO
TD % 7.4 7.1 7.0 7.0 6.8
2018-19 TD PERCENTAGE TDs 76 66 61 59 56
Rk. 1. 2. 3t. 5.
Name Lamar Jackson Patrick Mahomes Russell Wilson Ryan Tannehill Drew Brees
2018-19 TOUCHDOWN-TO-INTERCEPTION DIFFERENTIAL
2018-19 PASS PLAYS OF 25+ YARDS
Rk. 1. 2. 4. 3. 5.
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5t.
Name Patrick Mahomes Russell Wilson Drew Brees Aaron Rodgers Kirk Cousins
Team KC SEA NO GB MIN
TDS 76 66 59 51 56
2018-19 PASSER RATING Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Name Drew Brees Patrick Mahomes Russell Wilson Ryan Tannehill Lamar Jackson
INTS 17 12 9 6 16
Diff. +59 +54 +50 +45 +40
Name Patrick Mahomes Jared Goff Jameis Winston Aaron Rodgers Rivers/Wilson
Team KC LAR TB GB LAC/SEA
25+ Yard Comp. 86 77 72 71 68
2018-19 PASSING FIRST DOWNS Team NO KC SEA TEN BAL
Rating 115.9 110.0 108.4 105.4 104.7
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4t.
Name Matt Ryan Jared Goff Philip Rivers Patrick Mahomes Dak Prescott
Team ATL LAR LAC KC DAL
First Downs 464 453 430 413 413
2018-19 YARDS PER ATTEMPT (MIN. 10 GP)
2018-19 REDZONE PASSING TDs (ACTIVE)
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Name Patrick Mahomes Ryan Tannehill Jimmy Garoppolo Philip Rivers Jameis Winston
Chiefs
Team KC TEN SF LAC TB
Y/A 8.58 8.43 8.31 8.12 8.07
Name Russell Wilson Patrick Mahomes Matt Ryan Jared Goff Drew Brees
Team SEA KC ATL LAR NO
RZ TDs 48 46 43 41 40
11
BY THE NUMBERS - PATRICK MAHOMES VS. THE NFL Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes is in his fourth NFL season and third as the teamâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s full-time signal-caller. Mahomes led the Chiefs to a 12-4 record in 2018 and the top seed in the AFC. Mahomes had 5,097 yards through the air in the 2018 season, the most in a season in franchise history, and his 50 passing touchdowns are tied for the second most all-time in a season in NFL history. In 31 career games played, Mahomes has accumulted 9,412 career passing yards and 76 career passing TDs, helping guide the Chiefs to a 12-4 mark in 2019. (Below are regular season totals) AFC West Team Broncos Chargers Chiefs Raiders Total
G 5 4 0 4 13
Att. 159 118 0 135 412
Comp. 111 74 0 82 267
Yds. 1,307 855 0 1,194 3,356
TD 8 8 0 11 27
Int. 3 2 0 1 6
Pct. 69.8 62.7 0 60.7 64.8
Rtg. 103.4 100.1 0 113.6 105.8
AFC East Team Bills Dolphins Jets Patriots Total
G 0 0 0 2 2
Att. 0 0 0 76 76
Comp. 0 0 0 49 49
Yds. 0 0 0 635 635
TD 0 0 0 5 5
Int. 0 0 0 3 3
Pct. 0 0 0 64.5 64.5
Rtg. 0 0 0 96.1 96.1
AFC North Team Bengals Browns Ravens Steelers Total
G 1 1 2 1 5
Att. 39 32 90 28 189
Comp. 28 23 62 23 136
Yds. 358 375 751 326 1,810
TD 4 3 5 6 18
Int. 1 1 1 0 3
Pct. 71.8 71.9 68.9 82.1 73.7
Rtg. 123.7 129.0 108.1 154.8 127.1
AFC South Team Colts Jaguars Texans Titans Total
G 1 2 1 1 5
Att. 39 71 35 50 195
Comp. 22 47 19 36 124
Yds. 321 691 273 446 1,695
TD 1 3 3 3 10
Int. 0 2 1 0 3
Pct. 56.4 66.2 52.7 72.0 63.6
Rtg. 91.9 100.1 95.6 119.3 102.0
AFC Total
G 25
Att. 872
Comp. 576
Yds. 7,532
TD 60
Int. 15
Pct. 66.1
Rtg. 108.9
NFC East Team Cowboys Eagles Giants Redskins Total
G 0 0 0 0 0
Att. 0 0 0 0 0
Comp. 0 0 0 0 0
Yds. 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
Int. 0 0 0 0 0
Pct. 0 0 0 0 0
Rtg. 0 0 0 0 0
NFC North Team Bears Lions Packers Vikings Total
G 1 1 0 0 2
Att. 33 42 0 0 75
Comp. 23 24 0 0 47
Yds. 251 315 0 0 566
TD 2 0 0 0 2
Int. 0 0 0 0 0
Pct. 69.7 57.1 0 0 62.6
Rtg. 112.1 81.0 0 0 94.64
NFC South Team Buccaneers Falcons Panthers Saints Total
G 0 0 0 0 0
Att. 0 0 0 0 0
Comp. 0 0 0 0 0
Yds. 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
Int. 0 0 0 0 0
Pct. 0 0 0 0 0
Rtg. 0 0 0 0 0
NFC West Team 49ers Cardinals Rams Seahawks Total
G 1 1 1 1 4
Att. 38 28 46 40 152
Comp. 24 21 33 23 101
Yds. 314 249 478 273 1,314
TD 3 2 6 3 14
Int. 0 0 3 0 3
Pct. 63.2 75.0 71.7 57.5 66.4
Rtg. 115.5 125.4 117.6 103.4 115.9
NFC Total
G 6
Att. 227
Comp. 148
Yds. 1,880
TD 16
Int. 3
Pct. 65.2
Rtg. 108.9
12
Chiefs
QUARTERBACK PATRICK MAHOMES - NFL MVP SEASON (2018) In his first season as the team’s starting QB, Patrick Mahomes left his mark in both NFL and Chiefs record books each week. Below is a list of milestones he reached throughout the 2018 season. Week 1 at Los Angeles Chargers (W, 38-28) • 15 of 27 (55.5%) for 256 yards, 4 TD, 127.5 QB rating • Earned AFC Offensive Player of the Week Week 2 at Pittsburgh Steelers (W, 42-37) • 23 of 28 (82.1%) for 326 yards, 6 TD, 154.8 QB rating • Chiefs Record: 6 TD passes in a single game • Tied QB Len Dawson’s record set in 1964 • Chiefs Record: 10 TD passes in first 2 games of season • Passed QB Len Dawson’s record of 7 TDs set in 1963 • NFL Record: 10 TD passes in first 2 games of season • Passed QBs Peyton Manning (2013), Drew Brees (2009) Charley Johnson (1965) who all had 9 • Youngest player in NFL History to pass for 6 TDs • AFC Offensive Player of the Week Week 3 vs. San Francisco 49ers (W, 38-27) • 24 of 38 (63.2%) for 314 yards, 3 TD, 115.5 QB rating • NFL Record: 13 TD passes through first 3 weeks of season • Passed QB Tom Brady’s 12 TD mark set in 2013 Week 4 at Denver Broncos (W, 27-23) • 28 of 45 (62.2%) for 304 yards, 1 TD, 89.5 QB rating • Chiefs Record: 1,200 passing yards through Week 4 • Passed Alex Smith’s mark of 1,110 passing yards set in 2015 • AFC Offensive Player of the Month Week 5 vs. Jacksonville Jaguars (W, 30-14) • 22 of 38 (57.9%) for 313 yards, 0 TD, 62.7 QB rating • Chiefs Record: 1,513 passing yards through Week 5 • Passed Alex Smith’s mark of 1,391 passing yards set in 2015 Week 6 at New England Patriots (L, 43-40) • 23 of 36 (63.9%) 352 yards, 4 TD, 110.0 QB rating • Chiefs Record: 5 consecutive games with 300+ passing yards • Passed QBs Trent Green (2004) and Bill Kenney’s (1983) mark of four consecutive games of 300+ passing yards • Chiefs Record: 1,865 passing yards through Week 6 • Passed Alex Smith’s mark of 1,637 passing yards set in 2017 Week 7 vs. Cincinnati Bengals (W, 45-10) • 28 of 39 (71.8%) for 358 yards, 4 TD, 123.7 QB rating • NFL Record: 22 passing TDs through first 8 career games. • Passed QB Kurt Warner’s mark of 21 TDs (1998-99) • Chiefs Record: 6 consecutive games with 300+ passing yards • Passed Trent Green’s mark of 4 consecutive games (2004) • Chiefs Record: 2,223 passing yards through Week 7 • Passed Alex Smith’s mark of 1,979 passing yards set in 2017 • FedEx Air NFL Player of the Week Week 8 vs. Denver Broncos (W, 30-23) • 24 of 34 (70.6%) for 303 yards, 4 TD, 125.0 QB rating • NFL Record: 26 TD through first 9 career games • Passed QB Kurt Warner’s mark of 24 TDs (1998-99) • NFL Record: 2,810 passing yards through first 9 career games • Passed Andrew Luck’s mark of 2,631 passing yards (2012) • Chiefs Record: 7 consecutive games with 300+ passing yards • Extends his franchise record • FedEx Air NFL Player of the Week Week 9 at Cleveland Browns (W, 37-21) • 23 of 32 (71.9%) for 375 yards, 3 TD, 129.0 QB rating • NFL Record: 29 TD through first 10 career games • Passed QB Kurt Warner’s mark of 24 TDs (1998-99). • NFL Record: 3,185 passing yards through first 10 career games • Passed Andrew Luck’s mark of 2,965 passing yards (2012) • Chiefs Record: 8 consecutive games with 300+ passing yards
Chiefs
Week 10 vs. Arizona Cardinals (W, 26-14) • 21 of 28 (75.0%) for 249 yards, 2 TD, 125.4 QB rating • NFL Record: 31 TD through first 11 career games • Passed QB Kurt Warner’s mark of 27 TDs (1998-99) • NFL Record: 3,434 passing yards through first 11 career games • Passed QB Andrew Luck’s mark of 3,205 passing yards (2012) • Chiefs Record: 31 TD passes in single season • Passed QB L. Dawson’s single-season record 30 TD passes (1964) Week 11 at Los Angeles Rams (L, 54-51) • 33 of 46 (71.7%) for 478 yards, 6 TD, 117.6 QB rating • Chiefs Record: 9 games in single season with 300+ passing yards • Passed QB Trent Green’s mark of 8 games in 2004 • Chiefs Record: 6 TD passes in single game • Tied his own franchise record set at Pittsburgh (9/16/18) • Chiefs Record: 37 TD passes in single season • Extends franchise record Week 13 at Oakland Raiders (W, 40-33) • 23 of 38 (60.5%) for 295 yards, 4 TD, 120.0 QB rating • NFL Record: Fastest player to 4,000 passing yds (4,207 in 13 games) • Chiefs Record: 10 games of 100.0+ passer rating in single season • Tied QB Steve DeBerg’s mark set in 1990 • Chiefs Record: 41 TD passes in single season • Extends franchise record Week 14 vs. Baltimore Ravens (W, 27-24) • 35 of 53 (66.0%) for 377 yards, 2 TD, 91.5 QB rating • Chiefs Record: 43 TD passes in single season • Extends franchise record • Chiefs Record: 10 games in a single season with 300+ passing yds. • Extends franchise record Week 15 vs. Los Angeles Chargers (L, 29-28) • 24 of 34 (70.6%) for 243 yards, 2 TD, 110.3 rating • Chiefs Record: 45 TD passes in single season • Extends franchise record • Chiefs Record: 11 games of 100.0+ passer rating in single season • Passed QB Steve DeBerg’s mark of 10 set in 1990 Week 16 at Seattle Seahawks (L, 38-31) • 23 of 40 (57.5%) for 273 yards, 3 TD, 103.4 rating • Chiefs Record: 48 TD passes in single season • Extends franchise record • Chiefs Record: 12 games of 100.0+ passer rating in single season • Extends franchise record • Chiefs Record: 4,816 passing yards in single season • Passed QB Trent Green’s mark of 4,591 yards set in 2004 • NFL Record: 31 TDs in road games in single season • Passed QB Tom Brady’s mark of 29 set in 2007 Week 17 vs. Oakland Raiders (W, 35-3) • 14 of 24 (58.3%) for 281 yards, 2 TD, 109.9 rating • Chiefs Record: 50 TD passes in single season • Extends franchise record • Chiefs Record: 13 games of 100.0+ passer rating in single season • Extends franchise record • Chiefs Record: 5,097 passing yards in single season • Extends franchise record • Chiefs Record: 383 passes completed in a single season • Passed QB Trent Green’s mark of 369 set in 2004 AFC Divisional Playoffs vs. Indianapolis Colts (W, 31-13) • 27 of 41 (65.8%) for 278 yards, 1 Rushing TD, 85.2 rating • Led Chiefs to first home playoff win since 1993 season. • Helped advance Chiefs to first home AFC Championship appearance. AFC Championship Game vs. New England Patriots (L, 31-37) • 16 of 31 (51.6%) for 295 yards, 3 TDs, 117.0 rating • Fourth-most passing yards in postseason game in team history • Second-most TD passes in a single postseason game in club history
13
QUARTERBACK PATRICK MAHOMES - SUPER BOWL MVP SEASON (2019) In his second season as the Chiefs full-time signal-caller, QB Patrick Mahomes continued his trend of performing at a high level. Below is a gameby-game breakdown of the accolades that Mahomes reached on his path to a Super Bowl title. Week 1 at Jacksonville Jagurs (W, 40-26) • Completed 25-of-33 passes (75.8%) for 378 yards, three TDs and a 143.2 passer rating, along with zero INTs. • 211 first-half passing yards were most in NFL since QB Peyton Manning in 2004. • Passed Pro Football HOF QB Kurt Warner for most passing yards in first 20 career games (5,759). Week 2 at Oakland Raiders (W, 28-10) • Completed 30-of-44 passes (68.2%) for 443 yards, four TDs and a 131.2 passer rating, along with zero INTs. • 278 passing yards (NFL record) and four passing TDs in the second quarter broke a franchise mark. • Guided offense to record-breaking 20th straight 26-point output. • 821 passing yards from Week 1 to Week 2 set the franchise record for most passing yards in the first two weeks to being a season, also ranking fifth all-time in NFL history in the same category. • Named AFC Offensive Player of the Week. • Named FedEx Air & Ground’s “Air” Player of the Week. Week 3 vs. Baltimore Ravens (W, 33-28) • Completed 27-of-37 passes (73.0%) for 374 yards, three TDs and a 132.0 passer rating, along with zero INTs. • Passed Pro Football HOF QB Kurt Warner for most 300-yard passing games in a QB’s first 20 career games in the Super Bowl era (13). • 1,195 passing yards ranks through the first three games ranks fourth all-time in NFL history. • Named FedEx Air & Ground’s “Air” Player of the Week for second consecutive week. Week 4 at Detroit Lions (W, 34-30) • Completed 24-of-42 (57.1%) for 315 yards and zero INTs. • Ranked third in NFL history with 1,510 passing yards through the first four games. • Threw for at least 300 yards in 14th career game, the third most in franchise history. • Became just the fourth QB in NFL history to throw for at least 300 yards in each of the first four games to begin a season. • Named AFC Offensive Player of the Month (September). Week 5 vs. Indianapolis Colts (L, 13-19) • Completed 22-of-39 (56.4%) for 321 yards, one TD and zero INTs. • Broke the NFL record for most passing yards without throwing an INT to being a season (Peyton Manning, 2013; 1,744). • Recorded 300-plus passing yards for 15th career time, tying the franchise record for the second-most career 300-yard passing games in club history (Bill Kenney). Week 6 vs. Houston Texans (L, 24-31) • Completed 19-of-35 (52.7%) for 273 yards, three TDs and one INT. • Recorded his 14th career outing of throwing for at least three TDs, ranking third in team history for most games with three or more TD passes. • Threw first INT of the season in the second quarter after accumulating 1,896 passing yards on the season, advancing his NFL-record to 2,027 passing yards thrown without an INT to begin a season. Week 7 at Denver Broncos (W, 30-6) • Completed 10-of-19 (52.6%) for 117 yards, one TD and zero INTs. • Surpassed 7,500 career passing yards, setting a new NFL record (24 games). Week 10 at Tennessee Titans (L, 32-35) • Completed 36-of-50 (72.0%) for 446 yards, three TDs and zero INTs. • With a passer rating of 119.2, accumulated his fifth outing with at least a 115.0 passer rating this season, marking just the fourth time
14
that a QB in their first three seasons has been able to do so in a team’s first 10 games to begin a season. • Marked his 16th career 300-yard passing performance, the second most in franchise history and third-most in NFL history in a QB’s first three seasons. Week 11 at Los Angeles Chargers (W, 24-17) • Completed 19-of-32 (59.4%) for 182 yards and one TD. • Rushed for a career-high 59 yards, tallying three rushing first downs. Week 13 vs. Oakland Raiders (W, 40-9) • Completed 15-of-29 passes (51.7%) for 175 yards and one TD. • Rushed for at least 25 yards in second consecutive game, recording his first rushing TD of the season on a 13-yard carry. Week 14 at New England Patriots (W, 23-16) • Completed 26-of-40 passes (65.0%) for 283 yards with one TD and one INT. • Became the first starting QB under the age of 25 to beat the Patriots in Foxborough, Mass., since 2011 (Jets QB Mark Sanchez). Week 15 vs. Denver Broncos (W, 23-3) • Completed 27-of-24 passes (79.4%) for 340 yards with one TD and one INT. • Tied Kurt Warner’s record for second-most 300-yard passing games in a QB’s first three NFL seasons (17 games). • Recorded second-highest pass-completion percentage outing of career (79.4%). Week 16 at Chicago Bears (W, 26-3) • Completed 23-of-33 passes (69.7%) for 251 yards with two passing TDs and zerio INTs. • Became the fastest QB in NFL history to throw for 9,000 career passing yards and 75 career passing TDs (30th career game). • Tied a single-season career-best with second rushing TD of the year. Week 17 vs. Los Angeles Chargers (W, 31-21) • Completed 16-of-25 passes (64.0%) for 174 yards, one passing TD and one INT. • Added 21 rushing yards, taking his season total to 218 rushing yards. • Guided the Chiefs offense to over 30 points scored for the unit’s seventh time this season, helping secure the No. 2 seed in the AFC Playoffs. AFC Divisional Round vs. Houston Texans (W, 51-31) • Completed 23-of-35 passes (65.7%) for 321 yards and a franchiserecord five TD passes. • Guided the Chiefs to the franchise’s largest comeback (24 pts) • Recorded a 134.6 passer rating, becoming the first QB since Nick Foles (2017) to record a passer rating of over 134.5 in the postseason. • His five TD passes were the most by a QB since Ben Roethlisberger recorded five TD throws in the 2017 postseason. AFC Championship vs. Tennessee Titans (W, 35-24) • Completed 23-of-35 passes (65.7%) for 294 yards, three passing TDs and zero INTs. • Finished the game with a passer rating of 120.4, his second-highest single-game passer rating in a playoff game. • Broke the franchise record for most career passing TDs in the postsea son (11). • Rushed for a team-best 53 yards with a postseason career-long TD rush of 27 yards. Super Bowl LIV vs. San Francisco (W, 31-20) • Completed 26-of-42 passes (78.1%) for 286 yards, two passing TDs and two INTs. • Earned the Super Bowl LIV MVP Award after leading the Chiefs to 21 unanswered points in the game’s final quarter. • Rushed for a one-yard TD in the first quarter.
Chiefs
A HOT START FOR THE YOUNG QUARTERBACK With 31 games under his belt as a starting quarterback in the National Football League, Chiefs Quarterback Patrick Mahomes has performed at a recordsetting pace thus far. The below chart compares Mahomes’ first 31 games of his career to some of the game’s greatest quarterbacks in their first 31 starts. Listed are Pro Football HOF QBs Brett Favre, Kurt Warner, Dan Marino, John Elway, Joe Montana, Joe Namath, Troy Aikman, Jim Kelly, Steve Young and Johnny Unitas, along with modern-era QBs Peyton Manning, Tom Brady, Drew Brees and Aaron Rodgers. Among the group, there are 10 Pro Football Hall of Famers, 12 NFL MVP Award winners, 12 Super Bowl champions and 10 Super Bowl MVPs. PASSING YARDS (THROUGH FIRST 31 STARTS)
PASSER RATING (THROUGH FIRST 31 STARTS)
Name Patrick Mahomes Kurt Warner* Dan Marino* Aaron Rodgers Joe Namath* Peyton Manning Joe Montana* Jim Kelly* Brett Favre* Tom Brady Johnny Unitas* Drew Brees John Elway* Steve Young* Troy Aikman*
Name Patrick Mahomes Kurt Warner* Dan Marino* Aaron Rodgers Joe Montana* Johnny Unitas* Tom Brady Jim Kelly* Peyton Manning Brett Favre* Steve Young* Drew Brees John Elway* Troy Aikman* Joe Namath*
Team KC STL MIA GB NYJ IND SF BUF ATL/GB NE BAL SD DEN TB/SF DAL
Yards 9,412 9,030 8,603 8,237 7,799 7,711 7,057 6,996 6,715 6,684 6,314 6,074 5,900 5,419 5,383
Team KC STL MIA GB SF BAL NE BUF IND ATL/GB TB/SF SD DEN DAL NYJ
Rating 108.9 106.2 99.9 98.0 88.7 85.8 84.0 81.9 80.7 78.8 75.8 75.2 69.0 66.6 66.2
PASSING TOUCHDOWNS (THROUGH FIRST 31 STARTS)
INTERCEPTIONS (THROUGH FIRST 31 STARTS)
Name Patrick Mahomes Dan Marino* Kurt Warner* Aaron Rodgers Johnny Unitas* Peyton Manning Joe Namath* Tom Brady Joe Montana* Jim Kelly* Brett Favre* John Elway* Drew Brees Steve Young* Troy Aikman*
Name Patrick Mahomes Aaron Rodgers Steve Young* Joe Montana* Dan Marino* Tom Brady Jim Kelly* Drew Brees Kurt Warner* Johnny Unitas* Brett Favre* John Elway* Troy Aikman* Peyton Manning Joe Namath*
Team KC MIA STL GB BAL IND NYJ NE SF BUF ATL/GB DEN SD TB/SF DAL
TDs 76 73 73 57 57 52 48 46 44 42 38 36 34 27 26
Team KC GB SF TB/SF MIA NE BUF SD STL BAL ATL/GB DEN DAL IND NYJ
INTs 18 20 25 26 29 30 32 33 34 36 37 38 39 43 57
* Denotes Pro Football Hall of Famer
MAHOMES’ SPOT IN NFL RECORD BOOKS Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes has already made an impact in league annals through just 31 career games played. After finishing 2018 with 5,097 passing yards and 50 passing TDs, the signal-caller entered the 2019 season and picked up right where he left off. PASS COMPLETIONS (THROUGH FIRST 31 STARTS) Name Patrick Mahomes Aaron Rodgers Kurt Warner* Tom Brady Brett Favre* Dan Marino* Peyton Manning Joe Montana* Jim Kelly* Drew Brees Joe Namath* Troy Aikman* John Elway* Johnny Unitas* Steve Young*
Chiefs
Team KC GB STL NE ATL/GB MIA IND SF BUF SD NYJ DAL DEN BAL TB/SF
Comp. 724 670 665 646 643 642 639 628 588 580 523 475 466 431 429
NFL RECORD FASTEST TO 9,000 PASSING YARDS AND 75 PASSING TDS: Rk. 1. 2. 3.
Name Patrick Mahomes Dan Marino Kurt Warner
Year(s) 2017-19 1983-85 1998-01
Games 30 34 35
NFL RECORD MOST CONSECUTIVE 300-YARD GAMES (SINGLE SEASON): Rk. Name 1t. Patrick Mahomes Andrew Luck 3t. Rich Gannon Kurt Warner Steve Young
Year 2018 2014 2002 2000 1998
Games 8 8 6 6 6
15
MISC. OFFENSIVE NOTES KELCE LOGS NFL RECORD
KELCE JOINS THE 6,000 CLUB - REC. STREAK
Chiefs TE Travis Kelce recorded 103 receptions for 1,336 yards in 2018, which stood as an NFL record for single-season receiving yards by a tight end until later that day when San Francisco TE George Kittle broke his record. Kelce now owns the second-most receiving yards in a single season by a tight end in NFL history.
With 92 receiving yards in Kansas City’s Week 11 game against the Chargers (11/18/19), TE Travis Kelce became just the seventh pass catcher in franchise history to cross the 6,000-yard plateau for their career, now owning 6,465 career receiving yards. He had five 100-yard receiving games in 2018 and two in 2019.
NFL Leaders Single-Season Receiving Yards by a Tight End
Chiefs Record Book - Most Receiving Yards, Career
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Tm. SF KC NE NO SD
Name Year George Kittle 2018 Travis Kelce 2018 Rob Gronkowski 2011 Jimmy Graham 2011 Kellen Winslow 1980
Rec. 88 103 90 99 89
Yards 1,377 1,336 1,327 1,310 1,290
Avg. 15.6 13.0 14.7 13.2 14.5
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Yards 10,940 7,306 7,155 6,465 6,454
Player Tony Gonzalez Otis Taylor Dwayne Bowe Travis Kelce Henry Marshall
Pos. TE WR WR TE WR
Seasons 1997-2008 1965-75 2007-14 2013-19 1976-87
TE Travis Kelce has recorded at least one pass reception in 95 consecutive games from Week 1 of the 2014 season (Sept. 7, 2014) through Week 17 of the 2019 season, which is good enough for the second-longest streak in franchise history. Chiefs Record Book - Consecutive Games with Reception Rk. 1. 2. 3.
Games 131 95 83
Player Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Stephone Paige
Years Dec. 4, 2000 – Dec. 28, 2008 Sept. 7, 2014 – Present Nov. 17, 1985 – Sept. 29, 1991
KELCE YARDS AFTER CATCH ROOKIE HARDMAN RANKS AMONG LEAGUE’S BEST Rookie WR Mecole Hardman ranked sixth among all NFL rookies with six receiving TDs in 2019. Hardman’s Week 14 receiving score at NE placed him tied for first in Chiefs history for receiving TDs by a rookie. NFL LEADERS: ROOKIE REC. TDs Rk. 1t. 3t.
6.
Player A.J. Brown Darius Slayton Marquise Brown Terry McLaurin D.K. Metcalf Mecole Hardman
Team TEN NYG BAL WAS SEA KC
Rec. TDs 8 8 7 7 7 6
CHIEFS RECORD BOOK: ROOKIE RECEIVING TDS Rk. 1t.
5t.
TDs 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 5
Player Mecole Hardman Fred Arbanas Stephone Paige Tyreek Hill Chris Burford Otis Taylor Bill Jones Tim Barnett Dwayne Bowe
Year 2019 1962 1983 2016 1960 1965 1990 1991 2007
Since entering the NFL in 2013, Chiefs TE Travis Kelce ranks first among all tight ends in yards after catch. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Pos. TE TE TE TE TE
Name Travis Kelce Rob Gronkowski Jimmy Graham Zach Ertz George Kittle
Rec. 507 334 434 525 216
Yards 6,465 5,198 5,235 5,743 2,945
YAC 3,129 2,041 2,010 1,898 1,788
FASTEST TO 450 RECEPTIONS & 6,000 YARDS With 92 receiving yards in Week 11 of the 2019 season, TE Travis Kelce passed the 6,000-career receiving yards plateau. In Week 8 of the 2019 season, Kelce passed the 450-career receptions mark. With 473 receptions and 6,069 receiving yards in 91 career NFL games, Kelce became the fastest tight end in NFL history to reach 450+ receptions and 6,000+ receiving yards. Tight End Travis Kelce Kellen Winslow Rob Gronkowski Jimmy Graham Antonio Gates
Rec. 473 471 451 485 467
Yards 6,069 6,022 6,797 6,063 6,069
Games 91 94 98 100 105
KELCE OFF THE CHARTS
Hardman led in the NFL for yards per reception among all NFL WRs with at least 20 receptions in 2019.
Chiefs TE Travis Kelce ranks first among all tight ends in receiving yards since Week 1 of the 2016 season and fifth among all players. Kelce logged 2,565 receiving yards in the 2018 & 2019 seasons, the franchises’ second-best mark in consecutive seasons.
NFL LEADERS: REC. AVG. (MIN. 20 REC.) Rk. 1. 2. 4. 3. 5.
16
Player Mecole Hardman Mike Williams A.J. Brown Kenny Golladay John Ross III
Team KC LAC TEN DET CIN
Rec. Avg. 20.7 20.4 20.2 18.3 18.1
NFL Leaders (Since Week 1 - 2016) Receiving Yards Rk. Pos. Name Rec. 1. TE Travis Kelce 368 2. TE Zach Ertz 356 3. TE George Kittle 216 4. TE Jared Cook 195 5. TE Jimmy Graham 215
Yards 4,728 3,719 2,945 2,666 2,526
Avg. 12.8 10.4 13.6 13.7 11.7
Chiefs
MISC. OFFENSIVE NOTES RELIABILITY WITH KELCE
MITCHELL SCHWARTZ ON A STREAK
Chiefs TE Travis Kelce’s 95 consecutive games with a reception ranks tied for fifth among all active NFL players. Kelce’s achievement also ranks as the longest consecutive game mark by a TE in the National Football League.
Chiefs T Mitchell Schwartz ranks first among active offensive tackles with 128 consecutive games started in his career. Until the second quarter of KC’s Week 10 game at Tennessee, Schwartz had not missed a single offensive snap in his NFL career, dating back to his rookie season in 2012. According to STATS research, Schwartz had accumulated 7,849 consecutive offensive snaps played, the most by any active player in the NFL.
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5t. 7.
Name Larry Fitzgerald Julio Jones Golden Tate DeAndre Hopkins Travis Kelce Jarvis Landry Julian Edelman
Team ARI ATL NYG HOU KC CLE NE
Games 243 118 115 110 95 95 86
Date Nov. 7, 2004 – Present Dec. 4, 2011 – Present Oct. 28, 2012 – Present Sept. 9, 2013 – Present Sept. 7, 2014 – Present Sept. 14, 2014 – Present Nov. 18, 2012 – Present
PUT IT ON THE BOARD Since 2018, the Chiefs rank first in the NFL in points scored per game (31.8). The club also ranked first in the NFL in first quarter points scored in 2019 (237), 21 more points than the next closest team. NFL LEADERS - POINTS PER GAME (2018-19) Rk. 1. 2. 3t. 5.
Team KC NO BAL LAR NE
Points Per Game 31.8 30.1 28.8 28.8 26.8
NFL LEADERS - 1Q PTS SCORED (2018-19) Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4.
Team KC BAL NE GB
1st Q Pts 237 216 206 183
DOMINATING THE SECOND QUARTER Kansas City also lead the National Football League with 177 second-quarter points in 2019, eight more than any other team in the NFL. NFL LEADERS: 2Q POINTS SCORED Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Team Kansas City Tampa Bay Baltimore LA Rams New Orleans Dallas
2nd Q Pts 177 169 156 146 140 139
RACKING UP THE POINTS Since Andy Reid was named Head Coach in 2013, the Chiefs have had at least four games each season where they’ve scored 30 or more points. In 2018, the club scored at least 30 points 12 times, which ranked first in franchise history. Kansas City’s output of at least 30 points in seven games in 2019 ranked tied for third in club history.
Games 128
Player Mitchell Schwartz
Team CLE/KC
Cons. Snaps 7,894
ANTHONY SHERMAN ON A STREAK Chiefs FB Anthony Sherman has been one of the most consistent players in the NFL. Sherman ranks first among active fullbacks in the NFL for consecutive games played. NFL LEADERS, CONSECUTIVE GAMES PLAYED, FULLBACKS Rk. Games 1. 112 2. 110
Player Anthony Sherman Patrick DiMarco
Team Chiefs Bills
SCRIMMAGE YARDS PER GAME LEADERS Over the last two seasons, the Chiefs rank second in the NFL in scrimmage yards per game. 2018-19 NFL LEADERS - SCRIMMAGE YARDS PER GAME Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Team TB KC LAR ATL DAL
Scrimmage Yards Per Game 422.8 413.8 410.3 404.1 403.2
FIVE NAMED TO NFL’S TOP 100 ALL-TIME TEAM In celebration and honor of the NFL’s 100th season, the National Football League selected a blue-ribbon panel consisting of former players, league personnel and media members to vote on the best 100 players to play the game over the last 100 years of professional football. The Kansas City Chiefs, who did not join the National Football League until the 1970 AFL-NFL Merger, landed five players on the All-Time Team.LB Bobby Bell (1983), DT Buck Buchanan (1990), LB Willie Lanier (1986), K Jan Stenerud (1991) and TE Tony Gonzalez (2019) headlined a Chiefs class that was named to the NFL’s 100th Anniversary All-Time Team. Gonzalez was named to the NFL’s 2000’s All-Decade Team and his 14 career Pro Bowl selections tie for the most by a single player in NFL history. Lanier and Stenerud were named to the NFL’s 75th Anniversary Team in 1994, while Bell was named to the NFL’s 1970’s All-Decade Team and was voted NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 1969. Bell, Buchanan, Lanier and Stenerud were members of the club’s Super Bowl IV team, who defeated the Minnesota Vikings to claim the franchise’s first Super Bowl victory. Super Bowl IV served as the final AFL-NFL World Championship Game and the Chiefs’ final game as members of the AFL. QB Joe Montana and C Mike Webster, who spent time towards the end of their careers on the Kansas City Chiefs, were also named to the NFL’s 100th Anniversary All-Time Team.
CHIEFS RECORD BOOK: MOST 30-POINT GAMES, SEASON Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Games 12 8 7 6 5
Chiefs
Seasons 2018 1966, 2002, 2004 1999, 2003, 2019 1960, 1967, 2010 1962, 1965, 1968, 1983, 1994, 2005, 2006, 2015, 2016, 2017
17
MISC. OFFENSIVE NOTES HILL FINDING THE ENDZONE
HILL’S 50+ PRODUCTION
Chiefs WR Tyreek Hill ranks first among all NFL receivers in overall touchdowns since the start of the 2016 season. Hill scored 12 receiving, one rushing and one return touchdown in 2018 and seven receiving touchdowns in 2019.
WR Tyreek Hill owns 19 plays of at least 50-yards with all but two resulting in a touchdown, including five return TDs (4 PR, 1 KR), 10 receiving TDs and two rushing TDs. Below is a list of his 50+ yard plays. He owned five such plays last season, all resulting in a TD.
NFL Leaders (2016-19) Overall Touchdowns by a WR Rk. Name Touchdowns 1. Tyreek Hill 41 2. Davante Adams 40 3. Antonio Brown 37 4. DeAndre Hopkins 35 5. Mike Evans 34
Date Jan. 1, 2017 Sept. 9, 2018 Nov. 27, 2016 Oct. 8, 2017 Dec. 3, 2017 Dec. 8, 2016 Oct. 14, 2018 Sept. 7, 2017 Nov. 19, 2018 Dec. 25, 2016 Dec. 18, 2016 Dec. 30, 2018 Oct. 19, 2017 Dec. 16, 2017 Sept. 9, 2018 Oct. 17, 2019 Nov. 5, 2017 Dec. 24, 2017 Oct. 16, 2016
HILL’S 25+ YARD CATCHES WR Tyreek Hill recorded 87 catches for 1,479 yards in 2018, including 22 catches of 25-yards or more, which ranked first in the NFL and is six more than the next person on the list. Rk. Name 1. Tyreek Hill 2t. Mike Evans T.Y. Hilton 4t. Antonio Brown Julio Jones DeAndre Hopkins Tyler Lockett
Rec. 87 86 76 104 113 115 57
Yards 1,479 1,524 1,270 1,297 1,677 1,572 965
TD 12 8 6 15 8 11 10
25+ 22 16 16 14 14 14 14
Rookie WR Tyreek Hill had six receiving touchdowns in 16 games ranking him tied for first in franchise history for most receiving touchdowns by a rookie. Below is a look at the Chiefs rookie record book for receiving TDs. TD 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 5
Season 2016 2019 1962 1983 1960 1965 1990 1991 2007
Player Tyreek Hill Tavon Austin Jamison Crowder Jalen Richard Brandon Tate
Team KC LA WAS OAK BUF
Ret. 39 44 27 34 26
Yards 592 364 328 306 301
• The Chiefs are 12-6 in games that Hill records a play of 50+ yards.
• Hill has had one game with two plays of 50+ yards both resulting in touchdowns. In the club’s 2018 season opener at Los Angeles, Hill recorded a 91-yard punt return and a 58-yard TD reception. Hill joined Pro Football Hall of Famer Bob Hayes (December 8, 1968 vs. Pittsburgh) and Tavon Austin (November 10, 2013 at Indianapolis) as the only players in NFL history to record a 50+ yard touchdown catch and a 90+ yard punt-return touchdown in a single game. (Credit NFL Stats) • His 95- and 91-yard punt returns rank first and fourth, respectively, in franchise history. Hill’s four career punt return TDs (all were 50+ yards) rank tied
SAMMY WATKINS RECEIVING AVG.
Hill found a knack for returning punts early in his career. Through 16 games, the newcomer led the NFL in punt return yards with 592 total yards. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
50+ Yard Play 95-yard PR TD 91-yard PR TD 86-yard KR TD 82-yard PR TD 79-yard TD reception 78-yard PR TD 75-yard TD reception 75-yard TD reception 73-yard TD reception 70-yard TD rush 68-yard TD rush 67-yard TD reception 64-yard TD reception 64-yard TD reception 58-yard TD reception 57-yard TD reception 56-yard TD reception 52-yard reception 50-yard PR
• He’s recorded a play of 50+ yards in 36.0 percent (18 of the 50) of the games he’s played in.
CHEETAH’S ROOKIE SEASON
Rk. Player 1t. Tyreek Hill Mecole Hardman Fred Arbanas Stephone Paige 4t. Chris Burford Otis Taylor Bill Jones Tim Barnett Dwayne Bowe
Opp. @ SD @ LAC @ DEN @ HOU @ NYJ OAK @ NE @ NE @ LAR DEN TEN OAK @ OAK LAC @ LAC @DEN @ DAL MIA @ OAK
Avg. 15.2 8.3 12.1 9.0 11.6
• According to ESPN Stats & Info, Hill became the first player with a rushing TD, receiving TD and kick return TD in a single game since Gale Sayers (1965 Bears against Vikings) with his performance against the Denver Broncos on Nov. 27, 2016.
Since entering the NFL in 2014, WR Sammy Watkins is tied for the sixthmost yards per catch among all active wide receivers with 200+ receptions. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Name DeSean Jackson T.Y. Hilton Mike Evans Kenny Stills Julio Jones Sammy Watkins John Brown Marvin Jones Jr.
Rec. 242 420 462 267 623 284 287 278
Yards 4,303 6,654 7,260 4,058 9,388 4,244 4,290 4,134
Avg 17.8 15.8 15.7 15.2 15.1 14.9 14.9 14.9
• According to the National Football League, during Hill’s kickoff return touchdown vs. Denver on Nov. 27, Hill reached a maximum speed of 22.77 miles per hour on his TD run, the fastest by a ball carrier in the NFL in 2016. Hill was clocked at 23.24 MPH in a kickoff return against Houston on Sept. 18, 2016, but the play was nulified by penalty.
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Chiefs
CHIEFS DEFENSIVE NOTES CHIEFS TAKEAWAYS UNDER REID
INTS SINCE 2013
Dating back to 2013 when Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid arrived in Kansas City, the Chiefs defense ranks first in the AFC and tied for first in the NFL when it comes to forcing opponent turnovers, tallying 188 total takeaways.
The Chiefs rank second in the NFL with 114 interceptions since 2013, returning those interceptions for a league-best 1,953 yards and 18 TDs.
Rk. 1t.
Team KC SEA CAR NE LAR
3. 4t.
Games 112 112 112 112 112
Takeaways 188 188 187 180 180
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4t 6.
INTs 119 114 113 112 112 108
INT RETURN TDS SINCE 2013
POINTS PER GAME ALLOWED Dating back to 2013, Kansas City’s defense ranks tied for third in the NFL in allowing opposing teams to score just 20.1 points per game. Rk. 1. 2. 3t.
Team New England Patriots Seattle Seahawks Kansas City Chiefs Baltimore Ravens Minnesota Vikings
5.
PPG 18.4 19.0 20.1 20.1 20.8
Team Buffalo Bills Kansas City Chiefs New England Patriots Carolina Panthers Cincinnati Bengals Seattle Seahawks
The Chiefs have returned 18 of their 114 interceptions for touchdowns since 2013, the most in the NFL over that span. Rk. 1. 2t. 4t.
INT TDs 18 15 15 14 14 14 14
Team Kansas City Chiefs Chicago Bears Houston Texans Arizona Cardinals Denver Broncos Los Angeles Rams Tampa Bay Buccaneers
PASSES DEFENSED
DEFENSE GETS HOME
Going back to 2013, the club ranks first in the NFL for most passes defensed with 585 passes defensed.
Getting after the opposing quarterback has been a point of pride for the Kansas City Chiefs. The Chiefs defense tied for the NFL lead in 2018 with 52.0 total sacks, as DT Chris Jones ranked third in the NFL with 15.5 sacks. The Chiefs defensive unit collected 9.0 sacks in Week 7, the most in a single game since 2013, and added a 5.0 sack performance in Week 8.
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4t.
Team Kansas City Chiefs Philadelphia Eagles Buffalo Bills Cincinnati Bengals Denver Broncos
PD 585 579 571 570 570
RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS ALLOWED Since 2013, the Chiefs have allowed just 78 rushing touchdowns, which ranks tied for fifth in the AFC during that span. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5t.
Team New England Patriots Baltimore Ravens Houston Texans New York Jets Kansas City Chiefs Denver Broncos
Rushing TDs Allowed 51 70 74 75 78 78
OPPONENT COMPLETION PERCENTAGE Dating back to 2013, Kansas City’s pass defense is allowing opposing quarterbacks to complete just 59.0 percent of passes, ranking first in the NFL. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4t.
Comp. % 59.0 59.9 60.5 60.7 60.7
Team Kansas City Chiefs New England Patriots Buffalo Bills Baltimore Ravens Denver Broncos
2019 Chiefs Sack Leaders DT Chris Jones DE Frank Clark DE Emmanuel Ogbah DE Alex Okafor DE Tanoh Kpassagnon
Rk. 1. 2. 3t. 5.
Passer Rtg 79.8 81.0 82.3 82.3 83.8
Chiefs
Team Buffalo Bills Seattle Seahawks Kansas City Chiefs New England Patriots Denver Broncos
Multiple Sacks from Weeks 7-8 DE Frank Clark 2.0 LB Anthony Hitchens 2.0 DE Tanoh Kpassagnon 2.0 DE Emmanuel Ogbah 2.0 DE Alex Okafor 2.0
2020 CHIEFS PRO BOWL PLAYERS & AWARDS The National Football League announced on Dec. 17, 2019 that six members of the Chiefs were selected to participate in the 2020 NFL Pro Bowl. Frank Clark (Defensive End) – 1st Nomination Mecole Hardman (Returner) – 1st Nomination Tyreek Hill (Wide Receiver) – 4th Nomination Chris Jones (Defensive Tackle) – 1st Nomination Travis Kelce (Tight End) – 5th Nomination Patrick Mahomes (Quarterback) – 2nd Nomination 2019 Awards Throughout the 2019 regular season, five Chiefs players earned a combined nine awards including QB Patrick Mahomes, K Harrison Butker and S Tyrann Mathieu who earned player of the month honors. Name Patrick Mahomes
Award Week 2 Fedex Air Player of the Week Week 3 Fedex Air Player of the Week Week 2 AFC Offensive Player of the Week September AFC Offensive Player of the Month
Dustin Colquitt
Week 7 NFLPA Community MVP
Harrison Butker
Week 9 AFC Special Teams Player of the Week November Special Teams Player of the Month
Mecole Hardman
Week 17 AFC Special Teams Player of the Week
Tyrann Mathieu
December AFC Defensive Player of the Month
OPPONENT PASSER RATING Since 2013, the Chiefs are holding opposing teams to a 82.3 passer rating, placing the unit tied for third in the NFL during that time span.
9.0 8.0 5.5 5.0 4.0
19
CHIEFS DEFENSIVE NOTES CHIEFS DEFENSE NO STRANGER TO END ZONE
CHIEFS EXCEL WHEN SACKING THE QB
Below is a look at Kansas City’s most recent defensive touchdowns. Kansas City is 121-30-2 (.797) when producing a defensive score. KC is 112-27-1 (.804) when scoring a defensive TD and 14-3-1 (.806) when recording a safety. Kansas City’s defense ranks third in the NFL in scoring defense since 2013.
The Chiefs have placed an emphasis on putting pressure on opposing quarterbacks. Kansas City has recorded 6.0 or more team sacks 60 times in team history. In those 60 games, Kansas City has a 54-5-1 (.908) record and has outscored its opponents 1,759-725. Record When Recording 6.0 or More Team Sacks
Defensive Scores Under Head Coach Andy Reid Date Opponent Defensive Score 12/1/19 OAK S Juan Thornhill 46-yd INT return 10/17/19 @ DEN LB Reggie Ragland 5-yd fum return 9/29/19 @ DET CB B. Breeland 100-yd fum. return 12/30/18 OAK S Dan Sorensen 54-yd INT return 11/19/18 @ LAR DE Allen Bailey 2-yd fum. return 10/21/18 CIN S Ron Parker 33-yd INT return 10/7/18 JAX DL Chris Jones 20-yd INT return 12/31/17 @ DEN LB Ramik Wilson 11-yd fum. return 10/30/17 DEN CB Marcus Peters 45-yd fum. return 10/2/17 WAS LB Justin Houston 13-yd fum. return 12/4/16 @ ATL S Eric Berry 37-yd INT return 11/27/16 @ DEN LB Justin Houston safety (R. Okung) 11/13/16 @ CAR S Eric Berry 42-yd INT return 10/23/16 NO S Daniel Sorensen 48-yd INT return 9/25/16 NYJ LB Derrick Johnson 55-yd INT return 12/20/15 @ BAL CB Marcus Peters 90-yd INT return 12/20/15 @ BAL S Tyvon Branch 73-yd fumble return 12/6/15 @ OAK S Tyvon Branch 38-yd INT return 11/22/15 SD LB Justin Houston 17-yd INT return 10/11/15 CHI LB Ramik Wilson FR in endzone 9/17/15 DEN CB Marcus Peters 55-yd INT return 9/29/14 NE S Husain Abdullah 39-yd INT return 12/15/13 @ OAK S Eric Berry 47-yard INT return 11/3/13 @ BUF LB Tamba Hali 11-yard fumble return 11/3/13 @ BUF CB Sean Smith 100-yd INT return 10/13/13 OAK S Husain Abdullah 44-yd INT return 9/19/13 @ PHI S Eric Berry 38-yd INT return 9/8/13 @ JAX LB Tamba Hali 10-yd INT return
Result W, 40-9 W, 30-6 W, 34-30 W, 35-3 L, 51-54 W, 45-10 W, 30-14 W, 27-24 W, 29-19 W, 29-20 W, 29-28 W, 30-27 W, 20-17 W, 27-21 W, 24-3 W, 34-14 W, 34-14 W, 34-20 W, 33-3 L, 18-17 L, 31-24 W, 41-14 W, 56-31 W, 23-13 W, 23-13 W, 24-7 W, 26-16 W, 28-2
DEFENSIVE TD LEADERS SINCE 2015 Since the start of the 2015 season, the Chiefs defensive unit is the leagueleader in defensive TDs scored. The Chiefs defense has recorded an NFLbest 12 INT return TDs and ranks fourth in the league with nine fumbles returned for a TD. The Chiefs defense ranked tied for third in the NFL with two fumble return TDs in 2019 and recorded an INT return TD vs. Oakland in Week 13. NFL LEADERS: TOTAL DEF. TDs (SINCE 2015) Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Team KC TB BAL DEN LAR
Total TDs 21 18 17 16 15
INT TDs 12 8 6 11 9
Fum TDs 9 10 11 5 6
DL LEADS THE LEAGUE IN PASSES DEFENSED In 2019, the Chiefs defensive line unit ranked first in the NFL for passes defensed by a DL unit. NFL LEADERS: PASSES DEFENSED (DL) Rk. 1. 2. 3t.
20
Team Kansas City Oakland Denver Seattle Buffalo
PD 16 15 14 14 14
Date 12/4/1960 12/18/1960 9/23/1962 12/8/1963 12/14/1963 11/8/1964 10/31/1965 10/8/1967 9/28/1968 11/10/1968 12/8/1968 12/14/1968 10/26/1969 11/2/1969 9/28/1970 12/6/1970 10/1/1972 11/12/1973 12/2/1973 9/23/1979 10/5/1980 11/13/1983 11/27/1983 9/30/1984 12/8/1985 9/21/1986 9/23/1990 10/7/1990 11/11/1990 12/2/1990 10/7/1991 11/17/1991 10/11/1992 11/8/1992 12/27/1992 10/3/1993 10/17/1994 10/1/1995 9/15/1996 11/16/1997 12/7/1997 12/14/1997 9/6/1998 12/26/1998 9/17/2000 11/26/2000 12/10/2000 12/8/2002 12/4/2011 9/8/2013 9/19/2013 10/13/2013 12/8/2013 10/26/2014 12/28/2014 11/1/2015 1/3/2016 10/30/2016 9/17/2017 10/17/2019
Opponent Houston Buffalo @ Oakland Denver Boston Oakland Oakland Miami @ Miami @ Cincinnati @ San Diego @ Denver Cincinnati @ Buffalo @ Baltimore Denver @ Denver Chicago Cleveland Oakland @ Oakland Cincinnati @ Seattle Cleveland Atlanta Houston @ Green Bay @ Indianapolis Seattle @ New England Buffalo Denver Philadelphia San Diego Denver LA Raiders @ Denver @ Arizona @ Seattle Denver Oakland @ San Diego Oakland @ Oakland San Diego @ San Diego Carolina St. Louis Chicago @ Jacksonville @ Philadelphia Oakland @ Washington St. Louis San Diego Detroit Oakland @ Indianapolis Philadelphia @ Denver
Sacks 7.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 7.0 6.0 7.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 7.0 6.0 9.0 7.0 6.0 8.0 6.0 7.0 7.0 6.0 7.0 6.0 11.0 7.0 7.0 6.0 7.0 9.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 7.0 7.0 6.0 6.0 7.0 10.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 7.0 7.0 6.0 6.0 9.0 6.0 7.0 7.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 9.0
Yds 54 37 67 47 54 65 62 77 55 35 61 78 23 93 73 45 63 64 50 55 54 49 40 78 53 42 35 62 70 44 43 47 39 56 56 46 30 68 18 38 45 34 58 44 31 28 18 49 45 50 34 63 31 44 42 32 37 38 34 79
Result W, 24-0 W, 24-7 W, 26-16 W, 52-21 W, 35-3 W, 42-7 W, 14-7 W, 41-0 W, 48-3 W, 16-9 W, 40-3 W, 30-7 W, 42-22 W, 29-7 W, 44-24 W, 16-0 W, 45-24 W, 19-7 T, 20-20 W, 35-7 W, 31-17 W, 20-15 L, 48-51 (OT) W, 10-6 W, 38-10 W, 27-13 W, 17-3 L, 19-23 L, 16-17 W, 37-7 W, 33-6 L, 20-24 W, 24-17 W, 16-14 W, 42-20 W, 24-9 W, 31-28 W, 24-3 W, 35-17 W, 24-22 W, 30-0 W 29-7 W, 28-8 W, 31-24 W, 42-10 L, 16-17 W, 15-14 W, 49-10 W, 10-3 W, 28-2 W, 26-16 W, 24-7 W, 45-10 W, 34-7 W, 19-7 W, 45-10 W, 23-17 W, 30-14 W, 27-20 W, 30-6
Chiefs
SPECIAL TEAMS NOTES BUTKER’S BOOTS
CONSISTENT COVERAGE WITH TOUB
K Harrison Butker’s 147 points scored led all NFL players in 2019, while the third-year K also broke his own franchise record for the most points scored by a K in a single season. Butker’s 147 points rank second in club history for the most points scored by any player in a single season (Priest Holmes, 2003; 162). In Week 16 at Chicago, Butker connected on a 56-yard field goal, which marked the fourth-longest field goal made in franchise history.
Since his arrival in 2013, Chiefs Special Teams Coordinator/Assistant Head Coach Dave Toub has had tremendous success with his coverage units.
NFL LEADERS POINTS SCORED (2019) Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Pts. 147 144 141 127 124
FEWEST RETURN TDS ALLOWED SINCE 2013 Rk. 1t. 3t.
Player Harrison Butker Wil Lutz Justin Tucker Zane Gonzalez Matt Gay
Team KC NO BAL ARI TB
Team Kansas City Atlanta Dallas New England
PR/KR TDs 0 0 1 1
Toub’s one return TD allowed since the 2010 season ranks tied for the best among all active Special Teams Coordinators who have led special teams units since the 2010 season. FEWEST RETURN TDS ALLOWED SINCE 2010 (ACTIVE STC)
CHIEFS MOST POINTS, SEASON Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Pts. 162 147 144 142 139 137
Player Priest Holmes Harrison Butker Priest Holmes Harrison Butker Nick Lowery Harrison Butker
Rk. 1t.
Year 2003 2019 2002 2017 1990 2018
3. 4. 5.
STC Dave Toub Keith Armstrong Danny Crossman Brad Seely Chris Tabor
Team KC/CHI TB/ATL MIA/BUF/DET HOU/OAK/SF/CLE CHI/CLE
TDs 1 1 4 5 6
TOUB – RETURN TDS ALLOWED SINCE 2004 (FEWEST IN NFL)
BUTKER KEEPING PACE In his first three NFL seasons, K Harrison Butker has recorded at least 100 points each season and has accumulated 426 total points. Butker’s 426 career points are the most points scored in a player’s first three NFL seasons in league history.
Date 12/25/05 9/30/07 9/19/10
Type PR KR PR
Opponent Green Bay Detroit Dallas
NFL RECORD BOOK: POINTS SCORED, FIRST 3 SEASONS Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Player Harrison Butker Wil Lutz Justin Tucker Mason Crosby Dan Bailey
Points 426 409 401 397 390
Team KC NO BAL GB DAL
QUALITY SPECIAL TEAMS PLAY Over the past seven seasons (2013-19) under Special Teams Coordinator Dave Toub, the Chiefs special teams units have performed consistently. In fact, over the seven-year span, the club leads the league in kick return average and ranks second in punt return average. Additionally, the Chiefs have a combined 12 return touchdowns, which also ranks first in the NFL. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Team Kansas City Minnesota Baltimore Cincinnati Indianapolis
KR 294 259 237 276 232
Yds. 7,433 6,450 5,869 6,756 5,561
Avg. 25.3 24.9 24.8 24.5 24.0
TDs 5 5 3 1 1
Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4t.
Team Baltimore Kansas City Minnesota Chicago Detroit
PR 239 283 213 195 215
Yds. 2,529 2,950 2,175 1,872 2,065
Avg. 10.6 10.4 10.2 9.6 9.6
TDs 4 7 4 4 6
Team Kansas City Minnesota Detroit Philadelphia Baltimore
PR TDs 7 4 6 4 4
KR TDs 5 5 2 4 3
Rk. 1. 2. 3t. 5.
Chiefs
Tot TDs 12 9 8 8 7
HILL MAKING HISTORY Chiefs wide receiver and return specialist Tyreek Hill has a knack for finding the end zone when teams kick to him. In 60 career games played, he has returned five kicks for scores. Below is where he ranks in team history. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK: CAREER RETURNS FOR TDS Rk. 1. 2. 3 4. 5.
Player Dante Hall Tamarick Vanover Tyreek Hill J.T. Smith Dexter McCluster
PR 5 4 4 4 3
KR 6 4 1 0 0
Total 11 8 5 4 3
21
2020 OFFSEASON NOTES MAHOMES SIGNS DECADE-LONG EXTENSION
CHIEFS EXTEND JONES AND KELCE
The Kansas City Chiefs made several moves in the offseason to keep key members of the Super Bowl team in the Kingdom long-term, starting with signing quarterback and MVP of Super Bowl LIV Patrick Mahomes to a 10year contract extension.
The Kansas City Chiefs locked up two more central pieces of the Super Bowl squad by reaching agreements to extend the contracts of both DT Chris Jones and TE Travis Kelce. Jones is now under contract for the next four seasons and Kelce will be a member of the Chiefs for the next six.
At 24 years and 138 days, Mahomes became the third-youngest player and youngest quarterback in NFL history to be named Super Bowl MVP. He is also the youngest player to ever win an NFL MVP and a Super Bowl title. In 31-career games, Mahomes has completed 724-of-1,099 passes (65.9%) for 9,412 yards and 76 touchdowns. He is the fastest quarterback in NFL history to reach the milestones of 9,000+ career passing yards and 75+ passing touchdowns, doing so in his first 30 games. Mahomes also ranks first in career postseason passing touchdowns (13) and second in career postseason passing yards (1,474) in franchise history. The 10-year extension now brings Mahomes under contract in Kansas City for the next 12 seasons.
Entering his fifth season in the NFL, Jones has made his mark as one of the premier defensive linemen in the league and a focal point of the Chiefs defense. In 2019, Jones registered 9.0 sacks to lead the Chiefs defense for the second-consecutive season and was selected to the Pro Bowl for the first time in his career.
“This is a significant moment for our franchise and for the Chiefs Kingdom,” Chiefs Chairman and CEO Clark Hunt said. “Since he joined the Chiefs just a few years ago, Patrick has developed into one of the most prolific athletes in all of sports. With his dynamic play and infectious personality, he is one of the most recognized and beloved figures to put on the Chiefs uniform. He’s an extraordinary leader and a credit to the Kansas City community, and I’m delighted that he will be a member of the Chiefs for many years to come.” “Getting this deal done has been a priority for us for quite a while now,” Chiefs General Manager Brett Veach said. “I’d like to thank Chris Cabott and Leigh Steinberg for their efforts and patience, along with Brandt Tilis and Chris Shea on my staff. I’d also like to recognize Clark Hunt, Mark Donovan and Coach Reid who have all been incredibly supportive while we’ve worked though the details. I’ve said from the beginning that Patrick is one of the most impressive players I’ve ever scouted, but I don’t think anyone could have envisioned everything he’s brought to our football team and community. His abilities are so rare, and to couple that with an incredible personality is outstanding. We’re going to continue to do everything we can to surround him with talent, and this deal provides us more flexibility to do that. He’s obviously an integral part to our success and we’re thrilled he’s going to be the quarterback of the Kansas City Chiefs for a long time.” “I’ve had the privilege of coaching a lot of incredible athletes and special people in my career, and Patrick is without question on that list of players.” Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid said. “The best part is he’s still early in his career. He’s a natural leader and always grinding, whether that’s on the field, in the weight room or watching film, he wants to be the best. He’s a competitor and his teammates feed off his energy. He makes us all better as an organization and we are blessed he’s going to be our quarterback for years to come.” “The support Chiefs Kingdom has shown me has been tremendous since the day I got drafted. The fact that they’ve been behind me and supported me has been truly special and it’s a one-of a-kind-thing. I knew the moment I stepped on Arrowhead’s field that this was the place I wanted to be for my entire career,” Mahomes said. “I think I’ve reiterated that my entire career that I’ve been here and can’t wait.”
22
“I’d like to thank Chris and his representatives, Jason and Michael Katz for their efforts in getting this deal done,” Chiefs GM Brett Veach said. “Chris is an elite defensive tackle in our league, and there is no better example of that than his impact in our Super Bowl LIV victory. He’s a passionate player and guy who loves Kansas City. He wanted to be here with us, and it was a priority for us to keep him here. We’re really excited to lock him up for years to come.”
Entering his eighth season in the NFL and with the Chiefs, the All-Pro TE Kelce has already cemented himself as one of the most prolific offensive weapons in franchise history and is on his way to becoming one of the greatest tight ends to ever play the game. His 6,465 receiving yards are the most for any tight end through their first seven seasons in the league. He’s also the fastest tight end in NFL history to 500 catches – doing so in just 95 games – and with another 1,000-yard campaign in 2019, Kelce became the only tight end in history to reach the milestone in four-straight seasons. Following the deal, Andy Reid made note of Kelce’s growth both on the field and as a leader in the locker room. “Just the fact that he’s been voted a playoff captain the last couple of years - three years I think - probably says everything,” Reid said. “Everyone here has watched him grow before their eyes - fans included. Still though, he comes to work every day wanting to get better, so you love that part of him. He brings energy every day. I’ve been lucky enough coaching his brother and they’re both that way. They’re wired where they want to be the best, but yet they enjoy playing the game like no other—like you’re playing in the backyard type-thing.” “It’s a beautiful thing when you have ownership that trusts in you and wants to make change with you in terms of the season and the community,” Kelce said. “On top of that, going out there and playing football with guys that come to work every single day and fight their tail off for you. It’s a beautiful thing. This community - Kansas City - I love you, and I’m thankful I’m going to be here for the next six years.”
Chiefs
2020 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS DRAFT CLASS
CHIEFS KINGDOM FIGHTS FOR ITS RIGHT TO PARTY
RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire was selected by the Chiefs as the final pick of the first round of the 2020 NFL Draft (32nd overall) out of Louisiana State University. In his final season at LSU, Edwards-Helaire tallied 1,414 yards and 16 touchdowns plus another 453 yards through the air in 2019, averaging 6.58 yards-per-rush while racking up seven 100-yard rushing games on the team’s journey to an undefeated national championship season. He was a 2019 Paul Hornung Award finalist and was named firstteam All-SEC as a running back and second-team as a returner.
The Kansas City Chiefs celebrated their Super Bowl LIV win with their fans in a parade through downtown Kansas City followed by a rally at Union Station in February.
LB Willie Gay was taken in the second round as the 63rd overall selection out of Mississippi State to bolster the Chiefs defense. The six-footone, 243-pound Gay tallied 76 tackles and 9.0 tackles-for-loss over his last two seasons for the Bulldogs (18 games), contributing to a takeaway in seven of his final nine contests between 2018-19. OL Lucas Niang rounded out the Day 2 picks for the Chiefs, as Kansas City selected Niang in the third round with the 96th overall selection out of Texas Christian University. The six-foot-six, 315-pound Niang was a three-year starter at right tackle for the Horned Frogs and never allowed a sack in his 27 career starts, earning Second-Team All-Big 12 honors in 2018.Niang elected to opt out of the 2020 season. DB L’Jarius Sneed was selected in the fourth round as the 138th overall pick out of Louisiana Tech University. The six-foot-tall, 192-pound Sneed was a three-year starter for the Bulldogs, tallying 28 passes-defensed, eight interceptions and three pick-sixes during his career. He moved from corner to safety for the 2019 season and received second-team All-Conference USA recognition.
It was a glorious day for Chiefs Kingdom filled with confetti and cheers, and a day which Chiefs Chairman and CEO Clark Hunt said in his ring ceremony speech that he would “always remember as one of the greatest days of my life.”
DE Mike Danna was chosen by the Chiefs with the 177th overall pick in the fifth round out of the University of Michigan. Danna tallied 104 tackles, 28 tackles-for-loss and four forced fumbles across three seasons at Central Michigan before transferring to Michigan in 2019. He went on to record 38 tackles, three tackles-for-loss and a forced fumble for the Wolverines. CB BoPete Keyes was selected with the 237th overall pick as the Chiefs traded back into the seventh round to acquire the Tulane University product. Keyes was a two-year starter at Tulane, tallying 85 tackles, 18 passes defensed and two interceptions in 24 games (23 starts) over the last two seasons. The six-foot-one, 202-pound defensive back was an All-American Athletic Conference Honorable Mention selection in 2019, posting a career-high 47 tackles and six pass-breakups.
Thousands of fans embraced the winter weather in the spirit of TE Travis Kelce’s famous words after winning the AFC Championship Game, quoting the Beastie Boys, “You’ve gotta fight for your right to party!” After the Super Bowl victory in Miami, he ammended that to “You’ve gotta fight for your right to Lombardi!” which became a motto for the parade.
NEW TO THE KINGDOM
CONTINUITY IN THE KINGDOM The Kansas City Chiefs are set to return 18-of-22 starters from Super Bowl LIV for the Run It Back Tour in the 2020-21 season. This marks the most continuity by a defending Super Bowl championship team since 2000 when the Rams returned 18 starters from their Super Bowl XXXIV campaign. The eight returning starters on offense are: QB Patrick Mahomes, FB Anthony Sherman, WR Tyreek Hill, WR Sammy Watkins, TE Travis Kelce, T Eric Fisher, C Austin Reiter and T Mitchell Schwartz. The ten returning starters on defense are: DE Tanoh Kpassagnon, DT Chris Jones, DT Derrick Nnadi, DE Frank Clark, LB Anthony Hitchens, LB Damien Wilson, CB Charvarius Ward, CB Bashaud Breeland, S Daniel Sorensen and S Tyrann Mathieu.
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Since the beginning of 2020, the Kansas City Chiefs signed a number of players to bolster the roster heading into the regular season. Pos. S OL DE P TE CB OL OL DE OL
Name Tedric Thompson Kelechi Osemele Taco Charlton Tommy Townsend Ricky Seals-Jones Antonio Hamilton Mike Remmers Yasir Durant Tershawn Wharton Daniel Kilgore
Last Team Seattle N.Y. Jets Miami UDFA Cleveland N.Y. Giants N.Y. Giants UDFA UDFA San Francisco
How Acquired Signed Signed Signed Signed Signed Signed Signed Signed Signed Signed
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CHIEFS ALL-TIME YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS YEAR 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
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PRESEASON REG. SEASON PLAYOFFS 6-0 .........................8-6 .........................0-0 4-1 .........................6-8 .........................0-0 2-3 ........................11-3 ........................1-0 3-2 ....................... 5-7-2........................0-0 4-1 .........................7-7 .........................0-0 3-2 ....................... 7-5-2........................0-0 4-0 ...................... 11-2-1 .............. 1-1(S.B. loss) 4-1 .........................9-5 .........................0-0 4-1 ........................12-2 ........................0-1 6-0 ........................11-3 ............... 3-0 (S.B. win) 4-3 ....................... 7-5-2........................0-0 4-1-1 .................... 10-3-1.......................0-1 5-2 .........................8-6 .........................0-0 2-4 ....................... 7-5-2........................0-0 3-3 .........................5-9 .........................0-0 3-3 .........................5-9 .........................0-0 2-4 .........................5-9 .........................0-0 3-3 ........................2-12 ........................0-0 2-2 ........................4-12 ........................0-0 3-1 .........................7-9 .........................0-0 3-1 .........................8-8 .........................0-0 1-3 .........................9-7 .........................0-0 2-1-1 .......................3-6 .........................0-0 2-2 ........................6-10 ........................0-0 1-3 .........................8-8 .........................0-0 3-1 ........................6-10 ........................0-0 2-2 ........................10-6 ........................0-1 4-1 ........................4-11 ........................0-0 2-1-1 .................... 4-11-1 .......................0-0 1-3 ....................... 8-7-1........................0-0 1-3 ........................11-5 ........................0-1 2-2 ........................10-6 ........................1-1 1-3 ........................10-6 ........................0-1 3-1 ........................11-5 ........................2-1 2-3 .........................9-7 .........................0-1 3-1 ........................13-3 ........................0-1 3-1 .........................9-7 .........................0-0 1-3 ........................13-3 ........................0-1 2-3 .........................7-9 .........................0-0 2-2 .........................9-7 .........................0-0 0-4 .........................7-9 .........................0-0 2-2 ........................6-10 ........................0-0 3-1 .........................8-8 .........................0-0 3-2 ........................13-3 ........................0-1 1-3 .........................7-9 .........................0-0 0-4 ........................10-6 ........................0-0 2-2 .........................9-7 .........................0-1 0-4 ........................4-12 ........................0-0 2-2 ........................2-14 ........................0-0 0-4 ........................4-12 ........................0-0 1-3 ........................10-6 ........................0-1 0-4 .........................7-9 .........................0-0 1-3 ........................2-14 ........................0-0 2-2 ........................11-5 ........................0-1 1-3 .........................9-7 .........................0-0 4-0 ........................11-5 ........................1-1 2-2 ........................12-4 ........................0-1 2-2 ........................10-6 ........................0-1 2-2 ........................12-4 ........................1-1 1-3 ........................12-4 ........... 3-0 (S.B. win) 0-0 .........................0-0 .........................0-0
OWNERSHIP OF 50+ YEARS The Chiefs are one of only six current NFL franchises that have been owned by the same individual family for over 50 years. Ownership Halas Family Bidwill Family Rooney Family Hunt Family Adams Family Ford Family
Franchise Chicago Bears Arizona Cardinals Pittsburgh Steelers Kansas City Chiefs Tennessee Titans Detroit Lions
Years 99 88 87 61 61 57
THE FIRST LADY OF FOOTBALL Norma Hunt continues to play an integral part of the Chiefs in Kansas City. She owns the distinction of being the only woman known to have attended all 54 Super Bowls and was selected to preside over the coin toss at Super Bowl XLI along with Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino. She is involved in numerous philanthropic and civic efforts in Kansas City and Texas. Her late husband, Lamar Hunt, was the guiding force behind the formation of the Kansas City Chiefs and the American Football League and was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1972. He, with the help of his family, coined the term “Super Bowl.” Hunt, along with her daughter-in-law Tavia Hunt and granddaughters Gracie and Ava Hunt, all participate in the NFL Women’s Apparel advertising campaigns. The Hunts have been featured alongside other female NFL leaders such as Charlotte Jones Anderson (Dallas Cowboys Executive Vice President/Chief Brand Officer and NFL Foundation chair), Suzanne Johnson (wife of New York Jets owner Woody Johnson) and Tanya Snyder (wife of Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder).
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THIS IS OUR HOUSE
CHIEFS FANS SET WORLD RECORD
TOP CROWDS AT ARROWHEAD (Regular Season and Playoffs)
On Monday, Sept. 29, 2014, Kansas City defeated the New England Patriots 41-14, and Chiefs fans set a Guinness World Record for Loudest Crowd Roar at a Sports Stadium (Outdoors). Chiefs fans reached a peak decibel reading of 142.2 as Guinness World Records adjudicator Philip Robertson monitored the sound levels. The mark was set early in the contest while the club was on defense. The Arrowhead Stadium record passed the old record of 137.5 decibels and broke Seattle’s record of 137.6. The Chiefs still hold the record five years later.
Date Oct. 2, 2000 Nov. 5, 1972 Sept. 11, 1994 Sept. 17, 1972 Nov. 23, 2006 Sept. 22, 1996 Oct. 26, 1998 Oct. 9, 1995 Sept. 8, 1996 Nov. 10, 1996 Oct. 7, 1996 Jan. 11, 2004
Opponent Seattle Oakland San Francisco Miami Denver Denver Pittsburgh San Diego Oakland Green Bay Pittsburgh Indianapolis
Attendance 82,893* 82,094 79,907 79,829 79,484 79,439 79,431 79,288 79,281 79,281 79,189 79,159
THE ARROWHEAD ADVANTAGE “The fans, they’re phenomenal. 142.2 decibels, I never thought I would be fired up (for) decibel levels but I’m fired up for them. My ears are still ringing, I mean it was loud, loud down there. Like incredibly loud.” - Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid “One hundred percent. Whenever you can go out in pregame warmups and feed on the energy because the fans are there packing the stadium that early, it truly is special. We feed off that the entire game. There’s not an empty seat in the stands and I know there won’t be an empty seat in Arrowhead this week. I’m excited just to be in front of that crowd playing this AFC Championship.” - Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes “A legendary environment like that at Arrowhead Stadium is something else. We’re excited about it, we respect it, we realize that the environment is an issue and an element of play and it’s something that we need to be prepared for and ultimately combat.” - Steelers Head Coach Mike Tomlin
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RED FRIDAY - KICKOFF EDITION IS HERE
CHIEFS HAND OUT SUPER BOWL RINGS In an event that was highly publicized on social media on Tuesday evening, Chiefs Chairman and CEO gathered with players, coaches and some staff to unveil the club’s Super Bowl LIV championship ring and distribute them to the team. Beyond the active players on the roster, coaches and on-field staffers, there are many more individuals behind the scenes that helped the Chiefs perform at a championship level in 2019.
It was seven months ago that the Kansas City Chiefs secured their first Super Bowl title in 50 years, and with the encore season now just a few short days away, it’s nearly time to celebrate Red Friday – a tradition 29 years in the making – with a championship twist. The annual tradition is called Red Friday – Kickoff Edition this year, and from festivities all over town to a commemorative flag a half-century in the making – it has all the makings of being the best one yet. The week-long festivities began on Wednesday, Sept. 2, as flags, banners and jerseys were placed throughout the city as part of a coordinated effort to dress the town in red. That included banners on the exterior windows and inside the Grand Hall at Union Station, statues donning red and gold threads across the Country Club Plaza and numerous flags lining the iconic Sister Cities Bridge. The “Pioneer” statue located in Westport received a similar treatment on Thursday, and numerous locations – from the Liberty Memorial to Mill Creek Park – feature lawn paintings celebrating the defending Super Bowl Champions. Friday also marked a special day at Ronald McDonald House Charities of Kansas City, as several Chiefs’ representatives hosted a barbecue for the children and families currently staying at the facility.
On Wednesday, the focus shifted to all employees as the team handed out hundreds of additional custom championship rings to staff, Ambassadors, Cheerleaders, Red Coaters and many other members of the extended Chiefs family who were part of the team’s 2019 championship campaign. Everyone who received a ring also received a commemorative football and Red Friday merchandise to help kick off the 2020 season in style. It truly takes a village to operate an NFL franchise. And thanks to the generosity of the Hunt family, nearly 700 people who played a role in the team’s first championship in 50 years now have the ring to prove it.
The celebration will then continue with custom, one-of-a-kind murals at the Power & Light District, in Westport and in downtown Overland Park before the Kansas City skyline illuminates in red next Tuesday night on Sept. 8. It all culminates on Wednesday, Sept. 9, when a limited number of flags go on sale at Kansas City- and St. Joseph-area McDonald’s locations for a $5 donation beginning at 5 a.m. The flags - which will also be available at shop.chiefs.com for a $10 donation – celebrate the Chiefs’ triumph in Super Bowl LIV and are truly a piece of history 50 years in the making. This will mark the seventh-consecutive year that the Chiefs have sold commemorative flags in anticipation of the upcoming campaign, and as much as they ignite excitement for the approaching football season, the annual tradition does so much more than just that. In fact, Red Friday has raised more than $1.8 million for Ronald McDonald House Charities of Kansas City in the last eight years alone, channeling the passion of Chiefs Kingdom to help families facing unimaginable circumstances all while encouraging fans to show off their passion for the red and gold. That passion is at an all-time high following the Chiefs’ first Super Bowl victory in a half-century, and as Red Friday – Kickoff Edition continues one of the best traditions in the NFL, fans have an opportunity to secure a piece of history while helping those in need.
CHIEFS TO HOST RED FRIDAY RUN Fans are encouraged to join the team on Wednesday, Sept. 9th for the inaugural Red Friday Run, presented by GEHA and hosted by Arrowhead Events, the special events arm of the Kansas City Chiefs. This year’s race is fully virtual and will coincide with the Red Friday - Kickoff Edition celebration leading up to the club’s NFL Kickoff Game against the Houston Texans. The virtual race will be open through Sunday, Sept. 13 for participants to complete the run and registration remains live at www.chiefs.com/ redfridayrun. All participants will receive a 2020 Red Friday flag, a Red Friday Run t-shirt and their Red Friday Run bib. All materials will be mailed to the address provided during the registration process. With no official racecourse for this year’s event, Chiefs fans throughout the country and all over the world can participate virtually with the option to complete the 5K however they choose, including running or walking in their neighborhood, in a local park, on a nature trail or from their treadmill.
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CHIEFS DEVELOP SAFETY PLAN FOR FANS
CHIEFS HOST TWO STM DAYS AT CAMP
Under the guidelines established by the National Football League, and with the approval of Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas, City of Kansas City Health Director Dr. Rex Archer and City of Kansas City EMS Medical Director Dr. Erica Carney, the Kansas City Chiefs finalized plans for a reduced capacity of approximately 22 percent to kick off the 2020 season. Included in the approved plans are important health and safety protocols that the club, in consultation with The University of Kansas Health System, has developed for fans who will attend games at Arrowhead Stadium. The club introduced a number of changes to the fan experience as the safety of fans, vendors, staff, players and coaches remains the utmost priority during this unprecedented NFL season. A full breakdown of policies and protocols for the 2020 season is posted at www.chiefs.com/stadium/covid, with many important changes noted below. What The Team Is Doing • The Kansas City Chiefs and Arrowhead Stadium staff have rolled out enhanced cleaning and sanitization measures, achieving accreditation from the Global Biorisk Advisory Council (GBAC), the cleaning industry’s only outbreak prevention, response and recovery accreditation for facilities. • All staff members who enter the building will go through a health screening, which includes a questionnaire and a temperature check, and will be directed to wear personal protective equipment. • The stadium will be completely cashless to minimize contact between guests and staff during payment transactions. How The Fan Experience Is Changing • Masks will be required at all times for fans at the stadium, with the exception of when fans are actively eating or drinking. • All bags, including previously approved clear bags and small clutch bags, will be prohibited inside the stadium to minimize contact in the security screening process. • No smoking will be allowed inside the stadium, including vaping. Spitting of any kind (tobacco, sunflower seeds, etc.) is also prohibited. • All parking is general (red) parking and must be purchased in advance as payment will not be accepted at parking tollgates. • Parking is only open to ticket holders and cars will be parked in everyother parking spot to encourage physical distancing. • All guests will be provided with a recommended parking entry gate based on their ticket location to minimize contact with other guests. • Tailgating will be allowed in the parking lots, but guests should only use the approved tailgate area behind their vehicle to maintain proper physical distancing between groups. Fans are encouraged to wear masks in parking areas as well. • Arrowhead Stadium has been divided into zones to eliminate crossover, minimizing the amount of exposure among guests. • Guests will be required to enter the stadium via a specific gate based on their ticket location. What Fans Can Do • Fans are encouraged to stay home if they are sick or are showing COVID-19 symptoms. • Fans are encouraged to stay home if they have been or believe to have been in close contact with anyone confirmed to have tested positive for COVID-19 or is displaying symptoms. • Fans who are at elevated risk due to pre-existing health conditions should exercise extra caution prior to attending or when they attend an event at Arrowhead Stadium. • Properly wear masks or other face coverings at all times in parking lots, when entering the stadium, indside the stadium and exiting the stadium. Additional details on the all-new health and safety protocols and procedures for the 2020 season, including more in-depth information on concessions, retail, parking, tailgating and the stadium zone plan is available at www. chiefs.com/stadium/covid.
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With the approval of a reduced-capacity plan for fans to return to Arrowhead Stadium in 2020, the Kansas City Chiefs hosted two exclusive practice viewing days for Season Ticket Members at Arrowhead during 2020 Chiefs Training Camp presented by CommunityAmerica Credit Union. The first Season Ticket Member day was on Saturday, Aug. 22, while the second took place on Saturday, Aug. 29. Both events were presented by GEHA. Due to restrictions in place as a result of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, capacity was limited both days, including a maximum of 2,000 fans for the first practice and a maximum of 5,000 fans for the second practice. Season Ticket Members in attendance received complimentary food and beverages, and had access to purchase other items. Each Season Ticket Member also received an earpiece to listen to an exclusive closed-circuit radio broadcast by the Chiefs Radio Network team. In addition to offering the players and coaches a chance to practice inside the stadium prior to the regular season, and giving Season Ticket Members an opportunity to see their team in-person during an otherwise closed training camp, the Season Ticket Member events provided the team’s gameday operations staff multiple test runs of the team’s new COVID-19 stadium policies and protocols for fans. Following the Season Ticket Member practice on Saturday, Aug. 29, Chiefs Chairman and CEO Clark Hunt and Lamar Hunt Jr. raised a brand new Super Bowl LIV flag in the west end zone to match the club’s Super Bowl IV flag that has been on display at Arrowhead for years.
CHIEFS RADIO NETWORK TEAM FINALIZED This offseason, the Kansas City Chiefs and Entercom announced the new play-by-play broadcast team for the 2020 season on the 70-station Chiefs Radio Network. Anchored by the flagship station, 106.5 The Wolf (WDAF-FM), the Chiefs Radio Network will feature “Voice of the Chiefs” Hitch Holthus, who returns for his 27th season as the club’s play-by-play personality. He has called a team-record 433 career regular and postseason games for the club. A pair of newcomers will join Holthus in the booth for the 2020 season as former Chiefs wide receiver and current Ambassador Danan Hughes will begin his inaugural campaign as the network’s color commentator. Hughes has been broadcasting football and baseball as part of the Big Ten Network since 2008, as well as Chiefs pregame and postgame shows on local television since 2014. Josh Klingler enters his first season as the network’s sideline reporter. A morning show host on 610 Sports Radio (KCSP-AM), Klingler has been broadcasting collegiate athletics as a sideline reporter for the University of Kanas for more than 14 years and has spent 16 years in the local sports talk landscape. Veteran sportscaster Art Hains will return as the host of 106.5 The Wolf’s pregame and postgame show coverage.
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THE ORIGIN OF SUPER BOWL & SUPER BOWL IV Lamar Hunt left an indelible mark on professional football. While Hunt made many lasting contributions to the game, part of his legacy will be his “accidental” naming of pro football’s most important contest, the Super Bowl. As the story has been told and retold over the years, some of the facts have gotten lost along the way. Here are some of the most important elements of the tale in how the Super Bowl got its name...
CHIEFS HOFERS FROM SB IV Prior to Super Bowl LIV, it had been 50 years since the Kansas City Chiefs played in a Super Bowl (IV). That game served as the final AFLNFL World Championship Game in the history of professional football. The spectacle at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, La., helped pave the way for the eventual AFL-NFL merger later that year (1970).
• After the AFL-NFL merger was announced in June of 1966, Commissioner Pete Rozelle appointed a committee consisting of himself, Lamar Hunt (Kansas City), Tex Schramm (Dallas) and two other owners from each league (AFL & NFL) to firm up the details of the merger agreement. • At one of those initial merger meetings, there was a discussion about the date of the game. As the committee discussed the championship game (which ultimately became referenced as the Super Bowl), there was some confusion on whether the parties were discussing the respective AFL and NFL title games or the game between the two leagues. It was then that Hunt first recalled saying, “You know, the last game, the final game . . . the Super Bowl.” • The “inspiration” for Hunt’s whimsical suggestion was the high-bouncing “Super Ball” produced by the Wham-O company. Lamar’s wife, Norma, had previously purchased one for each of the Hunt children (Lamar Jr., Clark and Sharron) and the toy had become somewhat of a craze in the Hunt household and many other homes across the country.
In all, 17 members from both the Chiefs and the Vikings that took part in Super Bowl IV were later inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, including both head coaches, Hank Stram and Bud Grant, as well as Chiefs Founder Lamar Hunt and Vikings General Manager Jim Finks. For the Chiefs, 10 members of the Super Bowl IV Championship were later enshrined into the hallowed halls in Canton. • LB/DE Bobby Bell • DT Buck Buchanan • DT Curley Culp • QB Len Dawson • LB Willie Lanier • S Johnny Robinson • K Jan Stenerud • CB Emmitt Thomas • Head Coach Hank Stram • Chiefs Founder Lamar Hunt
• Hunt was later quoted as saying, “Nobody ever said let’s make that the name of the game. Far from it, we all agreed it was far too corny to be the name of the new title game.” • In a letter from Hunt to Rozelle on July 25, 1966, Hunt urged the commissioner to “coin a phrase” for the title game between the two leagues. In the letter, Hunt said, “I have kiddingly called it the Super Bowl, which can obviously be improved upon.” • Rozelle agreed with Hunt’s suggestion since he had a particular disdain for the term “super.” According to longtime NFL executive Don Weiss, Rozelle was a former PR man who had a keen appreciation of grammar. In Rozelle’s book, “super” was the equivalent of “gee whiz” or “neat.” He believed that the term “Super Bowl” had no sophistication whatsoever. • Rozelle was initially inclined to call the game the “Pro Bowl,” but that moniker was already assigned to the NFL’s annual all-star contest. • In the years leading up to the merger, many members of the media had billed a possible championship match-up between the two rival leagues as a “World Series of Football,” but Rozelle clearly did not want to have his game associated with baseball.
A LIFETIME OF SUNDAYS The National Football League celebrated its 100th season in 2019, marking a century of thrills, unforgettable moments and a cultural phenomenon that has evolved into America’s favorite sport. And through it all – from the AFL-NFL merger back in 1966 to Super Bowl LIV – four incredible women have been there every step of the way. That’s the focus of NFL Films’ documentary “A Lifetime of Sundays,” which traces the rich history of the league through the perspectives of four female owners integral to the sport’s growth: the Kansas City Chiefs’ Norma Hunt, the Chicago Bears’ Virginia Halas McCaskey, the Detroit Lions’ Martha Ford and the Pittsburgh Steelers’ Patricia Rooney. It’s a one-of-a-kind glimpse into the lives of those who helped make the NFL what it is today. “This whole process over the last year and a half has been so special,” said Chiefs Chairman & CEO Clark Hunt. “I’m so glad for my mom and the other three women that these stories are being told, because each one of them has a unique perspective on the history and the development of the National Football League.”
• After much consternation and debate, Rozelle eventually dubbed the title contest between the two leagues as “The AFL-NFL World Championship Game.” However, Hunt’s whimsical, off-the-cuff comment had taken root. In the weeks leading up to the game, headline writers had already adapted Hunt’s two-word title over the much more verbose official moniker for the game. The TV networks billed the game as “Super Sunday” and even NFL Films tagged their film reels as being designated for the “Super Bowl.” • After the first two “AFL-NFL World Championship Games,” the term “Super Bowl” was officially adopted by Commissioner Rozelle and the NFL. The first game to officially be designated as the Super Bowl at the time it was played was Super Bowl III between the AFL’s Jets and the NFL’s Colts. The first two championship games were retroactively named Super Bowls I & II.
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2019 FINAL NFL STANDINGS Team y- New England x- Buï¬&#x20AC;alo N.Y. Jets Miami
W 12 10 7 5
L 4 6 9 11
T 0 0 0 0
PCT .750 .625 .438 .313
PF 420 314 276 306
AFC East PA 225 259 359 494
Home 6-2-0 4-4-0 5-3-0 3-5-0
Road 6-2-0 6-2-0 2-6-0 2-6-0
AFC 8-4-0 7-5-0 4-8-0 4-8-0
NFC 4-0-0 3-1-0 3-1-0 1-3-0
DIV 5-1-0 3-3-0 2-4-0 2-4-0
Streak Lost 1 Lost 2 Won 2 Won 2
Team z- Baltimore Pittsburgh Cleveland Cincinnati
W 14 8 6 2
L 2 8 10 14
T 0 0 0 0
PCT .875 .500 .375 .125
PF 531 289 335 279
AFC North PA 282 303 393 420
Home 7-1-0 5-3-0 4-4-0 2-6-0
Road 7-1-0 3-5-0 2-6-0 0-8-0
AFC 10-2-0 6-6-0 6-6-0 2-10-0
NFC 4-0-0 2-2-0 0-4-0 0-4-0
DIV 5-1-0 3-3-0 3-3-0 1-5-0
Streak Won 12 Lost 3 Lost 3 Won 1
Team y- Houston x- Tennessee Indianapolis Jacksonville
W 10 9 7 6
L 6 7 9 10
T 0 0 0 0
PCT .625 .563 .438 .375
PF 378 402 361 300
AFC South PA 385 331 373 397
Home 5-3-0 4-4-0 5-3-0 3-5-0
Road 5-3-0 5-3-0 2-6-0 3-5-0
AFC 8-4-0 7-5-0 5-7-0 6-6-0
NFC 2-2-0 2-2-0 2-2-0 0-4-0
DIV 4-2-0 3-3-0 3-3-0 2-4-0
Streak Lost 1 Won 1 Lost 1 Won 1
Team Kansas City Denver Oakland L.A. Chargers
W 12 7 7 5
L 4 9 9 11
T 0 0 0 0
PCT .750 .438 .438 .313
PF 451 282 313 337
AFC West PA 308 316 419 345
Home 5-3-0 5-3-0 5-3-0 2-6-0
Road 7-1-0 2-6-0 2-6-0 3-5-0
AFC 9-3-0 6-6-0 5-7-0 3-9-0
NFC 3-1-0 1-3-0 2-2-0 2-2-0
DIV 6-0-0 3-3-0 3-2-0 0-6-0
Streak Won 6 Won 2 Lost 1 Lost 3
Team y- Philadelphia Dallas N.Y. Giants Washington
W 9 8 4 3
L 7 8 12 13
T 0 0 0 0
PCT .563 .500 .250 .266
PF 385 434 341 266
NFC East PA 354 321 451 435
Home 5-3-0 5-3-0 2-6-0 1-7-0
Road 4-4-0 3-5-0 2-6-0 2-6-0
NFC 7-5-0 7-5-0 3-9-0 2-10-0
AFC 2-2-0 1-3-0 1-3-0 1-3-0
DIV 5-1-0 5-1-0 2-4-0 0-6-0
Streak Won 4 Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 4
Team Green Bay x- Minnesota Chicago Detriot
W 13 10 8 3
L 3 6 8 12
T 0 0 0 1
PCT .813 .625 .500 .219
PF 376 407 280 341
NFC North PA 313 303 298 423
Home 7-1-0 6-2-0 4-4-0 2-6-0
Road 6-2-0 4-4-0 4-4-0 1-6-1
NFC 10-2-0 7-5-0 7-5-0 2-9-1
AFC 3-1-0 3-1-0 1-3-0 1-3-0
DIV 6-0-0 2-4-0 4-2-0 0-6-0
Streak Won 5 Lost 2 Won 1 Lost 9
Team y- New Orleans Atlanta Tampa Bay Carolina
W 13 7 7 5
L 3 9 9 11
T 0 0 0 0
PCT .813 .438 .438 .313
PF 458 381 458 340
NFC South PA 341 381 458 470
Home 6-2-0 3-5-0 2-6-0 2-6-0
Road 7-1-0 4-4-0 5-3-0 3-5-0
NFC 9-3-0 6-6-0 5-7-0 2-10-0
AFC 4-0-0 1-3-0 2-2-0 3-1-0
DIV 5-1-0 4-2-0 2-4-0 1-5-0
Streak Won 3 Won 4 Lost 2 Lost 8
Team z- San Francisco x- Seattle L.A. Rams Arizona
W 13 11 9 5
L 3 5 7 10
T 0 0 0 1
PCT .813 .688 .563 .344
PF 479 405 394 361
NFC West PA 310 398 364 442
Home 6-2-0 4-4-0 5-3-0 2-5-1
Road 7-1-0 7-1-0 4-4-0 3-5-0
NFC 10-2-0 8-4-0 7-5-0 3-8-1
AFC 3-1-0 3-1-0 2-2-0 2-2-0
DIV 5-1-0 3-3-0 3-3-0 1-5-0
Streak Won 2 Lost 2 Won 1 Lost 1
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CHIEFS CLAIM LAMAR HUNT TROPHY FOR FIRST TIME IN FRANCHISE HISTORY
CHIEFS CLAIM LAMAR HUNT TROPHY, SUPER BOWL BOUND: For the first time in franchise history, the Chiefs secured the Lamar Hunt Trophy as the AFC champions. In doing so, Kansas City advances to the Super Bowl for the third time in franchise annals. It marks the first time since the 1969 season that the team will play in the NFL’s championship game. COLD KICKOFF: Sunday’s kickoff temperature of 17 degrees was the fifthcoldest kickoff temp at Arrowhead Stadium since 1994. The kickoff wind chill was 5 degrees, tying for the sixth-coldest wind chill at kickoff at Arrowhead since 1994. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK COLDEST KICKOFF TEMPS, ARROWHEAD STADIUM, SINCE 1994 1. 1 Dec. 18, 2016 vs. Tennessee L 17-19 2. 9 Dec. 17, 2000 vs. Denver W 20-7 3. 10 Dec. 21, 2008 vs. Miami L 31-38 4. 15 Dec. 19, 2004 vs. Denver W 45-17 5. 17 Jan. 19, 2020 vs. Tennessee W 35-24 MAHOMES MOVES UP POSTSEASON CHARTS: QB Patrick Mahomes finished the game with 23 completions on 35 attempts for 294 passing yards and three passing touchdowns, good for a 120.4 passer rating. Mahomes now has 1,188 passing yards in four postseason contests, moving him into third place on the Chiefs all-time postseason passing chart. According to ESPN Stats & Info, Mahomes is the first player in Chiefs franchise history to ever record multiple passing touchdowns and a rushing touchdown in a postseason game. Mahomes owns 11 career postseason passing touchdowns, the most in franchise history. His three touchdown passes against Tennessee are tied for third in the Chiefs postseason record book for touchdowns in a single game (Joe Montana three vs. Houston, Jan. 16, 1994; Patrick Mahomes three vs. New England, Jan. 20, 2019). His 23 completions tonight give him 89 career postseason completions while his 35 attempts give him 142 career postseason attempts, both ranking third in franchise history.
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CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST PASSING YARDS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 1,497 Len Dawson (8 games) 1962-75 2. 1,250 Alex Smith (5 games) 2013-17 3. 1,188 Patrick Mahomes (4 games) 2017-19 4. 1,014 Joe Montana (4 games) 1993-94 5. 454 Dave Krieg (4 games) 1992-93 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST TOUCHDOWN PASSES, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 11 Patrick Mahomes (4 games) 2017-19 2. 9 Alex Smith (5 games) 2013-17 3. 7 Len Dawson (8 games) 1962-75 4. 6 Joe Montana (4 games) 1993-94 5t. 2 Steve DeBerg (3 games) 1988-91 2 Dave Krieg (4 games) 1992-93 2 Trent Green (2 games) 2001-06 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST PASSES COMPLETED, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 120 Alex Smith (5 games) 2013-17 2. 107 Len Dawson (8 games) 1962-75 3. 89 Patrick Mahomes (4 games) 2017-19 4. 85 Joe Montana (4 games) 1993-94 5. 33 Dave Krieg (4 games) 1992-93 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST PASS ATTEMPTS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 188 Len Dawson (8 games) 1962-75 2. 185 Alex Smith (5 games) 2013-17 3. 142 Patrick Mahomes (3 games) 2017-19 4. 141 Joe Montana (4 games) 1993-94 5. 64 Dave Krieg (4 games) 1992-93 MAHOMES SCRAMBLES TO THE ENDZONE: QB Patrick Mahomes scored his second-career postseason rushing touchdown in Sunday’s game on a 27-yard scramble. Mahomes scored a career tying high two
Chiefs
AFC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME NOTES: TENNESSEE TITANS rushing touchdowns in the regular season. He rushed for a team-high 53 yards and one rushing touchdown in Sunday’s game. HILL FINDS THE ENDZONE TWICE: WR Tyreek Hill recorded his first multi-touchdown game in the postseason against the Titans, scoring on eight- and 20-yard passes from QB Patrick Mahomes. Hill owns three career postseason touchdowns (two receiving, one rushing). With 67 receiving yards in Sunday’s game, Hill now has 303 receiving yards and 25 receptions in the postseason, both ranking as the fourth-most in Chiefs postseason history. Hill finished the game with five receptions for 67 yards and two receiving touchdowns. With his two receiving touchdowns coming in the first half of Sunday’s AFC Championship Game, Hill and TE Travis Kelce (three TDs in first half vs. Houston, 1/12/20) become the first pair of teammates to each record a playoff game with multiple first-half receiving touchdowns in a single postseason since Colts wide receivers Marvin Harrison and Brandon Stokley accomplished the feat in the 2003 NFL postseason. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST RECEIVING YARDS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 589 Travis Kelce (8 games) 2013-19 2. 481 Otis Taylor (7 games) 1965-75 3. 363 J.J. Birden (8 games) 1990-94 4. 303 Tyreek Hill (6 games) 2016-19 5. 266 Keith Cash (6 games) 1992-96 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST PASS RECEPTIONS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 46 Travis Kelce (8 games) 2013-19 2t. 27 Otis Taylor (7 games) 1965-75 27 J.J. Birden (8 games) 1990-94 4. 25 Tyreek Hill (6 games) 2016-19 5. 21 Keith Cash (6 games) 1992-96 WILLIAMS RUSHES IN: RB Damien Williams scored his third rushing touchdown of the 2019 postseason and fifth-career postseason rushing touchdown on a three-yard rush in Sunday’s game. Williams owns four total touchdowns (three rushing, one receiving) in the 2019 postseason and eight total postseason touchdowns (five rushing, three receiving) with the Chiefs. His eight total touchdowns in the postseason are the most in team history, while his five rushing touchdowns in the postseason are also the most in franchise history. With 45 rushing yards in Sunday’s game, Williams now owns 251 career postseason rushing yards, the second-most in Chiefs history. His 48 postseason points are the most in team annals. Williams finished the game with 17 rushes for 45 rushing yards and five receptions for 44 receiving yards with one rushing touchdown. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST TOUCHDOWNS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 8 Damien Williams (4 games) 2018-19 2. 5 Travis Kelce (8 games) 2013-19 3t. 3 Marcus Allen (6 games) 1993-97 3 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 3 Knile Davis (3 games) 2013-16 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 5 Damien Williams (4 games) 2018-19 2t. 3 Marcus Allen (6 games) 1993-97 3 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST RUSHING YARDS GAINED, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 386 Marcus Allen (6 games) 1993-97 2. 251 Damien Williams (4 games) 2018-19 2. 208 Wendell Hayes (5 games) 1968-74 4. 197 Barry Word (4 games) 1990-92 5. 186 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST POINTS, POSTSEASON, CAREER
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1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
48 37 35 31 30
Damien Williams (4 games – 8 TDs) Nick Lowery (8 games – 8 FGs, 13 PATs) Jan Stenerud (5 games – 9 FGs, 8 PATs) Harrison Butker (5 games – 3 FGs, 22 PATs) Travis Kelce (8 games – 5 TDs)
2018-19 1980-93 1967-79 2017-19 2018-19
WATKINS HAULS IN LONG TOUCHDOWN: WR Sammy Watkins hauled in a 60-yard touchdown pass from QB Patrick Mahomes, marking his firstcareer postseason touchdown. Watkins notched is second-career 100-yard receiving postseason game Sunday, logging 114 receiving yards on seven receptions. His 114 receiving yards ties his postseason single-game high (114 vs. New England, 1/20/19). He joins TE Travis Kelce as the only other Chiefs player in franchise history to record multiple 100-yard receiving games. KPASSAGNON TAKES DOWN TANNEHILL TWICE: DE Tanoh Kpassagnon recorded his first-career postseason sacks in Sunday’s game, taking down Titans QB Ryan Tannehill for a losses of eight and two yards. He finished the game with two solo tackles for loss, two quarterback hits and one pass defensed in addition to his 2.0 sacks. CLARK SACKS TANNEHILL: DE Frank Clark took down Titans QB Ryan Tannehill for a loss of 17 yards in Sunday’s game, marking his fourth sack of the 2019 postseason. Clark’s 4.0 sacks with the Chiefs in the postseason are tied for the fourth-most in franchise history with LB Justin Houston. Clark finished Sunday’s game with four tackles (one solo), one tackle for loss and one quarterback hit in addition to his sack. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST SACKS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1t. 6.5 Derrick Thomas (10 games) 6.5 Neil Smith (9 games) 3. 5.0 Aaron Brown (6 games) 4t. 4.0 Frank Clark (2 games) 4.0 Justin Houston (7 games) 6. 3.0 Albert Lewis (6 games)
1989-99 1988-96 1966-72 2019 2011-19 1983-93
COLQUITT SETS CHIEFS POSTSEASON RECORD: With his appearance in Sunday’s game, P Dustin Colquitt has played in 11 career postseason games with Kansas City, the most in franchise history. He punted three times for 122 yards (40.7 gross, 31.0 net). Colquitt owns the most punts in the postseason and the top punting average in team history for punters with at least 20 postseason punts with 1,838 punting yards on 41 punts, good for a 44.8 average. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST GAMES PLAYED, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 11 Dustin Colquitt 2005-19 2. 10 John Alt 1984-96 Tim Grunhard 1990-00 Dave Szott 1990-00 Derrick Thomas 1989-99 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST PUNTS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 41 Dustin Colquitt (11 games) 2. 39 Jerrel Wilson (7 games) 3. 38 Bryan Barker (7 games) 4. 11 Louie Aguiar (3 games)
2005-19 1963-77 1990-93 1994-98
CHIEFS RECORD BOOK HIGHEST PUNTING AVERAGE, POSTSEASON, CAREER (20 PUNTS) 1. 44.8 Dustin Colquitt (11 games: 1,838-41) 2005-19 2. 44.6 Jerrel Wilson (7 games: 1,693-39) 1963-77 3. 42.4 Bryan Barker (7 games: 1,613-38) 1990-93 CHIEFS SCORING POSTSEASON POINTS: With 35 points in Sunday’s game, the Chiefs become the first team since the 2017 Philadelphia Eagles to score at least 35 points in multiple playoff games in a single postseason run. The last team to accomplish the feat prior to the 2017 Eagles was the 2003 Indianapolis Colts.
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SUPER BOWL LIV CHAMPIONS
CHIEFS WIN SUPER BOWL LIV: For the second time in franchise history, the Chiefs secured the Lombardi Trophy as Super Bowl champions. The 31-20 Super Bowl LIV victory over the San Francisco 49ers marked the first time the Chiefs have clinched the Lombardi Trophy since the 1969 season when Kansas City beat the Minnesota Vikings 23-7. MAHOMES WINS SUPER BOWL LIV MVP: QB Patrick Mahomes finished the game with 26 completions on 42 attempts for 286 passing yards and two touchdowns, good for a 78.1 passer rating. Mahomes now has 1,474 passing yards in five postseason contests, moving him into second place on the Chiefs all-time postseason passing chart. Mahomes owns 13 career postseason passing touchdowns, the most in franchise history. Mahomes added a one-yard rushing touchdown in the first quarter of the game, marking the Chiefs first score of Super Bowl LIV. Mahomes owns two rushing touchdowns for the 2019 postseason and three for his postseason career. His three-career postseason rushing touchdowns are tied for the third-most postseason rushing touchdowns in franchise history with RBs Marcus Allen and Mike Garrett and are also tied for third-most overall touchdowns in Chiefs history. Mahomes finished the game with 29 rushing yards on nine attempts. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST PASSING YARDS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 1,497 Len Dawson (8 games) 1962-75 2. 1,474 Patrick Mahomes (5 games) 2017-19 2. 1,250 Alex Smith (5 games) 2013-17 4. 1,014 Joe Montana (4 games) 1993-94 5. 454 Dave Krieg (4 games) 1992-93 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST TOUCHDOWN PASSES, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 13 Patrick Mahomes (5 games) 2017-19 2. 9 Alex Smith (5 games) 2013-17 3. 7 Len Dawson (8 games) 1962-75 4. 6 Joe Montana (4 games) 1993-94 5t. 2 Steve DeBerg (3 games) 1988-91 2 Dave Krieg (4 games) 1992-93 2 Trent Green (2 games) 2001-06 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 6 Damien Williams (5 games) 2018-19 2t. 3 Patrick Mahomes (5 games) 2017-19 3 Marcus Allen (6 games) 1993-97 3 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST TOUCHDOWNS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 10 Damien Williams (5 games) 2018-19 2. 5 Travis Kelce (8 games) 2013-19 3t. 3 Patrick Mahomes (5 games) 2017-19 3 Marcus Allen (6 games) 1993-97 3 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 3 Knile Davis (3 games) 2013-16 3 Tyreek Hill (6 games) 2016-19 WILLIAMS FINDS THE ENDZONE TWICE: RB Damien Williams scored twice in the Super Bowl LIV victory, the first coming on a five-yard pass from QB Patrick Mahomes and again in the final minutes of the game on a 38-yard touchdown run that sealed the win. Williams owns six total touch-
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downs for the 2019 postseason (four rushing, two receiving) and 10 overall postseason touchdowns for his career with Kansas City (six rushing, four receiving). His 10 total touchdowns in the postseason are the most in team history, while his six rushing touchdowns in the postseason are also the most in franchise history. His four receiving touchdowns in the postseason with Kansas City are second-most in Chiefs history. With 104 rushing yards in the game, Williams now owns 355 career postseason rushing yards, the second-most in Chiefs history. Williams becomes the only Chiefs player in franchise history to record multiple 100-yard rushing games in the postseason. His 60 postseason points are the most in team annals. He added four receptions for 29 receiving yards. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST TOUCHDOWNS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 10 Damien Williams (5 games) 2018-19 2. 5 Travis Kelce (9 games) 2013-19 3t. 3 Patrick Mahomes (5 games) 2017-19 3 Marcus Allen (6 games) 1993-97 3 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 3 Knile Davis (3 games) 2013-16 3 Tyreek Hill (6 games) 2016-19 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 6 Damien Williams (5 games) 2018-19 2t. 3 Patrick Mahomes (5 games) 2017-19 3 Marcus Allen (6 games) 1993-97 3 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 6 Travis Kelce (9 games) 2013-19 2. 4 Damien Williams (5 games) 2018-19 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST RUSHING YARDS GAINED, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 386 Marcus Allen (6 games) 1993-97 2. 355 Damien Williams (5 games) 2018-19 3. 208 Wendell Hayes (5 games) 1968-74 4. 197 Barry Word (4 games) 1990-92 5. 186 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST POINTS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 60 Damien Williams (5 games – 10 TDs) 2. 38 Harrison Butker (6 games – 4 FGs, 26 PATs) 3. 37 Nick Lowery (8 games – 8 FGs, 13 PATs) 4. 36 Travis Kelce (9 games – 6 TDs) 5. 35 Jan Stenerud (5 games – 9 FGs, 8 PATs)
2018-19 2017-19 1980-93 2018-19 1967-79
BREELAND TAKES IT AWAY: CB Bashaud Breeland recorded his firstcareer postseason interception in the game, picking off 49ers QB Jimmy Garoppolo at the 43-yard line and returning it one yard. Breeland’s interception marked the Chiefs first interception of the 2019 postseason. He finished the game with a team-high seven tackles (six solo), including two for loss, one pass defensed and one interception. KELCE FINDS THE ENDZONE: TE Travis Kelce scored his fourth receiving touchdown of the 2019 postseason on a one-yard pass from QB Patrick
Chiefs
SUPER BOWL LIV CHAMPIONS
Mahomes. Kelce owns six career-receiving touchdowns in the postseason, the most in franchise history. His six touchdowns in the postseason are the second-most overall touchdowns in postseason history. Kelce owns 36 total postseason points, the fourth-most in franchise history. He finished the game with 43 receiving yards on six receptions with one touchdown. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 6 Travis Kelce (9 games) 2013-19 2. 4 Damien Williams (5 games) 2018-19 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST TOUCHDOWNS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 10 Damien Williams (5 games) 2018-19 2. 6 Travis Kelce (9 games) 2013-19 3t. 3 Patrick Mahomes (5 games) 2017-19 3 Marcus Allen (6 games) 1993-97 3 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 3 Knile Davis (3 games) 2013-16 3 Tyreek Hill (6 games) 2016-19 CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST POINTS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 60 Damien Williams (5 games – 10 TDs) 2. 38 Harrison Butker (6 games – 4 FGs, 26 PATs) 3. 37 Nick Lowery (8 games – 8 FGs, 13 PATs) 4. 36 Travis Kelce (9 games – 6 TDs) 5. 35 Jan Stenerud (5 games – 9 FGs, 8 PATs)
MOST PUNTS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 43 Dustin Colquitt (12 games) 2. 39 Jerrel Wilson (7 games) 3. 38 Bryan Barker (7 games) 4. 11 Louie Aguiar (3 games)
2018-19 2017-19 1980-93 2018-19 1967-79
CLARK TAKES DOWN GAROPPOLO: DE Frank Clark notched his fifth sack of the postseason in the win, taking down 49ers QB Jimmy Garoppolo for a loss of nine yards. Clark’s 5.0 career sacks with Kansas City in the postseason are tied for the third-most in Chiefs history with DE Aaron Brown. Clark finished game with one tackle for loss, two quarterback pressures and 1.0 sack. FULLER TAKES IT AWAY: CB Kendall Fuller recorded his first-career postseason interception in the game, picking off 49ers QB Jimmy Garoppolo at the Kansas City 41-yard line to seal the Chiefs Super Bowl LIV victory. Fuller finished the game with four tackles (three solo), two passes defensed and one interception. COLQUITT CONTINUES POSTSEASON APPEARANCE CLIMB: With his appearance in Super Bowl LIV, P Dustin Colquitt has played in 12 career postseason games with Kansas City, the most in franchise history. He punted two times for 100 yards (50.0 gross, 40.0 net). Colquitt owns the most punts in the postseason and the top punting average in team history for punters with at least 20 postseason punts with 1,938 punting yards on 43 punts, good for a 45.1 average.
Chiefs
CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST GAMES PLAYED, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 12 Dustin Colquitt 2005-19 2t. 10 John Alt 1984-96 Tim Grunhard 1990-00 Dave Szott 1990-00 Derrick Thomas 1989-99 6t. 9 Dan Saleaumua 1989-96 Tracy Simien 1991-97 Neil Smith 1988-96 Travis Kelce 2013-19 Daniel Sorensen 2014-19
2005-19 1963-77 1990-93 1994-98
CHIEFS RECORD BOOK HIGHEST PUNTING AVERAGE, POSTSEASON, CAREER (20 PUNTS) 1. 45.1 Dustin Colquitt (12 games: 1,938-43) 2005-19 2. 44.6 Jerrel Wilson (7 games: 1,693-39) 1963-77 3. 42.4 Bryan Barker (7 games: 1,613-38) 1990-93 BUTKER SETS PERSONAL POSTSEASON RECORD: With seven points (one FG, four PATs) in the game, K Harrison Butker owns 21 points for the 2019 postseason, the most of his career. He owns 38 total postseason points, the second-most in Chiefs postseason history. His 26 PATs are the most in franchise history. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST POINTS, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 60 Damien Williams (5 games – 10 TDs) 2. 38 Harrison Butker (6 games – 4 FGs, 26 PATs) 3. 37 Nick Lowery (8 games – 8 FGs, 13 PATs) 4. 36 Travis Kelce (9 games – 6 TDs) 5. 35 Jan Stenerud (5 games – 9 FGs, 8 PATs)
2018-19 2017-19 1980-93 2018-19 1967-79
CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST POINTS AFTER TOUCHDOWN, POSTSEASON, CAREER 1. 26 Harrison Butker (6 games – 27 att.) 2017-19 2. 13 Nick Lowery (8 games – 14 att.) 1980-93 3. 8 Jan Stenerud (5 games – 8 att.) 1967-79 4. 6 Ryan Succop (2 games – 8 att.) 2009-13 Cairo Santos (3 games – 6 att.) 2014-17
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THE CROWN JEWEL OF CHIEFS KINGDOM The Chiefs 2019 World Championship ring, produced by Jostens for Super Bowl LIV, is full of symbolism, as well as nods to the team’s history, in addition to highlighting the club’s title journey last season. Made out of 10 karat white and yellow gold, there are a total of 255 diamonds and 36 genuine rubies for a total of 10.5 carats of gemstones.
50-YEAR FLASHBACK Much has changed in since 1970 when the Chiefs won Super Bowl IV following the 1969 season. In the 50 years since the franchise’s first NFL championship, Super Bowl ring designs have been one of the things that’s seen a drastic change. Also designed by Jostens, below is a look at the club’s Super Bowl IV ring. The ring features a large, round one-carat diamond set in the center of a football shape with 10 additional smaller diamonds around its perimeter. A larger red stone serves as the backdrop. “Kansas City Chiefs 1969 World Champions” appears around the stone. Other features of the ring are an AFL logo, the teams and final scores of the AFL title game and the Super Bowl. Also, ‘62, ‘66 and ‘69 are listed as recognition for the team’s three AFL titles, among other features.
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Chiefs
CHIEFS IN THE POSTSEASON CHIEFS PLAYOFF APPEARANCES BY THE NUMBERS World Championships ...............................................................................................................2 (1969, 2019) AFL Championships ........................................................................................................3 (1962, 1966, 1969) AFC Championships............................................................................................................................1 (2019) AFL West Champs...........................................................................................................3 (1962, 1966, 1968) AFC West Champs ..................................10 (1971, 1993, 1995, 1997, 2003, 2010, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019) Total Playoff Games ..................................................................................................................................... 32 All-Time Playoff Record ...........................................................................................................................13-19 Years in Playoffs ........................................................................................................................................... 22 Most Consecutive Playoff Appearances ........................................................................................ 6 (1990-95) Current Streak of Consecutive Appearances ................................................................................ 5 (2015-19)
GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS
DATE 12/23/62 1/1/67 1/15/67 12/22/68 12/20/69 1/4/70 1/11/70 12/25/71 12/28/86 1/5/91 12/28/91 1/5/92 1/2/93 1/8/94 1/16/94 1/23/94 12/31/94 1/7/96 1/4/98 1/11/04 1/6/07 1/9/11 1/4/14 1/9/16 1/16/16 1/15/17 1/6/18 1/12/19 1/20/19 1/12/20 1/19/20 2/2/20
OPPONENT Houston Buffalo Green Bay Oakland N.Y. Jets Oakland Minnesota Miami N.Y. Jets Miami L.A. Raiders Buffalo San Diego Pittsburgh Houston Buffalo Miami Indianapolis Denver Indianapolis Indianapolis Baltimore Indianapolis Houston New England Pittsburgh Tennessee Indianapolis New England Houston Texans Tennessee Titans San Francisco 49ers
GAME 1962 AFL Championship 1966 AFL Championship Super Bowl I 1968 AFL Divisional 1969 AFL Divisional 1969 AFL Championship Super Bowl IV (New Orleans) 1971 AFC Divisional 1986 AFC Wild Card 1990 AFC Wild Card 1991 AFC Wild Card 1991 AFC Divisional 1992 AFC Wild Card 1993 AFC Wild Card 1993 AFC Divisional 1993 AFC Championship 1994 AFC Wild Card 1995 AFC Divisional 1997 AFC Divisional 2003 AFC Divisional 2006 AFC Wild Card 2010 AFC Wild Card 2013 AFC Wild Card 2015 AFC Wild Card 2015 AFC Divisional 2016 AFC Divisional 2017 AFC Wild Card 2018 AFC Divisional 2018 AFC Championship 2019 AFC Divisional 2019 AFC Championship Super Bowl LIV (Miami)
RESULT W, 20-17 (OT) W, 31-7 L, 10-35 L, 6-41 W, 13-6 W, 17-7 W, 23-7 L, 24-27 (2 OT) L, 15-35 L, 16-17 W, 10-6 L, 14-37 L, 0-17 W, 27-24 (OT) W, 28-20 L, 13-30 L, 17-27 L, 7-10 L, 10-14 L, 31-38 L, 8-23 L, 7-30 L, 44-45 W, 30-0 L, 20-27 L, 16-18 L, 21-22 W, 31-13 L, 31-37 (OT) W, 51-31 W, 35-24 W, 31-20
- Bold Denotes Home Games HOME RECORD IN POSTSEASON: 5-8 (Last Win Jan. 19, 2020 vs. Titans) AWAY RECORD IN POSTSEASON: 6-10 (Last Win Jan. 9, 2016 at Houston) SUPER BOWLS (NEUTRAL SITE): 2-1 (Last Win Feb. 2, 2020 in Miami) *The Chiefs franchise was located in Dallas and known as the Texans from 1960-62.
RECORD VS. ALL PLAYOFF OPPONENTS TEAM Baltimore Buffalo Denver Green Bay Oilers/Titans Houston Texans Indianapolis Miami Minnesota New England N.Y. Jets Oakland/LA Raiders Pittsburgh San Diego San Francisco
Chiefs
RECORD 0-1 1-2 0-1 0-1 3-1 2-0 1-4 0-3 1-0 0-2 1-1 2-1 1-1 0-1 1-0
LAST MEETING ’10 AFC Wild Card ’93 AFC Championship ’97 AFC Divisional Super Bowl I ’19 AFC Championship ’19 AFC Divisional ’18 AFC Divisional ’94 AFC First Round Super Bowl IV ’18 AFC Championship ’86 AFC Wild Card ’91 AFC First Round ’16 AFC Divisional ’92 AFC First Round Super Bowl LIV
RESULT L, 7-30 L, 30-13 L, 10-14 L, 10-35 W, 35-24 W, 51-31 W, 31-13 L, 27-17 W, 23-7 L, 31-37 (OT) L, 35-15 W, 10-6 L, 16-18 L, 17-0 W, 31-20
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KANSAS CITY CHIEFS / WEEK 17 / THROUGH SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2019 WON 12, LOST 4 * RUSHING No. Yds Avg Long TD 09/08 W 40-26 at Jacksonville 60,157 Dam. Williams 111 498 4.5 91t 5 09/15 W 28-10 at Oakland 52,748 McCoy 101 465 4.6 39 4 09/22 W 33-28 Baltimore 73,390 Mahomes 43 218 5.1 25 2 09/29 W 34-30 at Detroit 65,188 Dar. Williams 41 141 3.4 41 3 10/06 L 13-19 Indianapolis 73,352 D. Thompson 37 128 3.5 12 1 10/13 L 24-31 Houston 73,323 Ware LG 17 51 3.0 6 0 10/17 W 30- 6 at Denver 76,748 Ware TM 17 51 3.0 6 0 10/27 L 24-31 Green Bay 73,558 Hill 8 23 2.9 5 0 11/03 W 26-23 Minnesota 73,615 Hardman 4 17 4.3 9 0 11/10 L 32-35 at Tennessee 68,864 Watkins 2 12 6.0 11 0 11/18 W 24-17 at L.A. Chargers 76,252 Sherman 4 9 2.3 5 0 12/01 W 40- 9 Oakland 73,548 Kelce 1 4 4.0 4t 1 12/08 W 23-16 at New England 65,878 Thomas TM 1 4 4.0 4 0 12/15 W 23- 3 Denver 73,257 Moore 5 -1 -.2 3 0 12/22 W 26- 3 at Chicago 62,213 TEAM 375 1569 4.2 91t 16 12/29 W 31-21 L.A. Chargers 73,680 OPPONENTS 416 2051 4.9 68t 14 K.C. Opp. * RECEIVING No. Yds Avg Long TD TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 350 344 Kelce 97 1229 12.7 47 5 Rushing 93 115 Hill 58 860 14.8 57t 7 Passing 211 190 Watkins 52 673 12.9 68t 3 Penalty 46 39 Robinson 32 449 14.0 44t 4 3rd Down: Made/Att 89/187 75/202 Dam. Williams 30 213 7.1 32 2 3rd Down Pct. 47.6 37.1 McCoy 28 181 6.5 23 1 4th Down: Made/Att 6/10 16/31 Hardman 26 538 20.7 83t 6 4th Down Pct. 60.0 51.6 Dar. Williams 15 167 11.1 52 1 POSSESSION AVG. 29:27 30:33 Pringle 12 170 14.2 28 1 TOTAL NET YARDS 6067 5594 D. Thompson 9 43 4.8 19 0 Avg. Per Game 379.2 349.6 Bell 8 67 8.4 30 0 Total Plays 976 1043 Ware LG 5 22 4.4 18 0 Avg. Per Play 6.2 5.4 Ware TM 5 22 4.4 18 0 NET YARDS RUSHING 1569 2051 Yelder 3 50 16.7 24 0 Avg. Per Game 98.1 128.2 Sherman 2 22 11.0 15 0 Total Rushes 375 416 Thomas TM 1 6 6.0 6 0 NET YARDS PASSING 4498 3543 TEAM 378 4690 12.4 83t 30 Avg. Per Game 281.1 221.4 OPPONENTS 352 3881 11.0 69 21 Sacked/Yards Lost 25/192 45/338 * INTERCEPTIONS No. Yds Avg Long TD Gross Yards 4690 3881 Mathieu 4 70 17.5 35 0 Att./Completions 576/378 582/352 Thornhill 3 46 15.3 46t 1 Completion Pct. 65.6 60.5 C. Ward 2 10 5.0 10 0 Had Intercepted 5 16 Sorensen 2 6 3.0 6 0 PUNTS/AVERAGE 49/43.4 58/43.8 Breeland 2 4 2.0 4 0 NET PUNTING AVG. 49/40.3 58/39.6 Clark 1 5 5.0 5 0 PENALTIES/YARDS 107/1029 116/844 Fenton 1 0 0.0 0 0 FUMBLES/BALL LOST 20/10 20/7 Lammons LG 1 0 0.0 0 0 TOUCHDOWNS 50 36 Lawrence LG 1 0 0.0 0 0 Rushing 16 14 Nnadi 1 0 0.0 0 0 Passing 30 21 TEAM 16 141 8.8 46t 1 Returns 4 1 OPPONENTS 5 23 4.6 15 0 * SCORE BY PERIODS Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT PTS * PUNTING No. Yds Avg Net TB In Lg B TEAM 90 177 103 81 0 451 Colquitt 48 2126 44.3 40.3 3 21 68 1 OPPONENTS 80 67 57 104 0 308 TEAM 49 2126 43.4 40.3 3 21 68 1 * SCORING TD-Ru-Pa-Rt K-PAT FG S PTS OPPONENTS 58 2539 43.8 39.6 1 21 65 0 Butker 0 0 0 0 45/48 34/38 0 147 * PUNT RETURNS Ret FC Yds Avg Long TD Hardman 7 0 6 1 0 42 Hardman 18 6 167 9.3 36 0 Hill 7 0 7 0 0 42 Thomas TM 13 1 55 4.2 10 0 Dam. Williams 7 5 2 0 0 42 Hill 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 Kelce 6 1 5 0 0 36 TEAM 32 7 222 6.9 36 0 McCoy 5 4 1 0 0 30 OPPONENTS 19 14 89 4.7 11 0 Robinson 4 0 4 0 0 24 * KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds Avg Long TD Dar. Williams 4 3 1 0 0 24 Hardman 27 704 26.1 104t 1 Watkins 3 0 3 0 0 20 Thomas TM 7 155 22.1 29 0 Mahomes 2 2 0 0 0 12 Pringle 2 41 20.5 22 0 Breeland 1 0 0 1 0 6 D. Thompson 1 27 27.0 27 0 Pringle 1 0 1 0 0 6 TEAM 37 927 25.1 104t 1 Ragland 1 0 0 1 0 6 OPPONENTS 37 725 19.6 30 0 D. Thompson 1 1 0 0 0 6 * FIELD GOALS 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Thornhill 1 0 0 1 0 6 Butker 0/ 0 9/ 9 9/10 13/13 3/ 6 C. Ward 0 0 0 0 0 2 TEAM 0/ 0 9/ 9 9/10 13/13 3/ 6 TEAM 50 16 30 4 45/48 34/38 0 451 OPPONENTS 0/ 0 8/ 8 8/ 8 4/ 9 1/ 1 OPPONENTS 36 14 21 1 23/27 21/26 0 308 Butker: (28G,25G,46G,35G)()(42G,36G)(36N,23G, 2-Pt Conv: Watkins, TM 1-2, OPP 3-9 44G)(29G,36G)(41G,50N)(33G,20G,39G)(50N,28G) SACKS: Jones 9, Clark 8, Suggs LG 6.5, (24G,45G,54G,44G)(30G,41G,43G,39G,52B)(41G)(50G) Suggs TM 1, Ogbah 5.5, Okafor 5, (48G,31G,41G)(23G,24G,44G)(56G,32G)(40G) Kpassagnon 4, Hitchens 2, Mathieu 2, OPP: (37G,23G)(29G)(39G)(25G,48G,53G)(32G,32G, Ragland 2, Wilson 1.5, Fuller 1, Nnadi 1, 31G,29G)(44G,46N)(45N)(35G)(29G)()(27G,40N,26G, Pennel 1, Saunders 1, Watts 1, TM 45, OPP 25 49G)(44N,34G)(41B,29G)(32G)(46G)() FUM/LOST: Mahomes 3/2, McCoy 3/2, Hardman 2/2, Moore 2/0, Thomas(TM) 2/0, Watkins 2/1, Kelce 1/1, Reiter 1/0, Ware(LG) 1/0, Ware(TM) 1/0, Dam. Williams 1/1, Dar. Williams 1/1, Winchester 1/0
* PASSING Mahomes Moore Colquitt TEAM OPPONENTS
Att Cmp 484 319 91 59 1 0 576 378 582 352
Yds Cmp% Yds/Att 4031 65.9 8.33 659 64.8 7.24 0 0.0 0.00 4690 65.6 8.14 3881 60.5 6.67
TD 26 4 0 30 21
TD% Int Int% Long Sack/Lost Rating 5.4 5 1.0 83t 17/ 127 105.3 4.4 0 0.0 57t 8/ 65 100.9 0.0 0 0.0 --0/ 0 39.6 5.2 5 0.9 83t 25/ 192 104.4 3.6 16 2.7 69 45/ 338 80.8
2019 REGULAR SEASON KANSAS CITY CHIEFS DEFENSIVE STATS (THROUGH WEEK 17) POS. PLAYER SOLO ASST. TOTAL TFL SACKS/YDS. PR FR FF INT./YDS. PD 51 37 88 4 2.0/31 4 1 0/0 1 0 LB Hitchens, Anthony 52 29 81 3 1.5/10 4 1 0/0 1 0 LB Wilson, Damien 63 12 75 3 2.0/14 2 4/70 12 0 0 S Mathieu, Tyrann 56 18 74 0.0/0 1 2/10 11 0 0 0 CB Ward, Charvarius 41 16 57 0.0/0 3/46 5 0 0 0 0 S Thornhill, Juan 39 13 52 1 0.0/0 2 2/6 4 0 0 S Sorensen, Daniel 30 20 50 1 0.0/0 1 0/0 1 0 0 LB Niemann, Ben 34 15 49 3 1.0/7 1 0/0 2 0 0 CB Fuller, Kendall 37 11 48 1 0.0/0 1 2 2/4 8 0 CB Breeland, Bashaud 18 30 48 3 1.0/1 1 1 1/0 1 0 DT Nnadi, Derrick 27 10 37 12 8.0/51 14 1 3 1/5 4 DE Clark, Frank 23 13 36 8 9.0/75 20 1 1 0/0 4 DT Jones, Chris 23 9 32 6 5.5/38 11 0 1 0/0 3 DE Ogbah, Emmanuel 23 6 29 4 2.0/9 3 1 0/0 0 0 LB Ragland, Reggie 21 8 29 6 4.0/47 11 1 1 0/0 2 DE Kpassagnon, Tanoh 13 11 24 2 1.0/8 2 0/0 0 0 0 DT Pennel, Mike 16 7 23 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 LB Lee, Darron 15 7 22 5 5.0/33 9 1 0/0 1 0 DE Okafor, Alex 13 9 22 1.0/0 2 0/0 1 0 0 0 DT Saunders, Khalen 9 5 14 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 CB Claiborne, Morris 9 3 12 0.0/0 1 1/0 4 0 0 0 CB Fenton, Rashad 7 1 8 0.0/0 1 0/0 0 0 0 0 DT Williams, Xavier 5 2 7 1 1.0/7 1 0/0 0 0 0 S Watts, Armani 4 4 2 0.0/0 1 0/0 0 0 0 0 DE Harris, Demone 1 2 3 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 DT McClain, Terrell 1 2 3 1 1.0/8 2 0/0 0 0 0 DE Suggs, Terrell 2 2 0.0/0 1 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 DT Ivie, Joey 2 2 0.0/0 1 0/0 1 0 0 0 0 S Lucas, Jordan 0.0/0 1 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 DB Brown, Alex 631 300 931 66 45.0/339 96 6 12 16/141 66 TOTALS DEFENSIVE SCORES 2019 REGULAR SEASON CHIEFS SPECIAL TEAMS STATS INT (1) (3:52) (Shotgun) D.Carr pass short right intended for T.Williams POS. PLAYER TKLS. ASST. TOTAL INTERCEPTED by J.Thornhill at OAK 46. J.Thornhill for 46 8 2 10 S Watts, Armani yards. vs. OAK (12/01/19) 6 2 8 LB Lee, Darron FR (2) (9:31) K.Johnson up the middle to KC 1 for no gain (X.Williams). 5 3 8 FUMBLES (X.Williams), RECOVERED by KC-B.Breeland at KC 0. LB O'Daniel, Dorian B.Breeland for 100 yards. The Replay Official reviewed the 5 3 8 FB Sherman, Anthony fumble ruling, and the play was Upheld. The ruling on the field 4 3 7 WR Pringle, Byron stands. @ DET (09/29/19) 5 1 6 (7:17) J.Flacco sacked at DEN 17 for -9 yards (A.Hitchens). LB Niemann, Ben FUMBLES (A.Hitchens) [A.Hitchens], RECOVERED by KC5 5 0 S Sorensen, Daniel R.Ragland at DEN 5. R.Ragland for 5 yards. @ DEN (10/17/19) 3 2 5 S Lucas, Jordan Safety (0) 2 1 3 CB Fenton, Rashad SPECIAL TEAMS BIG PLAYS 2 2 0 FR (1) H.Butker kicks 55 yards from KC 35 to OAK 10. T.Davis to OAK 24 for TE Bell, Blake 14 yards (R.Fenton). FUMBLES (R.Fenton), RECOVERED by KC2 2 0 DB Brown, Alex D.O'Daniel at OAK 24. D.O'Daniel to OAK 24 for no gain 1 1 2 WR Dieter, Gehrig (D.Washington). vs. OAK (12/01/19) 1 1 2 LS Winchester, James TD (1) T.Long kicks 69 yards from LAC 35 to KC -4. M.Hardman for 104 yards. vs. LAC (12/29/19) 1 1 0 RB Thompson, Darwin 1 1 0 S Thornhill, Juan 1 1 0 LB Ragland, Reggie 51 20 71 TOTALS Regular Season defensive and special teams statistics are based on press box statistics.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS / WEEK 22 / THROUGH SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2020 / POSTSEASON WON 3, LOST 0 01/12 W 51-31 01/19 W 35-24 02/02 W 31-20
Houston 73,503 Tennessee 73,656 San Francisco 62,417 K.C. Opp. TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 82 64 Rushing 31 16 Passing 43 44 Penalty 8 4 3rd Down: Made/Att 14/32 11/33 3rd Down Pct. 43.8 33.3 4th Down: Made/Att 3/4 3/9 4th Down Pct. 75.0 33.3 POSSESSION AVG. 29:29 30:31 TOTAL NET YARDS 1235 1088 Avg. Per Game 411.7 362.7 Total Plays 196 190 Avg. Per Play 6.3 5.7 NET YARDS RUSHING 359 320 Avg. Per Game 119.7 106.7 Total Rushes 77 66 NET YARDS PASSING 876 768 Avg. Per Game 292.0 256.0 Sacked/Yards Lost 7/25 9/76 Gross Yards 901 844 Att./Completions 112/72 115/73 Completion Pct. 64.3 63.5 Had Intercepted 2 2 PUNTS/AVERAGE 9/38.3 8/45.3 NET PUNTING AVG. 9/31.7 8/44.3 PENALTIES/YARDS 17/122 20/217 FUMBLES/BALL LOST 6/1 3/1 TOUCHDOWNS 16 9 Rushing 6 3 Passing 10 5 Returns 0 1 * SCORE BY PERIODS Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT PTS TEAM 14 45 13 45 0 117 OPPONENTS 34 17 17 7 0 75 * SCORING TD-Ru-Pa-Rt K-PAT FG S PTS Dam. Williams 6 4 2 0 0 36 Kelce 4 0 4 0 0 24 Butker 0 0 0 0 15/16 2/ 2 0 21 Hill 2 0 2 0 0 12 Mahomes 2 2 0 0 0 12 Bell 1 0 1 0 0 6 Watkins 1 0 1 0 0 6 TEAM 16 6 10 0 15/16 2/ 2 0 117 OPPONENTS 9 3 5 1 9/ 9 4/ 5 0 75 2-Pt Conv: TM 0-0, OPP 0-0 SACKS: Clark 5, Kpassagnon 2, Fenton 1, O'Daniel 1, TM 9, OPP 7 FUM/LOST: Mahomes 4/0, Hill 1/1, Dam. Williams 1/0 * PASSING Mahomes Watkins TEAM OPPONENTS
* RUSHING No. Yds Avg Long TD Dam. Williams 46 196 4.3 38t 4 Mahomes 24 135 5.6 27t 2 Watkins 1 14 14.0 14 0 Hill 2 11 5.5 7 0 D. Thompson 2 7 3.5 7 0 Kelce 1 2 2.0 2 0 Hardman 1 -6 -6.0 -6 0 TEAM 77 359 4.7 38t 6 OPPONENTS 66 320 4.8 32 3 * RECEIVING No. Yds Avg Long TD Kelce 19 207 10.9 28 4 Hill 17 213 12.5 44 2 Watkins 14 288 20.6 60t 1 Dam. Williams 11 94 8.5 17t 2 Hardman 4 29 7.3 13 0 Robinson 3 35 11.7 24 0 Bell 3 24 8.0 9 1 Yelder 1 11 11.0 11 0 TEAM 72 901 12.5 60t 10 OPPONENTS 73 844 11.6 54t 5 * INTERCEPTIONS No. Yds Avg Long TD Breeland 1 1 1.0 1 0 Fuller 1 0 0.0 0 0 TEAM 2 1 0.5 1 0 OPPONENTS 2 10 5.0 7 0 * PUNTING No. Yds Avg Net TB In Lg B Colquitt 8 345 43.1 31.7 2 3 51 1 TEAM 9 345 38.3 31.7 2 3 51 1 OPPONENTS 8 362 45.3 44.3 0 4 53 0 * PUNT RETURNS Ret FC Yds Avg Long TD Hardman 2 2 8 4.0 7 0 Hill 1 1 0 0.0 0 0 Lucas 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 TEAM 4 3 8 2.0 7 0 OPPONENTS 3 2 20 6.7 11 0 * KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds Avg Long TD Hardman 13 286 22.0 58 0 Hill 1 19 19.0 19 0 TEAM 14 305 21.8 58 0 OPPONENTS 11 173 15.7 26 0 * FIELD GOALS 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Butker 0/ 0 1/ 1 1/ 1 0/ 0 0/ 0 TEAM 0/ 0 1/ 1 1/ 1 0/ 0 0/ 0 OPPONENTS 0/ 0 0/ 0 3/ 3 1/ 1 0/ 1 Butker: (24G)()(31G) TM: (24G)()(31G) OPP: (31G,51N)(30G)(38G,42G)
Att Cmp Yds Cmp% Yds/Att TD 112 72 901 64.3 8.04 10 0 0 0 ----0 112 72 901 64.3 8.04 10 115 73 844 63.5 7.34 5
TD% Int Int% Long Sack/Lost Rating 8.9 2 1.8 60t 6/ 20 111.5 --- 0 --- --1/ 5 --8.9 2 1.8 60t 7/ 25 111.5 4.3 2 1.7 54t 9/ 76 92.8
2019 POSTSEASON KANSAS CITY CHIEFS DEFENSIVE STATS (THROUGH WEEK 4) POS. PLAYER SOLO ASST. TOTAL TFL SACKS/YDS. PR FR FF INT./YDS. PD 14 8 22 1 0.0/0.0 0/0 1 0 0 0 S D. Sorensen 13 6 19 1 0.0/0.0 0/0 0 0 0 0 LB D. Wilson 15 3 18 2 0.0/0.0 1/1 3 0 0 0 CB B. Breeland 13 5 18 1 0.0/0.0 0/0 3 0 0 0 S T. Mathieu 6 5 11 0.0/0.0 1 0/0 0 0 0 0 LB A. Hitchens 7 2 9 0.0/0.0 0/0 1 0 0 0 0 CB C. Ward 6 3 9 5 5.0/51.0 7 0/0 0 0 0 DE F. Clark 6 2 8 1 0.0/0.0 0/0 0 0 0 0 LB R. Ragland 6 1 7 1 1.0/14.0 1 0/0 1 0 0 CB R. Fenton 4 3 7 1 0.0/0.0 0/0 0 0 0 0 DT D. Nnadi 2 5 7 0.0/0.0 1 0/0 0 0 0 0 DT M. Pennel 3 3 6 0.0/0.0 1 0/0 0 0 0 0 LB B. Niemann 4 1 5 0.0/0.0 1/0 2 0 0 0 0 CB K. Fuller 3 2 5 2 2.0/10.0 3 0/0 1 0 0 DE T. Kpassagnon 4 4 0.0/0.0 2 0/0 1 0 0 0 0 DE T. Suggs 2 1 3 0.0/0.0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 DT K. Saunders 1 2 3 0.0/0.0 1 0/0 3 0 0 0 DT C. Jones 1 1 2 1 1.0/1.0 1 0/0 0 0 0 LB D. O'Daniel 1 1 2 0.0/0.0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 DT X. Williams 1 1 0.0/0.0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 WR M. Hardman 108 58 166 16 9.0/76.0 18 0 0 2/1 16 TOTALS DEFENSIVE SCORES 2019 POSTSEASON CHIEFS SPECIAL TEAMS STATS INT (0) POS. PLAYER TKLS. ASST. TOTAL FR (0) 4 4 0 WR Pringle, Byron Safety (0) 3 3 0 CB Fenton, Rashad SPECIAL TEAMS BIG PLAYS 2 2 0 LB O'Daniel, Dorian FR (1) H.Butker kicks 65 yards from KC 35 to HST 0. D.Carter to HST 1 1 0 S Lucas, Jordan 21 for 21 yards (D.Sorensen). FUMBLES (D.Sorensen), RECOVERED by KC-D.Thompson at HST 24. D.Thompson 1 1 0 LB Niemann, Ben pushed ob at HST 6 for 18 yards (K.Crossen). vs. HOU 1 1 0 S Sorensen, Daniel (01/12/20) 1 1 0 S Watts, Armani 1 1 0 LS Winchester, James 14 14 0 TOTALS Postseason defensive and special teams statistics are based on press box statistics.
WEEK 1: Chiefs 40, Jaguars 26 September 8, 2019 • TIAA Bank Field • 60,157 Kansas City Chiefs ............. 17 Jacksonville Jaguars ............. 7 KC — S.Watkins 68 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (3-75, 1:36) KC — H.Butker 28 yd. Field Goal (6-70, 2:47) JAX — D.Chark 35 yd. pass from N.Foles (J.Lambo kick) (7-75, 3:34) KC — S.Watkins 49 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (5-80, 2:47) JAX — J.Lambo 37 yd. Field Goal (9-56, 6:00) KC — H.Butker 25 yd. Field Goal (7-68, 3:40) JAX — J.Lambo 23 yd. Field Goal (5-70, 3:34) KC — H.Butker 46 yd. Field Goal (10-47, 3:58) KC — Dam.Williams 1 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (12-60, 6:25) KC — S.Watkins 3 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (8-67, 4:19) JAX — D.Westbrook 15 yd. pass from G.Minshew (pass failed) (7-79, 3:24) KC — H.Butker 35 yd. Field Goal (4--5, 1:41) JAX — C.Conley 21 yd. pass from G.Minshew (J.Lambo kick) (6-75, 1:38) TEAM STATISTICS CHIEFS JAGUARS First Downs .................................................. 24 18 Total Net Yards ........................................... 491 428 Rushes/Net Yards ................................... 26/113 16/81 Net Passing ................................................ 378 347 Pass Attempts/Completions ..................... 34/25 33/27 Had Intercepted .............................................. 0 1 Sacked/Yards Lost ....................................... 0/0 1/3 Punts/Average ........................................ 1/51.0 2/48.0 Penalties/Yards .......................................... 5/55 10/71 Fumbles/Lost ............................................... 0/0 1/1 Possession Time ...................................... 31:15 28:45
6 6
7 0
10 13
— —
40 26
RUSHING KC — L. McCoy 10-81; D. Williams 13-26, TD; T. Hill 1-5; P. Mahomes 1-2; M. Moore 1-(-1) JAX — L. Fournette 13-66; R. Armstead 1-7; G. Minshew II 1-6; D. Westbrook 1-2 RECEIVING KC — S. Watkins 9-198, 3 TDs; T. Kelce 3-88; D. Williams 6-39; T. Hill 2-16; A. Sherman 1-15; L. McCoy 1-12; B. Bell 1-7; D. Thompson 1-3; D. Robinson 1-(0) JAX — D. Chark Jr. 4-146, TD; C. Conley 6-97, TD; J. O'Shaughnessy 4-32; D. Westbrook 5-30, TD; L. Fournette 4-28; G. Swaim 4-17 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 33-25-378, 3 TDs, 0 INT; M. Moore 1-0-(0), 0 TDs, 0 INT JAX — G. Minshew II 25-22-275, 2 TDs, 1 INT; N. Foles 8-5-75, TD, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — F. Clark 1 JAX — None SACKS KC — E. Ogbah 1.0 JAX — None FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (28) (25) (46) (35) JAX — J. Lambo (37) (23)
WEEK 2: Chiefs 28, Raiders 10 September 15, 2019 • Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum • 52,748 Kansas City Chiefs ............... 0 Las Vegas Raiders .............. 10 OAK — D.Carlson 29 yd. Field Goal (10-65, 4:39) OAK — T.Williams 4 yd. pass from D.Carr (D.Carlson kick) (6-74, 2:38) KC — D.Robinson 44 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (3-72, 1:10) KC — M.Hardman 42 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (14-95, 6:32) KC — T.Kelce 27 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (5-94, 1:52) KC — D.Robinson 39 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (1-39, 0:07) TEAM STATISTICS CHIEFS RAIDERS First Downs .................................................. 24 19 Total Net Yards ........................................... 467 307 Rushes/Net Yards .................................... 22/31 19/129 Net Passing ................................................ 436 178 Pass Attempts/Completions ..................... 44/30 38/23 Had Intercepted ............................................. 0 2 Sacked/Yards Lost ....................................... 2/7 3/20 Punts/Average ........................................ 5/39.2 6/44.0 Penalties/Yards ...................................... 10/114 7/52 Fumbles/Lost ............................................... 1/1 3/0 Possession Time ...................................... 32:35 27:25
28 0
0 0
0 0
— —
28 10
RUSHING — L. McCoy 11-23; D. Williams 9-8; D. Thompson 1-1; P. Mahomes 1-(-1) OAK — J. Jacobs 12-99; D. Carr 2-18; D. Washington 3-9; J. Richard 2-3 RECEIVING KC — D. Robinson 6-172, 2 TDs; T. Kelce 7-107, TD; M. Hardman 4-61, TD; S. Watkins 6-49; D. Williams 3-48; D. Thomas 1-6; L. McCoy 3-(0) OAK — D. Waller 6-63; T. Williams 5-46, TD; D. Carrier 3-33; H. Renfrow 4-30; D. Washington 2-26; J. Richard 2-2; R. Grant 1-(-2) PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 44-30-443, 4 TDs, 0 INT OAK — D. Carr 38-23-198, TD, 2 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — B. Breeland 1; C. Ward 1 OAK — None SACKS KC — K. Fuller 1.0; C. Jones 1.0; T. Kpassagnon 1.0 OAK — B. Mayowa 1.5; P. Hall 0.5 FIELD GOALS KC — None OAK — D. Carlson (29) KC
WEEK 3: Chiefs 33, Ravens 28 September 22, 2019 • Arrowhead Stadium • 73,390 Baltimore Ravens ................. 6 Kansas City Chiefs ................ 0 BAL — M.Ingram 2 yd. run (run failed) (14-84, 6:30) KC — L.McCoy 1 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (11-75, 5:06) KC — D.Robinson 18 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (5-47, 2:43) KC — M.Hardman 83 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (kick failed, wl) (3-96, 1:27) KC — H.Butker 42 yd. Field Goal (9-59, 1:13) BAL — M.Ingram 19 yd. run (J.Tucker kick) (9-75, 4:25) KC — L.McCoy 14 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (8-80, 4:14) BAL — M.Ingram 1 yd. run (pass failed) (13-75, 4:45) BAL — J.Tucker 39 yd. Field Goal (10-59, 4:01) KC — H.Butker 36 yd. Field Goal (7-57, 2:03) BAL — L.Jackson 9 yd. run (run failed) (9-70, 2:35) TEAM STATISTICS RAVENS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................. 29 27 Total Net Yards .......................................... 452 503 Rushes/Net Yards .................................. 32/203 25/140 Net Passing ................................................ 249 363 Pass Attempts/Completions .................... 43/22 37/27 Had Intercepted ............................................. 0 0 Sacked/Yards Lost ..................................... 3/18 1/11 Punts/Average ....................................... 3/51.0 2/44.0 Penalties/Yards ......................................... 7/60 4/31 Fumbles/Lost .............................................. 0/0 3/0 Possession Time ..................................... 32:44 27:16
0 23
7 7
15 3
— —
28 33
RUSHING KC — D. Williams 9-62; L. McCoy 8-54, TD; P. Mahomes 4-9; D. Thompson 3-8; M. Hardman 1-7 BAL — M. Ingram II 16-103, 3 TDs; G. Edwards 7-53; L. Jackson 8-46, TD; J. Hill 1-1 RECEIVING KC — M. Hardman 2-97, TD; T. Kelce 7-89; S. Watkins 5-64; D. Williams 5-47; D. Robinson 3-43, TD; L. McCoy 3-26, TD; B. Pringle 1-7; B. Bell 1-1 BAL — N. Boyle 4-58; M. Brown 2-49; W. Snead IV 3-47; S. Roberts 2-37; M. Ingram II 4-32; M. Andrews 3-15; G. Edwards 2-15; H. Hurst 2-14 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 37-27-374, 3 TDs, 0 INT BAL — L. Jackson 43-22-267, 0 TDs, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — None BAL — None SACKS KC — E. Ogbah 1.5; F. Clark 1.0; D. Wilson 0.5 BAL — M. Judon 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (42) (36) BAL — J. Tucker (39)
WEEK 4: Chiefs 34, Lions 30 September 29, 2019 • Ford Field • 65,188 Kansas City Chiefs ............... 0 Detroit Lions ....................... 10 DET — M.Prater 25 yd. Field Goal (10-68, 5:38) DET — T.Hockenson 5 yd. pass from M.Stafford (M.Prater kick) (7-74, 2:34) KC — H.Butker 23 yd. Field Goal (10-81, 3:53) KC — L.McCoy 1 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (7-70, 3:57) DET — M.Prater 48 yd. Field Goal (8-50, 3:10) KC — H.Butker 44 yd. Field Goal (6-49, 1:01) KC — B.Breeland 100 yd. fumble return (H.Butker kick) DET — M.Prater 53 yd. Field Goal (7-40, 2:49) DET — K.Golladay 9 yd. pass from M.Stafford (M.Prater kick) (8-45, 3:40) KC — D.Williams 1 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (9-75, 4:01) DET — K.Golladay 6 yd. pass from M.Stafford (M.Prater kick) (9-79, 4:16) KC — D.Williams 1 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (13-79, 2:06) TEAM STATISTICS CHIEFS LIONS First Downs ................................................... 29 29 Total Net Yards ........................................... 438 447 Rushes/Net Yards ................................... 25/123 35/186 Net Passing ................................................. 315 261 Pass Attempts/Completions ...................... 42/24 34/21 Had Intercepted .............................................. 0 0 Sacked/Yards Lost ....................................... 0/0 4/30 Punts/Average ........................................ 2/45.5 3/43.7 Penalties/Yards .......................................... 7/51 8/48 Fumbles/Lost ............................................... 4/3 2/2 Possession Time ...................................... 26:05 33:55
13 3
7 10
14 7
— —
34 30
RUSHING KC — L. McCoy 11-56, TD; P. Mahomes 6-54; D. Williams 8-13, 2 TDs DET — K. Johnson 26-125; J. McKissic 4-30; M. Stafford 2-18; T. Johnson 3-13 RECEIVING KC — T. Kelce 7-85; S. Watkins 3-54; D. Williams 3-43; D. Yelder 2-43; D. Robinson 4-35; L. McCoy 2-33; B. Pringle 1-13; M. Hardman 2-9 DET — M. Jones Jr. 3-77; K. Golladay 5-67, 2 TDs; M. Hall 2-47; K. Johnson 2-32; T. Hockenson 3-27, TD; L. Thomas 3-25; J. McKissic 1-11; N. Bawden 1-4; T. Johnson 1-1 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 42-24-315, 0 TDs, 0 INT DET — M. Stafford 34-21-291, 3 TDs, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — None DET — None SACKS KC — C. Jones 1.0; T. Mathieu 1.0; D. Nnadi 1.0; A. Okafor 1.0 DET — None FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker 36WR (23) (44) DET — M. Prater (25) (48) (53)
WEEK 5: Colts 19, Chiefs 13 October 6, 2019 • Arrowhead Stadium • 73,352 Indianapolis Colts ................ 7 Kansas City Chiefs ............... 3 KC — H.Butker 29 yd. Field Goal (12-64, 5:58) IND — J.Brissett 1 yd. run (A.Vinatieri kick) (11-70, 5:18) KC — B.Pringle 27 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (11-75, 4:36) IND — A.Vinatieri 32 yd. Field Goal (7-61, 2:56) IND — A.Vinatieri 32 yd. Field Goal (11-74, 1:34) IND — A.Vinatieri 31 yd. Field Goal (14-35, 8:34) IND — A.Vinatieri 29 yd. Field Goal (7-21, 2:35) KC — H.Butker 36 yd. Field Goal (7-57, 1:11) TEAM STATISTICS COLTS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................... 25 18 Total Net Yards ............................................ 331 324 Rushes/Net Yards .................................... 45/180 14/36 Net Passing .................................................. 151 288 Pass Attempts/Completions ........................ 29/18 39/22 Had Intercepted ............................................... 1 0 Sacked/Yards Lost ......................................... 0/0 4/33 Punts/Average .......................................... 3/41.0 4/38.8 Penalties/Yards ........................................... 7/50 11/125 Fumbles/Lost ................................................ 0/0 1/1 Possession Time ........................................ 37:15 22:45
6 7
0 0
6 3
— —
19 13
RUSHING KC — D. Williams 9-23; P. Mahomes 3-17; A. Sherman 1-2; M. Hardman 1-(-6) IND — M. Mack 29-132; J. Wilkins 7-28; Z. Pascal 1-12; J. Brissett 6-9, TD; N. Hines 2-(-1) RECEIVING KC — B. Pringle 6-103, TD; M. Hardman 4-79; T. Kelce 4-70; D. Robinson 3-31; L. McCoy 2-23; D. Williams 3-15 IND — N. Hines 4-46; T. Hilton 4-37; J. Doyle 3-19; M. Mack 3-16; M. Alie-Cox 1-10; E. Ebron 1-8; Z. Pascal 1-8; D. Cain 1-7 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 39-22-321, TD, 0 INT IND — J. Brissett 29-18-151, 0 TDs, 1 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — T. Mathieu 1 IND — None SACKS KC — None IND — J. Houston 1.0; K. Moore II 1.0; G. Stewart 1.0; J. Sheard 0.5; K. Turay 0.5 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (29) (36) IND — A. Vinatieri (32) (32) (31) (29)
WEEK 6: Texans 31, Chiefs 24 October 13, 2019 • Arrowhead Stadium • 73,323 Houston Texans .................... 3 Kansas City Chiefs .............. 17 KC
— T.Hill 46 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (6-91, 3:18) KC — H.Butker 41 yd. Field Goal (4--5, 1:17) HOU — K.Fairbairn 44 yd. Field Goal (12-49, 4:33) KC — Dam.Williams 14 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (9-90, 4:18) HOU — D.Johnson 11 yd. pass from D.Watson (kick failed, wr) (10-75, 4:13) HOU — C.Hyde 2 yd. run (K.Fairbairn kick) (12-80, 5:36) HOU — D.Watson 3 yd. run (K.Fairbairn kick) (1-3, 0:07) KC — T.Hill 6 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (10-64, 4:25) HOU — D.Watson 1 yd. run (D.Watson-D.Hopkins pass) (12-93, 8:32) TEAM STATISTICS TEXANS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................. 35 20 Total Net Yards .......................................... 472 309 Rushes/Net Yards ................................. 41/192 11/53 Net Passing ............................................... 280 256 Pass Attempts/Completions .................... 42/30 35/19 Had Intercepted ............................................ 2 1 Sacked/Yards Lost ...................................... 0/0 1/17 Punts/Average ......................................... 0/0.0 2/59.5 Penalties/Yards ....................................... 10/70 11/79 Fumbles/Lost .............................................. 1/1 1/1 Possession Time ..................................... 39:48 20:12
20 0
0 7
8 0
— —
31 24
RUSHING — L. McCoy 8-44; D. Williams 1-6; D. Thomas 1-4; P. Mahomes 1-(-1) HOU — C. Hyde 26-116, TD; D. Watson 10-42, 2 TDs; D. Johnson 5-34 RECEIVING KC — T. Hill 5-80, 2 TDs; T. Kelce 4-58; D. Williams 1-52; M. Hardman 4-45; B. Pringle 2-24; D. Williams 1-14, TD; L. McCoy 2-(0) HOU — D. Fells 6-69; D. Hopkins 9-55; W. Fuller V 5-44; K. Coutee 4-39; J. Akins 3-39; D. Johnson 2-20, TD; C. Hyde 1-14 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 35-19-273, 3 TDs, 1 INT HOU — D. Watson 42-30-280, TD, 2 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — J. Thornhill 1; C. Ward 1 HOU — T. Gipson Sr. 1 SACKS KC — None HOU — C. Omenihu 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (41) 50WR HOU — K. Fairbairn (44) 46WL KC
WEEK 7: Chiefs 30, Broncos 6 October 17, 2019 • Empower Field at Mile High • 76,748 Kansas City Chiefs ............. 10 Denver Broncos .................... 6 DEN — R.Freeman 1 yd. run (run failed) (10-75, 5:54) KC — M.Hardman 21 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (8-75, 4:56) KC — H.Butker 33 yd. Field Goal (4-6, 1:31) KC — H.Butker 20 yd. Field Goal (13-37, 6:53) KC — R.Ragland 5 yd. fumble return (H.Butker kick) KC — T.Hill 57 yd. pass from M.Moore (H.Butker kick) (2-73, 0:40) KC — H.Butker 39 yd. Field Goal (5-30, 3:06) TEAM STATISTICS CHIEFS BRONCOS First Downs .................................................. 14 15 Total Net Yards ........................................... 271 205 Rushes/Net Yards .................................... 27/80 21/71 Net Passing ................................................ 191 134 Pass Attempts/Completions ..................... 30/20 34/21 Had Intercepted ............................................. 0 0 Sacked/Yards Lost ....................................... 1/2 9/79 Punts/Average ........................................ 6/44.3 7/40.0 Penalties/Yards .......................................... 6/46 4/33 Fumbles/Lost ............................................... 1/0 3/1 Possession Time ...................................... 32:13 27:47
10 0
7 0
3 0
— —
30 6
RUSHING — L. McCoy 12-64; D. Williams 9-7; A. Sherman 2-7; P. Mahomes 1-2; D. Williams 2-1; M. Moore 1-(-1) DEN — P. Lindsay 11-36; R. Freeman 10-35, TD RECEIVING KC — T. Hill 3-74, TD; T. Kelce 6-44; D. Robinson 3-31; M. Hardman 2-28, TD; L. McCoy 2-12; D. Williams 2-5; D. Williams 2-(-1) DEN — C. Sutton 6-87; E. Sanders 5-60; R. Freeman 4-32; A. Janovich 1-22; N. Fant 1-7; D. Spencer 1-5; D. Hamilton 2-4; P. Lindsay 1-(-4) PASSING KC — M. Moore 19-10-117, TD, 0 INT; P. Mahomes 11-10-76, TD, 0 INT DEN — J. Flacco 34-21-213, 0 TDs, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — None DEN — None SACKS KC — F. Clark 2.0; A. Hitchens 2.0; A. Okafor 2.0; E. Ogbah 1.0; R. Ragland 1.0; A. Watts 1.0 DEN — D. Walker 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (33) (20) (39) DEN — B. McManus 45WR KC
WEEK 8: Packers 31, Chiefs 24 October 27, 2019 • Arrowhead Stadium • 73,558 Green Bay Packers ............. 14 Kansas City Chiefs ................ 0 GB — A.Jones 4 yd. pass from A.Rodgers (M.Crosby kick) (10-74, 6:17) GB — J.Williams 1 yd. run (M.Crosby kick) (4-60, 2:02) KC — T.Kelce 29 yd. pass from M.Moore (H.Butker kick) (12-89, 6:14) KC — M.Hardman 30 yd. pass from M.Moore (H.Butker kick) (5-62, 1:50) KC — H.Butker 28 yd. Field Goal (11-74, 3:03) GB — M.Crosby 35 yd. Field Goal (15-72, 8:33) GB — J.Williams 3 yd. pass from A.Rodgers (M.Crosby kick) (5-27, 2:22) KC — Dam.Williams 3 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (10-75, 4:56) GB — A.Jones 67 yd. pass from A.Rodgers (M.Crosby kick) (2-75, 0:59) TEAM STATISTICS PACKERS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................. 21 21 Total Net Yards .......................................... 374 337 Rushes/Net Yards ................................. 26/118 20/88 Net Passing ............................................... 256 249 Pass Attempts/Completions .................... 33/23 36/24 Had Intercepted ............................................ 0 0 Sacked/Yards Lost .................................... 5/49 2/18 Punts/Average ....................................... 3/35.3 3/51.3 Penalties/Yards ......................................... 4/25 3/30 Fumbles/Lost .............................................. 0/0 1/1 Possession Time ..................................... 33:13 26:47
0 17
3 0
14 7
— —
31 24
RUSHING KC — L. McCoy 9-40; D. Williams 7-30, TD; D. Williams 2-10; T. Hill 1-5; M. Moore 1-3 GB — A. Jones 13-67; A. Rodgers 6-29; J. Williams 7-22, TD RECEIVING KC — T. Hill 6-76; T. Kelce 4-63, TD; M. Hardman 2-55, TD; S. Watkins 5-45; L. McCoy 4-23; D. Robinson 2-6; D. Thompson 1-(-1) GB — A. Jones 7-159, 2 TDs; J. Kumerow 2-48; A. Lazard 5-42; J. Graham 3-20; J. Williams 3-14, TD; M. Lewis 1-11; G. Allison 1-7; M. Valdes-Scantling 1-4 PASSING KC — M. Moore 36-24-267, 2 TDs, 0 INT GB — A. Rodgers 33-23-305, 3 TDs, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — None GB — None SACKS KC — T. Kpassagnon 2.0; E. Ogbah 1.0; K. Saunders 1.0; D. Wilson 1.0 GB — Z. Smith 2.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker 50WL (28) GB — M. Crosby (35)
WEEK 9: Chiefs 26, Vikings 23 November 3, 2019 • Arrowhead Stadium • 73,615 Minnesota Vikings ................ 7 Kansas City Chiefs ................ 7 KC — T.Hill 40 yd. pass from M.Moore (H.Butker kick) (7-67, 3:15) MIN — O.Johnson 4 yd. pass from K.Cousins (D.Bailey kick) (12-75, 5:31) KC — H.Butker 24 yd. Field Goal (17-85, 8:56) MIN — D.Bailey 29 yd. Field Goal (12-57, 1:36) MIN — A.Abdullah 16 yd. pass from K.Cousins (kick failed, wl) (5-38, 3:01) KC — Dam.Williams 91 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (2-97, 0:48) KC — H.Butker 45 yd. Field Goal (7-39, 2:58) MIN — K.Rudolph 3 yd. pass from K.Cousins (D.Bailey kick) (11-75, 4:31) KC — H.Butker 54 yd. Field Goal (8-38, 4:05) KC — H.Butker 44 yd. Field Goal (5-19, 1:47) TEAM STATISTICS VIKINGS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................. 17 17 Total Net Yards .......................................... 308 377 Rushes/Net Yards ................................... 27/96 18/147 Net Passing ............................................... 212 230 Pass Attempts/Completions .................... 38/19 35/25 Had Intercepted ............................................ 0 0 Sacked/Yards Lost ...................................... 1/8 5/45 Punts/Average ....................................... 8/44.1 5/50.2 Penalties/Yards ......................................... 3/25 4/25 Fumbles/Lost .............................................. 1/0 3/1 Possession Time ..................................... 28:12 31:48
3 3
6 10
7 6
— —
23 26
RUSHING KC — D. Williams 12-125, TD; L. McCoy 3-9; M. Hardman 1-7; T. Hill 1-5; D. Williams 1-1 MIN — D. Cook 21-71; S. Diggs 1-12; A. Mattison 3-6; K. Cousins 1-5; A. Abdullah 1-2 RECEIVING KC — T. Hill 6-140, TD; S. Watkins 7-63; T. Kelce 7-62; D. Robinson 1-5; D. Williams 2-3; B. Bell 1-2; L. McCoy 1-(0) MIN — L. Treadwell 3-58; D. Cook 4-45; C. Ham 2-37; I. Smith Jr. 4-33; K. Rudolph 3-23, TD; A. Abdullah 1-16, TD; S. Diggs 1-4; B. Johnson 1-4, TD PASSING KC — M. Moore 35-25-275, TD, 0 INT MIN — K. Cousins 38-19-220, 3 TDs, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — None MIN — None SACKS KC — C. Jones 1.0 MIN — E. Griffen 1.0; I. Odenigbo 1.0; H. Smith 1.0; S. Weatherly 1.0; D. Hunter 0.5; J. Johnson 0.5 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (24) (45) (54) (44) MIN — D. Bailey (29)
WEEK 10: Titans 35, Chiefs 32 November 10, 2019 • Nissan Stadium • 68,864 Kansas City Chiefs ............. 10 Tennessee Titans ................. 0 KC — T.Kelce 3 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (12-69, 5:41) KC — H.Butker 30 yd. Field Goal (4-8, 3:05) TEN — A.Firkser 9 yd. pass from R.Tannehill (R.Succop kick) (4-73, 1:34) TEN — R.Evans 53 yd. fumble return (kick failed, wl) KC — H.Butker 41 yd. Field Goal (10-52, 5:02) KC — T.Hill 11 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (kick failed, wl) (10-77, 5:40) TEN — D.Henry 68 yd. run (R.Succop kick) (2-74, 0:56) KC — H.Butker 43 yd. Field Goal (10-50, 4:00) KC — M.Hardman 63 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (5-79, 2:06) TEN — D.Henry 1 yd. run (R.Succop kick) (10-75, 5:28) KC — H.Butker 39 yd. Field Goal (7-53, 3:12) TEN — A.Humphries 23 yd. pass from R.Tannehill (R.Tannehill run) (4-61, 0:58) TEAM STATISTICS CHIEFS TITANS First Downs .................................................. 28 19 Total Net Yards ........................................... 530 371 Rushes/Net Yards ..................................... 25/97 26/225 Net Passing ................................................ 433 146 Pass Attempts/Completions ..................... 51/36 19/13 Had Intercepted .............................................. 0 0 Sacked/Yards Lost ..................................... 2/13 4/35 Punts/Average ........................................ 1/26.0 4/51.0 Penalties/Yards .......................................... 9/80 8/64 Fumbles/Lost ............................................... 2/1 1/1 Possession Time ...................................... 37:52 22:08
3 13
9 7
10 15
— —
32 35
RUSHING KC — D. Williams 19-77; S. Watkins 2-12; D. Williams 2-6; T. Hill 1-3; D. Thompson 1-(-1) TEN — D. Henry 23-188, 2 TDs; R. Tannehill 3-37 RECEIVING KC — T. Hill 11-157, TD; T. Kelce 7-75, TD; M. Hardman 1-63, TD; D. Robinson 4-56; S. Watkins 5-39; D. Williams 5-32; D. Williams 1-9; D. Thompson 1-8; D. Yelder 1-7 TEN — K. Raymond 1-52; A. Firkser 3-36, TD; J. Smith 4-30; A. Humphries 1-23, TD; T. Sharpe 1-20; A. Brown 1-17; D. Henry 2-3 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 50-36-446, 3 TDs, 0 INT; D. Colquitt 1-0-(0), 0 TDs, 0 INT TEN — R. Tannehill 19-13-181, 2 TDs, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — None TEN — None SACKS KC — C. Jones 2.0; F. Clark 1.0; E. Ogbah 1.0 TEN — R. Evans 1.0; H. Landry III 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (30) (41) (43) (39) 52B TEN — None
WEEK 11: Chiefs 24, Chargers 17 November 18, 2019 • Azteca Stadium • 76,252 Kansas City Chiefs ............... 0 Los Angeles Chargers .......... 3 LAC — KC — LAC — KC — LAC — KC — KC —
M.Badgley 27 yd. Field Goal (9-68, 5:29) L.McCoy 6 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (1-6, 0:05) M.Badgley 26 yd. Field Goal (9-67, 3:44) H.Butker 41 yd. Field Goal (9-52, 3:18) M.Badgley 49 yd. Field Goal (9-44, 1:43) D.Williams 6 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (9-75, 5:31) T.Kelce 23 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (6-54, 3:20) LAC — K.Allen 7 yd. pass from P.Rivers (P.Rivers-H.Henry pass) (6-75, 3:12) TEAM STATISTICS CHIEFS CHARGERS First Downs .................................................. 18 23 Total Net Yards ........................................... 310 438 Rushes/Net Yards ................................... 27/130 19/93 Net Passing ................................................ 180 345 Pass Attempts/Completions ..................... 32/19 52/28 Had Intercepted ............................................. 1 4 Sacked/Yards Lost ....................................... 1/2 2/8 Punts/Average ........................................ 6/40.0 3/47.7 Penalties/Yards ........................................ 8/102 9/60 Fumbles/Lost ............................................... 1/0 3/0 Possession Time ...................................... 28:58 31:02
10 6
14 8
0 0
— —
24 17
RUSHING KC — P. Mahomes 5-59; D. Williams 11-35, TD; L. McCoy 7-29, TD; D. Williams 4-7 LAC — M. Gordon III 14-69; A. Ekeler 5-24 RECEIVING KC — T. Kelce 7-92, TD; L. McCoy 4-28; S. Watkins 2-26; M. Hardman 2-13; B. Pringle 1-9; D. Williams 2-8; D. Williams 1-6 LAC — A. Ekeler 8-108; M. Williams 2-76; K. Allen 8-71, TD; H. Henry 6-69; M. Gordon III 3-21; V. Green 1-8 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 32-19-182, TD, 1 INT LAC — P. Rivers 52-28-353, TD, 4 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — R. Fenton 1; T. Mathieu 1; D. Nnadi 1; D. Sorensen 1 LAC — R. Jenkins 1 SACKS KC — F. Clark 1.0; M. Pennel 1.0 LAC — M. Ingram III 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (41) LAC — M. Badgley (27) (26) (49) 40WR
WEEK 13: Chiefs 40, Raiders 9 December 1, 2019 • Arrowhead Stadium • 73,548 Las Vegas Raiders ................ 0 Kansas City Chiefs ................ 7 KC
— D.Williams 3 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (11-47, 3:31) KC — P.Mahomes 13 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (8-60, 3:25) KC — J.Thornhill 46 yd. interception return (H.Butker kick) KC — H.Butker 50 yd. Field Goal (9-34, 2:57) KC — L.McCoy 3 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (4-64, 2:15) OAK — D.Carlson 34 yd. Field Goal (13-60, 6:55) KC — D.Thompson 4 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (14-75, 9:32) OAK — D.Carrier 4 yd. pass from D.Carr (10-75, 4:45) KC — C.Ward defensive two point conversion TEAM STATISTICS RAIDERS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................. 19 22 Total Net Yards .......................................... 332 259 Rushes/Net Yards ................................. 25/122 29/96 Net Passing ................................................ 210 163 Pass Attempts/Completions .................... 30/20 29/15 Had Intercepted ............................................. 2 0 Sacked/Yards Lost .................................... 2/12 1/12 Punts/Average ....................................... 2/38.5 2/41.5 Penalties/Yards ....................................... 12/99 0/0 Fumbles/Lost .............................................. 2/1 0/0 Possession Time ..................................... 31:41 28:19
0 14
0 10
9 9
— —
9 40
RUSHING — D. Thompson 11-44, TD; P. Mahomes 3-25, TD; D. Williams 6-13; L. McCoy 5-10, TD; M. Hardman 1-9; A. Sherman 1(0); M. Moore 1-(-1); T. Hill 1-(-4) OAK — J. Jacobs 17-104; D. Carr 3-7; D. Washington 2-5; A. Ingold 1-4; J. Richard 1-2; T. Davis 1-(0) RECEIVING KC — T. Kelce 5-90; T. Hill 5-55; L. McCoy 3-20; A. Sherman 1-7; D. Williams 1-3, TD OAK — D. Waller 7-100; D. Washington 3-44; F. Moreau 1-15; Z. Jones 2-14; A. Ingold 2-13; K. Doss 1-11; D. Carrier 2-10, TD; T. Williams 1-9; J. Richard 1-6 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 29-15-175, TD, 0 INT OAK — D. Carr 30-20-222, TD, 2 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — T. Mathieu 1; J. Thornhill 1 OAK — None SACKS KC — C. Jones 1.0; T. Kpassagnon 1.0 OAK — M. Hurst 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (50) OAK — D. Carlson 44WL (34) KC
WEEK 14: Chiefs 23, Patriots 16 December 8, 2019 • Gillette Stadium • 65,878 Kansas City Chiefs ............... 3 New England Patriots .......... 7 NE — J.Edelman 37 yd. pass from T.Brady (N.Folk kick) (5-83, 2:26) KC — H.Butker 48 yd. Field Goal (9-53, 3:46) KC — M.Hardman 48 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (7-58, 3:56) KC — T.Kelce 4 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (7-35, 3:20) KC — H.Butker 31 yd. Field Goal (10-74, 1:49) KC — H.Butker 41 yd. Field Goal (11-52, 6:14) NE — B.Bolden 10 yd. run (run failed) (2-19, 0:51) NE — N.Folk 29 yd. Field Goal (9-46, 3:25) TEAM STATISTICS CHIEFS PATRIOTS First Downs .................................................. 20 17 Total Net Yards ........................................... 346 278 Rushes/Net Yards .................................... 29/75 22/94 Net Passing ................................................ 271 184 Pass Attempts/Completions ..................... 40/26 37/20 Had Intercepted ............................................. 1 1 Sacked/Yards Lost ..................................... 1/12 3/20 Punts/Average ........................................ 4/32.8 4/41.3 Penalties/Yards ...................................... 10/136 5/25 Fumbles/Lost ............................................... 2/1 0/0 Possession Time ...................................... 34:21 25:39
17 0
3 6
0 3
— —
23 16
RUSHING KC — L. McCoy 11-39; S. Ware 5-11; T. Hill 2-8; D. Thompson 4-7; P. Mahomes 6-6; T. Kelce 1-4, TD NE — J. White 6-33; T. Brady 2-20; R. Burkhead 7-15; B. Bolden 1-10, TD; S. Michel 5-8; J. Edelman 1-8 RECEIVING KC — T. Kelce 7-66; T. Hill 6-62; S. Watkins 4-50; M. Hardman 1-48, TD; D. Thompson 4-36; B. Pringle 1-14; D. Robinson 1-12; L. McCoy 1-4; S. Ware 1-(-9) NE — J. Edelman 8-95, TD; J. Meyers 1-35; J. White 5-27; M. LaCosse 2-14; M. Sanu Sr. 1-13; N. Harry 1-12; B. Watson 1-7; S. Michel 1-1 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 40-26-283, TD, 1 INT NE — T. Brady 36-19-169, TD, 1 INT; J. White 1-1-35, 0 TDs, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — B. Breeland 1 NE — J. Jackson 1 SACKS KC — F. Clark 1.0; C. Jones 1.0; A. Okafor 1.0 NE — D. Wise Jr. 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (48) (31) (41) NE — N. Folk 41B (29)
WEEK 15: Chiefs 23, Broncos 3 December 15, 2019 • Arrowhead Stadium • 73,257 Denver Broncos ..................... 0 Kansas City Chiefs ................ 6 KC
— T.Hill 41 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (pass failed) (4-79, 2:00) KC — H.Butker 23 yd. Field Goal (12-79, 6:48) KC — H.Butker 24 yd. Field Goal (10-69, 5:24) DEN — B.McManus 32 yd. Field Goal (11-61, 4:28) KC — H.Butker 44 yd. Field Goal (9-53, 1:56) KC — T.Hill 5 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (P.Mahomes-S.Watkins pass) (10-75, 5:15) TEAM STATISTICS BRONCOS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................. 15 27 Total Net Yards .......................................... 251 419 Rushes/Net Yards ................................... 15/52 25/92 Net Passing ................................................ 199 327 Pass Attempts/Completions .................... 40/18 34/27 Had Intercepted ............................................ 1 1 Sacked/Yards Lost ...................................... 2/9 3/13 Punts/Average ....................................... 4/42.8 2/39.5 Penalties/Yards ......................................... 7/72 5/45 Fumbles/Lost .............................................. 2/0 0/0 Possession Time ..................................... 26:27 33:33
3 9
0 8
— —
0 0
3 23
RUSHING — D. Thompson 8-38; S. Ware 7-26; L. McCoy 6-16; P. Mahomes 3-11; T. Hill 1-1 DEN — P. Lindsay 7-32; R. Freeman 5-12; D. Booker 1-5; D. Lock 2-3 RECEIVING KC — T. Kelce 11-142; T. Hill 5-67, 2 TDs; S. Watkins 3-49; B. Bell 2-41; D. Robinson 2-21; M. Hardman 1-10; S. Ware 2-9; D. Thompson 1-1 DEN — C. Sutton 4-79; N. Fant 2-56; T. Patrick 3-26; R. Freeman 4-14; A. Beck 2-13; D. Hamilton 2-13; T. Fumagalli 1-7 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 34-27-340, 2 TDs, 1 INT DEN — D. Lock 40-18-208, 0 TDs, 1 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — J. Thornhill 1 DEN — J. Simmons 1 SACKS KC — T. Mathieu 1.0; A. Okafor 1.0 DEN — S. Harris 2.0; V. Miller 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (24) (44) (23) DEN — B. McManus (32) KC
WEEK 16: Chiefs 26, Bears 3 December 22, 2019 • Soldier Field • 62,213 Kansas City Chiefs ............... 7 Chicago Bears ....................... 0 KC — P.Mahomes 12 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (15-82, 7:58) KC — H.Butker 56 yd. Field Goal (7-31, 3:06) KC — T.Kelce 6 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (13-95, 6:42) CHI — E.Pineiro 46 yd. Field Goal (6-23, 2:50) KC — Dam.Williams 14 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (kick failed, hlu) (9-71, 4:55) KC — H.Butker 32 yd. Field Goal (11-43, 6:02) TEAM STATISTICS CHIEFS BEARS First Downs ................................................... 25 18 Total Net Yards ........................................... 350 234 Rushes/Net Yards ................................... 29/106 22/101 Net Passing ................................................. 244 133 Pass Attempts/Completions ...................... 33/23 34/18 Had Intercepted .............................................. 0 0 Sacked/Yards Lost ....................................... 1/7 3/24 Punts/Average ........................................ 2/46.5 3/46.3 Penalties/Yards .......................................... 9/71 7/50 Fumbles/Lost ............................................... 0/0 1/0 Possession Time ...................................... 33:24 26:36
10 0
0 3
9 0
— —
26 3
RUSHING KC — D. Williams 16-65; D. Thompson 5-14; S. Ware 5-14; P. Mahomes 2-14, TD; M. Moore 1-(-1) CHI — D. Montgomery 13-57; M. Trubisky 6-20; C. Patterson 1-16; T. Cohen 2-8 RECEIVING KC — T. Kelce 8-74, TD; T. Hill 5-72; S. Watkins 2-28; D. Williams 3-27, TD; S. Ware 2-22; B. Bell 2-15; D. Robinson 1-13 CHI — A. Robinson II 6-53; J. Wims 3-26; T. Cohen 3-25; J. Horsted 1-20; J. Holtz 1-13; E. Saubert 1-11; C. Patterson 1-5; A. Miller 1-2; D. Montgomery 1-2 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 33-23-251, 2 TDs, 0 INT CHI — M. Trubisky 34-18-157, 0 TDs, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — None CHI — None SACKS KC — F. Clark 1.0; C. Jones 1.0; R. Ragland 1.0 CHI — K. Mack 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (56) (32) CHI — E. Pineiro (46)
WEEK 17: Chiefs 31, Chargers 21 December 29, 2019 • Arrowhead Stadium • 73,680 Los Angeles Chargers .......... 0 Kansas City Chiefs ................ 3 KC — H.Butker 40 yd. Field Goal (15-62, 8:12) LAC — K.Allen 12 yd. pass from P.Rivers (M.Badgley kick) (11-74, 4:45) KC — D.Robinson 24 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (4-57, 1:29) LAC — M.Gordon 5 yd. run (M.Badgley kick) (3-21, 1:26) KC — M.Hardman 104 yd. kickoff return (H.Butker kick) (0-0, 0:16) KC — Dam.Williams 84 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (1-84, 0:15) LAC — H.Henry 8 yd. pass from P.Rivers (M.Badgley kick) (14-86, 7:11) KC — Dam.Williams 7 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (8-77, 2:46) TEAM STATISTICS CHARGERS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................. 25 16 Total Net Yards .......................................... 366 336 Rushes/Net Yards ................................. 25/108 23/162 Net Passing ................................................ 258 174 Pass Attempts/Completions .................... 46/31 25/16 Had Intercepted ............................................. 2 1 Sacked/Yards Lost .................................... 3/23 0/0 Punts/Average ....................................... 3/44.7 2/51.5 Penalties/Yards ......................................... 8/40 5/39 Fumbles/Lost .............................................. 0/0 0/0 Possession Time ..................................... 36:04 23:56
7 7
7 14
7 7
— —
21 31
RUSHING KC — D. Williams 12-124, 2 TDs; P. Mahomes 7-21; D. Thompson 4-17 LAC — M. Gordon III 14-46, TD; A. Ekeler 9-46; J. Jackson 1-11; P. Rivers 1-5 RECEIVING KC — T. Hill 4-61; D. Williams 4-30; M. Hardman 1-30; T. Kelce 3-24; D. Robinson 1-24, TD; S. Watkins 1-8; B. Bell 1-1; D. Thompson 1-(-4) LAC — K. Allen 9-82, TD; M. Gordon III 6-76; A. Ekeler 9-43; H. Henry 5-42, TD; M. Williams 2-38 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 25-16-174, TD, 1 INT LAC — P. Rivers 46-31-281, 2 TDs, 2 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — T. Mathieu 1; D. Sorensen 1 LAC — M. Davis 1 SACKS KC — F. Clark 1.0; C. Jones 1.0; T. Suggs 1.0 LAC — None FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (40) LAC — None
WEEK 1: Chiefs 51, Texans 31 January 12, 2020 • Arrowhead Stadium • 73,503 Houston Texans .................. 21 Kansas City Chiefs ................ 0 HOU — K.Stills 54 yd. pass from D.Watson (K.Fairbairn kick) (6-75, 3:01) HOU — L.Johnson 10 yd. return of blocked punt (K.Fairbairn kick) HOU — D.Fells 4 yd. pass from D.Watson (K.Fairbairn kick) (2-6, 0:48) HOU — K.Fairbairn 31 yd. Field Goal (9-38, 4:55) KC — Dam.Williams 17 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (2-42, 0:59) KC — T.Kelce 5 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (3-33, 0:23) KC — T.Kelce 6 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (3-6, 1:25) KC — T.Kelce 5 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (8-90, 2:03) KC — Dam.Williams 1 yd. run (kick failed, wl) (7-85, 3:36) KC — Dam.Williams 5 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (6-77, 3:55) HOU — D.Watson 5 yd. run (K.Fairbairn kick) (9-75, 4:15) KC — B.Bell 8 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (4-72, 1:32) KC — H.Butker 24 yd. Field Goal (7-52, 3:31) TEAM STATISTICS TEXANS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................. 23 29 Total Net Yards .......................................... 442 434 Rushes/Net Yards ................................... 21/94 21/118 Net Passing ............................................... 348 316 Pass Attempts/Completions .................... 52/31 35/23 Had Intercepted ............................................ 0 0 Sacked/Yards Lost .................................... 5/40 1/5 Punts/Average ....................................... 3/45.7 4/30.8 Penalties/Yards ......................................... 7/87 4/37 Fumbles/Lost .............................................. 2/1 2/1 Possession Time ..................................... 34:35 25:25
3 28
7 13
0 10
— —
31 51
RUSHING — P. Mahomes 7-53; D. Williams 12-47, 2 TDs; S. Watkins 1-14; T. Hill 1-4 HOU — C. Hyde 13-44; D. Watson 6-37, TD; D. Johnson 1-11; J. Reid 1-2 RECEIVING KC — T. Kelce 10-134, 3 TDs; S. Watkins 2-76; T. Hill 3-41; D. Williams 2-21, TD; M. Hardman 2-19; B. Bell 2-15, TD; D. Yelder 1-11; D. Robinson 1-4 HOU — D. Hopkins 9-118; W. Fuller V 5-89; K. Stills 3-80, TD; D. Johnson 5-23; D. Fells 3-22, TD; C. Hyde 3-18; D. Carter 1-17; T. Jones 1-14; J. Thomas 1-7 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 35-23-321, 5 TDs, 0 INT HOU — D. Watson 52-31-388, 2 TDs, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — None HOU — None SACKS KC — F. Clark 3.0; R. Fenton 1.0; D. O'Daniel 1.0 HOU — G. Conley 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (24) HOU — K. Fairbairn (31) 51WR KC
WEEK 2: Chiefs 35, Titans 24 January 19, 2020 • Arrowhead Stadium • 73,656 Tennessee Titans ............... 10 Kansas City Chiefs ............... 7 TEN — G.Joseph 30 yd. Field Goal (8-58, 3:31) TEN — D.Henry 4 yd. run (G.Joseph kick) (9-58, 4:07) KC — T.Hill 8 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (10-74, 5:06) TEN — D.Kelly 1 yd. pass from R.Tannehill (G.Joseph kick) (15-75, 9:07) KC — T.Hill 20 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (5-63, 2:36) KC — P.Mahomes 27 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (9-86, 1:40) KC — Dam.Williams 3 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (13-73, 7:08) KC — S.Watkins 60 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (7-88, 4:21) TEN — A.Firkser 22 yd. pass from R.Tannehill (G.Joseph kick) (8-80, 3:15) TEAM STATISTICS TITANS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................. 20 27 Total Net Yards ........................................... 295 405 Rushes/Net Yards .................................... 23/85 26/113 Net Passing ................................................ 210 292 Pass Attempts/Completions ..................... 32/22 36/23 Had Intercepted .............................................. 0 0 Sacked/Yards Lost ..................................... 3/27 2/2 Punts/Average ........................................ 3/46.3 3/40.7 Penalties/Yards .......................................... 8/85 9/61 Fumbles/Lost ............................................... 0/0 1/0 Possession Time ...................................... 30:10 29:50
7 14
0 0
7 14
— —
24 35
RUSHING KC — P. Mahomes 7-54, TD; D. Williams 17-45, TD; T. Hill 1-7; D. Thompson 1-7 TEN — D. Henry 19-69, TD; R. Tannehill 3-11; M. Mariota 1-5 RECEIVING KC — S. Watkins 7-114, TD; T. Hill 5-67, 2 TDs; D. Williams 5-44; D. Robinson 2-31; T. Kelce 3-30; M. Hardman 1-8 TEN — C. Davis 5-65; A. Brown 3-51; J. Smith 3-38; A. Hooker 1-28; A. Humphries 4-25; A. Firkser 1-22, TD; M. Pruitt 1-9; D. Lewis 1-6; D. Kelly 1-1, TD; D. Henry 2-(-8) PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 36-23-294, 3 TDs, 0 INT TEN — R. Tannehill 31-21-209, 2 TDs, 0 INT; B. Kern 1-1-28, 0 TDs, 0 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — None TEN — None SACKS KC — T. Kpassagnon 2.0; F. Clark 1.0 TEN — K. Correa 1.0; J. Casey 0.5; D. Jones 0.5 FIELD GOALS KC — None TEN — G. Joseph (30)
WEEK 3: Chiefs 31, 49ers 20 February 2, 2020 • Hard Rock Stadium • 62,417 San Francisco 49ers ............ 3 Kansas City Chiefs ............... 7 SF — KC — KC — SF —
R.Gould 38 yd. Field Goal (10-62, 5:58) P.Mahomes 1 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (15-75, 7:26) H.Butker 31 yd. Field Goal (9-43, 4:36) K.Juszczyk 15 yd. pass from J.Garoppolo (R.Gould kick) (7-80, 4:27) SF — R.Gould 42 yd. Field Goal (9-60, 5:31) SF — R.Mostert 1 yd. run (R.Gould kick) (6-55, 2:48) KC — T.Kelce 1 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (10-83, 2:40) KC — Dam.Williams 5 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (7-65, 2:26) KC — Dam.Williams 38 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (2-42, 0:13) TEAM STATISTICS 49ERS CHIEFS First Downs .................................................... 21 26 Total Net Yards ............................................. 351 397 Rushes/Net Yards ..................................... 22/141 30/129 Net Passing .................................................. 210 268 Pass Attempts/Completions ........................ 31/20 41/26 Had Intercepted ............................................... 2 2 Sacked/Yards Lost ......................................... 1/9 4/18 Punts/Average .......................................... 2/43.0 2/50.0 Penalties/Yards ............................................ 5/45 4/24 Fumbles/Lost ................................................ 1/0 3/0 Possession Time ........................................ 26:47 33:13
7 3
10 0
0 21
— —
20 31
RUSHING KC — D. Williams 17-104, TD; P. Mahomes 10-29, TD; T. Kelce 1-2; D. Thompson 1-(0); M. Hardman 1-(-6) SF — R. Mostert 12-58, TD; D. Samuel 3-53; T. Coleman 5-28; J. Garoppolo 2-2 RECEIVING KC — T. Hill 9-105; S. Watkins 5-98; T. Kelce 6-43, TD; D. Williams 4-29, TD; B. Bell 1-9; M. Hardman 1-2 SF — K. Bourne 2-42; D. Samuel 5-39; K. Juszczyk 3-39, TD; E. Sanders 3-38; G. Kittle 4-36; J. Wilson Jr. 1-20; T. Coleman 1-3; R. Mostert 1-2 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 41-26-286, 2 TDs, 2 INT SF — J. Garoppolo 31-20-219, TD, 2 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — B. Breeland 1; K. Fuller 1 SF — T. Moore 1; F. Warner 1 SACKS KC — F. Clark 1.0 SF — D. Buckner 1.5; N. Bosa 1.0; J. Tartt 1.0; E. Mitchell 0.5 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker (31) SF — R. Gould (38) (42)
2020 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS NUMERICAL ROSTER (As of September 5, 2020) NO. 4 5 6 7 10 11 13 14 15 17 20 22 23 24 25 27 29 31 32 34 35 38 41 42 44 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 62 67 70 71 72 73 75 77 79 82 83 87 91 92 94 95 97 98 99 30 43 74 21 64 26 67 76
NAME Chad Henne Tommy Townsend Marcus Kemp Harrison Butker Tyreek Hill Demarcus Robinson Byron Pringle Sammy Watkins Patrick Mahomes Mecole Hardman Antonio Hamilton Juan Thornhill Armani Watts Tedric Thompson Clyde Edwards-Helaire Rashad Fenton BoPete Keyes Darrel Williams Tyrann Mathieu Darwin Thompson Charvarius Ward L'Jarius Sneed James Winchester Anthony Sherman Dorian O'Daniel Nick Keizer Daniel Sorensen Willie Gay Mike Danna Demone Harris Anthony Hitchens Damien Wilson Frank Clark Ben Niemann Austin Reiter Daniel Kilgore Kelechi Osemele Mitchell Schwartz Eric Fisher Nick Allegretti Mike Remmers Andrew Wylie Yasir Durant Deon Yelder Ricky Seals-Jones Travis Kelce Derrick Nnadi Tanoh Kpassagnon Taco Charlton Chris Jones Alex Okafor Tershawn Wharton Khalen Saunders Reserve/Injured Alex Brown Emmanuel Smith Reserve/PUP Martinas Rankin Reserve/Suspended Bashaud Breeland Mike Pennel Reserve/Voluntary Opt-Out Damien Williams Lucas Niang Laurent Duvernay-Tardif
POS. QB P WR K WR WR WR WR QB WR CB S S S RB CB DB RB S RB CB CB LS FB LB TE S LB DE DE LB LB DE LB C C G T T G T G OL TE TE TE DT DE DE DT DE DT DT
HT. 6-3 6-2 6-4 6-4 5-10 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-3 5-10 6-0 6-0 5-11 6-0 5-8 5-11 6-1 5-11 5-9 5-8 6-1 6-1 6-3 5-10 6-1 6-4 6-2 6-1 6-2 6-4 6-0 6-0 6-3 6-2 6-3 6-3 6-5 6-5 6-7 6-4 6-5 6-6 6-7 6-4 6-5 6-5 6-1 6-7 6-6 6-6 6-4 6-4 6-0
WT. 222 176 210 205 185 203 203 211 230 187 195 205 205 204 209 188 200 224 190 200 198 193 240 242 220 251 208 243 261 272 235 245 260 235 300 291 330 320 315 320 308 309 330 255 243 260 312 289 270 310 261 255 324
AGE 35 23 25 25 26 25 26 27 24 22 27 24 24 25 21 23 22 25 28 23 24 23 31 31 26 25 30 22 22 24 28 27 27 25 28 32 31 31 29 24 31 26 22 25 25 30 24 26 25 26 29 22 24
EXP. 13 R 2 4 5 5 3 7 4 2 5 2 3 4 R 2 R 3 8 2 3 R 6 10 3 1 7 R R 2 7 6 6 3 5 10 9 9 8 2 8 3 R 3 4 8 3 4 4 5 8 R 2
COLLEGE Michigan Florida Hawaii Georgia Tech West Alabama Florida Kansas State Clemson Texas Tech Georgia South Carolina State Virginia Texas A&M Colorado LSU South Carolina Tulane LSU LSU Utah State Middle Tennessee State LA Tech Oklahoma Connecticut Clemson Grand Valley State BYU Mississippi State Michigan Buffalo Iowa Minnesota Michigan Iowa South Florida Appalachian State Iowa State California Central Michigan Illinois Oregon State Eastern Michigan Missouri Western Kentucky Texas A&M Cincinnati Florida State Villanova Michigan Mississippi State Texas Missouri S&T Western Illinois
HOW ACQ. UFA-18 CFA-20 CFA-17 FA-17 D5b-16 D4c-16 CFA-18 UFA-18 D1-17 D2a-19 FA-20 D2b-19 D4-18 FA-20 D1-20 D6a-19 D7-20 CFA-18 UFA-19 D6b-19 T (DAL)-18 D4-20 FA-15 T (ARI)-13 D3b-18 FA-19 CFA-14 D2-20 D5-20 FA-19 UFA-18 UFA-19 T (SEA)-19 CFA-18 W (CLE)-18 FA-20 FA-20 UFA-16 D1-13 D7-19 FA-20 FA-17 CFA-20 FA-18 FA-20 D3a-13 D3a-18 D2-17 FA-20 D2-16 UFA-19 CFA-20 D3-19
HOMETOWN West Lawn, Pa. Orlando, Fla Layton, Utah Decatur, Ga. Pearson, Ga. Fort Valley, Ga. Tampa, Fla. Fort Myers, Fla. Tyler, Texas Bowman, Ga. Johnston, S.C. Altavista, Va. Forney, Texas Inglewood, Calif. Baton Rouge, La. Miami, Fla. Laurel, Miss. Marrero, La. New Orleans, La. Tulsa, Okla. McCombs, Miss. Minden, La. Washington, Okla. North Attleborough, Mass. Olney, Md. Kalamazoo, Mich. Colton, Calif. Starkville, Miss. Detroit, Mich. Buffalo, N.Y. Lorain, Ohio Gloster, Miss. Cleveland, Ohio Sycamore, Ill. Bradenton, Fla. Kingsport, Tenn. Houston, Texas Pacific Palisades, Calif. Rochester, Mich. Frankfort, Ill. Portland, Ore. Midland, Mich. Philadelphia, Pa. Louisville, Ky. Sealy, Texas Cleveland Heights, Ohio Virginia Beach, Va. Kalamazoo, Mich. Pickerington, Ohio Houston, Miss. Dallas, Texas University City, Mo. St. Louis, Mo.
DB LB
5-11 6-2
170 240
24 25
1 1
South Carolina State Vanderbilt
FA-19 FA-19
Holly Hill, S.C. Murfreesboro, Tenn.
T
6-5
311
25
3
Mississippi State
T (HOU)-19
Mendenhall, Miss.
CB DT
5-11 6-4
195 330
28 29
7 7
Clemson Colorado State-Pueblo
UFA-19 FA-19
Allendale, S.C. Aurora, Colo.
RB OL G
5-11 6-7 6-5
224 328 321
28 22 29
7 R 7
Oklahoma TCU McGill
UFA-18 D3-20 D6b-14
San Diego, Calif. New Canaan, Conn. Montreal, Quebec
HEAD COACH: Andy Reid OFFENSE: Eric Bieniemy (Offensive Coordinator); Joe Bleymaier (Pass Game Analyst/Asst. QBs); Porter Ellett (Offensive Quality Control); David Girardi (Offensive Quality
Control); Andy Heck (Offensive Line); Mike Kafka (QBs/Pass Game Coordinator); Greg Lewis (Wide Receivers); Corey Matthaei (Asst. Offensive Line); Deland McCullough (Running Backs); Tom Melvin (Tight Ends).
DEFENSE: Steve Spagnuolo (Defensive Coordinator); Terry Bradden (Defensive Quality Control); Brendan Daly (Run Game Coordinator/Defensive Line); Connor Embree (Defensive Assistant); Matt House (Linebackers); Sam Madison (Defensive Backs/Cornerbacks); Dave Merritt (Defensive Backs); Britt Reid (Linebackers/Outside Linebackers); Alex Whittingham (Defensive Quality Control). SPECIALISTS: Dave Toub (Assistant Head Coach/Special Teams Coordinator); Andy Hill (Asst. Special Teams). MISCELLANEOUS: Barry Rubin (Head Strength & Conditioning); Greg Carbin (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Travis Crittenden (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Ryan
Reynolds (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Mike Frazier (Statistical Analysis Coordinator); Dan Williams (Senior Asst. to Head Coach).
2020 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS ALPHABETICAL ROSTER (As of September 5, 2020) NO. 73 7 94 55 51 79 25 27 72 50 20 17 52 4 10 53 95 48 87 6 29 67 92 15 32 56 91 44 97 70 13 62 75 11 99 71 83 42 38 49 34 24 22 5 35 14 23 98 31 54 41 77 82 30 43 74 64 21 76 67 26
NAME Allegretti, Nick Butker, Harrison Charlton, Taco Clark, Frank Danna, Mike Durant, Yasir Edwards-Helaire, Clyde Fenton, Rashad Fisher, Eric Gay, Willie Hamilton, Antonio Hardman, Mecole Harris, Demone Henne, Chad Hill, Tyreek Hitchens, Anthony Jones, Chris Keizer, Nick Kelce, Travis Kemp, Marcus Keyes, BoPete Kilgore, Daniel Kpassagnon, Tanoh Mahomes, Patrick Mathieu, Tyrann Niemann, Ben Nnadi, Derrick O'Daniel, Dorian Okafor, Alex Osemele, Kelechi Pringle, Byron Reiter, Austin Remmers, Mike Robinson, Demarcus Saunders, Khalen Schwartz, Mitchell Seals-Jones, Ricky Sherman, Anthony Sneed, L'Jarius Sorensen, Daniel Thompson, Darwin Thompson, Tedric Thornhill, Juan Townsend, Tommy Ward, Charvarius Watkins, Sammy Watts, Armani Wharton, Tershawn Williams, Darrel Wilson, Damien Winchester, James Wylie, Andrew Yelder, Deon Reserve/Injured Brown, Alex Smith, Emmanuel Reserve/PUP Rankin, Martinas Reserve/Suspended Pennel, Mike Breeland, Bashaud Reserve/Voluntary Opt-Out Duvernay-Tardif, Laurent Niang, Lucas Williams, Damien
POS. G K DE DE DE OL RB CB T LB CB WR DE QB WR LB DT TE TE WR CB C DE QB S LB DT LB DE G WR C T WR DT T TE FB CB S RB S S P CB WR S DT RB LB LS G TE
HT. 6-4 6-4 6-6 6-3 6-2 6-7 5-8 5-11 6-7 6-1 6-0 5-10 6-4 6-3 5-10 6-0 6-6 6-4 6-5 6-4 6-1 6-3 6-7 6-3 5-9 6-2 6-1 6-1 6-4 6-5 6-1 6-3 6-5 6-1 6-0 6-5 6-5 5-10 6-1 6-2 5-8 6-0 6-0 6-2 6-1 6-1 5-11 6-4 5-11 6-0 6-3 6-6 6-4
WT. 320 205 270 260 261 330 209 188 315 243 195 187 272 222 185 235 310 251 260 210 200 291 289 230 190 235 312 220 261 330 203 300 308 203 324 320 243 242 193 208 200 204 205 176 198 211 205 255 224 245 240 309 255
AGE 24 25 25 27 22 22 21 23 29 22 27 22 24 35 26 28 26 25 30 25 22 32 26 24 28 25 24 26 29 31 26 28 31 25 24 31 25 31 23 30 23 25 24 23 24 27 24 22 25 27 31 26 25
EXP. 2 4 4 6 R R R 2 8 R 5 2 2 13 5 7 5 1 8 2 R 10 4 4 8 3 3 3 8 9 3 5 8 5 2 9 4 10 R 7 2 4 2 R 3 7 3 R 3 6 6 3 3
COLLEGE Illinois Georgia Tech Michigan Michigan Michigan Missouri LSU South Carolina Central Michigan Mississippi State South Carolina State Georgia Buffalo Michigan West Alabama Iowa Mississippi State Grand Valley State Cincinnati Hawaii Tulane Appalachian State Villanova Texas Tech LSU Iowa Florida State Clemson Texas Iowa State Kansas State South Florida Oregon State Florida Western Illinois California Texas A&M Connecticut LA Tech BYU Utah State Colorado Virginia Florida Middle Tennessee State Clemson Texas A&M Missouri S&T LSU Minnesota Oklahoma Eastern Michigan Western Kentucky
HOW ACQ. D7-19 FA-17 FA-20 T (SEA)-19 D5-20 CFA-20 D1-20 D6a-19 D1-13 D2-20 FA-20 D2a-19 FA-19 UFA-18 D5b-16 UFA-18 D2-16 FA-19 D3a-13 CFA-17 D7-20 FA-20 D2-17 D1-17 UFA-19 CFA-18 D3-18 D3b-18 UFA-19 FA-20 CFA-18 W (CLE)-18 FA-20 D4c-16 D3-19 UFA-16 FA-20 T (ARI)-13 D4-20 CFA-14 D6b-19 FA-20 D2b-19 CFA-20 T (DAL)-18 UFA-18 D4-18 CFA-20 CFA-18 UFA-19 FA-15 FA-17 FA-18
HOMETOWN Frankfort, Ill. Decatur, Ga. Pickerington, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Detroit, Mich. Philadelphia, Pa. Baton Rouge, La. Miami, Fla. Rochester, Mich. Starkville, Miss. Johnston, S.C. Bowman, Ga. Buffalo, N.Y. West Lawn, Pa. Pearson, Ga. Lorain, Ohio Houston, Miss. Kalamazoo, Mich. Cleveland Heights, Ohio Layton, Utah Laurel, Miss. Kingsport, Tenn. Kalamazoo, Mich. Tyler, Texas New Orleans, La. Sycamore, Ill. Virginia Beach, Va. Olney, Md. Dallas, Texas Houston, Texas Tampa, Fla. Bradenton, Fla. Portland, Ore. Fort Valley, Ga. St. Louis, Mo. Pacific Palisades, Calif. Sealy, Texas North Attleborough, Mass. Minden, La. Colton, Calif. Tulsa, Okla. Inglewood, Calif. Altavista, Va. Orlando, Fla McCombs, Miss. Fort Myers, Fla. Forney, Texas University City, Mo. Marrero, La. Gloster, Miss. Washington, Okla. Midland, Mich. Louisville, Ky.
DB LB
5-11 6-2
170 240
24 25
1 1
South Carolina State Vanderbilt
FA-19 FA-19
Holly Hill, S.C. Murfreesboro, Tenn.
T
6-5
311
25
3
Mississippi State
T (HOU)-19
Mendenhall, Miss.
DT CB
6-4 5-11
330 195
29 28
7 7
Colorado State-Pueblo Clemson
FA-19 UFA-19
Aurora, Colo. Allendale, S.C.
G OL RB
6-5 6-7 5-11
321 328 224
29 22 28
7 R 7
McGill TCU Oklahoma
D6b-14 D3-20 UFA-18
Montreal, Quebec New Canaan, Conn. San Diego, Calif.
HEAD COACH: Andy Reid OFFENSE: Eric Bieniemy (Offensive Coordinator); Joe Bleymaier (Pass Game Analyst/Asst. QBs); David Girardi (Offensive Quality Control); Andy Heck (Offensive Line); Mike Kafka (QBs/Pass Game Coordinator); Greg Lewis (Wide Receivers); Corey Matthaei (Asst. Offensive Line); Deland McCullough (Running Backs); Tom Melvin (Tight Ends).
DEFENSE: Steve Spagnuolo (Defensive Coordinator); Terry Bradden (Defensive Quality Control); Brendan Daly (Run Game Coordinator/Defensive Line); Connor Embree (Defensive Assistant); Matt House (Linebackers); Sam Madison (Defensive Backs/Cornerbacks); Dave Merritt (Defensive Backs); Britt Reid (Linebackers/Outside Linebackers); Alex Whittingham (Defensive Quality Control).
SPECIALISTS: Dave Toub (Assistant Head Coach/Special Teams Coordinator); Andy Hill (Asst. Special Teams). MISCELLANEOUS: Barry Rubin (Head Strength & Conditioning); Greg Carbin (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Travis Crittenden (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Ryan Reynolds (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Mike Frazier (Statistical Analysis Coordinator); Porter Ellett (Senior Asst. to Head Coach).
2020 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS POSITION-BY-POSITION ROSTER (As of September 5, 2020)
NO. 4 15
NAME Henne, Chad Mahomes, Patrick
POS. QB QB
HT. 6-3 6-3
WT. 222 230
NO. 25 42 34 31
NAME Edwards-Helaire, Clyde Sherman, Anthony Thompson, Darwin Williams, Darrel
POS. RB FB RB RB
HT. 5-8 5-10 5-8 5-11
WT. 209 242 200 224
NO. 17 10 6 13 11 14
NAME Hardman, Mecole Hill, Tyreek Kemp, Marcus Pringle, Byron Robinson, Demarcus Watkins, Sammy
POS. WR WR WR WR WR WR
HT. 5-10 5-10 6-4 6-1 6-1 6-1
WT. 187 185 210 203 203 211
NO. 48 87 83 82
NAME Keizer, Nick Kelce, Travis Seals-Jones, Ricky Yelder, Deon
POS. TE TE TE TE
HT. 6-4 6-5 6-5 6-4
WT. 251 260 243 255
NO. 73 79 72 67 70 62 75 71 77
NAME Allegretti, Nick Durant, Yasir Fisher, Eric Kilgore, Daniel Osemele, Kelechi Reiter, Austin Remmers, Mike Schwartz, Mitchell Wylie, Andrew
POS. G OL T C G C T T G
HT. 6-4 6-7 6-7 6-3 6-5 6-3 6-5 6-5 6-6
WT. 320 330 315 291 330 300 308 320 309
NO. 94 55 51 52 95 92 91 97 99 98
NAME Charlton, Taco Clark, Frank Danna, Mike Harris, Demone Jones, Chris Kpassagnon, Tanoh Nnadi, Derrick Okafor, Alex Saunders, Khalen Wharton, Tershawn
POS. DE DE DE DE DT DE DT DE DT DT
HT. 6-6 6-3 6-2 6-4 6-6 6-7 6-1 6-4 6-0 6-4
WT. 270 260 261 272 310 289 312 261 324 255
NO. 50 53 56 44 54
NAME Gay, Willie Hitchens, Anthony Niemann, Ben O'Daniel, Dorian Wilson, Damien
POS. LB LB LB LB LB
HT. 6-1 6-0 6-2 6-1 6-0
WT. 243 235 235 220 245
NO. 27 20 29 32 38 49 24 22 35 23
NAME Fenton, Rashad Hamilton, Antonio Keyes, BoPete Mathieu, Tyrann Sneed, L'Jarius Sorensen, Daniel Thompson, Tedric Thornhill, Juan Ward, Charvarius Watts, Armani
POS. CB CB CB S CB S S S CB S
HT. 5-11 6-0 6-1 5-9 6-1 6-2 6-0 6-0 6-1 5-11
WT. 188 195 200 190 193 208 204 205 198 205
NO. 7 5 41
NAME Butker, Harrison Townsend, Tommy Winchester, James
POS. K P LS
HT. 6-4 6-2 6-3
WT. 205 176 240
QUARTERBACKS (2) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 13 Michigan 35 4 Texas Tech 24 RUNNING BACKS (4) AGE EXP. COLLEGE R LSU 21 10 Connecticut 31 2 Utah State 23 3 LSU 25 WIDE RECEIVERS (6) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 2 Georgia 22 5 West Alabama 26 2 Hawaii 25 3 Kansas State 26 5 Florida 25 7 Clemson 27 TIGHT ENDS (4) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 1 Grand Valley State 25 8 Cincinnati 28 4 Texas A&M 25 3 Western Kentucky 25 OFFENSIVE LINE (9) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 2 Illinois 24 R Missouri 22 8 Central Michigan 29 10 Appalachian State 32 9 Iowa State 31 5 South Florida 28 8 Oregon State 31 9 California 31 3 Eastern Michigan 26 DEFENSIVE LINE (10) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 4 Michigan 25 6 Michigan 27 R Michigan 22 2 Buffalo 24 5 Mississippi State 26 4 Villanova 26 3 Florida State 24 8 Texas 29 2 Western Illinois 24 R Missouri S&T 22 LINEBACKERS (5) AGE EXP. COLLEGE R Mississippi State 22 7 Iowa 28 3 Iowa 25 3 Clemson 26 6 Minnesota 27 DEFENSIVE BACKS (10) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 2 South Carolina 23 5 South Carolina State 27 R Tulane 22 8 LSU 28 R LA Tech 23 7 BYU 30 4 Colorado 25 2 Virginia 24 3 Middle Tennessee State 24 3 Texas A&M 24 SPECIALISTS (3) AGE EXP. COLLEGE Georgia Tech 25 4 23 R Florida Oklahoma 31 6
HOMETOWN West Lawn, Pa. Tyler, Texas
HOW ACQ. UFA-18 D1-17
HOMETOWN Baton Rouge, La. North Attleborough, Mass. Tulsa, Okla. Marrero, La.
HOW ACQ. D1-20 T (ARI)-13 D6b-19 CFA-18
HOMETOWN Bowman, Ga. Pearson, Ga. CFA-17 Tampa, Fla. Fort Valley, Ga. Fort Myers, Fla.
HOW ACQ. D2a-19 D5b-16 Layton, Utah CFA-19 D4c-16 UFA-18
HOMETOWN Kalamazoo, Mich. Cleveland Heights, Ohio Sealy, Texas Louisville, Ky.
HOW ACQ. FA-19 D3a-13 FA-20 FA-18
HOMETOWN Frankfort, Ill. Philadelphia, Pa. Rochester, Mich. Kingsport, Tenn. Houston, Texas Bradenton, Fla. Portland, Ore. Pacific Palisades, Calif. Midland, Mich.
HOW ACQ. D7-19 CFA-20 D1-13 FA-20 FA-20 W (CLE)-18 FA-20 UFA-16 FA-17
HOMETOWN Pickerington, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Detroit, Mich. Buffalo, N.Y. Houston, Miss. Kalamazoo, Mich. Virginia Beach, Va. Dallas, Texas St. Louis, Mo. University City, Mo.
HOW ACQ. FA-20 T (SEA)-19 D5-20 FA-19 D2-16 D2-17 D3-18 UFA-19 D3-19 CFA-20
HOMETOWN Starkville, Miss. Lorain, Ohio Sycamore, Ill. Olney, Md. Gloster, Miss.
HOW ACQ. D2-20 UFA-18 CFA-18 D3b-18 UFA-19
HOMETOWN Miami, Fla. Johnston, S.C. Laurel, Miss. New Orleans, La. Minden, La. Colton, Calif. Inglewood, Calif. Altavista, Va. McCombs, Miss. Forney, Texas
HOW ACQ. D6a-19 FA-20 D7-20 UFA-19 D4-20 CFA-14 FA-20 D2b-19 T (DAL)-18 D4-18
HOMETOWN Decatur, Ga. Orlando, Fla Washington, Okla.
HOW ACQ. FA-17 CFA-20 FA-15
2020 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS UNOFFICIAL DEPTH CHART (As of September 5, 2020) OFFENSE WR LT LG C RG RT TE WR QB RB FB
10 72 70 62 77 71 87 14 15 25 42
Tyreek Hill Eric Fisher Kelechi Osemele Austin Reiter Andrew Wylie Mitchell Schwartz Travis Kelce Sammy Watkins Patrick Mahomes Clyde Edwards-Helaire Anthony Sherman
17 75 73 67 79 75 48 11 4 31
Mecole Hardman Mike Remmers Nick Allegretti Daniel Kilgore Yasir Durant Mike Remmers Nick Keizer Demarcus Robinson Chad Henne Darrel Williams
LDE LDT RDT RDE LB LB LCB RCB CB FS SS
92 95 91 55 53 54 35 27 20 49 32
Tanoh Kpassagnon Chris Jones Derrick Nnadi Frank Clark Anthony Hitchens Damien Wilson Charvarius Ward Rashad Fenton Antonio Hamilton Daniel Sorensen Tyrann Mathieu
97 98 99 94 56 50 29 38 27 22 24
Alex Okafor Tershawn Wharton Khalen Saunders Taco Charlton Ben Niemann Willie Gay BoPete Keyes L'Jarius Sneed Rashad Fenton Juan Thornhill Tedric Thompson
P K H LS PR KR
5 7 5 41 17 17
Tommy Townsend Harrison Butker Tommy Townsend James Winchester Mecole Hardman Mecole Hardman
6 Marcus Kemp
83 Ricky Seals-Jones 13 Byron Pringle 34 Darwin Thompson
DEFENSE 51 Mike Danna
52 Demone Harris 44 Dorian O'Daniel
23 Armani Watts
SPECIALISTS 5 Tommy Townsend
10 Tyreek Hill 10 Tyreek Hill
Rookies Underlined
Nick Allegretti Yasir Durant Clyde Edwards-Helaire Mecole Hardman Tyreek Hill Travis Kelce Tanoh Kpassagnon Tyrann Mathieu Ben Niemann Derrick Nnadi Alex Okafor Kelechi Osemele Austin Reiter Khalen Saunders Charvarius Ward Andrew Wylie
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE al-uh-GRET-ee YAH-seer EE-lair MUH-cole tie-REEK KEL-see TAWN-o pass-N-yo TY-run MATH-you NEE-man NAH-dee OH-kuh-for kah-LETCH-ee oh-SEM-uh-lee RIGHT-er KAH-len CHAR-Vair-EE-us WHY-lee
82 Deon Yelder
HOW THE 2020 CHIEFS ROSTER WAS BUILT (As of September 5, 2020) YEAR DRAFT
FREE AGENTS
2014
S Daniel Sorensen (CFA)
2015
LS James Winchester (FA)
2016 DT Chris Jones (2) WR Demarcus Robinson (4c) WR Tyreek Hill (5b)
T Mitchell Schwartz (UFA)
2017 QB Patrick Mahomes (1) DE Tanoh Kpassagnon (2)
K Harrison Butker (FA) WR Marcus Kemp (CFA) G Andrew Wylie (FA) QB Chad Henne (UFA) LB Anthony Hitchens (UFA) LB Ben Niemann (CFA) WR Byron Pringle (CFA) WR Sammy Watkins (UFA) RB Darrel Williams (CFA) TE Deon Yelder (FA)
2013 T Eric Fisher (1) TE Travis Kelce (3a)
2018 DT Derrick Nnadi (3a) LB Dorian O'Daniel (3b) S Armani Watts (4)
2019 WR Mecole Hardman (2a) S Juan Thornhill (2b) DT Khalen Saunders (3) CB Rashad Fenton (6a) RB Darwin Thompson (6b) G Nick Allegretti (7)
DE Demone Harris (FA) TE Nick Keizer (FA) S Tyrann Mathieu (UFA) DE Alex Okafor (UFA) LB Damien Wilson (UFA)
2020 RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire (1) LB Willie Gay (2) CB L'Jarius Sneed (4) DE Mike Danna (5) CB BoPete Keyes (7)
DE Taco Charlton (FA) OL Yasir Durant (CFA) CB Antonio Hamilton (FA) C Daniel Kilgore (FA) G Kelechi Osemele (FA) T Mike Remmers (FA) TE Ricky Seals-Jones (FA) S Tedric Thompson (FA) P Tommy Townsend (CFA) DT Tershawn Washington (CFA)
TOTAL ROSTER BREAKDOWN 21 Draft Choices
7 Unrestricted Free Agents 13 Free Agents 8 College Free Agents
TRADE/WAIVERS
FB Anthony Sherman (T/ARI)
CB Charvarius Ward (T/DAL) C Austin Reiter (W/CLE)
DE Frank Clark (T/SEA)
1 Waiver Claims 3 Trades
2020 CHIEFS ROSTER BY EXPERIENCE 13th Year (1) QB Chad Henne 10th Year (2) C Daniel Kilgore FB Anthony Sherman 9th Year (2) G Kelechi Osemele T Mitchell Schwartz 8th Year (5) T Eric Fisher TE Travis Kelce S Tyrann Mathieu DE Alex Okafor T Mike Remmers 7th Year (3) LB Anthony Hitchens S Daniel Sorensen WR Sammy Watkins
(As of September 5, 2020) 6th Year (3) 3rd Year (10) DE Frank Clark WR Marcus Kemp LB Damien Wilson LB Ben Niemann LS James Winchester DT Derrick Nnadi LB Dorian O'Daniel WR Byron Pringle 5th Year (5) CB Antonio Hamilton CB Charvarius Ward WR Tyreek Hill S Armani Watts DT Chris Jones RB Darrel Williams OL Austin Reiter G Andrew Wylie WR Demarcus Robinson TE Deon Yelder 4th Year (6) K Harrison Butker DE Taco Charlton LB Tanoh Kpassagnon QB Patrick Mahomes TE Ricky Seals-Jones S Tedric Thompson
1st Year (1) TE Nick Keizer Rookie (8) DE Mike Danna OL Yasir Durant RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire LB Willie Gay CB BoPete Keyes CB L'Jarius Sneed P Tommy Townsend DT Tershawn Wharton
2nd Year (7) G Nick Allegretti CB Rashad Fenton WR Mecole Hardman DE Demone Harris DT Khalen Saunders RB Darwin Thompson S Juan Thornhill
2020 CHIEFS ROSTER BY DRAFT ROUND [Overall selection in brackets] 1st Round (5) [1] T Eric Fisher (2013) [4] WR Sammy Watkins (2014-BUF) [10] QB Patrick Mahomes (2017) [28] DE Taco Charlton (2017-DAL) [32] RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire (2020)
2nd Round (9)
[37] T Mitchell Schwartz (2012-CLE) [37] DT Chris Jones (2016) [56] WR Mecole Hardman (2019) [57] QB Chad Henne (2008)-MIA) [59] DE Tanoh Kpassagnon (2017) [60] Kelechi Osemele (2012-BAL) [63] DE Frank Clark (2015-SEA) [63] S Juan Thornhill (2019) [63] LB Willie Gay (2020)
3rd Round (5) [63] TE Travis Kelce (2013) [69] S Tyrann Mathieu (2013-ARI) [75] DT Derrick Nnadi (2018) [84] DT Khalen Saunders (2019) [100] LB Dorian O'Daniel (2018)
4th Round (7) [103] DE Alex Okafor (2013-ARI) [111] S Tedric Thompson (2017-SEA) [119] LB Anthony Hitchens (2014-DAL) [124] S Armani Watts (2018) [126] WR Demarcus Robinson (2016) [127] LB Damien Wilson (2015-DAL) [138] CB L'Jarius Sneed (2020)
5th Round (4) [136] FB Anthony Sherman (2011-ARI) [163] C Daniel Kilgore (2011-SF) [165] WR Tyreek Hill (2016) [177] DE Mike Danna (2020)
6th Round (2) [201] CB Rashad Fenton (2019) [210] RB Darwin Thompson (2019)
7th Round (4) [216] G Nick Allegretti (2019) [222] C Austin Reiter (2015-CLE) [233] K Harrison Butker (2017-CAR) [237] CB BoPete Keyes (2020)
Undrafted (17) T Mike Remmers (2012-DEN), LS James Winchester (2013-PHI), S Daniel Sorensen (2014), CB Antonio Hamilton (2016-OAK), WR Marcus Kemp (2017), TE Ricky Seals-Jones (2017-ARI), G Andrew Wylie (2017-IND), DE Demone Harris,TE Nick Keizer (2018-BAL), LB Ben Niemann (2018), CB Charvarius Ward (2018DAL), TE Deon Yelder (2018-NO), WR Byron Pringle (2018), (2018-TB), RB Darrel Williams (2018), OL Yasir Durant (2020), P Tommy Townsend (2020), DT Tershawn Wharton (2020)
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 2020 TRANSACTIONS (as of 9/5/20) Date Jan. 8 Jan. 9 Jan. 9 Feb. 4 Feb. 4 Feb. 4 Feb. 4 Feb. 4 Feb. 4 Feb. 4 Feb. 4 Feb. 4 Mar. 16 Mar. 19 April 2 April 2 April 2 April 6 April 6 April 8 April 9 April 13 April 14 April 15 April 23 April 24 April 24 April 25 April 25 April 25 April 28 April 28 April 28 April 28 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 April 30 May 3 May 3 May 6 May 6 June 5 July 6 June 9 July 10 July 10 July 15 July 26 July 26 July 26 July 26 July 26 July 26 July 26 July 26 July 26 July 29
Player ..................................................................... Transaction LANIER, Anthony, DE..............................Reserve/Future signing MACK, Alize, TE ......................................Reserve/Future signing MARSHALL, Marcus, RB .........................Reserve/Future signing FORTSON, Jody, WR....................................................... Signed HOYETT, Braxton, DT ...................................................... Signed KEIZER, Nick, TE ............................................................. Signed LAMMONS, Chris, DB ...................................................... Signed LAWRENCE, Devaroe, DT ............................................... Signed MCGUIRE, Elijah, RB ....................................................... Signed SHURMUR, Kyle, QB ....................................................... Signed SMITH, Emmanuel, LB ..................................................... Signed WEBER, Mike, RB ............................................................ Signed JONES, Chris, DT .......................... Designated the franchise tag HENNE, Chad, QB ........................................................... Signed HAMILTON, Antonio, CB .................................................. Signed REMMERS, Mike, OL ....................................................... Signed TA’AMU, Jordan, QB ........................................................ Signed PENNEL, Mike, DT ........................................................... Signed SHERMAN, Anthony, FB .................................................. Signed ROBINSON, Demarcus, WR ............................................ Signed SEALS-JONES, Ricky, TE ................................................ Signed NEWSOME, Tyler, P ........................................................ Signed BREELAND, Bashaud, CB ............................................... Signed WASHINGTON, DeAndré, RB .......................................... Signed EDWARDS-HELAIRE, Clyde, RB ................. Drafted in 1st Round GAY, Willie, LB ............................................ Drafted in 2nd Round NIANG, Lucas, OL ....................................... Drafted in 3rd Round SNEED, L’Jarius, CB ....................................Drafted in 4th Round DANNA, Mike, DE ........................................Drafted in 5th Round KEYES, BoPete, CB .....................................Drafted in 7th Round LANIER, Anthony, DE................................................... Released MARSHALL, Marcus, RB .............................................. Released SHURMUR, Kyle, QB ................................................... Released COLQUITT, Dustin, P ................................................... Released BACCELLIA, Andre, WR................................................... Signed BAILEY, Hakeem, DB ....................................................... Signed CLEMONS, Rodney, DB ................................................... Signed COBB, Omari, LB ............................................................. Signed DAVIS, Javaris, DB.......................................................... Signed DURANT, Yasir, OL .......................................................... Signed FAIR, Jovahn, OL ............................................................. Signed FFRENCH, Maurice, WR .................................................. Signed HIFO, Aleva, WR .............................................................. Signed HILL, Lavert, DB ............................................................... Signed JULIUS, Jalen, DB ............................................................ Signed LIPSCOMB, Kalija, WR .................................................... Signed SHELTON-MOSLEY, Justice, WR ................................... Signed TOWNSEND, Tommy, P .................................................. Signed WHARTON, Tershawn, DE .............................................. Signed WHITE, Cody, WR ........................................................... Signed WILLIAMS, Darryl, OL ..................................................... Signed WRIGHT, Bryan, LB ........................................................ Signed MACK, Alize, TE ........................................................... Released WEBER, Mike, RB ........................................................ Released CHARLTON, Taco, DE ..................................................... Signed PATTERSON, Shea, QB .................................................. Signed DAVIS, Felton, WR ....................................................... Released MAHOMES, Patrick, QB .............................................. Re-signed SOROH, Andrew, S .......................................................... Signed MOORE, Matt, QB ............................................................ Signed PATTERSON, Shea ..................................................... Released JONES, Chris, DT ....................................................... Re-signed EDWARDS-HELAIRE, Clyde, RB ..................................... Signed GAY, Willie, LB ................................................................. Signed NIANG, Lucas, OL ............................................................ Signed SNEED, L’Jarius, CB ........................................................ Signed DANNA, Mike, DE ............................................................ Signed KEYES, BoPete, CB ......................................................... Signed DAVIS, Javaris, DB....................................................... Released WHITE, Cody, WR ....................................................... Released HIFO, Aleva, WR .......................... Placed on Reserve/COVID-19 FAIR, Jovahn, G ........................................................... Released
July 29 July 29 July 29 July 29 July 29 July 29 July 29 July 29 July 30 July 30 July 31 Aug 7 Aug 7 Aug 16 Aug 16 Aug 16 Aug 19 Aug 19 Aug 22 Aug 22 Aug 27 Aug 27 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 5
HOYETT, Braxton, DT .................................................. Released JULIUS, Jalen, DB........................................................ Released LOVETT, John, FB ....................................................... Released NEWSOME, Tyler, P .................................................... Released WRIGHT, Bryan, LB ..................................................... Released DUVERNAY-TARDIF, Laurent, G ................... Elected to Opt Out WILLIAMS, Damien, RB ................................. Elected to Opt Out OSEMELE, Kelechi, G ...................................................... Signed SOROH, Andrew, S ...................................................... Released THOMPSON, Tedric, S..................................................... Signed HIFO, Aleva, WR .......................................................... Released NIANG, Lucas, OL .......................................... Elected to Opt Out HOYETT, Braxton, DT ...................................................... Signed BROWN, Alex, CB ............................. Placed on Reserve/Injured HIFO, Aleva, WR .............................................................. Signed HELM, Daniel, TE ............................................................. Signed BACCELLIA, Andre, WR .............................................. Released HIFO, Aleva, WR .......................................................... Released BAILEY, Hakeem, CB ................................................... Released COLBERT, Adrian, S ........................................................ Signed SMITH, Emmanuel, LB ................................................. Released KILGORE, Daniel, C ......................................................... Signed BARTON, Jackson, T ................................................... Released CLEMONS, Rodney, DB ............................................... Released COBB, Omari, LB ......................................................... Released COLBERT, Adrian, S .................................................... Released DIETER, Gehrig, WR .................................................... Released FFRENCH, Maurice, WR .............................................. Released FORTSON, Jody, WR................................................... Released HARRIS, Darius, LB ..................................................... Released HELM, Daniel, TE ......................................................... Released HILL, Lavert, DB ........................................................... Released HOYETT, Braxton, DT .................................................. Released HUNTER, Ryan, G ....................................................... Released LAMMONS, Chris, CB .................................................. Released LAWRENCE, Devaroe, DT ........................................... Released LIPSCOMB, Kalija, WR ................................................ Released MCGUIRE, Elijah, RB ................................................... Released MOORE, Matt, QB ........................................................ Released SENAT, Greg, T ........................................................... Released SHELTON-MOSLEY, Justice, WR ................................ Released SPEAKS, Breeland, DE ................................................ Released TA’AMU, Jordan, QB .................................................... Released WARD, Tim, DE............................................................ Released WASHINGTON, DeAndré, RB ...................................... Released WILLIAMS, Darryl, OL .................................................. Released RANKIN, Martinas, T ............................. Placed on Reserve/PUP BREELAND, Bashaud, CB ......... Placed on Reserve/Suspension PENNEL, Mike, DT ..................... Placed on Reserve/Suspension
2019 REGULAR SEASON CHIEFS GAME-BY-GAME OFFENSE
FIRST DOWNS Total Rushing Passing Penalty THIRD DOWNS Attempts Converted Percentage FOURTH DOWNS Attempts Converted Percentage
09/08
09/15
09/22
@ JAX
09/29
@ OAK
BAL
@ DET
24 9 13 2
24 2 18 4
27 9 14 4
29 8 16 5
10/06
10/13
10/17
IND
HOU
@ DEN
18 3 12 3
20 5 11 4
14 5 7 2
10/27
11/03
11/10
11/18
12/01
12/08
12/15
12/22
12/29
GB
MIN
@ TEN
@ LAC
OAK
@ NE
DEN
@ CHI
LAC
Totals
21 4 16 1
17 2 15 0
28 6 20 2
18 7 9 2
22 8 10 4
20 3 13 4
27 7 17 3
25 6 15 4
16 9 5 2
350 93 211 46
10 14 9 9 12 8 15 11 13 14 13 11 16 11 11 10 187 5 8 5 4 4 4 5 6 4 7 6 7 5 6 6 7 89 50.0% 57.1% 55.6% 44.4% 33.3% 50.0% 33.3% 54.5% 30.8% 50.0% 46.2% 63.6% 31.3% 54.5% 54.5% 70.0% 47.6% 1 1 2 1 1 0 0.0% 100.0% 50.0%
0 0 0
1 1 100.0%
0 0 0
324 57 5.7
309 47 6.6
271 58 4.7
337 58 5.8
377 58 6.5
530 78 6.8
310 60 5.2
259 59 4.4
123 25 4.9
36 14 2.6
53 11 4.8
80 27 3.0
88 20 4.4
147 18 8.2
97 25 3.9
130 27 4.8
363 37 27 0 374 1.0 11
315 42 24 0 315 0.0 0
288 39 22 0 321 4.0 33
256 35 19 1 273 1.0 17
191 30 20 0 193 1.0 2
249 36 24 0 267 2.0 18
230 35 25 0 275 5.0 45
433 51 36 0 446 2.0 13
22 30 52 11
25 27 52 10
25 24 49 11
14 22 36 10
11 19 30 10
27 20 47 12
20 24 44 9
18 25 43 13
5 55
10 114
4 31
7 51
11 125
11 79
6 46
3 30
FUMBLES Number Lost
0 0
1 1
3 0
4 3
1 1
1 1
1 0
PUNTING Net Yards Punts Net Avg. Gross Avg.
51 1 31.0 51.0
196 5 37.2 39.2
88 2 34.0 44.0
91 2 46.0 45.5
155 4 38.8 38.8
119 2 54.5 59.5
0 0 0
0 0 0
TOT. OFFENSE Net Yards Plays Avg./Play
491 60 8.2
467 68 6.9
503 63 8.0
438 67 6.5
RUSHING Net Yards Rush. Att. Avg./Att.
113 26 4.3
31 22 1.4
140 25 5.6
PASSING Net Yards Attempts Completions Intercepted Gross Yards Sacked Yards Lost
378 34 25 0 378 0.0 0
436 44 30 0 443 2.0 7
ADVANCES Rushes Completions Totals Total Drives
26 25 51 10
PENALTIES Number Yards
SCORING Points Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT TD Rushing TD Passing TD KO Returns TD Punt Returns TD Sp. Teams TD Def. Returns FG Attempts FG Made Safety 2-Pt Attempts 2-Pt Made Time of Possession
40 28 33 17 0 0 6 28 23 7 7 0 10 3 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 3 4 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 0 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 31:15 32:35 27:16
34 0 13 7 14 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 3 2 0 0 0 26:05
13 24 3 17 7 0 7 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 22:45 20:12
1 2 1 1 100.0% 50.0%
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
10 6 60.0%
346 70 4.9
419 62 6.8
350 63 5.6
336 48 7.0
6,067 976 6.2
96 29 3.3
75 29 2.6
92 25 3.7
106 29 3.7
162 23 7.0
1,569 375 4.2
180 32 19 1 182 1.0 2
163 29 15 0 175 1.0 12
271 40 26 1 283 1.0 12
327 34 27 1 340 3.0 13
244 33 23 0 251 1.0 7
174 25 16 1 174 0.0 0
4,498 576 378 5 4,690 25.0 192
25 36 61 12
27 19 46 12
29 15 44 9
29 26 55 12
25 27 52 9
29 23 52 8
23 16 39 10
375 378 753 168
4 25
9 80
8 102
0 0
10 136
5 45
9 71
5 39
107 1,029
1 1
3 1
2 1
1 0
0 0
2 1
0 0
0 0
0 0
20 10
266 6 42.3 44.3
154 3 51.3 51.3
251 5 44.4 50.2
26 1 26.0 26.0
240 6 40.0 40.0
83 2 40.0 41.5
131 4 26.2 32.8
79 2 35.5 39.5
93 2 37.5 46.5
103 2 41.5 51.5
2,126 49 36.9 43.4
30 10 10 7 3 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 3 3 0 0 0 32:13
24 0 17 0 7 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 26:47
26 7 3 10 6 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 4 4 0 0 0 31:48
0 0 0
1 1 1 0 0.0% 100.0%
32 24 40 10 7 0 3 10 14 9 14 10 10 9 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 5 1 1 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 37:52 28:58 28:19
23 3 17 3 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 3 0 0 0 34:21
23 26 31 451 6 7 3 90 9 10 7 177 8 14 103 0 9 7 81 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 16 0 2 2 1 30 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 2 1 38 3 2 1 34 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 33:33 33:24 23:56 471:19
2019 POSTSEASON CHIEFS GAME-BY-GAME OFFENSE 01/12
01/19
02/02
HOU
TEN
SF
Totals
FIRST DOWNS Total Rushing Passing Penalty
29 9 16 4
27 10 14 3
26 12 13 1
82 31 43 8
THIRD DOWNS Attempts Converted Percentage
8 2 25.0%
10 6 60.0%
14 6 42.9%
32 14 43.8%
0 0 0
1 1 100.0%
3 2 66.7%
4 3 75.0%
TOT. OFFENSE Net Yards Plays Avg./Play
434 57 7.6
405 64 6.3
397 75 5.3
1,236 196 6.3
RUSHING Net Yards Rush. Att. Avg./Att.
118 21 5.6
113 26 4.3
129 30 4.3
360 77 4.7
PASSING Net Yards Attempts Completions Intercepted Gross Yards Sacked Yards Lost
316 35 23 0 321 1.0 5
292 36 23 0 294 2.0 2
268 41 26 2 286 4.0 18
876 112 72 2 901 7.0 25
ADVANCES Rushes Completions Totals Total Drives
21 23 44 13
26 23 49 9
30 26 56 10
77 72 149 32
PENALTIES Number Yards
4 37
9 61
4 24
17 122
FUMBLES Number Lost
2 1
1 0
3 0
6 1
PUNTING Net Yards Punts Net Avg. Gross Avg.
123 4 22.4 30.8
122 3 31.0 40.7
100 2 40.0 50.0
345 9 29.7 38.3
51 0 28 13 10 0 2 5 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 25:25
35 7 14 0 14 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 29:50
31 7 3 0 21 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 33:13
117 14 45 13 45 0 6 10 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 88:28
FOURTH DOWNS Attempts Converted Percentage
SCORING Points Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT TD Rushing TD Passing TD KO Returns TD Punt Returns TD Sp. Teams TD Def. Returns FG Attempts FG Made Safety 2-Pt Attempts 2-Pt Made Time of Possession
2019 REGULAR SEASON CHIEFS GAME-BY-GAME DEFENSE
FIRST DOWNS Total Rushing Passing Penalty THIRD DOWNS Attempts Converted Percentage FOURTH DOWNS Attempts Converted Percentage
09/08
09/15
09/22
@ JAX
09/29
@ OAK
BAL
@ DET
18 3 13 2
19 5 12 2
29 15 14 0
29 8 17 4
10/06
10/13
10/17
IND
HOU
@ DEN
25 12 7 6
35 12 20 3
15 4 8 3
10/27
11/03
11/10
11/18
12/01
12/08
12/15
12/22
12/29
GB
MIN
@ TEN
@ LAC
OAK
@ NE
DEN
@ CHI
LAC
Totals
21 5 15 1
17 4 12 1
19 9 7 3
23 6 14 3
19 8 11 0
17 6 8 3
15 3 10 2
18 7 8 3
25 8 14 3
344 115 190 39
10 14 13 13 14 12 13 13 15 8 15 9 12 14 12 15 202 5 6 5 5 5 5 1 8 5 2 5 3 2 5 5 8 75 50.0% 42.9% 38.5% 38.5% 35.7% 41.7% 7.7% 61.5% 33.3% 25.0% 33.3% 33.3% 16.7% 35.7% 41.7% 53.3% 37.1% 0 0 0
1 4 1 3 100.0% 75.0%
0 0 0
2 3 3 2 2 1 100.0% 66.7% 33.3%
0 0 0
1 1 1 2 3 3 3 4 31 1 1 1 1 1 2 16 0 0 100.0% 0.0% 100.0% 50.0% 33.3% 33.3% 0.0% 50.0% 51.6%
TOT. OFFENSE Net Yards Plays Avg./Play
428 50 8.6
307 60 5.1
452 78 5.8
447 73 6.1
331 74 4.5
472 83 5.7
205 64 3.2
374 64 5.8
308 66 4.7
371 49 7.6
438 73 6.0
332 57 5.8
278 62 4.5
251 57 4.4
234 59 4.0
366 74 4.9
5,594 1,043 5.4
RUSHING Net Yards Rush. Att. Avg./Att.
81 16 5.1
129 19 6.8
203 32 6.3
186 35 5.3
180 45 4.0
192 41 4.7
71 21 3.4
118 26 4.5
96 27 3.6
225 26 8.7
93 19 4.9
122 25 4.9
94 22 4.3
52 15 3.5
101 22 4.6
108 25 4.3
2,051 416 4.9
PASSING Net Yards Attempts Completions Intercepted Gross Yards Sacked Yards Lost
347 33 27 1 350 1.0 3
178 38 23 2 198 3.0 20
249 43 22 0 267 3.0 18
261 34 21 0 291 4.0 30
151 29 18 1 151 0.0 0
280 42 30 2 280 0.0 0
134 34 21 0 213 9.0 79
256 33 23 0 305 5.0 49
212 38 19 0 220 1.0 8
146 19 13 0 181 4.0 35
345 52 28 4 353 2.0 8
210 30 20 2 222 2.0 12
184 37 20 1 204 3.0 20
199 40 18 1 208 2.0 9
133 34 18 0 157 3.0 24
258 46 31 2 281 3.0 23
3,543 582 352 16 3,881 45.0 338
ADVANCES Rushes Completions Totals Total Drives
16 27 43 10
19 23 42 11
32 22 54 10
35 21 56 13
45 18 63 10
41 30 71 10
21 21 42 13
26 23 49 10
27 19 46 12
26 13 39 10
19 28 47 12
25 20 45 9
22 20 42 12
15 18 33 8
22 18 40 8
25 31 56 9
416 352 768 167
PENALTIES Number Yards
10 71
7 52
7 60
8 48
7 50
10 70
4 33
4 25
3 25
8 64
9 60
12 99
5 25
7 72
7 50
8 40
116 844
FUMBLES Number Lost
1 1
3 0
0 0
2 2
0 0
1 1
3 1
0 0
1 0
1 1
3 0
2 1
0 0
2 0
1 0
0 0
20 7
PUNTING Net Yards Punts Net Avg. Gross Avg.
96 2 48.0 48.0
264 6 36.0 44.0
153 3 41.3 51.0
131 3 42.7 43.7
123 3 40.7 41.0
0 0 0.0 0.0
280 7 32.9 40.0
106 3 29.3 35.3
353 8 42.0 44.1
204 4 49.8 51.0
143 3 40.3 47.7
77 2 38.5 38.5
165 4 36.3 41.3
171 4 43.3 42.8
139 3 43.0 46.3
134 3 37.7 44.7
2,539 58 41.9 43.8
26 7 6 0 13 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 1 0 28:45
10 10 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 27:25
23 7 3 6 7 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 28:12
35 0 13 7 15 0 2 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 22:08
17 3 6 8 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 3 0 1 1 31:02
SCORING Points Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT TD Rushing TD Passing TD KO Returns TD Punt Returns TD Sp. Teams TD Def. Returns FG Attempts FG Made Safety 2-Pt Attempts 2-Pt Made Time of Possession
28 30 6 10 3 0 7 10 15 7 0 0 4 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 3 0 0 3 0 0 0 32:44 33:55
19 7 6 0 6 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 4 0 0 0 37:15
31 6 31 3 6 14 20 0 0 3 0 0 8 14 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 39:48 27:47 33:13
9 16 3 3 21 308 7 80 0 0 0 0 3 7 67 0 0 0 6 3 7 57 0 0 9 3 7 104 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 14 0 0 0 1 1 2 21 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 1 26 0 1 1 1 1 21 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 9 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 31:41 25:39 26:27 26:36 36:04 488:41
2019 POSTSEASON CHIEFS GAME-BY-GAME DEFENSE 01/12
01/19
02/02
HOU
TEN
SF
Totals
FIRST DOWNS Total Rushing Passing Penalty
23 4 18 1
20 4 13 3
21 8 13 0
64 16 44 4
THIRD DOWNS Attempts Converted Percentage
15 5 33.3%
10 3 30.0%
8 3 37.5%
33 11 33.3%
FOURTH DOWNS Attempts Converted Percentage
5 1 20.0%
3 2 66.7%
1 0 0.0%
9 3 33.3%
TOT. OFFENSE Net Yards Plays Avg./Play
442 78 5.7
295 58 5.1
351 54 6.5
1,088 190 5.7
RUSHING Net Yards Rush. Att. Avg./Att.
94 21 4.5
85 23 3.7
141 22 6.4
320 66 4.8
PASSING Net Yards Attempts Completions Intercepted Gross Yards Sacked Yards Lost
348 52 31 0 388 5.0 40
210 32 22 0 237 3.0 27
210 31 20 2 219 1.0 9
768 115 73 2 844 9.0 76
ADVANCES Rushes Completions Totals Total Drives
21 31 52 13
23 22 45 9
22 20 42 10
66 73 139 32
PENALTIES Number Yards
7 87
8 85
5 45
20 217
FUMBLES Number Lost
2 1
0 0
1 0
3 1
PUNTING Net Yards Punts Net Avg. Gross Avg.
137 3 45.3 45.7
139 3 44.0 46.3
86 2 43.0 43.0
362 8 42.8 45.3
31 21 3 7 0 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 34:35
24 10 7 0 7 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 30:10
20 3 7 10 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 26:47
75 34 17 17 7 0 3 5 0 0 1 0 5 4 0 0 0 91:32
SCORING Points Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT TD Rushing TD Passing TD KO Returns TD Punt Returns TD Sp. Teams TD Def. Returns FG Attempts FG Made Safety 2-Pt Attempts 2-Pt Made Time of Possession
2019 REGULAR SEASON CHIEFS INDIVIDUAL SINGLE-GAME HIGHS Points 24 Patrick Mahomes at Raiders 09/15 Touchdowns 3 Sammy Watkins at Jaguars 09/08 Passes Attempted 50 Patrick Mahomes at Titans 11/10 Passes Completed 36 Patrick Mahomes at Titans 11/10 Completion Percentage 79.4 Patrick Mahomes vs. Broncos 12/15 Passing Yards 446 Patrick Mahomes at Titans 11/10 Yards Per Attempt 11.5 Patrick Mahomes at Jaguars 09/08 Touchdown Passes 4 Patrick Mahomes at Raiders 09/15 Pass Receptions 11 Travis Kelce vs. Broncos 12/15 Tyreek Hill at Titans 11/10 Receiving Yards 198 Sammy Watkins at Jaguars 09/08 Touchdown Receptions 3 Sammy Watkins at Jaguars 09/08 Rushing Yards 125 Damien Williams vs. Vikings 11/03 Rushing Attempts 19 Damien Williams at Titans 11/10 Rushing Average 10.4 Damien Williams vs. Vikings 11/03 Rushing Touchdowns 2 Damien Williams vs. Chargers 12/29 Darrel Williams at Lions 09/29 Yards From Scrimmage 198 Sammy Watkins at Jaguars 09/08 Combined Net Yards 198 Sammy Watkins at Jaguars 09/08 Interceptions Made 1 Tyrann Mathieu vs. Chargers 12/29 Daniel Sorensen vs. Chargers 12/29 Juan Thornhill vs. Broncos 12/15 Bashaud Breeland at Patriots 12/08 Tyrann Mathieu vs. Raiders 12/01 Juan Thornhill vs. Raiders 12/01 Rashad Fenton at Chargers 11/18 Tyrann Mathieu at Chargers 11/18 Derrick Nnadi at Chargers 11/18 Daniel Sorensen at Chargers 11/18 Juan Thornhill vs. Texans 10/13 Charvarius Ward vs. Texans 10/13 Tyrann Mathieu vs. Colts 10/06 Bashaud Breeland at Raiders 09/15 Charvarius Ward at Raiders 09/15 Frank Clark at Jaguars 09/08 Interceptions Thrown 1 Patrick Mahomes vs. Chargers 12/29 Patrick Mahomes vs. Broncos 12/15 Patrick Mahomes at Patriots 12/08 Patrick Mahomes at Chargers 11/18 Patrick Mahomes vs. Texans 10/13 INT Return Yards 46 Juan Thornhill vs. Raiders 12/01 Tackles 10 Tyrann Mathieu vs. Texans 10/13 Sacks 2.0 Chris Jones at Titans 11/10 Tanoh Kpassagnon vs. Packers 10/27 Frank Clark at Broncos 10/17 Anthony Hitchens at Broncos 10/17 Alex Okafor at Broncos 10/17 Punts 6 Dustin Colquitt at Chargers 11/18 Dustin Colquitt at Broncos 10/17 Punts Inside the 20 5 Dustin Colquitt at Chargers 11/18 Punting Average 59.5 Dustin Colquitt vs. Texans 10/13 Punt Returns 5 De'Anthony Thomas at Raiders 09/15 Punt Return Yards 36 Mecole Hardman at Broncos 10/17 Kickoff Returns 4 Mecole Hardman at Titans 11/10 Mecole Hardman vs. Vikings 11/03 Kickoff Return Yards 117 Mecole Hardman vs. Chargers 12/29 Field Goals Attempted 5 Harrison Butker at Titans 11/10
Field Goals Made
4
Harrison Butker Harrison Butker Harrison Butker
2019 REGULAR SEASON KANSAS CITY CHIEFS LONGEST PLAYS Run From Scrimmage 91 Damien Williams Touchdown Run 91 Damien Williams Passing Long 83 Patrick Mahomes Touchdown Pass Long 83 Patrick Mahomes Pass Reception 83 Mecole Hardman Touchdown Reception 83 Mecole Hardman Interception Return 46 Juan Thornhill Longest INT Return for TD 46 Juan Thornhill Longest Opponentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Fumble Return 100 Bashaud Breeland Punt Return 36 Mecole Hardman Kickoff Return 104 Mecole Hardman Punt 68 Dustin Colquitt Field Goal 56 Harrison Butker Field Goal Attempt 50 Harrison Butker Harrison Butker
at Titans vs. Vikings at Jaguars
11/10 11/03 09/08
vs. Vikings 11/03 vs. Vikings 11/03 vs. Ravens 09/22 vs. Ravens 09/22 vs. Ravens 09/22 vs. Ravens 09/22 vs. Raiders 12/01 vs. Raiders 12/01 at Lions 09/29 at Broncos 10/17 vs. Chargers 12/29 vs. Texans 10/13 at Bears 12/22 vs. Packers 10/27 vs. Texans 10/13
2019 POSTSEASON CHIEFS INDIVIDUAL SINGLE-GAME HIGHS Points 30 Patrick Mahomes Touchdowns 3 Travis Kelce Damien Williams Passes Attempted 41 Patrick Mahomes Passes Completed 26 Patrick Mahomes Completion Percentage 65.7 Patrick Mahomes Passing Yards 321 Patrick Mahomes Yards Per Attempt 9.2 Patrick Mahomes Touchdown Passes 5 Patrick Mahomes Pass Receptions 10 Travis Kelce Receiving Yards 134 Travis Kelce Touchdown Receptions 3 Travis Kelce Rushing Yards 104 Damien Williams Rushing Attempts 17 Damien Williams Damien Williams Rushing Average 7.7 Patrick Mahomes Rushing Touchdowns 2 Damien Williams Yards From Scrimmage 134 Travis Kelce Combined Net Yards 162 Mecole Hardman Interceptions Made 1 Bashaud Breeland Kendall Fuller Interceptions Thrown 2 Patrick Mahomes INT Return Yards 1 Bashaud Breeland Tackles 6 Bashaud Breeland Tyrann Mathieu Daniel Sorensen Damien Wilson Bashaud Breeland Sacks 3.0 Frank Clark Punts 3 Dustin Colquitt Dustin Colquitt Punts Inside the 20 2 Dustin Colquitt Punting Average 50.0 Dustin Colquitt Punt Returns 1 Mecole Hardman Jordan Lucas Mecole Hardman Tyreek Hill Punt Return Yards 7 Mecole Hardman Kickoff Returns 6 Mecole Hardman Kickoff Return Yards 142 Mecole Hardman Field Goals Attempted 1 Harrison Butker Harrison Butker Field Goals Made 1 Harrison Butker Harrison Butker
vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs.
Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 49ers 02/02 49ers 02/02 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 49ers 02/02 49ers 02/02 Titans 01/19 Titans 01/19 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 49ers 02/02 49ers 02/02 49ers 02/02 49ers 02/02 49ers 02/02 Titans 01/19 Titans 01/19 Titans 01/19 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 Titans 01/19 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 49ers 02/02 Titans 01/19 Titans 01/19 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 Titans 01/19 Texans 01/12 Texans 01/12 49ers 02/02 Texans 01/12 49ers 02/02 Texans 01/12
2019 POSTSEASON KANSAS CITY CHIEFS LONGEST PLAYS Run From Scrimmage 38 Damien Williams Touchdown Run 38 Damien Williams Passing Long 60 Patrick Mahomes Touchdown Pass Long 60 Patrick Mahomes Pass Reception 60 Sammy Watkins Touchdown Reception 60 Sammy Watkins Interception Return 1 Bashaud Breeland Longest Opponentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Fumble Return 18 Darwin Thompson Punt Return 7 Mecole Hardman Kickoff Return 58 Mecole Hardman Punt 51 Dustin Colquitt
vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs.
49ers 02/02 49ers 02/02 Titans 01/19 Titans 01/19 Titans 01/19 Titans 01/19 49ers 02/02 Texans 01/12 Titans 01/19 Texans 01/12 49ers 02/02
Field Goal
31
Harrison Butker
vs. 49ers 02/02
2019 REGULAR SEASON OPPONENTS INDIVIDUAL SINGLE-GAME HIGHS Points 20 Deshaun Watson vs. Texans 10/13 Touchdowns 3 Mark Ingram II vs. Ravens 09/22 Passes Attempted 52 Philip Rivers at Chargers 11/18 Passes Completed 31 Philip Rivers vs. Chargers 12/29 Completion Percentage 88.0 Gardner Minshew II at Jaguars 09/08 Passing Yards 353 Philip Rivers at Chargers 11/18 Yards Per Attempt 35.0 James White at Patriots 12/08 Touchdown Passes 3 Kirk Cousins vs. Vikings 11/03 Aaron Rodgers vs. Packers 10/27 Matthew Stafford at Lions 09/29 Pass Receptions 9 Keenan Allen vs. Chargers 12/29 Austin Ekeler vs. Chargers 12/29 DeAndre Hopkins vs. Texans 10/13 Receiving Yards 159 Aaron Jones vs. Packers 10/27 Touchdown Receptions 2 Aaron Jones vs. Packers 10/27 Kenny Golladay at Lions 09/29 Rushing Yards 188 Derrick Henry at Titans 11/10 Rushing Attempts 29 Marlon Mack vs. Colts 10/06 Rushing Average 8.2 Josh Jacobs at Raiders 09/15 Rushing Touchdowns 3 Mark Ingram II vs. Ravens 09/22 Yards From Scrimmage 226 Aaron Jones vs. Packers 10/27 Combined Net Yards 226 Aaron Jones vs. Packers 10/27 Interceptions Made 1 Michael Davis vs. Chargers 12/29 Justin Simmons vs. Broncos 12/15 J.C. Jackson at Patriots 12/08 Rayshawn Jenkins at Chargers 11/18 Tashaun Gipson Sr. vs. Texans 10/13 Interceptions Thrown 4 Philip Rivers at Chargers 11/18 INT Return Yards 15 Michael Davis vs. Chargers 12/29 Tackles 11 Tracy Walker at Lions 09/29 Sacks 2.0 Shelby Harris vs. Broncos 12/15 Za'Darius Smith vs. Packers 10/27 Punts 8 Britton Colquitt vs. Vikings 11/03 Punts Inside the 20 3 Colby Wadman vs. Broncos 12/15 Punting Average 51.0 Brett Kern at Titans 11/10 Sam Koch vs. Ravens 09/22 Punt Returns 5 Mike Hughes vs. Vikings 11/03 Punt Return Yards 29 Mike Hughes vs. Vikings 11/03 Kickoff Returns 4 Brandon Bolden at Patriots 12/08 Kickoff Return Yards 76 Brandon Bolden at Patriots 12/08 Field Goals Attempted 4 Michael Badgley at Chargers 11/18 Adam Vinatieri vs. Colts 10/06 Field Goals Made 4 Adam Vinatieri vs. Colts 10/06 2019 REGULAR SEASON OPPONENTS LONGEST PLAYS Run From Scrimmage 68 Derrick Henry at Titans 11/10 Touchdown Run 68 Derrick Henry at Titans 11/10 Passing Long 69 Gardner Minshew II at Jaguars 09/08 Touchdown Pass Long 67 Aaron Rodgers vs. Packers 10/27 Pass Reception 69 DJ Chark Jr. at Jaguars 09/08 Touchdown Reception 67 Aaron Jones vs. Packers 10/27 Interception Return 15 Michael Davis vs. Chargers 12/29 Longest Opponentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Fumble Return 53 Rashaan Evans at Titans 11/10 Punt Return 11 Dwayne Harris at Raiders 09/15 Kickoff Return 30 Zach Pascal vs. Colts 10/06 Dwayne Harris at Raiders 09/15 Punt 65 Brett Kern at Titans 11/10
Field Goal Field Goal Attempt
53 46
Matt Prater Ka'imi Fairbairn
at Lions vs. Texans
09/29 10/13
2019 POSTSEASON OPPONENTS INDIVIDUAL SINGLE-GAME HIGHS Points 18 Deshaun Watson Touchdowns 1 Kyle Juszczyk Raheem Mostert Anthony Firkser Derrick Henry Dennis Kelly Darren Fells Kenny Stills Deshaun Watson Passes Attempted 52 Deshaun Watson Passes Completed 31 Deshaun Watson Completion Percentage 67.7 Ryan Tannehill Passing Yards 388 Deshaun Watson Yards Per Attempt 28.0 Brett Kern Touchdown Passes 2 Ryan Tannehill Deshaun Watson Pass Receptions 9 DeAndre Hopkins Receiving Yards 118 DeAndre Hopkins Touchdown Receptions 1 Kyle Juszczyk Anthony Firkser Dennis Kelly Darren Fells Kenny Stills Rushing Yards 69 Derrick Henry Rushing Attempts 19 Derrick Henry Rushing Average 4.8 Raheem Mostert Rushing Touchdowns 1 Raheem Mostert Derrick Henry Deshaun Watson Yards From Scrimmage 118 DeAndre Hopkins Combined Net Yards 118 DeAndre Hopkins Interceptions Made 1 Tarvarius Moore Fred Warner Interceptions Thrown 2 Jimmy Garoppolo INT Return Yards 7 Tarvarius Moore Tackles 8 Jimmie Ward Sacks 1.5 DeForest Buckner Punts 3 Brett Kern Bryan Anger Punts Inside the 20 2 Bryan Anger Punting Average 46.3 Brett Kern Punt Returns 1 Richie James Jr. Kalif Raymond DeAndre Carter Punt Return Yards 11 DeAndre Carter Kickoff Returns 4 Richie James Jr. Kickoff Return Yards 61 Richie James Jr. Kalif Raymond Field Goals Attempted 2 Robbie Gould Ka'imi Fairbairn Field Goals Made 2 Robbie Gould
vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs.
Texans 49ers 49ers Titans Titans Titans Texans Texans Texans Texans Texans Titans Texans Titans Titans Texans Texans Texans 49ers Titans Titans Texans Texans Titans Titans 49ers 49ers Titans Texans Texans Texans 49ers 49ers 49ers 49ers 49ers 49ers Titans Texans Texans Titans 49ers Titans Texans Texans 49ers 49ers Titans 49ers Texans 49ers
01/12 02/02 02/02 01/19 01/19 01/19 01/12 01/12 01/12 01/12 01/12 01/19 01/12 01/19 01/19 01/12 01/12 01/12 02/02 01/19 01/19 01/12 01/12 01/19 01/19 02/02 02/02 01/19 01/12 01/12 01/12 02/02 02/02 02/02 02/02 02/02 02/02 01/19 01/12 01/12 01/19 02/02 01/19 01/12 01/12 02/02 02/02 01/19 02/02 01/12 02/02
2019 POSTSEASON OPPONENTS LONGEST PLAYS Run From Scrimmage 32 Touchdown Run 5 Passing Long 54 Touchdown Pass Long 54
vs. vs. vs. vs.
49ers Texans Texans Texans
02/02 01/12 01/12 01/12
Deebo Samuel Deshaun Watson Deshaun Watson Deshaun Watson
Pass Reception Touchdown Reception Interception Return Punt Return Kickoff Return Punt Field Goal Field Goal Attempt
54 54 7 11 26 53 42 51
Kenny Stills Kenny Stills Tarvarius Moore DeAndre Carter DeAndre Carter Brett Kern Robbie Gould Ka'imi Fairbairn
vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs.
Texans Texans 49ers Texans Texans Titans 49ers Texans
01/12 01/12 02/02 01/12 01/12 01/19 02/02 01/12
DATE OPPONENT 9/8 at Jaguars 9/15 9/15
at Raiders at Raiders
10/6 11/3 11/10 12/15
vs. Colts vs. Vikings at Titans vs. Broncos
DATE OPPONENT 11/3 vs. Vikings 12/29
vs. Chargers
DATE OPPONENT 9/8 at Jaguars 9/15
at Raiders
9/22
vs. Ravens
9/29
at Lions
10/6
vs. Colts
11/10
at Titans
12/15
vs. Broncos
DATE 9/8 10/27 11/18 12/1
OPPONENT at Jaguars vs. Packers at Chargers vs. Raiders
DATE OPPONENT 9/22 vs. Ravens 9/29
at Lions
10/6 10/13 11/10
vs. Colts vs. Texans at Titans
12/1
vs. Raiders
DATE OPPONENT 10/27 vs. Packers 11/18
at Chargers
2019 REGULAR SEASON BIG YARDAGE 100-YARD PASS RECEIVERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. 9 198 Sammy Watkins 7 107 Travis Kelce 6 172 Demarcus Robinson 6 103 Byron Pringle 6 140 Tyreek Hill 11 157 Tyreek Hill 11 142 Travis Kelce 100-YARD RUSHERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. 12 125 Damien Williams 12 124 Damien Williams 300-YARD PASSERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. 33 378 Patrick Mahomes 44 443 Patrick Mahomes 37 374 Patrick Mahomes 42 315 Patrick Mahomes 39 321 Patrick Mahomes 50 446 Patrick Mahomes 34 340 Patrick Mahomes
GAMES AVG. 22.0
LG 68T
TD 3
15.3 28.7
34 44T
1 2
17.2 23.3 14.3 12.9
28 41 39 21
1 1 1 0
AVG. 10.4
LG 91T
TD 1
10.3
84T
2
COMP. 25
LG 68T
TD 3
30
44T
4
27
83T
3
24
33
0
22
31
1
36
63T
3
27
41T
2
LG 69 67T 37 24
TD 1 2 0 0
LG 21
TD 3
14
0
30 26 68T
0 1 2
35
0
LG 67T
TD 3
50
1
2019 OPPONENTS BIG YARDAGE GAMES 100-YARD PASS RECEIVERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. AVG. 4 146 36.5 DJ Chark Jr. 7 159 22.7 Aaron Jones 8 108 13.5 Austin Ekeler 7 100 14.3 Darren Waller 100-YARD RUSHERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. AVG. 16 103 6.4 Mark Ingram II 26 125 4.8 Kerryon Johnson 29 132 4.6 Marlon Mack 26 116 4.5 Carlos Hyde 23 188 8.2 Derrick Henry 17 104 6.1 Josh Jacobs 300-YARD PASSERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. COMP. 33 305 23 Aaron Rodgers 52 353 28 Philip Rivers
DATE OPPONENT 1/12 vs. Texans 1/19 vs. Titans 2/2
vs. 49ers
DATE OPPONENT 2/2 vs. 49ers DATE OPPONENT 1/12 vs. Texans
DATE OPPONENT 1/12 vs. Texans DATE OPPONENT 1/12 vs. Texans
2019 POSTSEASON BIG YARDAGE GAMES 100-YARD PASS RECEIVERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. AVG. 10 134 13.4 Travis Kelce 7 114 16.3 Sammy Watkins 9 105 11.7 Tyreek Hill 100-YARD RUSHERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. AVG. 17 104 6.1 Damien Williams 300-YARD PASSERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. COMP. 35 321 23 Patrick Mahomes 2019 OPPONENTS BIG YARDAGE GAMES 100-YARD PASS RECEIVERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. AVG. 9 118 13.1 DeAndre Hopkins 300-YARD PASSERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. COMP. 52 388 31 Deshaun Watson
LG 28 60T
TD 3 1
44
0
LG 38T
TD 1
LG 48
TD 5
LG 38
TD 0
LG 54T
TD 2
2019 REGULAR SEASON 100.0+ PASSER RATING CHIEFS PASSING GAMES ATT. CMP. YDS. CMP.% YDS/ATT. YDS/CMP. TD 33 25 378 75.76% 11.45 15.12 3 44 30 443 68.18% 10.07 14.77 4 37 27 374 72.97% 10.11 13.85 3 36 24 267 66.67% 7.42 11.13 2 35 25 275 71.43% 7.86 11.00 1 50 36 446 72.00% 8.92 12.39 3 34 27 340 79.41% 10.00 12.59 2 33 23 251 69.70% 7.61 10.91 2
DATE 9/8 9/15 9/22 10/27 11/3 11/10 12/15 12/22
OPPONENT at Jaguars at Raiders vs. Ravens vs. Packers vs. Vikings at Titans vs. Broncos at Bears
PLAYER Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes Matt Moore Matt Moore Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes
DATE 9/8 9/29 10/27
OPPONENT at Jaguars at Lions vs. Packers
2019 OPPONENTS 100.0+ PASSER RATING PASSING GAMES PLAYER ATT. CMP. YDS. CMP.% YDS/ATT. YDS/CMP. 22 275 88.00% 11.00 12.50 Gardner Minshew II 25 34 21 291 61.76% 8.56 13.86 Matthew Stafford 33 23 305 69.70% 9.24 13.26 Aaron Rodgers
TD% INT INT% LONG SACK/LOST RATING 9.09% 0 0.00% 68t 0/0 143.20 9.09% 0 0.00% 44t 2/7 131.20 8.11% 0 0.00% 83t 1/11 132.00 5.56% 0 0.00% 30t 2/18 107.10 2.86% 0 0.00% 41 5/45 103.90 6.00% 0 0.00% 63t 2/13 119.20 5.88% 1 2.94% 41t 3/13 115.70 6.06% 0 0.00% 19 1/7 112.10
TD TD% INT INT% LONG SACK/LOST RATING 2 8.00% 1 4.00% 69 1/3 122.50 3 8.82% 0 0.00% 34 4/30 118.60 3 9.09% 0 0.00% 67t 5/49 129.00
*Need minimum of 20 attempts to qualify
DATE 1/12 1/19
DATE 1/19
OPPONENT vs. Texans vs. Titans
2019 POSTSEASON 100.0+ PASSER RATING CHIEFS PASSING GAMES PLAYER ATT. CMP. YDS. CMP.% YDS/ATT. YDS/CMP. TD TD% INT INT% LONG SACK/LOST RATING 23 321 65.71% 9.17 13.96 5 14.29% 0 0.00% 48 0/0 134.60 Patrick Mahomes 35 23 294 63.89% 8.17 12.78 3 8.33% 0 0.00% 60t 2/2 117.10 Patrick Mahomes 36
OPPONENT vs. Titans
2019 OPPONENTS 100.0+ PASSER RATING PASSING GAMES ATT. CMP. YDS. CMP.% YDS/ATT. YDS/CMP. TD TD% INT INT% LONG SACK/LOST RATING 31 21 209 67.74% 6.74 9.95 2 6.45% 0 0.00% 37 3/27 108.10
PLAYER Ryan Tannehill
*Need minimum of 20 attempts to qualify
DATE 09/08 09/15 09/22 09/29 10/06 10/13 10/17 10/27 11/03 11/10 11/18 [bye] 12/01 12/08 12/15 12/22 12/29
OPPONENT @ Jacksonville @ Oakland Baltimore @ Detroit Indianapolis Houston @ Denver Green Bay Minnesota @ Tennessee @ L.A. Chargers -Oakland @ New England Denver @ Chicago L.A. Chargers
TOTAL 1 6 7 8 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 1 1 1 1
2019 REGULAR SEASON OFFENSE *POINTS RUSH PASS SCORED 1 1 1 10 9 1 15 7 1 13 9 1 T-10 10 2 11 6 1 7 2 1 12 2 1 8 2 1 7 2 1 8 2 1 14 3 2 13 3 1 15 3 1 16 2 1 16 3 1 16 3 1
TOTAL 1 7 3 1
2019 POSTSEASON OFFENSE *POINTS RUSH PASS SCORED 1 1 1 4 7 5 3 3 2 1 1 1
DEFENSE TOTAL 1 32 32 32 32 32 32 31 32 31 32 30 31 30 31 31 31
RUSH 1 T-6 T-18 28 24 28 25 27 26 26 26 20 22 25 26 28 27
PASS 1 32 T-31 31 32 32 32 31 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 31 31
*POINTS SCORED 1 29 30 25 20 27 25 T-23 T-25 22 30 28 27 28 28 29 24
*Points per game
DATE 12/31 01/12 01/19 02/02
OPPONENT Houston Tennessee San Francisco
*Points per game
DEFENSE TOTAL 1 2 4 1
RUSH 1 4 4 1
PASS 1 1 3 1
*POINTS SCORED 1 1 3 1
2019 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS PATRICK MAHOMES
PASSING: DATE OPP.
ATT
CMP
YDS
CMP%
Y/A
Y/C
TD
TD%
INT
INT%
LG
SK/YD
RATE
09/08 at Jacksonville
33
25
378
75.8%
11.5
15.1
3
9.1%
0
0.0%
68t
0/0
143.2
09/15 at Oakland
44
30
443
68.2%
10.1
14.8
4
9.1%
0
0.0%
44t
2/7
131.2
09/22 Baltimore
37
27
374
73.0%
10.1
13.9
3
8.1%
0
0.0%
83t
1/11
132.0
09/29 at Detroit
42
24
315
57.1%
7.5
13.1
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
33
0/0
81.0
10/06 Indianapolis
39
22
321
56.4%
8.2
14.6
1
2.6%
0
0.0%
31
4/33
91.9
10/13 Houston
35
19
273
54.3%
7.8
14.4
3
8.6%
1
2.9%
52
1/17
96.5
10/17 at Denver
11
10
76
90.9%
6.9
7.6
1
9.1%
0
0.0%
21t
0/0
125.8
INACTIVE INACTIVE
10/27 Green Bay 11/03 Minnesota 11/10 at Tennessee
50
36
446
72.0%
8.9
12.4
3
6.0%
0
0.0%
63t
2/13
119.2
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
32
19
182
59.4%
5.7
9.6
1
3.1%
1
3.1%
31
1/2
72.7
12/01 Oakland
29
15
175
51.7%
6.0
11.7
1
3.4%
0
0.0%
47
1/12
81.8
12/08 at New England
40
26
283
65.0%
7.1
10.9
1
2.5%
1
2.5%
48t
1/12
83.6
12/15 Denver
34
27
340
79.4%
10.0
12.6
2
5.9%
1
2.9%
41t
3/13
115.7
12/22 at Chicago
33
23
251
69.7%
7.6
10.9
2
6.1%
0
0.0%
19
1/7
112.1
12/29 L.A. Chargers
25
16
174
64.0%
7.0
10.9
1
4.0%
1
4.0%
47
0/0
81.1
484
319
4,031
65.9%
8.3
12.6
26
5.4%
5
1.0%
83t
17/127
105.3
ATT
CMP
YDS
CMP%
Y/A
Y/C
TD
TD%
INT
INT%
LG
SK/YD
RATE
1
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
39.6
TOTALS PASSING: DATE OPP. 09/08 at Jacksonville
MATT MOORE
DID DID DID DID DID
09/15 at Oakland 09/22 Baltimore 09/29 at Detroit 10/06 Indianapolis 10/13 Houston
NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT
PLAY PLAY PLAY PLAY PLAY
10/17 at Denver
19
10
117
52.6%
6.2
11.7
1
5.3%
0
0.0%
57t
1/2
89.1
10/27 Green Bay
36
24
267
66.7%
7.4
11.1
2
5.6%
0
0.0%
30t
2/18
107.1
11/03 Minnesota
35
25
275
71.4%
7.9
11.0
1
2.9%
0
0.0%
41
5/45
103.9
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
4.4%
0
0.0%
57t
8/65
100.9
DID NOT PLAY DID NOT PLAY
11/10 at Tennessee 11/18 at L.A. Chargers 12/01 Oakland
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
12/15 Denver 12/22 at Chicago
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
DID NOT PLAY
12/29 L.A. Chargers TOTALS
0
DID NOT PLAY DID NOT PLAY
12/08 at New England
91
59
659
64.8%
7.2
11.2
ATT
CMP
YDS
CMP%
Y/A
Y/C
TD
TD%
INT
INT%
LG
SK/YD
RATE
09/08 at Jacksonville
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
09/15 at Oakland
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
09/22 Baltimore
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
09/29 at Detroit
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
10/06 Indianapolis
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
10/13 Houston
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
10/17 at Denver
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
10/27 Green Bay
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
11/03 Minnesota
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
11/10 at Tennessee
1
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
39.6
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
12/01 Oakland
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
12/08 at New England
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
12/15 Denver
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
12/22 at Chicago
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
12/29 L.A. Chargers
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
1
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
0
0/0
39.6
PASSING: DATE OPP.
TOTALS
4
DUSTIN COLQUITT
PASSING: DATE OPP.
CHAD HENNE ATT
CMP
YDS
CMP%
Y/A
09/15 at Oakland 09/22 Baltimore 09/29 at Detroit 10/06 Indianapolis 10/13 Houston 10/17 at Denver 10/27 Green Bay 11/03 Minnesota 11/10 at Tennessee 11/18 at L.A. Chargers 12/01 Oakland 12/08 at New England 12/15 Denver 12/22 at Chicago 12/29 L.A. Chargers 0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
ATT
CMP
YDS
CMP%
Y/A
Y/C
PASSING: DATE OPP.
TD%
INT
INT%
LG
SK/YD
RATE
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
INT
INT%
LG
SK/YD
RATE
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
KYLE SHURMUR TD
TD%
PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD DID NOT PLAY NOT ON ROSTER PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD
09/08 at Jacksonville 09/15 at Oakland 09/22 Baltimore 09/29 at Detroit 10/06 Indianapolis 10/13 Houston 10/17 at Denver 10/27 Green Bay 11/03 Minnesota 11/10 at Tennessee 11/18 at L.A. Chargers 12/01 Oakland 12/08 at New England 12/15 Denver 12/22 at Chicago 12/29 L.A. Chargers TOTALS
TD
DID NOT PLAY RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED DID NOT PLAY INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
09/08 at Jacksonville
TOTALS
Y/C
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
2019 POSTSEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS PATRICK MAHOMES
PASSING: DATE OPP.
ATT
CMP
YDS
CMP%
Y/A
Y/C
TD
TD%
INT
INT%
LG
SK/YD
RATE
01/12 Houston
35
23
321
65.7%
9.2
14.0
5
14.3%
0
0.0%
48
0/0
134.6
01/19 Tennessee
36
23
294
63.9%
8.2
12.8
3
8.3%
0
0.0%
60t
2/2
117.1
02/02 San Francisco
41
26
286
63.4%
7.0
11.0
2
4.9%
2
4.9%
44
4/18
79.9
112
72
901
64.3%
8.0
12.5
10
8.9%
2
1.8%
60t
6/20
111.5
ATT
CMP
YDS
CMP%
Y/A
Y/C
TD
TD%
INT
INT%
LG
SK/YD
RATE
01/12 Houston
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
1/5
0.0
01/19 Tennessee
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
02/02 San Francisco
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
0
1/5
0.0
ATT
CMP
YDS
CMP%
Y/A
Y/C
TD%
INT
INT%
LG
SK/YD
RATE
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
INT
INT%
LG
SK/YD
RATE
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
TD%
INT
INT%
LG
SK/YD
RATE
0.0%
0
0.0%
--
0/0
0.0
TOTALS PASSING: DATE OPP.
TOTALS
SAMMY WATKINS
PASSING: DATE OPP.
CHAD HENNE
01/19 Tennessee 02/02 San Francisco TOTALS
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
ATT
CMP
YDS
CMP%
Y/A
Y/C
PASSING: DATE OPP.
0
KYLE SHURMUR
01/19 Tennessee 02/02 San Francisco 0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
ATT
CMP
YDS
CMP%
Y/A
Y/C
0
PASSING: DATE OPP.
TD%
MATT MOORE TD
DID NOT PLAY INACTIVE DID NOT PLAY
01/12 Houston 01/19 Tennessee 02/02 San Francisco TOTALS
TD
PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD
01/12 Houston
TOTALS
TD
INACTIVE DID NOT PLAY INACTIVE
01/12 Houston
0
0
0
0.0%
0.0
0.0
0
2019 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS RUSHING: DATE OPP.
MECOLE HARDMAN
TYREEK HILL
TRAVIS KELCE
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
09/08 at Jacksonville
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
5
5.0
5
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/15 at Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/22 Baltimore
1
7
7.0
7
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/29 at Detroit
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/06 Indianapolis
1
-6
-6.0
-6
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/13 Houston
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/17 at Denver
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/27 Green Bay
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
5
5.0
5
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
11/03 Minnesota
1
7
7.0
7
0
1
5
5.0
5
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
11/10 at Tennessee
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
3
3.0
3
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/01 Oakland
1
9
9.0
9
0
1
-4
-4.0
-4
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/08 at New England
0
0
0.0
--
0
2
8
4.0
5
0
1
4
4.0
4t
1
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
12/15 Denver
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
1
1.0
1
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/22 at Chicago
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/29 L.A. Chargers
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
TOTALS
4
17
4.3
9
0
8
23
2.9
5
0
1
4
4.0
4t
1
RUSHING: DATE OPP.
PATRICK MAHOMES
LESEAN MCCOY
MATT MOORE
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
09/08 at Jacksonville
1
2
2.0
2
0
10
81
8.1
31
0
1
-1
-1.0
-1
0
09/15 at Oakland
1
-1
-1.0
-1
0
11
23
2.1
6
0
09/22 Baltimore
4
9
2.3
11
0
8
54
6.8
25
1
09/29 at Detroit
6
54
9.0
25
0
11
56
5.1
39
1
10/06 Indianapolis
3
17
5.7
14
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/13 Houston
1
-1
-1.0
-1
0
8
44
5.5
17
0
10/17 at Denver
1
2
2.0
2
0
12
64
5.3
22
0
1
-1
-1.0
-1
0
9
40
4.4
9
0
1
3
3.0
3
0
3
9
3.0
7
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
7
29
4.1
8
1
-1
0
-1
0
3
0
INACTIVE INACTIVE
10/27 Green Bay 11/03 Minnesota
INACTIVE
11/10 at Tennessee
0
0
0.0
--
0
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
5
59
11.8
24
0
12/01 Oakland
3
25
8.3
13t
1
5
10
2.0
6
1
12/08 at New England
6
6
1.0
5
0
11
39
3.5
13
0
12/15 Denver
3
11
3.7
7
0
6
16
2.7
10
0
12/22 at Chicago
2
14
7.0
12t
1
12/29 L.A. Chargers
7
21
3.0
11
0
43
218
5.1
25
2
101
NO.
TOTALS RUSHING: DATE OPP.
DID DID DID DID DID
INACTIVE DID NOT PLAY
ANTHONY SHERMAN
465
1
-1
-1.0
DID NOT PLAY DID NOT PLAY 1
-1
-1.0
DID NOT PLAY
4.6
AVG
PLAY PLAY PLAY PLAY PLAY
DID NOT PLAY DID NOT PLAY
39
4
5
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
0
0
0.0
--
0
DE'ANTHONY THOMAS YDS
NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT
LG
-1
-0.2
DARWIN THOMPSON
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
09/08 at Jacksonville
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/15 at Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
1
1.0
1
0
09/22 Baltimore
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
3
8
2.7
8
0
09/29 at Detroit
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/06 Indianapolis
1
2
2.0
2
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/13 Houston
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
4
4.0
4
0
--
0
10/17 at Denver
2
7
3.5
5
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/27 Green Bay
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
--
0
11/03 Minnesota
0
0
0.0
--
0
NOT ON ROSTER
11/10 at Tennessee
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
-1
0
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
12/01 Oakland
1
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
11
44
4.0
9
1
12/08 at New England
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
4
7
1.8
4
0
12/15 Denver
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
8
38
4.8
12
0
12/22 at Chicago
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
5
14
2.8
8
0
12/29 L.A. Chargers
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
4
17
4.3
6
0
TOTALS
4
9
2.3
5
0
37
128
3.5
12
1
NOT ON ROSTER
1
4
4.0
INACTIVE 0
0
0.0
INACTIVE 0
0
0.0
INACTIVE 1
-1
-1.0
INACTIVE
4
0
RUSHING: DATE OPP.
SPENCER WARE NO.
YDS
AVG
SAMMY WATKINS
LG
TD
DAMIEN WILLIAMS
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
09/08 at Jacksonville
Colts
0
0
0.0
--
0
13
26
2.0
6
1
09/15 at Oakland
Colts
0
0
0.0
--
0
9
8
0.9
5
0
09/22 Baltimore
NOT ON ROSTER
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/29 at Detroit
NOT ON ROSTER
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/06 Indianapolis
Colts
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/13 Houston
Colts
INACTIVE INACTIVE
10/17 at Denver
NOT ON ROSTER
10/27 Green Bay
NOT ON ROSTER
0
11/03 Minnesota
NOT ON ROSTER
0
0
11/10 at Tennessee
NOT ON ROSTER
2
12
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
NOT ON ROSTER
0
0
12/01 Oakland
NOT ON ROSTER
0
9
23
2.6
6
0
1
6
6.0
6
0
9
7
0.8
4
0
--
0
7
30
4.3
9
1
0.0
--
0
12
125
10.4
91t
1
6.0
11
0
19
77
4.1
15
0
0.0
--
0
4
7
1.8
3
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0.0
INACTIVE INACTIVE
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
12/08 at New England
5
11
2.2
6
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/15 Denver
7
26
3.7
5
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/22 at Chicago
5
14
2.8
5
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
16
65
4.1
12
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
12
124
10.3
84t
2
2
12
6.0
11
0
111
498
4.5
91t
5
RESERVE/INJURED
12/29 L.A. Chargers TOTALS
17
51
NO.
YDS
RUSHING:
3.0
6
0
DARREL WILLIAMS
DATE
OPP.
AVG
LG
TD
09/08
at Jacksonville
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/15
at Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/22
Baltimore
9
62
6.9
41
0
09/29
at Detroit
8
13
1.6
8
2
10/06
Indianapolis
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/13
Houston
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/17
at Denver
2
1
0.5
1
0
10/27
Green Bay
2
10
5.0
8
0
11/03
Minnesota
1
1
1.0
1
0
11/10
at Tennessee
2
6
3.0
5
0
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
11
35
3.2
6t
1
12/01
Oakland
13
2.2
15
0
12/08
at New England
12/15
Denver
12/22
at Chicago
12/29
L.A. Chargers
TOTALS
6
RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED 41
141
3.4
41
3
2019 POSTSEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS RUSHING: DATE OPP.
MECOLE HARDMAN
TYREEK HILL
TRAVIS KELCE
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
01/12 Houston
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
4
4.0
4
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
01/19 Tennessee
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
7
7.0
7
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
02/02 San Francisco
1
-6
-6.0
-6
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
2
2.0
2
0
TOTALS
1
-6
-6.0
-6
0
2
11
5.5
7
0
1
2
2.0
2
0
RUSHING: DATE OPP.
PATRICK MAHOMES
DARWIN THOMPSON
SAMMY WATKINS
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
01/12 Houston
7
53
7.6
21
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
14
14.0
14
0
01/19 Tennessee
7
54
7.7
27t
1
1
7
7.0
7
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
02/02 San Francisco
10
29
2.9
13
1
1
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
TOTALS
24
136
5.7
27t
2
2
7
3.5
7
0
1
14
14.0
14
0
NO.
YDS
RUSHING:
DAMIEN WILLIAMS
DATE
OPP.
AVG
LG
01/12
Houston
12
47
3.9
26
2
01/19
Tennessee
17
45
2.6
8
1
02/02
San Francisco
17
104
6.1
38t
1
46
196
4.3
38t
4
TOTALS
TD
2019 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS RECEIVING: DATE OPP.
BLAKE BELL
MECOLE HARDMAN
TYREEK HILL
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
09/08 at Jacksonville
1
7
7.0
7
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
2
16
8.0
8
0
09/15 at Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
0
4
61
15.3
42t
1
09/22 Baltimore
1
1
1.0
1
0
2
97
48.5
83t
1
09/29 at Detroit
0
0
0.0
--
0
2
9
4.5
7
0
10/06 Indianapolis
0
0
0.0
--
0
4
79
19.8
31
0
10/13 Houston
0
0
0.0
--
0
4
45
11.3
14
0
5
80
16.0
46t
2
10/17 at Denver
0
0
0.0
--
0
2
28
14.0
21t
1
3
74
24.7
57t
1
10/27 Green Bay
0
0
0.0
--
0
2
55
27.5
30t
1
6
76
12.7
21
0
11/03 Minnesota
1
2
2.0
2
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
6
140
23.3
41
1
11/10 at Tennessee
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
63
63.0
63t
1
11
157
14.3
39
1
2
13
6.5
9
0
0
0
0.0
--
0 0
INACTIVE
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
12/01 Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
5
55
11.0
17
12/08 at New England
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
48
48.0
48t
1
6
62
10.3
21
0
12/15 Denver
2
41
20.5
30
0
1
10
10.0
10
0
5
67
13.4
41t
2
12/22 at Chicago
2
15
7.5
10
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
5
72
14.4
19
0
12/29 L.A. Chargers
1
1
1.0
1
0
1
30
30.0
30
0
4
61
15.3
47
0
TOTALS
8
67
8.4
30
0
26
538
20.7
83t
6
58
860
14.8
57t
7
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
09/08 at Jacksonville
3
88
29.3
42
0
1
12
12.0
12
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/15 at Oakland
7
107
15.3
34
1
3
0
0.0
5
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/22 Baltimore
7
89
12.7
21
0
3
26
8.7
14t
1
1
7
7.0
7
0
09/29 at Detroit
7
85
12.1
18
0
2
33
16.5
23
0
1
13
13.0
13
0
10/06 Indianapolis
4
70
17.5
24
0
2
23
11.5
21
0
6
103
17.2
28
1
10/13 Houston
4
58
14.5
18
0
2
0
0.0
4
0
2
24
12.0
19
0
10/17 at Denver
6
44
7.3
13
0
2
12
6.0
6
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/27 Green Bay
4
63
15.8
29t
1
4
23
5.8
10
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
11/03 Minnesota
7
62
8.9
17
0
1
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
11/10 at Tennessee
7
75
10.7
17
1
0
0
0.0
--
0
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
7
92
13.1
31
1
4
28
7.0
16
0
1
9
9.0
9
0
12/01 Oakland
5
90
18.0
47
0
3
20
6.7
9
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/08 at New England
7
66
9.4
20
0
1
4
4.0
4
0
1
14
14.0
14
0
11
142
12.9
21
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/22 at Chicago
8
74
9.3
13
1
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/29 L.A. Chargers
3
24
8.0
11
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
97
1,229
12.7
47
5
28
1
12
170
14.2
28
1
NO.
RECEIVING: DATE OPP.
12/15 Denver
TOTALS
TRAVIS KELCE
RECEIVING: DATE OPP.
LESEAN MCCOY
BYRON PRINGLE
INACTIVE
INACTIVE DID NOT PLAY
DEMARCUS ROBINSON
181
6.5
23
ANTHONY SHERMAN
TD
DE'ANTHONY THOMAS
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
09/08 at Jacksonville
1
0
0.0
--
0
1
15
15.0
15
0
09/15 at Oakland
6
172
28.7
44t
2
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
6
6.0
6
0
09/22 Baltimore
3
43
14.3
18t
1
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/29 at Detroit
4
35
8.8
15
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/06 Indianapolis
3
31
10.3
14
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/13 Houston
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/17 at Denver
3
31
10.3
16
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/27 Green Bay
2
6
3.0
4
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
11/03 Minnesota
1
5
5.0
5
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
NOT ON ROSTER
11/10 at Tennessee
4
56
14.0
23
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
12/01 Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
7
7.0
7
0
Ravens
12/08 at New England
1
12
12.0
12
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
12/15 Denver
2
21
10.5
13
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
12/22 at Chicago
1
13
13.0
13
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
Ravens
12/29 L.A. Chargers
1
24
24.0
24t
1
0
0
0.0
--
0
32
449
14.0
44t
4
2
22
11.0
15
0
6
0
TOTALS
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NOT ON ROSTER
Ravens 1
6
6.0
RECEIVING: DATE OPP.
DARWIN THOMPSON
SPENCER WARE
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
09/08 at Jacksonville
1
3
3.0
3
0
09/15 at Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
09/22 Baltimore
0
0
0.0
09/29 at Detroit
0
0
0.0
0
0
1
-1
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
Colts
9
198
22.0
68t
3
0
Colts
6
49
8.2
14
0
--
0
NOT ON ROSTER
5
64
12.8
36
0
--
0
NOT ON ROSTER
3
54
18.0
30
0
Colts
0
0
0.0
--
0
--
0
-1.0
-1
0
1
8
8.0
TD
INACTIVE INACTIVE
NOT ON ROSTER
8
0
INACTIVE
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
LG
Colts
INACTIVE
11/03 Minnesota 11/10 at Tennessee
0.0
AVG
SAMMY WATKINS NO.
INACTIVE
10/17 at Denver 10/27 Green Bay
YDS
INACTIVE
10/06 Indianapolis 10/13 Houston
NO.
NOT ON ROSTER
5
45
9.0
25
0
NOT ON ROSTER
7
63
9.0
17
0
NOT ON ROSTER
5
39
7.8
10
0
NOT ON ROSTER
2
26
13.0
15
0
NOT ON ROSTER
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/01 Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
0
12/08 at New England
4
36
9.0
19
0
1
-9
-9.0
-9
0
4
50
12.5
23
0
12/15 Denver
1
1
1.0
1
0
2
9
4.5
6
0
3
49
16.3
29
0
12/22 at Chicago
0
0
0.0
--
0
2
22
11.0
18
0
2
28
14.0
17
0
12/29 L.A. Chargers
1
-4
-4.0
-4
0
1
8
8.0
8
0
TOTALS
9
43
4.8
19
0
5
22
0
52
673
12.9
68t
3
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
LG
TD
09/08 at Jacksonville
6
39
6.5
18
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
09/15 at Oakland
3
48
16.0
32
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
5
47
9.4
16
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
3
43
14.3
30
0
2
43
21.5
24
0
RECEIVING: DATE OPP.
RESERVE/INJURED
DAMIEN WILLIAMS
09/29 at Detroit
18
DARREL WILLIAMS
INACTIVE INACTIVE
09/22 Baltimore
4.4
DEON YELDER AVG
INACTIVE INACTIVE
10/06 Indianapolis
3
15
5.0
7
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/13 Houston
1
14
14.0
14t
1
1
52
52.0
52
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/17 at Denver
2
-1
-0.5
1
0
2
5
2.5
6
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/27 Green Bay
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
11/03 Minnesota
2
3
1.5
5
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
11/10 at Tennessee
5
32
6.4
10
0
1
9
9.0
9
0
1
7
7.0
7
0
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
1
6
6.0
6
0
2
8
4.0
4
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
3
3.0
3t
1
24
0
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
12/01 Oakland 12/08 at New England 12/15 Denver 12/22 at Chicago
3
27
9.0
14t
1
12/29 L.A. Chargers
4
30
7.5
13
0
30
213
7.1
32
2
TOTALS
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED 15
167
11.1
52
1
3
50
16.7
2019 POSTSEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS RECEIVING: DATE OPP.
BLAKE BELL
MECOLE HARDMAN
TYREEK HILL
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
01/12 Houston
2
15
7.5
8t
1
2
19
9.5
13
0
3
41
13.7
20
0
01/19 Tennessee
0
0
0.0
--
0
1
8
8.0
8
0
5
67
13.4
26
2
02/02 San Francisco
1
9
9.0
9
0
1
2
2.0
2
0
9
105
11.7
44
0
TOTALS
3
24
8.0
9
1
4
29
7.3
13
0
17
213
12.5
44
2
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
10
134
13.4
28
3
1
4
4.0
4
0
2
76
38.0
48
0
3
30
10.0
18
0
2
31
15.5
24
0
7
114
16.3
60t
1
RECEIVING: DATE OPP. 01/12 Houston 01/19 Tennessee
TRAVIS KELCE
DEMARCUS ROBINSON
TD
SAMMY WATKINS TD
6
43
7.2
11
1
0
0
0.0
--
0
5
98
19.6
38
0
19
207
10.9
28
4
3
35
11.7
24
0
14
288
20.6
60t
1
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
01/12 Houston
2
21
10.5
17t
1
1
11
11.0
11
0
01/19 Tennessee
5
44
8.8
17
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
02/02 San Francisco
4
29
7.3
13
1
0
0
0.0
--
0
11
94
8.5
17t
2
1
11
11.0
11
0
02/02 San Francisco TOTALS
RECEIVING: DATE OPP.
TOTALS
DAMIEN WILLIAMS
DEON YELDER
2019 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS DUSTIN COLQUITT
PUNTING: DATE OPP.
NO.
YDS
AVG
TB
IN 20
LG
NET
BLK
09/08 at Jacksonville
1
51
51.0
1
0
51
31.0
0
09/15 at Oakland
5
196
39.2
0
1
53
37.2
0
09/22 Baltimore
2
88
44.0
1
1
57
34.0
0
09/29 at Detroit
2
91
45.5
0
1
51
46.0
0
10/06 Indianapolis
4
155
38.8
0
2
43
38.8
0
10/13 Houston
2
119
59.5
0
1
68
54.5
0
10/17 at Denver
6
266
44.3
0
3
53
42.3
0
10/27 Green Bay
3
154
51.3
0
3
58
51.3
0
11/03 Minnesota
5
251
50.2
0
1
58
44.4
0
11/10 at Tennessee
1
26
26.0
0
0
26
26.0
0
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
6
240
40.0
0
5
55
40.0
0
12/01 Oakland
2
83
41.5
0
0
42
40.0
0
12/08 at New England
3
131
43.7
0
0
57
32.8
1
12/15 Denver
2
79
39.5
0
1
41
35.5
0
12/22 at Chicago
2
93
46.5
0
1
50
37.5
0
12/29 L.A. Chargers
2
103
51.5
1
1
63
41.5
0
48
2,126
44.3
3
21
68
40.3
1
TOTALS
2019 POSTSEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS PUNTING: DATE OPP.
DUSTIN COLQUITT NO.
YDS
AVG
TB
IN 20
LG
NET
BLK
01/12 Houston
3
123
41.0
0
2
50
28.0
1
01/19 Tennessee
3
122
40.7
1
0
46
31.0
0
02/02 San Francisco
2
100
50.0
1
1
51
40.0
0
TOTALS
8
345
43.1
2
3
51
31.7
1
2019 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS HARRISON BUTKER
FIELD GOALS: DATE OPP.
0-19
20-29
30-39
40-49
50+
TOTAL
FGM
FGA
PCT
LG
09/08 at Jacksonville
0/0
2/2
1/1
1/1
0/0
4/4
4
4
100.0%
46
09/15 at Oakland
0/0
0/0
0/0
0/0
0/0
0/0
0
0
0.0%
0
09/22 Baltimore
0/0
0/0
1/1
1/1
0/0
2/2
2
2
100.0%
42
09/29 at Detroit
0/0
1/1
0/1
1/1
0/0
2/3
2
3
66.7%
44
10/06 Indianapolis
0/0
1/1
1/1
0/0
0/0
2/2
2
2
100.0%
36
10/13 Houston
0/0
0/0
0/0
1/1
0/1
1/2
1
2
50.0%
41
10/17 at Denver
0/0
1/1
2/2
0/0
0/0
3/3
3
3
100.0%
39
10/27 Green Bay
0/0
1/1
0/0
0/0
0/1
1/2
1
2
50.0%
28
11/03 Minnesota
0/0
1/1
0/0
2/2
1/1
4/4
4
4
100.0%
54
11/10 at Tennessee
0/0
0/0
2/2
2/2
0/1
4/5
4
5
80.0%
43
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
0/0
0/0
0/0
1/1
0/0
1/1
1
1
100.0%
41
12/01 Oakland
0/0
0/0
0/0
0/0
1/1
1/1
1
1
100.0%
50
12/08 at New England
0/0
0/0
1/1
2/2
0/0
3/3
3
3
100.0%
48
12/15 Denver
0/0
2/2
0/0
1/1
0/0
3/3
3
3
100.0%
44
12/22 at Chicago
0/0
0/0
1/1
0/0
1/1
2/2
2
2
100.0%
56
12/29 L.A. Chargers
0/0
0/0
0/0
1/1
0/0
1/1
1
1
100.0%
40
TOTALS
0/0
9/9
9/10
13/13
3/6
34/38
34
38
89.5%
56
2019 POSTSEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS HARRISON BUTKER
FIELD GOALS: DATE OPP.
0-19
20-29
30-39
40-49
50+
TOTAL
FGM
FGA
PCT
LG
01/12 Houston
0/0
1/1
0/0
0/0
0/0
1/1
1
1
100.0%
24
01/19 Tennessee
0/0
0/0
0/0
0/0
0/0
0/0
0
0
0.0%
0
02/02 San Francisco
0/0
0/0
1/1
0/0
0/0
1/1
1
1
100.0%
31
TOTALS
0/0
1/1
1/1
0/0
0/0
2/2
2
2
100.0%
31
2019 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL DEFENSIVE GAME-BY-GAME STATS BASHAUD BREELAND ALEX BROWN DATE
OPP.
S
A
TK
09/08
at Jacksonville
0
0
0
09/15
at Oakland
7
1
8
1
09/22
Baltimore
4
0
4
0
09/29
at Detroit
2
0
2
0
10/06
Indianapolis
3
1
4
10/13
Houston
3
3
6
10/17
at Denver
0
0
10/27
Green Bay
2
11/03
Minnesota
11/10
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
0.0 0.0
0
1
0
0
1
6
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
1
0
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
at Tennessee
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
3
2
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/01
Oakland
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/08
at New England
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
12/15
Denver
1
2
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
12/22
at Chicago
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
12/29
L.A. Chargers
2
1
3
0
0
37 11 48
TOTALS
TFL TFLY
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
6
0.0 0.0
2
2
0
1
8
S
A
TK
TFL TFLY
SK SKY
PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE
INT
FR
FF
PR
MORRIS CLAIBORNE PD
SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
TFL TFLY
0
FRANK CLARK
0.0 0.0
09/08
at Jacksonville
1
0
1
0
0
09/15
at Oakland
1
2
3
1
09/22
Baltimore
2
1
3
09/29
at Detroit
0
2
2
10/06
Indianapolis
2
0
2
10/13
Houston
1
0
1
10/17
at Denver
5
0
5
10/27
Green Bay
11/03
Minnesota
11/10
at Tennessee
4
0
4
1
7
1.0 7.0
0
0
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
2
3
5
1
1
1.0 0.0
0
0
1
3
1
3
0
3
12/01
Oakland
2
0
2
1
7
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
12/08
at New England
3
1
4
2
6
1.0 4.0
0
0
0
1
0
12/15
Denver
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
2
0
12/22
at Chicago
1
0
1
1
8
1.0 8.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/29
L.A. Chargers
1
1
2
1
8
1.0 8.0
0
0
0
3
1
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
8.0 51.0
1
1
3
14
4
9
3
12
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
1
4
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
5
1.0 5.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
4
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
2
18
2.0 19.0
0
0
1
1
0
3
1
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0.0 0.0
27 10 37
12 64
1
1
FF
PR
PD
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
2
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
PD
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE 9
5
14
0
0.0 0.0
0
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
3
7
1
2
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
5
1
6
1
7
1.0 7.0
0
0
0
1
1
0
7
1
8
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
2
8
1
1
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
DEMONE HARRIS
FR
SK SKY
DID NOT PLAY
INACTIVE INACTIVE 0
0
INT
KENDALL FULLER
TK
0
SK SKY
0
RASHAD FENTON
A
TOTALS
TFL TFLY
INACTIVE
S
SKY
TK
0
OPP.
SK
A
DID NOT PLAY RESERVE/LEAGUE SUSP. RESERVE/LEAGUE SUSP. RESERVE/LEAGUE SUSP.
DATE
TFL TFLY
S
TFL TFLY
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE 0
3
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
2
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
5
1
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
10
1.0 7.0
0
0
0
1
2
34 15 49
ANTHONY HITCHENS
JOEY IVIE
DATE
OPP.
S
A
TK
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
09/08
at Jacksonville
Buccaneers
5
2
7
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
09/15
at Oakland
Buccaneers
4
1
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
09/22
Baltimore
Buccaneers
6
2
8
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
09/29
at Detroit
Buccaneers
3
3
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
10/06
Indianapolis
NOT ON ROSTER
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/13
Houston
Buccaneers
10/17
at Denver
Buccaneers
5
1
6
1
10
2.0 31.0
0
0
1
2
0
10/27
Green Bay
2
4
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
11/03
Minnesota
Ravens
3
3
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
11/10
at Tennessee
Ravens
5
1
6
1
3
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
Ravens
2
8
10
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
12/01
Oakland
INACTIVE
3
2
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Titans
12/08
at New England
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Titans
12/15
Denver
2
0
2
2
9
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
2
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
Titans
12/22
at Chicago
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
3
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Titans
12/29
L.A. Chargers
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
5
5
10
2
9
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
0
4
2
9
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
51 37 88
4
22
2.0 31.0
0
0
1
4
1
0
0
0
1
0
TOTALS
S
A
TK
TFL TFLY
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
TFL TFLY
SK
SKY
TFL TFLY
PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE
INACTIVE
CHRIS JONES
SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD
Titans 0
2
2
0
TANOH KPASSAGNON
0
0.0 0.0
DARRON LEE
DATE
OPP.
S
A
TK
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
09/08
at Jacksonville
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
09/15
at Oakland
3
2
5
1
6
1.0 6.0
0
0
0
3
1
2
0
2
1
1
1.0 7.0
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
09/22
Baltimore
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
0
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
09/29
at Detroit
2
0
2
1
10
1.0 10.0
0
1
0
1
0
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/06
Indianapolis
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
2
0
4
1
5
2
4
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
4
1
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/13
Houston
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
5
3
8
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/17
at Denver
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/27
Green Bay
2
0
2
2
30
2.0 30.0
0
0
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
11/03
Minnesota
2
1
3
1
8
1.0 8.0
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
11/10
at Tennessee
4
4
8
1
7
2.0 19.0
0
0
1
2
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
2
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/01
Oakland
2
3
5
1
2
1.0 2.0
0
0
0
1
1
3
2
5
1
10
1.0 10.0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/08
at New England
2
1
3
1
10
1.0 10.0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/15
Denver
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
3
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
2
1
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/22
at Chicago
3
0
3
1
13
1.0 13.0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/29
L.A. Chargers
1
1
2
1
7
1.0 7.0
0
0
0
2
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
8
63
9.0 75.0
0
1
1
20
4
21
8
29
6
45
4.0 47.0
0
1
1
11
2
16
7
23
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
TOTALS
TFL TFLY
SK
SKY
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
23 13 36
TFL TFLY
SK
SKY
TFL TFLY
JORDAN LUCAS
TYRANN MATHIEU
DATE
OPP.
09/08
at Jacksonville
09/15
at Oakland
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
09/22
Baltimore
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
09/29
at Detroit
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
10/06
Indianapolis
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
10/13
Houston
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
10/17
at Denver
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
10/27
Green Bay
0
0
0
0
0
11/03
Minnesota
0
0
0
0
11/10
at Tennessee
0
0
0
0
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
0
1
1
0
12/01
Oakland
12/08
at New England
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
12/15
Denver
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
12/22
at Chicago
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
12/29
L.A. Chargers
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
2
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
TOTALS
S
A
TK
TFL TFLY
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
2
1
3
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
2
2
4
0
0
1
5
1
6
0
0
0
4
0
0
0
0
0
10
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
FR
FF
PR
PD
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
--
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Raiders
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
3
Raiders
1
14
1.0 14.0
0
0
0
1
0
Raiders
4
1
8
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
0
10
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
2
2
0
0
5
0
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Raiders
0
0
0
3
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Raiders
0
0
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Raiders
0
0
4
4
8
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
Raiders
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
Raiders
0
6
0
6
1
2
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Raiders
0
0
5
0
5
0
0
1.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
2
NOT ON ROSTER
0
1
0
6
0
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
NOT ON ROSTER
0
0
0
7
0
7
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
2
0
0
1
1
3
24
2.0 14.0
4
0
0
2
12
INACTIVE
63 12 75
BEN NIEMANN DATE
OPP.
S
A
TK
09/08
at Jacksonville
0
0
0
0
09/15
at Oakland
2
1
3
TFL TFLY
SK
SKY
TERRELL MCCLAIN
INT
INACTIVE
TFL TFLY
S
A
TK
TFL TFLY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
TFL TFLY
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
3
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
PD
Raiders
Raiders 2
2
4
0
DERRICK NNADI
SK SKY
SK SKY
0.0 0.0
0
0
EMMANUEL OGBAH
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
TFL TFLY
INT
FR
FF
PR
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
1
3
1
3
1.0 3.0
SK
SKY
0
0
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
1
0
0 1
09/22
Baltimore
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
2
2
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
1
12
1.5 12.5
0
0
0
4
09/29
at Detroit
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
5
4
9
0
0
1.0 1.0
0
0
1
0
0
2
1
3
1
3
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
10/06
Indianapolis
6
4
10
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
4
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
4
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/13
Houston
2
4
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
2
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
5
0
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/17
at Denver
4
1
5
1
4
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
1
1
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
3
1
3
1.0 3.0
0
0
0
1
2
10/27
Green Bay
4
0
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
3
1
4
1
10
1.0 10.0
0
0
0
3
0
11/03
Minnesota
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
4
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
11/10
at Tennessee
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
3
1
9
1.0 9.0
0
0
0
1
0
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
2
2
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
12/01
Oakland
0
3
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/08
at New England
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
1
3
2
2
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/15
Denver
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/22
at Chicago
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
12/29
L.A. Chargers
3
1
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
4
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
1
3
3
1.0 1.0
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
11
3
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
30 20 50
TOTALS
18 30 48
ALEX OKAFOR OPP.
S
A
TK
09/08
at Jacksonville
2
1
3
0
09/15
at Oakland
0
0
0
09/22
Baltimore
2
2
4
09/29
at Detroit
1
1
2
10/06
Indianapolis
10/13
Houston
3
1
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
10/17
at Denver
4
0
4
2
14
2.0 13.0
0
0
1
3
0
10/27
Green Bay
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
11/03
Minnesota
11/10
at Tennessee
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
12/01
Oakland
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
12/08
at New England
2
0
2
1
6
1.0 6.0
0
0
0
12/15
Denver
1
1
2
1
9
1.0 9.0
0
0
0
12/22
at Chicago
12/29
L.A. Chargers
TOTALS
SK
SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
5
1.0 5.0
0
0
0
2
0
S
A
TK
TFL TFLY
NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT
INACTIVE
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
7
22
S
A
TK
5
34
5.0 33.0
2
0
2
0
0
1
2
3
0
0
0
40
INT
5.5 37.5
0
REGGIE RAGLAND FR
FF
PR
PD
ROSTER ROSTER ROSTER ROSTER ROSTER ROSTER ROSTER
S
A
TK
TFL TFLY
SK SKY
INACTIVE INACTIVE 0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
2
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
2
1
6
1.0 6.0
0
1
0
1
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
2
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
2
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
11
1.0 8.0
0
0
0
2
0
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
2
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
1
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
2
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
3
1.0 3.0
0
0
0
1
0
4
2
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
2
1
3
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
11
1.0 8.0
0
0
0
2
0
23
6
29
4
14
2.0 9.0
0
1
0
3
0
S
A
TK
FR
FF
PR
PD
0
1
9
1
FR
FF
PR
PD
13 11 24
KHALEN SAUNDERS
DANIEL SORENSEN
at Jacksonville
09/15
at Oakland
09/22
Baltimore
09/29
at Detroit
10/06
Indianapolis
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
10/13
Houston
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
10/17
at Denver
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
10/27
Green Bay
2
1
3
0
0
1.0 0.0
0
11/03
Minnesota
1
2
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
11/10
at Tennessee
1
0
1
0
0
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
1
1
2
0
12/01
Oakland
1
2
3
12/08
at New England
2
0
12/15
Denver
0
12/22
at Chicago
12/29
L.A. Chargers
TOTALS
6
3
OPP.
INT
32
1
09/08
SK SKY
9
2
DATE
TFL TFLY
SK SKY
ON ON ON ON ON ON ON
INACTIVE
RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED 15
23
MIKE PENNEL
DATE
TFL TFLY
RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
S
A
TK
0
0
0
TFL TFLY
0
TERRELL SUGGS
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
TFL TFLY
Cardinals
SK SKY
INT
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Cardinals
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Cardinals
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
Cardinals
0
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Cardinals
0
0
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Cardinals
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Cardinals
0
0
1
0
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Cardinals
0
0
0
1
1
2
2
4
1
7
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Cardinals
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
5
4
9
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Cardinals
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
6
2
8
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
Cardinals
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
0
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
Cardinals
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
Cardinals
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
NOT ON ROSTER
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
0
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
1
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
2
1
8
1.0 8.0
0
0
0
2
0
13
9
22
0
0
1.0 0.0
0
0
0
2
1
1
7
0.0 0.0
2
0
0
2
4
1
2
3
1
8
1.0 8.0
0
0
0
2
0
39 13 52
JUAN THORNHILL DATE
OPP.
S
A
TK
09/08
at Jacksonville
5
3
8
0
09/15
at Oakland
3
0
3
09/22
Baltimore
2
0
09/29
at Detroit
2
10/06
Indianapolis
10/13
CHARVARIUS WARD
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
5
2
7
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
1
4
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
1
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
6
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
Houston
4
0
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
10/17
at Denver
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
10/27
Green Bay
3
2
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
11/03
Minnesota
4
0
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
11/10
at Tennessee
2
3
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
12/01
Oakland
2
1
3
0
0
12/08
at New England
3
1
4
0
12/15
Denver
2
2
4
12/22
at Chicago
3
0
12/29
L.A. Chargers
0
1
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
1
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
2
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
7
1
8
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
7
1.0 7.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
3
1
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
4
2
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
1
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
3
0
2
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
4
2
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
3
7
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
3
0
0
0
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
2
0
1
0
10
5
2
7
1
7
1.0 7.0
0
0
0
1
0
56 18 74
TFL TFLY
ARMANI WATTS
SK SKY
41 16 57
TOTALS
TFL TFLY
XAVIER WILLIAMS
DAMIEN WILSON
TFL
DATE
OPP.
S
A
TK
TFL
Y
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
09/08
at Jacksonville
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
5
0
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
1
0
0
09/15
at Oakland
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
3
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
09/22
Baltimore
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
1
5
0
0
0.5 0.5
0
0
0
1
0
09/29
at Detroit
2
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
1
0
0
7
1
8
1
1
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/06
Indianapolis
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
7
5
12
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/13
Houston
3
3
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/17
at Denver
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
10/27
Green Bay
5
2
7
1
9
1.0 9.0
0
0
0
3
0
11/03
Minnesota
11/10
at Tennessee
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
12/01
Oakland
12/08
at New England
12/15
Denver
12/22
at Chicago
12/29
L.A. Chargers
TOTALS
RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED RESERVE/INJURED INACTIVE 7
1
8
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
1
0
0
TFL TFLY
PD
4
3
7
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
3
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
2
6
1
2
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0 0
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
3
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
12
1.5 9.5
0
0
1
4
1
52 29 81
TFL TFLY
2019 POSTSEASON INDIVIDUAL DEFENSIVE GAME-BY-GAME STATS BASHAUD BREELAND FRANK CLARK DATE
OPP.
S
A
TK
01/12
Houston
6
1
7
0
01/19
Tennessee
3
1
4
0
02/02
San Francisco
TOTALS
TFL TFLY
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
TFL TFLY
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
4
0
4
3
25
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
1
3
4
1
17
SK
SKY
RASHAD FENTON
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
TFL TFLY
INT
FR
FF
PR
3.0 25.0
0
0
0
4
0
5
0
5
1
14
1.0 14.0
SK
SKY
0
0
0
1
PD
1
1.0 17.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
6
1
7
2
2
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
9
1.0 9.0
0
0
0
2
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
15
3
18
2
2
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
3
6
3
9
5
51
5.0 51.0
0
0
0
7
0
6
1
7
1
14
1.0 14.0
0
0
0
1
1
TFL TFLY
KENDALL FULLER
MECOLE HARDMAN
ANTHONY HITCHENS
DATE
OPP.
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
01/12
Houston
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
01/19
Tennessee
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
1
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
02/02
San Francisco
3
1
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
3
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
4
1
5
0
0
0.0 0.0
1
0
0
0
2
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
6
5
11
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
S
A
TK
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
TOTALS
TFL TFLY
CHRIS JONES
TANOH KPASSAGNON
DATE
OPP.
01/12
Houston
01/19
Tennessee
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
02/02
San Francisco
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
2
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
TOTALS
TFL TFLY
SK SKY
TFL TFLY
TFL TFLY
A
TK
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
3
0
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
2
0
2
0
2
2
10
2.0 10.0
0
0
0
2
1
6
3
9
1
2
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
3
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
2
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
3
3
2
5
2
10
2.0 10.0
0
0
0
3
1
13
5
18
1
2
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
3
TFL TFLY
BEN NIEMANN DATE
OPP.
S
A
TK
01/12
Houston
2
2
4
0
01/19
Tennessee
1
0
1
02/02
San Francisco
0
1
3
TOTALS
TFL TFLY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
3
1
3
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
4
S
A
TK
01/12
Houston
2
0
2
0
01/19
Tennessee
0
4
4
02/02
San Francisco
0
1
2
TOTALS
TFL TFLY
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
1
1
1.0 1.0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
1
1
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
7
1
1
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
1
1
1.0 1.0
0
0
0
1
0
REGGIE RAGLAND
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
3
1
4
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
2
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
5
7
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
6
TFL TFLY
S
A
TK
01/12
Houston
4
4
8
0
01/19
Tennessee
6
2
8
02/02
San Francisco
4
2
14
TOTALS
TFL TFLY
KHALEN SAUNDERS
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
1
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
8
1
1
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
1
3
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
TERRELL SUGGS
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
6
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
6
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
8
22
1
6
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
TFL TFLY
CHARVARIUS WARD
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
3
1
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
1
0
3
1
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
4
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
2
1
7
2
9
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
1
XAVIER WILLIAMS
DAMIEN WILSON
TFL
OPP.
S
A
TK
TFL
Y
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
S
A
TK
SK SKY
INT
FR
FF
PR
PD
01/12
Houston
0
1
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
5
3
8
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
01/19
Tennessee
1
0
1
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
6
1
7
1
2
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
02/02
San Francisco
2
2
4
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
13
6
19
1
2
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
TOTALS
1
1
2
0
0
0.0 0.0
0
0
0
0
0
TFL TFLY
SK SKY
DATE
DID NOT PLAY
TFL TFLY
SK SKY
DANIEL SORENSEN OPP.
DORIAN O'DANIEL
INT
SK SKY
DATE
TFL TFLY
SK SKY
MIKE PENNEL OPP.
SKY
DERRICK NNADI
SK SKY
DATE
SK
TYRANN MATHIEU
S
0
INACTIVE
TFL TFLY
TFL TFLY
2019 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL SPECIAL TEAMS GAME-BY-GAME STATS ALEX BROWN
BLAKE BELL DATE OPP.
TKL
AST
TOT
09/08 at Jacksonville
0
0
0
09/15 at Oakland
0
0
0
09/22 Baltimore
0
0
0
09/29 at Detroit
1
0
1
10/06 Indianapolis
0
0
0
10/13 Houston
0
0
0
10/17 at Denver
0
0
0
10/27 Green Bay
0
0
0
11/03 Minnesota
0
0
0
11/10 at Tennessee
0
0
0
INACTIVE
11/18 at L.A. Chargers 12/01 Oakland
0
0
0
12/08 at New England
1
0
1
TKL
AST
PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE 0
GEHRIG DIETER TOT
SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD
0
0
12/15 Denver
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
12/29 L.A. Chargers
0
0
0
TOTALS
2
0
2
2
TKL
INACTIVE
DARRON LEE
TKL
AST
TOT
0
0
0
DID NOT PLAY 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE
SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD SQUAD
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE 0
0
0
2
2
1
3
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
TOT
TKL
JORDAN LUCAS
1
BEN NIEMANN
DORIAN O'DANIEL
TKL
AST
TOT
09/08 at Jacksonville
0
0
0
09/15 at Oakland
0
1
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
09/22 Baltimore
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
09/29 at Detroit
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
10/06 Indianapolis
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
10/13 Houston
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
10/17 at Denver
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
0
0
10/27 Green Bay
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
11/03 Minnesota
1
1
2
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
2
2
11/10 at Tennessee
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
12/01 Oakland
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
12/08 at New England
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
2
1
1
2
12/15 Denver
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
12/22 at Chicago
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
12/29 L.A. Chargers
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0
TOTALS
6
2
8
3
2
5
5
1
6
5
3
8
TKL
TOT
TKL
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
INACTIVE
INACTIVE
BYRON PRINGLE DATE OPP.
AST
RASHAD FENTON TOT
1
2
0
AST
NOT ON ROSTER NOT ON ROSTER NOT ON ROSTER NOT ON ROSTER NOT ON ROSTER NOT ON ROSTER PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD PRACTICE SQUAD
12/22 at Chicago
DATE OPP.
TKL
REGGIE RAGLAND AST
ANTHONY SHERMAN
TOT
INACTIVE INACTIVE 0
DANIEL SORENSEN
TKL
AST
TOT
09/08 at Jacksonville
0
0
0
09/15 at Oakland
0
0
0
09/22 Baltimore
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
09/29 at Detroit
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
2
10/06 Indianapolis
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
10/13 Houston
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
10/17 at Denver
2
0
2
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
10/27 Green Bay
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
11/03 Minnesota
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
11/10 at Tennessee
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
12/01 Oakland
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
12/08 at New England
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0
12/15 Denver
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
12/22 at Chicago
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
12/29 L.A. Chargers
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
TOTALS
4
3
7
0
1
1
5
3
8
5
0
5
INACTIVE INACTIVE
TOT
DARWIN THOMPSON DATE OPP.
JUAN THORNHILL
ARMANI WATTS
JAMES WINCHESTER
TKL
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
TOT
09/08 at Jacksonville
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
09/15 at Oakland
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
09/22 Baltimore
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
09/29 at Detroit
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0
INACTIVE
10/06 Indianapolis 10/13 Houston
0 0
0
0
INACTIVE
11/03 Minnesota 11/10 at Tennessee
0
INACTIVE
10/17 at Denver 10/27 Green Bay
0
0
0
0
INACTIVE
0
0
0
2
0
2
0
0
0
12/01 Oakland
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
12/08 at New England
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
12/15 Denver
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
12/22 at Chicago
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
12/29 L.A. Chargers
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0
TOTALS
1
0
1
1
0
1
8
2
10
1
1
2
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
2019 POSTSEASON INDIVIDUAL SPECIAL TEAMS GAME-BY-GAME STATS JORDAN LUCAS
RASHAD FENTON DATE OPP.
BEN NIEMANN
DORIAN O'DANIEL
TKL
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
01/12 Houston
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
01/19 Tennessee
2
0
2
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
02/02 San Francisco
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
TOTALS
3
0
3
1
0
1
1
0
1
2
0
2
BYRON PRINGLE DATE OPP.
DANIEL SORENSEN
ARMANI WATTS
TOT
JAMES WINCHESTER
TKL
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
TOT
TKL
AST
TOT
01/12 Houston
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
01/19 Tennessee
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
02/02 San Francisco
3
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
TOTALS
4
0
4
1
0
1
1
0
1
1
0
1
2019 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS MECOLE HARDMAN
PUNT RETURNS: DATE OPP.
TYREEK HILL
DE'ANTHONY THOMAS
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
TD
09/08 at Jacksonville
0
0
0.0
--
1
0
1
0
0.0
--
0
0
09/15 at Oakland
1
20
20.0
20
0
0
09/22 Baltimore
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
09/29 at Detroit
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
10/06 Indianapolis
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
10/13 Houston
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
10/17 at Denver
1
36
36.0
36
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
10/27 Green Bay
1
18
18.0
18
0
0
0
0
0.0
INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE INACTIVE
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
5
28
5.6
10
0
0
1
9
9.0
9
0
0
2
3
1.5
9
0
0
2
1
0.5
2
1
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0
3
14
4.7
8
0
0
--
0
0
Ravens
1
0
11/03 Minnesota
2
17
8.5
15
1
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
NOT ON ROSTER
11/10 at Tennessee
1
5
5.0
5
2
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
2
22
11.0
15
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
12/01 Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
1
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
12/08 at New England
3
20
6.7
9
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
12/15 Denver
2
-2
-1.0
--
1
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
12/22 at Chicago
2
10
5.0
9
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
12/29 L.A. Chargers
3
21
7.0
15
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
18
167
9.3
36
6
0
1
0
0.0
0
0
0
TOTALS
FC
NOT ON ROSTER
Ravens 13
55
4.2
10
2019 POSTSEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS MECOLE HARDMAN
PUNT RETURNS: DATE OPP.
TYREEK HILL
JORDAN LUCAS
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
TD
01/12 Houston
1
1
1.0
1
0
0
1
0
0.0
--
1
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
01/19 Tennessee
1
7
7.0
7
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
1
0
0.0
--
0
0
02/02 San Francisco
0
0
0.0
--
2
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
TOTALS
2
8
4.0
7
2
0
1
0
0.0
0
1
0
1
0
0.0
0
0
0
2019 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS MECOLE HARDMAN
KICKOFF RETURNS: DATE OPP. 09/08 at Jacksonville
BYRON PRINGLE
DE'ANTHONY THOMAS
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
TD
2
45
22.5
27
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
TD
NOT ON ROSTER
09/15 at Oakland
1
18
18.0
18
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
1
19
19.0
19
0
0
09/22 Baltimore
0
0
0.0
--
1
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
09/29 at Detroit
1
29
29.0
29
0
0
2
41
20.5
22
0
0
3
72
24.0
29
0
0
10/06 Indianapolis
1
22
22.0
22
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
10/13 Houston
2
41
20.5
22
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
3
64
21.3
24
0
0
10/17 at Denver
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
10/27 Green Bay
3
68
22.7
26
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
0
0
11/03 Minnesota
4
101
25.3
34
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
NOT ON ROSTER
11/10 at Tennessee
4
90
22.5
30
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
12/01 Oakland
1
23
23.0
23
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
12/08 at New England
3
73
24.3
31
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
12/15 Denver
1
20
20.0
20
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
12/22 at Chicago
2
57
28.5
32
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
Ravens
12/29 L.A. Chargers
2
117
58.5
104t
0
1
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
27
704
26.1
104t
1
1
2
41
20.5
22
0
0
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
09/08 at Jacksonville
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
09/15 at Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
09/22 Baltimore
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
09/29 at Detroit
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
TOTALS KICKOFF RETURNS: DATE OPP.
DARWIN THOMPSON
INACTIVE
10/06 Indianapolis 10/13 Houston
0
0
1
27
--
27.0
27
INACTIVE
11/03 Minnesota 11/10 at Tennessee
0.0
INACTIVE
10/17 at Denver 10/27 Green Bay
TD
0
0
0.0
--
INACTIVE
11/18 at L.A. Chargers 12/01 Oakland
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
12/08 at New England
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
12/15 Denver
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
12/22 at Chicago
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
12/29 L.A. Chargers
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
TOTALS
1
27
27.0
27
0
0
Ravens 7
155
22.1
29
2019 POSTSEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS MECOLE HARDMAN
KICKOFF RETURNS: DATE OPP.
TYREEK HILL
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
TD
NO.
YDS
AVG
LG
FC
TD
01/12 Houston
6
142
23.7
58
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
01/19 Tennessee
4
86
21.5
35
0
0
1
19
19.0
19
0
0
02/02 San Francisco
3
58
19.3
29
0
0
0
0
0.0
--
0
0
13
286
22.0
58
0
0
1
19
19.0
19
0
0
TOTALS
PLAYERS Allegretti, Nick Allen, Jeff Barton, Jackson Bell, Blake Breeland, Bashaud Brown, Alex Butker, Harrison Claiborne, Morris Clark, Frank Colquitt, Dustin Davis, Felton Dieter, Gehrig Duvernay-Tardif, L. Erving, Cam Fenton, Rashad Fisher, Eric Fortson, Jody Fox, Jack Fuller, Kendall Grayson, Davon Hardman, Mecole Harris, Darius Harris, Demone Henne, Chad Hill, Tyreek Hitchens, Anthony Hoyett, Braxton Hunter, Ryan Ivie, Joey Jones, Chris Keizer, Nick Kelce, Travis Kemp, Marcus Kpassagnon, Tanoh Lammons, Chris Lawrence, Devaroe Lee, Darron Lovett, John Lucas, Jordan Mack, Alizé Mahomes, Patrick Malveaux, Cameron Marshall, Marcus Mathieu, Tyrann McClain, Terrell McCoy, LeSean McGuire, Elijah McTyer, Torry Moore, Matt Murray, Jimmy Niemann, Ben Nnadi, Derrick O'Daniel, Dorian Ogbah, Emmanuel Okafor, Alex Pennel, Mike Pringle, Byron Ragland, Reggie Rankin, Martinas Reaser, Keith Reiter, Austin Robinson, Demarcus Saunders, Khalen Schwartz, Mitchell Senat, Greg Sherman, Anthony Shurmur, Kyle Smith, Emmanuel Smith, Tremon Sorensen, Daniel Speaks, Breeland Suggs, Terrell Thomas, De'Anthony Thompson, Cody Thompson, Darwin Thornhill, Juan Ward, Charvarius Ward, Tim Ware, Spencer Watkins, Sammy Watts, Armani Weber, Mike Wells, David Williams, Damien Williams, Darrel Williams, Xavier Wilson, Damien Winchester, James Wisniewski, Stefen Wylie, Andrew Yelder, Deon
@ JAX 9/8 * P ^ P LCB PS P Active RDE P IR NOT RG DNP P LT PS NOT CB IR P Active ^ Active WR LB NOT * P RDT PS TE Active P ^ ^ P Active * ^ QB PS PS SS ^ P ^ PS P PS P LDT P P LDE NOT P * * Active C WR * RT ^ P PS PS P P IR ^ NOT PS P FS RCB Active ^ WR P ^ IR RB P P LB P NOT LG *
2019 REGULAR SEASON KANSAS @ OAK BAL @ DET IND HOU @ DEN 9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6 10/13 10/17 * * * * P P P P P NOT NOT NOT ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ TE TE P TE TE TE RCB LCB LCB RCB LCB LCB PS PS PS PS PS PS P P P P P P R/SUS R/SUS R/SUS P P P RDE RDE RDE RDE RDE LDE P P P P P P IR IR IR IR IR IR NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT PS RG RG RG RG RG RG P LT LT LT LT LT DNP P P P P P LT * * * * * PS PS PS PS PS PS NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT P CB CB CB P * IR IR IR NOT NOT NOT WR P WR P P WR R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ IR IR IR IR IR IR * * * * WR WR LB LB LB LB * LB NOT NOT NOT PS PS NOT * P P P PS PS P PS PS PS PS PS LDT RDT LDT LDT * * PS PS PS PS PS PS TE TE TE TE TE TE IR IR IR IR IR IR P P P P P P ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ LB P P P LB P IR IR IR IR IR IR P P P P P P ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ QB QB QB QB QB QB PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS NOT NOT SS SS SS SS SS SS ^ ^ ^ ^ P P P RB RB P RB RB ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ PS PS PS ^ ^ ^ DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP P NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT P P P P LB P RDT LDT RDT RDT RDT LDT P P P * * P P P P LDE P P LDE LDE LDE * LDE RDE NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT NOT P P P P P P * P P P P LB * * * P LG RG IR IR IR IR IR IR C C C C C C P WR WR WR WR P * * * P LDT RDT RT RT RT RT RT RT ^ * * * * * P P P P P P PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS NOT ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ P P P P P P IR IR IR IR IR IR ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ P P P P P P PS PS PS PS PS PS P P P * P * FS FS FS FS FS FS LCB RCB RCB LCB RCB RCB R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ WR WR WR WR * * P P P P P P ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ IR IR IR IR IR IR RB * * RB P P P P P P P P P P P P IR IR LB LB LB LB LB LB P P P P P P NOT NOT NOT NOT P P LG LG LG LG * * * P P P P P
CITY CHIEFS PLAYER GB MIN @ TEN 10/27 11/3 11/10 P P P NOT NOT NOT ^ ^ ^ P TE P LCB P LCB PS PS PS P P P P LCB P * * P P P P IR IR IR PS PS PS RG * * LT LT LT P P P * * * PS PS PS NOT PS NOT * * * NOT NOT NOT P WR P R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN ^ ^ ^ IR DNP * WR WR WR LB LB LB PS PS PS PS PS PS PS P P * P RDT PS PS PS TE TE TE IR IR IR P RDE RDE ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ P P P IR IR IR P P P ^ ^ PS * * QB PS PS PS NOT NOT NOT SS SS SS ^ ^ ^ RB RB * ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ QB QB DNP NOT NOT NOT P P P LDT LDT LDT P P P RDE LDE LDE LDE * * P P * P P P LB LB LB LG LG LG IR IR IR C C C WR P WR RDT RDT P RT RT RT * IR IR P P P DNP NOT PS PS PS PS ^ ^ ^ P P P IR IR IR ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ PS ^ ^ P * P FS FS FS RCB RCB RCB R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN ^ ^ ^ WR P WR P P P ^ ^ ^ IR IR IR P P RB P P P IR IR IR LB LB LB P P P P P P * RG RG P P P
PARTICIPATION @ LAC OAK @ NE 11/18 12/1 12/8 * * * NOT NOT NOT * * * * P P LCB RCB LCB PS PS P P P P P P * RDE RDE P P P P IR IR IR P P PS RG RG RG P DNP P P P * LT LT LT PS PS PS NOT NOT ^ * P P NOT NOT NOT P P P R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN ^ * P * * * WR WR WR LB LB LB PS PS PS PS PS PS P ^ ^ LDT RDT LDT PS PS PS TE TE TE IR IR IR LDE LDE RDE ^ ^ ^ ^ PS PS P P P IR IR IR P * P PS NOT NOT QB QB QB PS PS PS NOT NOT NOT SS SS SS ^ ^ ^ P RB RB ^ PS PS ^ ^ ^ DNP P DNP NOT NOT NOT P P P RDT LDT RDT P P P IR IR IR * P LDE P P P P P P LB P LB IR IR IR IR IR IR C C C P WR WR P P P RT RT RT IR IR IR P P P PS PS PS PS PS PS ^ ^ ^ P CB P IR IR R/SUS ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ NOT ^ ^ * P P FS FS FS RCB LCB RCB R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN ^ ^ P WR WR WR P P P ^ ^ PS IR IR IR RB * * P P IR IR IR IR LB LB LB P P P P P P LG LG LG TE * *
DEN 12/15 * NOT * P LCB P P * P P IR PS RG P * LT PS ^ P NOT P R/NFIN P * WR LB PS PS ^ RDT PS TE IR RDE PS PS P IR P NOT QB ^ NOT SS ^ RB PS ^ DNP NOT P LDT P IR LDE P P LB IR IR C WR P RT IR P PS PS ^ P R/SUS ^ ^ ^ P FS RCB R/NFIN P WR P PS IR * IR IR LB P P LG *
@ CHI 12/22 P NOT * TE LCB P P * LDE P IR PS RG DNP * LT PS ^ P NOT P R/NFIN P * WR LB PS PS ^ LDT PS TE IR RDE PS PS P IR P NOT QB ^ NOT SS ^ * PS ^ P NOT P RDT P IR IR P P P IR IR C P P RT IR P PS PS ^ CB R/SUS P ^ ^ P FS RCB R/NFIN RB WR P PS IR P IR IR LB P LG * *
LAC 12/29 P NOT * P LCB * P * RDE P IR PS RG P P LT PS ^ P NOT WR R/NFIN P * WR LB PS PS ^ RDT PS TE IR LDE PS PS P IR P NOT QB ^ NOT SS ^ DNP PS ^ DNP NOT P LDT P IR IR P P P IR IR C P P RT IR P PS PS ^ CB R/SUS P ^ ^ P FS RCB R/NFIN IR WR P NOT IR RB IR * LB P LG * *
GP 7 4 0 15 16 3 16 8 14 16 0 2 14 13 12 8 0 0 11 0 16 0 4 0 12 15 0 3 5 13 0 16 0 16 0 0 16 0 14 0 14 0 0 16 2 13 0 0 6 0 16 16 14 10 10 8 16 14 6 0 16 16 12 16 0 16 0 0 1 16 0 2 6 0 12 16 16 0 3 14 16 0 0 11 12 5 16 16 11 11 9
GS DNP IN 9 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 7 1 0 15 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 0 11 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 2 0 8 3 0 1 3 0 8 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 5 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 7 0 12 4 0 15 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 12 3 0 0 0 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 14 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 9 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 10 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 16 0 0 2 0 0 4 0 0 9 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 2 0 5 4 0 0 0 0 16 0 0 10 0 0 4 4 0 16 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 16 0 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 13 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 5 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 11 5 0 1 7 0
LEGEND: Starters indicated by position (Bold), *=Inactive, P=Played, DNP=Did Not Play, PS=Practice Squad, IR=Reserve/Injured, NOT=Not on Roster, R/SUS=Reserve/League Susp., R/NFIN=Reserve/Non-Football Injury, ^=With Other Team
PLAYERS Allegretti, Nick Barton, Jackson Bell, Blake Breeland, Bashaud Brown, Alex Butker, Harrison Claiborne, Morris Clark, Frank Colquitt, Dustin Davis, Felton Dieter, Gehrig Duvernay-Tardif, L. Erving, Cam Fenton, Rashad Fisher, Eric Fortson, Jody Fuller, Kendall Hardman, Mecole Harris, Darius Harris, Demone Henne, Chad Hill, Tyreek Hitchens, Anthony Hoyett, Braxton Hunter, Ryan Jones, Chris Keizer, Nick Kelce, Travis Kemp, Marcus Kpassagnon, Tanoh Lammons, Chris Lawrence, Devaroe Lee, Darron Lovett, John Lucas, Jordan Mahomes, Patrick Mathieu, Tyrann McCoy, LeSean McGuire, Elijah Moore, Matt Niemann, Ben Nnadi, Derrick O'Daniel, Dorian Ogbah, Emmanuel Okafor, Alex Pennel, Mike Pringle, Byron Ragland, Reggie Rankin, Martinas Reaser, Keith Reiter, Austin Robinson, Demarcus Saunders, Khalen Schwartz, Mitchell Senat, Greg Sherman, Anthony Shurmur, Kyle Smith, Emmanuel Sorensen, Daniel Speaks, Breeland Suggs, Terrell Thompson, Darwin Thornhill, Juan Ward, Charvarius Ward, Tim Ware, Spencer Watkins, Sammy Watts, Armani Weber, Mike Wells, David Williams, Damien Williams, Darrel Williams, Xavier Wilson, Damien Winchester, James Wisniewski, Stefen Wylie, Andrew Yelder, Deon
2019 POSTSEASON KANSAS CITY CHIEFS PLAYER PARTICIPATION HOU TEN SF 1/12 1/19 2/2 GP GS P P P 3 0 * * * 0 0 P P P 3 0 LCB LCB RCB 3 3 P P P 3 0 P P P 3 0 * * * 0 0 LDE LDE RDE 3 3 P P P 3 0 IR IR IR 0 0 PS PS PS 0 0 RG RG RG 3 3 DNP DNP P 1 0 P P P 3 0 LT LT LT 3 3 PS PS PS 0 0 CB CB P 3 2 P P WR 3 1 R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN 0 0 P P DNP 2 0 * DNP * 0 0 WR WR WR 3 3 LB LB LB 3 3 PS PS PS 0 0 * * * 0 0 * P LDT 2 1 PS PS PS 0 0 TE TE TE 3 3 IR IR IR 0 0 RDE RDE LDE 3 3 PS PS PS 0 0 PS PS PS 0 0 * * * 0 0 IR IR IR 0 0 P P P 3 0 QB QB QB 3 3 SS SS SS 3 3 P * * 1 0 PS PS PS 0 0 DNP * DNP 0 0 P P P 3 0 RDT RDT RDT 3 3 P P P 3 0 IR IR IR 0 0 IR IR IR 0 0 LDT LDT P 3 2 P P P 3 0 P P LB 3 1 IR IR IR 0 0 IR IR IR 0 0 C C C 3 3 WR WR P 3 2 P P P 3 0 RT RT RT 3 3 IR IR IR 0 0 P P P 3 0 PS PS PS 0 0 PS PS PS 0 0 FS FS FS 3 3 IR IR IR 0 0 P P P 3 0 P P P 3 0 IR IR IR 0 0 RCB RCB LCB 3 3 R/NFIN R/NFIN R/NFIN 0 0 IR IR IR 0 0 WR WR WR 3 3 P P P 3 0 PS PS PS 0 0 IR IR IR 0 0 RB RB RB 3 3 IR IR IR 0 0 P P DNP 2 0 LB LB LB 3 3 P P P 3 0 LG LG LG 3 3 * * * 0 0 P P P 3 0
DNP 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
LEGEND: Starters indicated by position (Bold), P=Played, *=Inactive, DNP=Did Not Play, IR=Reserve/Injured, PS=Practice Squad, R/NFIN=Reserve/Non-Football Injury, ^=With Other Team
IN 0 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0
2019 REGULAR SEASON OFFENSE OFFENSE TE LT LG T. Kelce E. Fisher A. Wylie
DATE OPPONENT 9/8 at Jacksonville
QB RB P. Mahomes D. Williams
WR T. Hill
WR S. Watkins
C RG RT WR A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz D. Robinson
TE --
9/15
at Oakland
P. Mahomes D. Williams M. Hardman S. Watkins
T. Kelce
E. Fisher
A. Wylie
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz
--
B. Bell
9/22
Baltimore
P. Mahomes
L. McCoy
D. Robinson
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
C. Erving
A. Wylie
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz
--
B. Bell
9/29
at Detroit
P. Mahomes
L. McCoy
D. Robinson
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
C. Erving
A. Wylie
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz M. Hardman
10/6
Indianapolis
P. Mahomes D. Williams D. Robinson
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
C. Erving
A. Wylie
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz
--
B. Bell
--
10/13 Houston
P. Mahomes
L. McCoy
T. Hill
D. Robinson
T. Kelce
C. Erving
M. Rankin
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz
--
B. Bell
10/17 at Denver
P. Mahomes
L. McCoy
T. Hill
M. Hardman
T. Kelce
C. Erving
M. Rankin
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz
--
B. Bell
10/27 Green Bay
M. Moore
L. McCoy
T. Hill
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
C. Erving
M. Rankin
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz D. Robinson
11/3
M. Moore
L. McCoy
T. Hill
M. Hardman
T. Kelce
C. Erving
M. Rankin
A. Reiter
A. Wylie
M. Schwartz
A. Reiter
A. Wylie
M. Schwartz D. Robinson
Minnesota
--
-B. Bell
11/10 at Tennessee
P. Mahomes D. Williams
T. Hill
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
C. Erving
M. Rankin
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
P. Mahomes D. Williams
T. Hill
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
E. Fisher
A. Wylie
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz
12/1
Oakland
P. Mahomes
L. McCoy
T. Hill
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
E. Fisher
A. Wylie
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz D. Robinson
--
12/8
at New England
P. Mahomes
L. McCoy
T. Hill
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
E. Fisher
A. Wylie
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz D. Robinson
--
12/15 Denver
P. Mahomes
L. McCoy
T. Hill
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
E. Fisher
A. Wylie
A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz D. Robinson
12/22 at Chicago
P. Mahomes
S. Ware
T. Hill
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
E. Fisher S. Wisniewski A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz
12/29 L.A. Chargers
P. Mahomes D. Williams
T. Hill
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
E. Fisher S. Wisniewski A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz M. Hardman
LDT D. Nnadi
RDT C. Jones
2019 REGULAR SEASON DEFENSE DEFENSE RDE LB LB F. Clark A. Hitchens D. Wilson
A. Okafor
C. Jones
D. Nnadi
F. Clark
A. Hitchens D. Wilson
A. Okafor
D. Nnadi
C. Jones
F. Clark
A. Hitchens D. Wilson
D. Nnadi
F. Clark
D. Nnadi
F. Clark
DATE OPPONENT 9/8 at Jacksonville
LDE A. Okafor
9/15
at Oakland
9/22
Baltimore
9/29
at Detroit
A. Okafor
C. Jones
10/6
Indianapolis
E. Ogbah
C. Jones
LB --
CB K. Fuller
--
--
-D. Yelder
-B. Bell --
LCB B. Breeland
RCB C. Ward
FS SS J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
D. Lee
C. Ward
B. Breeland
--
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
--
B. Breeland
C. Ward
K. Fuller
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
A. Hitchens D. Wilson
--
B. Breeland
C. Ward
K. Fuller
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
A. Hitchens D. Wilson
--
C. Ward
B. Breeland
K. Fuller
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
B. Niemann D. Wilson
D. Lee
A. Okafor
K. Saunders
D. Nnadi
F. Clark
B. Breeland
C. Ward
--
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
10/17 at Denver
F. Clark
D. Nnadi
K. Saunders
A. Okafor
A. Hitchens D. Wilson R. Ragland B. Breeland
C. Ward
--
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
10/27 Green Bay
A. Okafor
D. Nnadi
K. Saunders
E. Ogbah
A. Hitchens D. Wilson R. Ragland B. Breeland
C. Ward
--
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
11/3
E. Ogbah
D. Nnadi
K. Saunders T. Kpassagnon A. Hitchens D. Wilson R. Ragland M. Claiborne
C. Ward
--
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
C. Ward
--
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
C. Ward
--
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
10/13 Houston
Minnesota
E. Ogbah
D. Nnadi
C. Jones
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
T. Kpassagnon
C. Jones
D. Nnadi
12/1
Oakland
T. Kpassagnon
D. Nnadi
C. Jones
12/8
at New England
A. Okafor
C. Jones
D. Nnadi
T. Kpassagnon A. Hitchens D. Wilson R. Ragland
A. Okafor
D. Nnadi
C. Jones
T. Kpassagnon A. Hitchens D. Wilson R. Ragland B. Breeland
F. Clark
C. Jones
D. Nnadi
T. Kpassagnon A. Hitchens D. Wilson
T. Kpassagnon
D. Nnadi
C. Jones
11/10 at Tennessee
12/15 Denver 12/22 at Chicago 12/29 L.A. Chargers
T. Kpassagnon A. Hitchens D. Wilson R. Ragland B. Breeland F. Clark
A. Hitchens D. Wilson R. Ragland B. Breeland
F. Clark
A. Hitchens D. Wilson
F. Clark
A. Hitchens D. Wilson
--
C. Ward
B. Breeland D. Sorensen J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
C. Ward
B. Breeland
--
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
C. Ward
--
J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
--
B. Breeland
C. Ward
D. Sorensen J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
--
B. Breeland
C. Ward
D. Sorensen J. Thornhill T. Mathieu
DATE OPPONENT 1/12 Houston
QB RB P. Mahomes D. Williams
WR T. Hill
2019 POSTSEASON OFFENSE OFFENSE WR TE LT LG C RG RT WR S. Watkins T. Kelce E. Fisher S. Wisniewski A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz D. Robinson
1/19
Tennessee
P. Mahomes D. Williams
T. Hill
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
E. Fisher S. Wisniewski A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz D. Robinson
--
2/2
San Francisco
P. Mahomes D. Williams
T. Hill
S. Watkins
T. Kelce
E. Fisher S. Wisniewski A. Reiter L. Duvernay-Tardif M. Schwartz M. Hardman
--
DATE OPPONENT 1/12 Houston 1/19
Tennessee
2/2
San Francisco
LDE F. Clark
LDT M. Pennel
RDT D. Nnadi
2019 POSTSEASON DEFENSE DEFENSE RDE LB LB LB T. Kpassagnon A. Hitchens D. Wilson B. Breeland
F. Clark
M. Pennel
D. Nnadi
T. Kpassagnon A. Hitchens D. Wilson
T. Kpassagnon
C. Jones
D. Nnadi
F. Clark
A. Hitchens D. Wilson
LCB C. Ward
RCB --
CB K. Fuller
TE --
FS SS D. Sorensen T. Mathieu
--
B. Breeland
C. Ward
K. Fuller
D. Sorensen T. Mathieu
R. Ragland
C. Ward
B. Breeland
--
D. Sorensen T. Mathieu
DATE OPPONENT 09/08 at Jacksonville 09/15 at Oakland 09/22 Baltimore 09/29 at Detroit 10/06 Indianapolis 10/13 Houston 10/17 at Denver 10/27 Green Bay 11/03 Minnesota 11/10 at Tennessee 11/18 at L.A. Chargers 12/01 Oakland 12/08 at New England 12/15 Denver 12/22 at Chicago 12/29 L.A. Chargers DATE OPPONENT 01/12 Houston 01/19 Tennessee 02/02 San Francisco
2019 REGULAR SEASON - CAPTAINS OFFENSE DEFENSE Patrick Mahomes Tyrann Mathieu Mitchell Schwartz Anthony Hitchens Travis Kelce Byron Pringle Andrew Wylie Frank Clark Cam Erving Daniel Sorensen Demarcus Robinson Emmanuel Ogbah Tyreek Hill Charvarius Ward LeSean McCoy Reggie Ragland Sammy Watkins Tanoh Kpassagnon Austin Reiter Derrick Nnadi Patrick Mahomes Tyrann Mathieu Laurent Duvernay-Tardif Bashaud Breeland Anthony Sherman Anthony Hitchens Eric Fisher Kendall Fuller Spencer Ware Chris Jones Damien Williams Mike Pennel 2019 POSTSEASON - CAPTAINS OFFENSE DEFENSE Travis Kelce Tyrann Mathieu Patrick Mahomes Anthony Hitchens Travis Kelce Tyrann Mathieu Patrick Mahomes Anthony Hitchens Travis Kelce Tyrann Mathieu Patrick Mahomes Anthony Hitchens
SPECIAL TEAMS Dustin Colquitt Armani Watts Chris Jones Jordan Lucas Damien Wilson James Winchester Anthony Sherman Harrison Butker Dorian O'Daniel Byron Pringle Dustin Colquitt Darrel Williams Darron Lee Byron Pringle Ben Niemann Blake Bell SPECIAL TEAMS Dustin Colquitt Harrison Butker Dustin Colquitt Harrison Butker Dustin Colquitt Harrison Butker
DATE 09/08
OPPONENT at Jacksonville
09/15
at Oakland
09/22
Baltimore
09/29
at Detroit
10/06
Indianapolis
10/13
Houston
10/17
at Denver
10/27
Green Bay
11/03
Minnesota
11/10
at Tennessee
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
12/01
Oakland
12/08
at New England
12/15
Denver
12/22
at Chicago
12/29
L.A. Chargers
2019 REGULAR SEASON INACTIVES PLAYERS Nick Allegretti Martinas Rankin Ryan Hunter Khalen Saunders Jordan Lucas Deon Yelder Reggie Ragland Nick Allegretti Martinas Rankin Tyreek Hill Khalen Saunders Ryan Hunter Deon Yelder Reggie Ragland Nick Allegretti Khalen Saunders Eric Fisher Greg Senat Tyreek Hill Damien Williams Martinas Rankin Nick Allegretti Khalen Saunders Eric Fisher Greg Senat Tyreek Hill Damien Williams Martinas Rankin Nick Allegretti Alex Okafor Eric Fisher Greg Senat Tyreek Hill Darwin Thompson Dorian O'Daniel Eric Fisher Greg Senat Anthony Hitchens Sammy Watkins Chris Jones Andrew Wylie Dorian O'Daniel Eric Fisher Darwin Thompson Kendall Fuller Sammy Watkins Chris Jones Andrew Wylie Greg Senat Frank Clark Patrick Mahomes Eric Fisher Greg Senat Kendall Fuller Andrew Wylie Chris Jones Frank Clark Patrick Mahomes Laurent Duvernay-Tardif Alex Okafor Eric Fisher Darwin Thompson Kendall Fuller Laurent Duvernay-Tardif LeSean McCoy Eric Fisher Alex Okafor Kendall Fuller Mike Pennel Chad Henne Nick Allegretti Chad Henne Jackson Barton Alex Okafor Blake Bell Darwin Thompson Kendall Fuller Nick Allegretti Jordan Lucas Jackson Barton Damien Williams Demone Harris Deon Yelder Chad Henne Nick Allegretti Chad Henne Jackson Barton Damien Williams Morris Claiborne Deon Yelder Rashad Fenton Nick Allegretti Chad Henne Jackson Barton Damien Williams Morris Claiborne Deon Yelder Rashad Fenton Jackson Barton LeSean McCoy Morris Claiborne Andrew Wylie Rashad Fenton Deon Yelder Chad Henne Jackson Barton Xavier Williams Alex Brown Andrew Wylie Morris Claiborne Deon Yelder Chad Henne
2019 POSTSEASON INACTIVES DATE 01/12
OPPONENT Houston
01/19
Tennessee
02/02
San Francisco
Jackson Barton Morris Claiborne Chad Henne Ryan Hunter Jackson Barton Morris Claiborne Ryan Hunter Darron Lee Jackson Barton Morris Claiborne Chad Henne Ryan Hunter
PLAYERS Chris Jones Darron Lee Andrew Wylie LeSean McCoy Matt Moore Andrew Wylie Darron Lee LeSean McCoy Andrew Wylie
DATE OPPONENT 09/08 at Jacksonville 09/15 at Oakland 09/22 Baltimore 09/29 at Detroit 10/06 Indianapolis 10/13 Houston
10/17 10/27 11/03 11/10 11/18
at Denver Green Bay Minnesota at Tennessee at L.A. Chargers
12/01 Oakland 12/08 12/15 12/22 12/29
at New England Denver at Chicago L.A. Chargers
DATE 9/8 9/15 9/22 9/29
OPPONENT at Jacksonville at Oakland Baltimore at Detroit
2019 REGULAR SEASON - DEFENSIVE TAKEAWAYS TAKEAWAY QTR. SCORE YD-LINE RESULT 3 23-13 KC-26 TD B. Breeland FR (D. Wilson FF) 4 37-19 JAX-17 FG F. Clark INT (G. Minshew II) 3 28-10 KC-(-4) Punt B. Breeland INT (D. Carr: touchback) 3 28-10 KC-45 Fumble C. Ward INT (D. Carr) None 3 0-3 KC-6 Fumble C. Jones FR (D. Nnadi FF) 3 13-13 KC-0 TD B. Breeland FR (X. Williams FF) 2 10-10 KC-7 Fumble T. Mathieu INT (J. Brissett) 1 7-0 HST-18 FG F. Clark FR (F. Clark FF) 2 17-16 KC-0 Fumble J. Thornhill INT (D. Watson: touchback) 3 24-23 KC-(-2) Punt C. Ward INT (D. Watson: touchback) 2 7-6 DEN-5 TD R. Ragland FR (A. Hitchens FF) None None 1 7-0 TEN-20 FG T. Kpassagnon FR (C. Jones FF) 2 0-3 KC-31 Punt D. Nnadi INT (P. Rivers) 2 0-3 LAC-41 TD T. Mathieu INT (P. Rivers) 4 24-17 KC-33 Punt R. Fenton INT (P. Rivers) 4 24-17 KC-(-3) EOG D. Sorensen INT (P. Rivers: touchback) 1 0-0 KC-48 TD T. Mathieu INT (D. Carr) 2 7-0 OAK-46 TD J. Thornhill INT (D. Carr) 2 10-7 NE-39 TD B. Breeland INT (T. Brady) 3 23-3 KC-(-2) INT J. Thornhill INT (D. Lock: touchback) None 2 10-7 KC-(-2) End of Half T. Mathieu INT (P. Rivers: touchback) 4 31-21 LAC-44 EOG D. Sorensen INT (P. Rivers)
12/15 Denver 12/22 at Chicago 12/29 L.A. Chargers
2019 REGULAR SEASON - OFFENSIVE GIVEAWAYS GIVEAWAY QTR. SCORE YD-LINE None 4 28-10 OAK-16 P. Mahomes fumble (B. Mayowa FF; D. Worley FR) None 3 13-13 KC-31 D. Williams fumble (T. Flowers FF; A. Robinson FR) 3 20-16 KC-45 S. Watkins fumble (J. Coleman FF; J. Coleman FR) 2 10-10 IND-14 L. McCoy fumble (G. Odum FF; B. Okereke FR) 2 17-9 HST-(-1) P. Mahomes INT (T. Gipson Sr.: touchback) 2 17-16 KC-3 P. Mahomes fumble (C. Omenihu FF; B. McKinney FR) None 3 17-17 KC-27 L. McCoy fumble (T. Lancaster FF; T. Lancaster FR) None 2 22-20 TEN-47 D. Williams fumble (D. Long Jr. FF; R. Evans FR) 1 0-3 LAC-27 P. Mahomes INT (R. Jenkins) None 1 0-7 KC-46 P. Mahomes INT (J. Jackson) 3 23-13 NE-43 T. Kelce fumble (D. McCourty FF; S. Gilmore FR) 4 23-3 DEN-1 P. Mahomes INT (J. Simmons) None 3 10-7 KC-36 P. Mahomes INT (M. Davis)
DATE OPPONENT 12/01 Oakland
2019 REGULAR SEASON - SPECIAL TEAMS/MISC TAKEAWAYS TAKEAWAY QTR. SCORE YD-LINE 1 7-0 OAK-24 D. O'Daniel FR (R. Fenton FF)
RESULT Downs
DATE OPPONENT 09/29 at Detroit 11/03 Minnesota
2019 REGULAR SEASON - SPECIAL TEAMS/MISC GIVEAWAYS GIVEAWAY QTR. SCORE YD-LINE 3 13-13 KC-36 M. Hardman fumble (J. Agnew FF; J. Reeves-Maybin FR) 3 10-10 KC-38 M. Hardman fumble (M. Hughes FF; H. Hill FR)
RESULT Fumble TD
10/6 Indianapolis 10/13 Houston 10/17 10/27 11/3 11/10 11/18 12/1 12/8
at Denver Green Bay Minnesota at Tennessee at L.A. Chargers Oakland at New England
2019 REGULAR SEASON - TURNOVERS Offense: 13 Giveaways Ratio 44 Points (6 TD, 1 FG) +8 (23 takes, 15 gives) Defense: 22 Takeaways 58 Points (7 TD, 3 FG) Special 2 Giveaways Points Off Turnovers Ratio Teams: 6 Points (1 TD, 0 FG) +8 (58 scored, 50 allowed) 1 Takeaway 0 Points (0 TD, 0 FG)
RESULT Punt Fumble TD Punt TD TD TD TD INT Punt FG Downs TD
DATE 01/12 01/19 02/02
OPPONENT Houston Tennessee San Francisco
2019 POSTSEASON - DEFENSIVE TAKEAWAYS TAKEAWAY None None B. Breeland INT (J. Garoppolo) K. Fuller INT (J. Garoppolo)
DATE 1/12 1/19 2/2
OPPONENT Houston Tennessee San Francisco
2019 POSTSEASON - OFFENSIVE GIVEAWAYS GIVEAWAY None None P. Mahomes INT (F. Warner) P. Mahomes INT (T. Moore)
QTR. SCORE YD-LINE
2 4
7-3 31-20
KC-43 KC-41
QTR. SCORE YD-LINE
RESULT
TD Punt
DATE OPPONENT 01/12 Houston
2019 POSTSEASON - SPECIAL TEAMS/MISC TAKEAWAYS TAKEAWAY QTR. SCORE YD-LINE 2 14-24 HST-24 D. Thompson FR (D. Sorensen FF)
RESULT TD
DATE OPPONENT 01/12 Houston
2019 POSTSEASON - SPECIAL TEAMS/MISC GIVEAWAYS GIVEAWAY QTR. SCORE YD-LINE 1 0-14 KC-6 T. Hill; K. Crossen FR
RESULT TD
2019 POSTSEASON - TURNOVERS Giveaways Ratio Points (1 TD, 0 FG) 0 (3 takes, 3 gives) Takeaways Points (0 TD, 1 FG) Giveaway Points Off Turnovers Ratio Points (1 TD, 0 FG) -4 (10 scored, 14 allowed) Takeaway Points (1 TD, 0 FG)
10-13 10-20
FG Downs
SF-42 SF-13
Offense: 2 7 Defense: 2 3 Special 1 Teams: 7 1 7
3 4
RESULT
DATE OPPONENT 09/08 at Jacksonville
09/15 at Oakland
2019 REGULAR SEASON - INSIDE THE 20 OFFENSE FG - 28 yards FG - 25 yards TD - Run TD - Pass FG - 35 yards End of Game TD - Pass Fumble
09/22 Baltimore
TD - Run TD - Pass TD - Pass FG - 36 yards
09/29 at Detroit
Missed FG FG - 23 yards TD - Run TD - Run TD - Run
10/06 Indianapolis
FG - 29 yards TD - Pass FG - 36 yards
10/13 Houston
FG - 41 yards TD - Pass TD - Pass
10/17 at Denver
FG - 33 yards FG - 20 yards FG - 28 yards TD - Run
10/27 Green Bay
11/03 Minnesota
FG - 24 yards FG - 54 yards
11/10 at Tennessee
TD - Pass FG - 30 yards TD - Pass TD - Run TD - Run
11/18 at L.A. Chargers
12/01 Oakland
12/08 at New England 12/15 Denver
12/22 at Chicago
12/29 L.A. Chargers
TD - Pass Downs TD - Run TD - Run TD - Run TD - Run FG - 31 yards FG - 23 yards FG - 24 yards TD - Pass Interception TD - Run TD - Pass TD - Pass FG - 32 yards TD - Run
DEFENSE FG - 37 yards FG - 23 yards TD - Pass
FG - 29 yards TD - Pass Interception TD - Run TD - Run TD - Run FG - 39 yards TD - Run FG - 25 yards TD - Pass Fumble Fumble TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Run FG - 32 yards FG - 32 yards FG - 31 yards FG - 29 yards TD - Pass TD - Run TD - Run Interception TD - Run End of Game TD - Run Missed FG TD - Pass TD - Run FG - 35 yards TD - Pass TD - Pass FG - 29 yards TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Run FG - 27 yards FG - 26 yards TD - Pass Interception Missed FG FG - 34 yards TD - Pass TD - Run FG - 29 yards Downs FG - 32 yards Interception Downs
TD - Pass TD - Run Downs TD - Pass Inside the 20 Scores Touchdowns Field Goals Total Points in 20 Fumbles Interceptions Missed Field Goals Lost on Downs End of Half/Game TDs Outside
OFFENSE DEFENSE 50 57 45 45 27 29 18 16 242 244 1 2 1 4 1 2 1 3 1 1 20 6
DATE OPPONENT 01/12 Houston
01/19 Tennessee 02/02 San Francisco
2019 POSTSEASON - INSIDE THE 20 OFFENSE TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Run TD - Run TD - Pass FG - 24 yards TD - Pass TD - Run End of Game TD - Run FG - 31 yards TD - Pass TD - Pass
DEFENSE TD - Pass FG - 31 yards TD - Run Downs
FG - 30 yards TD - Run TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Run
Inside the 20 Scores Touchdowns Field Goals Total Points in 20 Fumbles Interceptions Missed Field Goals Lost on Downs End of Half/Game TDs Outside
OFFENSE DEFENSE 15 9 14 8 12 6 2 2 89 48 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 4 2
DATE 09/08 09/15 09/22 09/29
10/06 10/13
10/17 10/27 11/03 11/10 11/18 12/01 12/08 12/15 12/22 12/29
2019 REGULAR SEASON - GOAL TO GO SITUATIONS OPPONENT OFFENSE DEFENSE at Jacksonville Field Goal - 25 yards Field Goal - 23 yards TD - Run TD - Pass at Oakland NONE TD - Pass Interception Baltimore TD - Run TD - Run TD - Run TD - Run at Detroit Field Goal - 23 yards Field Goal - 25 yards TD - Run Fumble TD - Run Fumble TD - Run TD - Pass TD - Pass Indianapolis Field Goal - 36 yards TD - Run Houston TD - Pass TD - Run TD - Run Interception TD - Run at Denver Field Goal - 20 yards TD - Run Green Bay TD - Run TD - Run Field Goal - 35 yards Minnesota Field Goal - 24 yards TD - Pass TD - Pass at Tennessee TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Run at L.A. Chargers TD - Run Field Goal - 26 yards TD - Pass Oakland TD - Pass NONE TD - Run TD - Run at New England TD - Run Field Goal - 29 yards Denver Field Goal - 23 yards Field Goal - 32 yards Field Goal - 24 yards TD - Pass at Chicago TD - Pass Lost on Downs L.A. Chargers TD - Run TD - Run Goal-To-Go Situations Scores Touchdowns Field Goals Total Points Fumbles Interceptions Missed Field Goals Lost on Downs End of Half/Game
OFFENSE DEFENSE 24 29 24 24 17 18 7 6 142 142 2 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
DATE 01/12
01/19 02/02
2019 POSTSEASON - GOAL TO GO SITUATIONS OPPONENT OFFENSE DEFENSE Houston TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Run TD - Pass Lost on Downs TD - Run TD - Run TD - Pass Tennessee TD - Pass TD - Run TD - Run TD - Pass San Francisco TD - Run TD - Run TD - Pass TD - Pass Goal-To-Go Situations Scores Touchdowns Field Goals Total Points Fumbles Interceptions Missed Field Goals Lost on Downs End of Half/Game
OFFENSE DEFENSE 11 6 11 5 11 5 0 0 76 35 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
QTR 1 4 4
CHIEFS PLAYER
2019 REGULAR YDS. 13 31 19
SEASON - BIG RUN PLAYS (10+ YARDS) DOWN RESULT QTR 2-2-KC 28 Touchdown 1 1-10-KC 43 Touchdown 3 1-10-JAX 47 End Game 3
DATE
OPPONENT
09/08
at Jacksonville
09/15
at Las Vegas
09/22
Baltimore
1 1 3 4
Patrick Mahomes LeSean McCoy LeSean McCoy Darrel Williams
11 12 25 41
2-9-KC 26 1-10-KC 25 1-10-KC 25 1-10-KC 25
09/29
at Detroit
1 2 4
Patrick Mahomes LeSean McCoy Patrick Mahomes
25 39 15
10/06
Indianapolis
4
Patrick Mahomes
10/13
Houston
1 3
1 4
LeSean McCoy LeSean McCoy LeSean McCoy
OPP. PLAYER Leonard Fournette Leonard Fournette Leonard Fournette
YDS. 12 14 10
DOWN 1-10-JAX 38 3-2-KC 48 3-23-JAX 9
RESULT Field Goal Fumble Punt
12 10 51
1-10-OAK 25 3-11-OAK 36 1-10-OAK 19
Punt Punt Interception
2 2 3
Josh Jacobs Derek Carr Josh Jacobs
Punt Touchdown Downs Field Goal
1 3 3 3
Mark Ingram II Gus Edwards Gus Edwards Mark Ingram II
21 15 13 19T
2-10-BAL 42 1-10-BAL 38 1-10-KC 47 2-10-KC 19
Touchdown Touchdown Touchdown Touchdown
3-6-KC 18 1-10-KC 30 4-8-KC 34
Field Goal Touchdown Touchdown
2 3 3 3 3 3
Kerryon Johnson Kerryon Johnson Kerryon Johnson J.D. McKissic Kerryon Johnson Matthew Stafford
14 11 13 26 12 11
1-10-DET 21 2-5-KC 31 1-10-KC 20 2-10-KC 28 1-10-KC 45 2-9-KC 32
Field Goal Fumble Fumble Fumble Touchdown Touchdown
14
1-10-KC 25
Field Goal
1 1 2 3 3
Marlon Mack Jordan Wilkins Marlon Mack Marlon Mack Zach Pascal
30 10 11 11 12
1-10-KC 36 1-11-KC 11 1-10-IND 33 2-12-IND 20 3-1-IND 44
Touchdown Touchdown Interception Punt Punt
LeSean McCoy LeSean McCoy
15 17
1-10-HOU 40 2-5-HOU 49
Touchdown Touchdown
1 2 3 4 4
Carlos Hyde Carlos Hyde Carlos Hyde Duke Johnson Deshaun Watson
11 11 26 15 10
1-10-KC 49 3-1-HOU 48 1-10-KC 46 1-10-KC 41 1-10-KC 44
Field Goal Touchdown Interception Touchdown End Game
LeSean McCoy LeSean McCoy
19 22
2-3-KC 32 1-10-KC 49
Touchdown Field Goal
NONE
3
Royce Freeman
14
2-10-DEN 11
Punt
3 3
Jamaal Williams Aaron Rodgers
14 15
1-10-GB 49 2-10-KC 27
Field Goal Touchdown
Touchdown
4 4
Dalvin Cook Stefon Diggs
12 12
2-10-MIN 40 2-3-KC 41
Touchdown Touchdown
Touchdown Touchdown Fumble Field Goal
2 3 4 4 4 4 4
Derrick Henry Derrick Henry Ryan Tannehill Derrick Henry Derrick Henry Derrick Henry Ryan Tannehill
12 68T 12 12 14 14 18
1-10-TEN 22 2-4-TEN 32 3-10-TEN 34 1-10-TEN 46 2-3-KC 15 1-10-TEN 25 1-10-TEN 39
Punt Touchdown Touchdown Touchdown Touchdown Downs Touchdown
3-7-KC 18 3-2-KC 35 3-6-KC 37
Interception Touchdown Punt
1 2 2
Melvin Gordon III Melvin Gordon III Austin Ekeler
21 11 18
1-10-KC 48 2-4-LAC 14 1-10-KC 26
Missed FG Interception Field Goal
15 13T
1-10-KC 21 1-10-OAK 13
Punt Touchdown
1 1 2
Josh Jacobs Josh Jacobs Josh Jacobs
12 15 35
2-10-OAK 14 1-10-OAK 15 1-10-OAK 24
Interception Punt Missed FG
LeSean McCoy
13
1-10-KC 45
Field Goal
2 3 4
James White Brandon Bolden Tom Brady
19 10T 17
1-10-NE 31 2-1-KC 10 4-6-KC 29
Downs Touchdown Downs
1 2 3
LeSean McCoy Darwin Thompson Darwin Thompson
10 12 12
1-10-KC 16 2-5-DEN 22 1-10-KC 20
Field Goal Field Goal Interception
1 3
Phillip Lindsay Phillip Lindsay
10 13
1-10-DEN 26 2-10-KC 33
Punt Interception
at Chicago
1 3
Patrick Mahomes Damien Williams
12T 12
3-5-CHI 12 1-10-KC 4
Touchdown Punt
3 3 3
David Montgomery David Montgomery Cordarrelle Patterson
13 16 16
2-6-CHI 17 2-10-KC 39 2-8-KC 21
Downs Downs Downs
L.A. Chargers
3 4
Damien Williams Patrick Mahomes
84T 11
1-10-KC 16 2-10-KC 5
Touchdown Punt
1 2 3 3
Austin Ekeler Justin Jackson Melvin Gordon III Austin Ekeler
10 11 15 22
3-20-LAC 36 2-10-KC 23 2-9-KC 20 2-3-LAC 30
Punt Touchdown Touchdown Downs
YDS. 11 10
DOWN 1-10-HOU 15 2-1-HOU 34
RESULT Punt Punt
10/17
at Denver
10/27
Green Bay
11/03
Minnesota
3
Damien Williams
91T
2-4-KC 9
11/10
at Tennessee
1 1 2 4
Damien Williams Damien Williams Sammy Watkins Damien Williams
15 10 11 10
1-10-TEN 39 1-10-TEN 13 1-10-KC 28 1-10-KC 26
11/18
at L.A. Chargers
1 3 4
Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes
24 20 15
12/01
Las Vegas
2 2
Darrel Williams Patrick Mahomes
12/08
at New England
3
12/15
Denver
12/22
12/29
TOTALS
NONE
33 - 708 (21.5), 4 TDS
CHIEFS PLAYER
56 - 912 (16.3), 3 TDS
OPPONENT
01/12
Houston
01/19
Tennessee
2 3
Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes
27T 11
2-10-TEN 27 1-10-TEN 33
Touchdown Touchdown
1 2
Derrick Henry Derrick Henry
11 13
1-10-TEN 42 1-10-TEN 47
Touchdown Touchdown
02/02
San Francisco
1 1 4 4
Damien Williams Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes Damien Williams
14 10 13 38T
2-1-SF 42 3-11-SF 15 2-19-SF 36 2-6-SF 38
Touchdown Touchdown Interception Touchdown
1 2 2 3 4
Deebo Samuel Raheem Mostert Tevin Coleman Deebo Samuel Raheem Mostert
32 11 17 14 17
1-10-SF 28 1-10-SF 46 1-10-KC 43 1-10-SF 36 1-10-SF 15
Field Goal Touchdown Touchdown Field Goal Downs
TOTALS
QTR 2 2 3 3 4 4
2019 POSTSEASON - BIG RUN PLAYS (10+ YARDS) YDS. DOWN RESULT QTR 1 Touchdown 1-10-KC 45 21 2 Touchdown 1-10-HOU 19 14 Touchdown 1-10-HOU 26 14 Touchdown 1-5-HOU 44 14 Field Goal 2-3-KC 49 11 Field Goal 1-10-HOU 40 26
DATE
Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes Sammy Watkins Damien Williams Damien Williams
12 - 213 (17.8), 2 TDS
OPP. PLAYER Duke Johnson Deshaun Watson
9 - 136 (15.1), 0 TDS
2019 REGULAR SEASON - BIG PASS PLAYS (20+ YARDS) OPPON QT DATE ENT R CHIEFS PLAYER 09/08 at Jacks 1 Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy 1 Watkins onville 1 Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce 1 Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy 2 Watkins 2 Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy Watkins Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy Watkins
YD S. 68 T 42 21 49 T 41 22
Q YD DOWN RESULT TR OPP. PLAYER S. 3-3-KC 32 Touchdown 1 Nick Foles -> Chris Conley 21 1-10-KC 21 Field Goal 1 Nick Foles -> DJ Chark Jr. 35 1-10-JAX 37 Field Goal 2 Gardner Minshew II -> Chris T 1-10-JAX 49 Touchdown 2 Conley 20 1-10-KC 25 Field Goal 4 Gardner Minshew II -> DJ Chark Jr. 69 2-7-JAX 31 Field Goal 4 Gardner Minshew II -> DJ Chark Jr. 35 21 Gardner Minshew II -> Chris T Conley
09/15 at Las Vegas
2 2 2 2 2 2 3 4
Patrick Mahomes -> Demarcus Robinson Patrick Mahomes -> Mecole Hardman Patrick Mahomes -> Damien Williams Patrick Mahomes -> Demarcus Robinson Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce Patrick Mahomes -> Demarcus Robinson Patrick Mahomes -> Demarcus Robinson Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce
44 1-10-OAK T 44 42 3-20-OAK T 42 32 2-11-KC 5 43 1-10-KC 37 27 2-17-OAK T 27 39 1-10-OAK T 39 28 1-10-KC 22 34 3-4-KC 30
09/22 Baltimor e
1 1 2 3
Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce Patrick Mahomes -> Mecole Hardman Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy Watkins
20 21 83 T 36
1-10-KC 2-10-KC 1-10-KC 1-10-KC
09/29 at Detro 1 1 it 2 4
Patrick Mahomes -> Deon Yelder Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy Watkins Patrick Mahomes -> Darrel Williams Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce:10 -> LeSean McCoy:23
24 30 30 33
Patrick Mahomes -> Byron Pringle Patrick Mahomes -> Byron Pringle Patrick Mahomes -> LeSean McCoy Patrick Mahomes -> Mecole Hardman Patrick Mahomes -> Byron Pringle Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce
28 2-8-IND 41 Field Goal 27 3-18-IND 27 Touchdown T 1-10-IND 46 Fumble 21 2-6-KC 24 Punt 31 3-28-KC 7 Downs 27 1-10-IND 32 Field Goal 24
10/06 Indianap olis
1 2 2 3 4 4
10/13 Houston
1 Patrick Mahomes -> Darrel 1 Williams Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill
52 46 T
10/17 at Denv er
1 Patrick Mahomes -> Mecole 3 Hardman Matt Moore -> Tyreek Hill
10/27 Green Bay
2 2 2 2 4
11/03 Minneso ta
1 Matt Moore -> Tyreek Hill 3 Matt Moore -> Tyreek Hill 4 Matt Moore -> Tyreek Hill
21 T 57 T 29 T 30 T 21 25 25 40 T 30 41
Matt Moore -> Travis Kelce Matt Moore -> Mecole Hardman Matt Moore -> Tyreek Hill Matt Moore -> Mecole Hardman Matt Moore -> Sammy Watkins
Touchdown Touchdown Touchdown Touchdown Touchdown Touchdown Punt End Game
DOWN 3-18-JAX 17 3-8-KC 35 2-7-KC 47 1-10-JAX 25 1-10-JAX 35 1-10-KC 21
RESULT Touchdow n Touchdow n Field Goal Field Goal Touchdow n Touchdow n
1 Derek Carr -> Derek Carrier 2 Derek Carr -> DeAndré Washington
25 3-3-OAK 32 Field Goal 20 1-10-OAK End Half 48
37 Punt 37 Touchdown 17 Touchdown 20 Touchdown
1 4 4 4
Lamar Lamar Lamar Lamar
23 25 31 23
1-10-KC 37 Missed FG 1-10-DET Field Goal 44 Field Goal 2-10-KC 44 Touchdown 2-12-DET 46
1 1 3 4 4
Matthew Stafford Golladay Matthew Stafford Jr. Matthew Stafford Johnson Matthew Stafford Matthew Stafford Jr.
3-6-KC 13 3-21-HOU 46
Touchdown Touchdown
Jackson Jackson Jackson Jackson
-> -> -> ->
Nick Boyle Seth Roberts Marquise Brown Willie Snead IV
33 33 -> Marvin Jones 22 34 25 -> Kerryon -> Kenny
-> Marvin Hall -> Marvin Jones
2-7-BAL 19 Touchdow 4-5-KC 27 n 1-10-BAL Touchdow 37 n 3-17-KC 39 Field Goal Field Goal 2-5-DET 30 3-9-KC 44 1-10-DET 25 2-4-KC 43 1-10-DET 25
Field Goal Touchdow n Field Goal Touchdow n End Game
NONE
2 Deshaun Watson -> Keke Coutee 4 Deshaun Watson -> Jordan Akins
23 2-9-HOU 21 Touchdow 23 2-1-HOU 25 n Touchdow n
3-2-DEN 21 Touchdown 1-10-KC 43 Touchdown
1 Joe Flacco -> Andy Janovich 2 Joe Flacco -> Courtland Sutton
22 41
1-10-GB 29 Touchdown 1-10-GB 30 Touchdown 2-10-KC 29 Field Goal 1-10- 50 Field Goal 1-10-GB 46 Touchdown
1 Aaron Rodgers -> Jake Kumerow 34 3-9-KC 45 Touchdow 1 Aaron Rodgers -> Aaron Jones 50 2-10-GB 40 n 4 Aaron Rodgers -> Aaron Jones 67 2-2-GB 33 Touchdow T n Touchdow n
2-10-MIN Touchdown 40 Field Goal 1-10-KC 45 Field Goal 1-10-KC 40
1 2 3 4
Kirk Kirk Kirk Kirk
Cousins Cousins Cousins Cousins
-> -> -> ->
Laquon Treadwell Irv Smith Jr. C.J. Ham Dalvin Cook
26 21 32 22
1-10-KC 35 Touchdow 1-10-DEN n 25 Missed FG
3-7-MIN 40 Touchdow 2-6-MIN 36 n 2-8-MIN 22 Field Goal 2-9-KC 28 Punt Touchdow n
11/10 at Tenn essee
2 3 4 4 4
11/18 at L.A. Charger s
29 3-10-KC 41 Field Goal 20 1-10-KC 38 Touchdown 63 3-9-KC 37 Touchdown T 2-8-KC 38 Field Goal 39 1-10-KC 38 Blocked FG 23
1 2 4 4
Ryan Tannehill -> Tajaé Sharpe Ryan Tannehill -> Kalif Raymond Ryan Tannehill -> Anthony Firkser Ryan Tannehill -> Adam Humphries
20 2-13-TEN Punt 52 22 Touchdow 20 1-10-TEN n 23 27 Touchdow T 2-10-KC 43 n 1-10-KC 23 Touchdow n
2 Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce 3 Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce
31 23 T
1 2 2 4
Philip Philip Philip Philip
37 30 26 50
12/01 Las Vegas
3 Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce
47
12/08 at New England
1 2 2 2
Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy Watkins Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Mecole Hardman Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce
23 3-10-KC 17 Field Goal 21 3-19-KC 46 Touchdown 48 2-25-NE 48 Touchdown T 3-5-NE 24 Touchdown 20
12/15 Denver
1 2 3 4
Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy Watkins Patrick Mahomes -> Travis Kelce Patrick Mahomes -> Blake Bell
41 1-10-DEN Touchdown 2 Drew Lock -> Noah Fant T 41 Field Goal 4 Drew Lock -> Courtland Sutton 29 3-8-KC 27 Interception 4 Drew Lock -> Courtland Sutton 21 2-6-KC 36 Interception 30 2-8-DEN 41
12/22 at Chica go 12/29 L.A. Charger s
TOTALS
Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Demarcus Robinson Patrick Mahomes -> Mecole Hardman Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Demarcus Robinson
2-4-KC 43 1-10-LAC 23
Field Goal Touchdown
1-10-KC 36 Touchdown
NONE 2 Patrick Mahomes -> Mecole 2 Hardman 4 Patrick Mahomes -> Demarcus Robinson Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill
30 24 T 47
3-7-KC 46 1-10-LAC 24 3-7-KC 26
Touchdown Touchdown Touchdown
59 - 1,993 (33.8), 19 TDS
Rivers Rivers Rivers Rivers
-> -> -> ->
Austin Ekeler Keenan Allen Mike Williams Mike Williams
1 Derek Carr -> DeAndré 2 Washington Derek Carr -> Darren Waller
1-10-KC 49 2-6-LAC 44 3-2-LAC 33 3-15-LAC 25
28 24
1 Tom Brady -> Julian Edelman 4 James White -> Jakobi Meyers
Field Goal Interceptio n Field Goal Interceptio n Punt Downs
1-20-OAK 32 1-10-OAK 27 37 1-10-KC 37 Touchdow T 1-10-NE 32 n 35 Downs
43 4-1-DEN 48 Field Goal 33 2-10-DEN 1 Downs 27 1-10-DEN Downs 28
4 Mitchell Trubisky -> Jesper Horsted
20 2-17-CHI 18
2 Philip Rivers -> Mike Williams 4 Philip Rivers -> Melvin Gordon III
22 23
Downs
1-10-KC 45 Touchdow 1-10-KC 40 n Touchdow n
46 - 1,406 (30.6), 5 TDS
2019 POSTSEASON - BIG PASS PLAYS (20+ YARDS) OPPON QT DATE ENT R CHIEFS PLAYER 01/12 Houston 2 Patrick Mahomes -> 2 Patrick Mahomes -> 2 Patrick Mahomes -> 3 Patrick Mahomes -> 3 Watkins 3 Patrick Mahomes -> 4 Patrick Mahomes ->
Travis Kelce Tyreek Hill Travis Kelce Sammy
Travis Kelce Travis Kelce Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy Watkins
01/19 Tenness ee
1 2 2 4
02/02 San Francisc o
2 Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy 4 Watkins 4 Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy Watkins
TOTALS
Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Demarcus Robinson Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Sammy Watkins
14 - 432 (30.9), 2 TDS
YD S. DOWN RESULT 25 1-10-HOU Touchdown Touchdown 42 20 20 1-10-KC 25 Touchdown 48 2-15-HOU Touchdown Touchdown 39 28 23 2-10-KC 26 Touchdown 28 1-10-KC 23 Touchdown 1-10-KC 28 1-10-HOU 36
Q TR 1 2 3 3 4 4
OPP. PLAYER
YD S. DOWN 54 3-1-HOU 46 1-10-HOU T 23 38 21 1-10-HOU 25 39 20 2-24-KC 44 V 30 2-3-HOU 32 2-10-HOU 21
Deshaun Watson -> Kenny Stills Deshaun Watson -> DeAndre Hopkins Deshaun Watson -> DeAndre Hopkins Deshaun Watson -> Will Fuller Deshaun Watson -> DeAndre Hopkins Deshaun Watson -> Will Fuller V
26 1-10-KC 38 Touchdown 1 Ryan Tannehill -> A.J. Brown 24 1-10-KC 43 Touchdown 1 Ryan Tannehill -> Jonnu Smith 20 2-10-TEN Touchdown 4 Brett Kern -> Amani Hooker T 20 Touchdown 4 Ryan Tannehill -> Corey Davis 60 3-6-KC 40 4 Ryan Tannehill -> Anthony T Firkser
28 1-10-KC 44 Field Goal 2 Jimmy Garoppolo -> Jeff Wilson 44 3-15-KC 35 Touchdown 3 Jr. 38 2-7-SF 48 Touchdown Jimmy Garoppolo -> Kendrick Bourne 13 - 379 (29.2), 2 TDS
37 22 28 22 22 T
RESULT Touchdow n Missed FG Touchdow n Touchdow n Downs Downs
2-6-TEN 34 Field Goal 1-10-KC 26 Touchdow 4-8-TEN 22 n 2-2-KC 42 Touchdow 2-12-KC 22 n Touchdow n Touchdow n 20 3-5-SF 25 End Half 26 3-8-KC 37 Touchdow n
DATE 09/08 09/15 09/22 09/29 10/06 10/13 10/17 10/27 11/03 11/10 11/18 12/01 12/08 12/15 12/22 12/29 TOTALS
OPPONENT at Jacksonville at Oakland Baltimore at Detroit Indianapolis Houston at Denver Green Bay Minnesota at Tennessee at L.A. Chargers Oakland at New England Denver at Chicago L.A. Chargers
2019 REGULAR SEASON CHIEFS ADVANCES RUSHES COMPLETIONS ADVANCES 26 25 51 22 30 52 25 27 52 25 24 49 14 22 36 11 19 30 27 20 47 20 24 44 18 25 43 25 36 61 27 19 46 29 15 44 29 26 55 25 27 52 29 23 52 23 16 39 375 378 753
OUTCOME W 40-26 W 28-10 W 33-28 W 34-30 L 19-13 L 31-24 W 30-6 L 31-24 W 26-23 L 35-32 W 24-17 W 40-9 W 23-16 W 23-3 W 26-3 W 31-21
DATE 09/08 09/15 09/22 09/29 10/06 10/13 10/17 10/27 11/03 11/10 11/18 12/01 12/08 12/15 12/22 12/29 TOTALS
OPPONENT at Jacksonville at Oakland Baltimore at Detroit Indianapolis Houston at Denver Green Bay Minnesota at Tennessee at L.A. Chargers Oakland at New England Denver at Chicago L.A. Chargers
2019 REGULAR SEASON OPPONENT ADVANCES RUSHES COMPLETIONS ADVANCES 16 27 43 19 23 42 32 22 54 35 21 56 45 18 63 41 30 71 21 21 42 26 23 49 27 19 46 26 13 39 19 28 47 25 20 45 22 20 42 15 18 33 22 18 40 25 31 56 416 352 768
OUTCOME W 40-26 W 28-10 W 33-28 W 34-30 L 19-13 L 31-24 W 30-6 L 31-24 W 26-23 L 35-32 W 24-17 W 40-9 W 23-16 W 23-3 W 26-3 W 31-21
CHIEFS RECORD WHEN: Having 45 or more advances Having 50 or more advances Having less than 45 advances Having less than 50 advances Allowing 45 or more advances Allowing 50 or more advances Allowing less than 45 advances Allowing less than 50 advances
9 6 3 6 6 3 6 9
-
1 1 3 3 3 2 1 2
NOTE: Advances equal to all rushing attempts plus completions.
DATE 01/12 01/19 02/02 TOTALS
OPPONENT Houston Tennessee San Francisco
2019 POSTSEASON CHIEFS ADVANCES RUSHES COMPLETIONS 21 23 26 23 30 26 77 72
DATE 01/12 01/19 02/02 TOTALS
OPPONENT Houston Tennessee San Francisco
2019 POSTSEASON OPPONENT ADVANCES RUSHES COMPLETIONS ADVANCES 21 31 52 23 22 45 22 20 42 66 73 139
CHIEFS RECORD WHEN: Having 45 or more advances Having 50 or more advances Having less than 45 advances Having less than 50 advances Allowing 45 or more advances Allowing 50 or more advances Allowing less than 45 advances Allowing less than 50 advances NOTE: Advances equal to all rushing attempts plus completions.
2 1 1 2 2 1 1 2
-
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ADVANCES 44 49 56 149
OUTCOME W 51-31 W 35-24 W 31-20
OUTCOME W 51-31 W 35-24 W 31-20
CHIEFS 2019 REGULAR SEASON SCORING DRIVES DATE OPPONENT 09/08 at Jacksonville
ACQUIRED Kickoff Punt Kickoff Kickoff Kickoff Fumble Punt Interception 09/15 at Oakland Punt Punt Punt Punt 09/22 Baltimore Kickoff Downs Punt Punt Punt Kickoff 09/29 at Detroit Kickoff Punt Kickoff Kickoff Kickoff 10/06 Indianapolis Kickoff Kickoff Kickoff 10/13 Houston Kickoff Fumble Kickoff Missed FG 10/17 at Denver Kickoff Punt Downs Punt Downs 10/27 Green Bay Kickoff Punt Punt Kickoff 11/03 Minnesota Punt Punt Punt Punt Punt Punt 11/10 at Tennessee Kickoff Fumble Kickoff Punt Kickoff Punt Kickoff 11/18 at L.A. Chargers Interception Kickoff Kickoff Punt 12/01 Oakland Interception Downs Kickoff Punt Kickoff 12/08 at New England Punt Blocked FG Interception Punt Kickoff 12/15 Denver Punt Punt Punt Kickoff Kickoff 12/22 at Chicago Punt Punt Punt Kickoff Downs 12/29 L.A. Chargers Punt Punt Kickoff Punt Kickoff AVG TOTALS
DRIVE FIRST START PLAYS YARDSQ|TIME DOWNS SCORING PLAY KC OPP 7 0 1 75 Q1|1:36 3 S. Watkins: 68-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 25 10 0 2 70 Q1|2:47 6 H. Butker: 28-yard FG KC 21 17 7 3 80 Q1|2:47 5 S. Watkins: 49-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 20 20 10 2 68 Q2|3:40 7 H. Butker: 25-yard FG KC 25 23 13 3 47 Q2|3:58 10 H. Butker: 46-yard FG KC 25 30 13 7 60 Q3|6:25 12 D. Williams: 1-yard run KC 40 37 13 4 67 Q3|4:19 8 Q4: S. Watkins: 3-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 33 40 19 0 -5 Q4|1:41 4 H. Butker: 35-yard FG JAX 12 3 72 Q1|1:10 3 Q2: D. Robinson: 44-yard pass from P. Mahomes 7 10 KC 28 14 10 6 95 Q2|6:32 14 M. Hardman: 42-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 5 21 10 3 94 Q2|1:52 5 T. Kelce: 27-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 6 28 10 1 39 Q2|0:07 1 D. Robinson: 39-yard pass from P. Mahomes OAK 39 7 6 6 75 Q1|5:06 11 Q2: L. McCoy: 1-yard run KC 25 14 6 3 47 Q2|2:43 5 D. Robinson: 18-yard pass from P. Mahomes BAL 47 20 6 2 96 Q2|1:27 3 M. Hardman: 83-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 4 23 6 3 59 Q2|1:13 9 H. Butker: 42-yard FG KC 17 30 13 4 80 Q3|4:14 8 L. McCoy: 14-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 20 33 22 3 57 Q4|2:03 7 H. Butker: 36-yard FG KC 25 3 10 4 81 Q1|3:53 10 Q2: H. Butker: 23-yard FG KC 14 10 10 5 70 Q2|3:57 7 L. McCoy: 1-yard run KC 30 13 13 2 49 Q2|1:01 6 H. Butker: 44-yard FG KC 25 27 23 5 75 Q3|4:01 9 Q4: D. Williams: 1-yard run KC 25 34 30 7 79 Q4|2:06 13 D. Williams: 1-yard run KC 21 3 0 4 12 64 Q1|5:58 H. Butker: 29-yard FG KC 25 10 7 5 11 75 Q1|4:36 Q2: B. Pringle: 27-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 25 13 19 5 7 57 Q4|1:11 H. Butker: 36-yard FG KC 25 7 0 2 91 Q1|3:18 6 T. Hill: 46-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 9 10 0 0 -5 Q1|1:17 4 H. Butker: 41-yard FG HOU 18 17 3 6 90 Q1|4:18 9 D. Williams: 14-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 10 24 23 5 64 Q3|4:25 10 T. Hill: 6-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 36 7 6 3 75 Q1|4:56 8 M. Hardman: 21-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 25 10 6 0 6 Q1|1:31 4 H. Butker: 33-yard FG DEN 21 6 13 3 37 13 H. Butker: 20-yard FG Q2|6:53 DEN 38 27 6 2 73 Q3|0:40 2 T. Hill: 57-yard pass from M. Moore KC 27 30 6 1 30 Q4|3:06 5 H. Butker: 39-yard FG KC 49 7 14 5 89 Q1|6:14 12 Q2: T. Kelce: 29-yard pass from M. Moore KC 11 14 14 3 62 Q2|1:50 5 M. Hardman: 30-yard pass from M. Moore KC 38 14 17 4 74 11 H. Butker: 28-yard FG Q2|3:03 KC 16 24 24 6 75 Q4|4:56 10 D. Williams: 3-yard run KC 25 7 0 3 67 Q1|3:15 7 T. Hill: 40-yard pass from M. Moore KC 33 10 7 7 85 Q2|8:56 17 H. Butker: 24-yard FG KC 9 17 16 1 97 Q3|0:48 2 D. Williams: 91-yard run KC 3 20 16 2 39 Q3|2:58 7 H. Butker: 45-yard FG KC 34 23 23 2 38 8 H. Butker: 54-yard FG Q4|4:05 KC 26 26 23 1 19 5 H. Butker: 44-yard FG Q4|1:47 MIN 45 7 0 6 69 Q1|5:41 12 T. Kelce: 3-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 31 10 0 0 8 Q1|3:05 4 H. Butker: 30-yard FG TEN 20 13 13 2 52 Q2|5:02 10 H. Butker: 41-yard FG KC 25 19 13 6 77 Q3|5:40 10 T. Hill: 11-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 23 22 20 3 50 10 H. Butker: 43-yard FG Q3|4:00 KC 25 29 20 2 79 5 M. Hardman: 63-yard pass from P. Mahomes Q4|2:06 KC 21 32 27 2 53 Q4|3:12 7 H. Butker: 39-yard FG KC 26 7 3 1 6 Q2|0:05 1 L. McCoy: 6-yard run LAC 6 10 6 2 52 Q2|3:18 9 H. Butker: 41-yard FG KC 25 17 9 5 9 75 Q3|5:31 D. Williams: 6-yard run KC 25 24 9 4 54 Q3|3:20 6 T. Kelce: 23-yard pass from P. Mahomes KC 46 11 47 Q1|3:31 4 7 0 OAK 47 D. Williams: 3-yard pass from P. Mahomes 8 60 Q2|3:25 5 14 0 KC 40 P. Mahomes: 13-yard run 9 34 Q3|2:57 2 24 0 KC 34 H. Butker: 50-yard FG 4 64 Q3|2:15 3 31 0 KC 36 L. McCoy: 3-yard run 14 75 6 38 3 KC 25 Q4|9:32 D. Thompson: 4-yard run 9 53 Q1|3:46 2 3 7 KC 17 H. Butker: 48-yard FG 7 58 Q1|3:56 3 KC 42 Q2: M. Hardman: 48-yard pass from P. Mahomes 10 7 7 35 Q2|3:20 3 17 7 NE 35 T. Kelce: 4-yard run 10 74 Q2|1:49 5 20 7 KC 13 H. Butker: 31-yard FG 11 52 Q3|6:14 3 23 7 KC 25 H. Butker: 41-yard FG 4 79 Q1|2:00 4 6 0 KC 21 T. Hill: 41-yard pass from P. Mahomes 12 79 Q1|6:48 5 9 0 KC 16 Q2: H. Butker: 23-yard FG 10 69 Q2|5:24 3 12 0 KC 25 H. Butker: 24-yard FG 9 53 Q2|1:56 4 15 3 KC 21 H. Butker: 44-yard FG 10 75 Q3|5:15 6 23 3 KC 25 T. Hill: 5-yard pass from P. Mahomes 15 82 Q1|7:58 6 7 0 KC 18 P. Mahomes: 12-yard run 7 31 Q2|3:06 2 10 0 KC 30 H. Butker: 56-yard FG 13 95 Q2|6:42 8 17 0 KC 5 T. Kelce: 6-yard pass from P. Mahomes 9 71 Q4|4:55 4 23 3 KC 29 D. Williams: 14-yard pass from P. Mahomes 11 43 Q4|6:02 3 26 3 KC 43 H. Butker: 32-yard FG 15 62 Q1|8:12 5 3 0 KC 16 H. Butker: 40-yard FG 4 57 Q2|1:29 2 10 7 KC 43 D. Robinson: 24-yard pass from P. Mahomes 0 0 Q3|0:16 0 17 14 0 M. Hardman: 104-yard run 1 84 Q3|0:15 1 24 14 KC 16 D. Williams: 84-yard run 8 77 Q4|2:46 4 31 21 KC 23 D. Williams: 7-yard run 7.9 60.7 3:37.38 3.4 642 4,916 293:28 275
CHIEFS 2019 POSTSEASON SCORING DRIVES DATE OPPONENT 01/12 Houston
ACQUIRED Kickoff Downs Fumble Punt Kickoff Punt Kickoff Downs 01/19 Tennessee Kickoff Kickoff Punt Punt Punt 02/02 San Francisco Kickoff Interception Punt Punt Downs AVG TOTALS
DRIVE FIRST START PLAYS YARDS Q|TIME DOWNS SCORING PLAY KC OPP 2 42 Q2|0:59 2 HOU 42 D. Williams: 17-yard pass from P. Mahomes 7 24 3 33 Q2|0:23 2 14 24 HOU 33 T. Kelce: 5-yard pass from P. Mahomes 3 6 Q2|1:25 1 21 24 HOU 6 T. Kelce: 6-yard pass from P. Mahomes 8 90 Q2|2:03 6 28 24 KC 10 T. Kelce: 5-yard pass from P. Mahomes 7 85 Q3|3:36 5 34 24 KC 15 D. Williams: 1-yard run 6 77 Q3|3:55 5 41 24 KC 23 D. Williams: 5-yard run 4 72 Q3|1:32 4 KC 28 Q4: B. Bell: 8-yard pass from P. Mahomes 48 31 7 52 Q4|3:31 2 51 31 KC 42 H. Butker: 24-yard FG 10 74 Q1|5:06 6 7 10 KC 26 T. Hill: 8-yard pass from P. Mahomes 5 63 Q2|2:36 4 14 17 KC 37 T. Hill: 20-yard pass from P. Mahomes 9 86 Q2|1:40 4 21 17 KC 14 P. Mahomes: 27-yard run 13 73 Q3|7:08 6 28 17 KC 27 Q4: D. Williams: 3-yard run 7 88 Q4|4:21 3 KC 12 S. Watkins: 60-yard pass from P. Mahomes 35 17 15 75 Q1|7:26 6 7 3 KC 25 P. Mahomes: 1-yard run 9 43 Q2|4:36 2 10 3 KC 44 H. Butker: 31-yard FG 10 83 Q4|2:40 5 17 20 KC 17 T. Kelce: 1-yard pass from P. Mahomes 7 65 Q4|2:26 3 KC 35 D. Williams: 5-yard pass from P. Mahomes 24 20 2 42 Q4|0:13 1 31 20 SF 42 D. Williams: 38-yard run 7.1 63.8 3:05.33 3.7 127 1,149 55:36 67
CHIEFS OPPONENTS 2019 REGULAR SEASON SCORING DRIVES DATE OPPONENT 09/08 at Jacksonville
ACQUIRED Kickoff Kickoff Kickoff Kickoff Kickoff 09/15 at Oakland Kickoff Punt 09/22 Baltimore Punt Kickoff Kickoff Punt Kickoff 09/29 at Detroit Kickoff Missed FG Kickoff Kickoff Fumble Punt 10/06 Indianapolis Kickoff Kickoff Punt Punt Downs 10/13 Houston Kickoff Kickoff Interception Fumble Punt 10/17 at Denver Kickoff 10/27 Green Bay Kickoff Missed FG Punt Fumble Kickoff 11/03 Minnesota Kickoff Punt Fumble Kickoff 11/10 at Tennessee Punt Kickoff Kickoff Downs 11/18 at L.A. Chargers Kickoff Kickoff Kickoff Kickoff 12/01 Oakland Kickoff Kickoff 12/08 at New England Kickoff Blocked Punt Fumble 12/15 Denver Kickoff 12/22 at Chicago Punt 12/29 L.A. Chargers Kickoff Interception Punt AVG TOTALS
DRIVE FIRST START PLAYS YARDSQ|TIME DOWNS SCORING PLAY KC OPP 10 7 4 75 Q1|3:34 7 D. Chark Jr.: 35-yard pass from N. Foles JAX 25 17 10 3 56 Q1|6:00 9 Q2: J. Lambo: 37-yard FG JAX 25 20 13 1 70 Q2|3:34 5 J. Lambo: 23-yard FG JAX 25 4 79 Q4|3:24 7 D. Westbrook: 15-yard pass from G. Minshew II 37 19 JAX 21 40 26 4 75 Q4|1:38 6 C. Conley: 21-yard pass from G. Minshew II JAX 25 10 65 Q1|4:39 3 0 3 OAK 25 D. Carlson: 29-yard FG 6 74 Q1|2:38 4 0 10 OAK 26 T. Williams: 4-yard pass from D. Carr 6 84 Q1|6:30 14 0 6 M. Ingram II: 2-yard run BAL 16 23 13 5 75 Q3|4:25 9 M. Ingram II: 19-yard run BAL 25 30 19 5 75 Q3|4:45 13 Q4: M. Ingram II: 1-yard run BAL 25 30 22 3 59 Q4|4:01 10 J. Tucker: 39-yard FG BAL 20 33 28 6 70 9 L. Jackson: 9-yard run Q4|2:35 BAL 30 3 68 Q1|5:38 10 0 3 M. Prater: 25-yard FG DET 25 4 74 Q1|2:34 7 0 10 T. Hockenson: 5-yard pass from M. Stafford DET 26 10 13 3 50 Q2|3:10 8 M. Prater: 48-yard FG DET 21 20 16 2 40 Q3|2:49 7 M. Prater: 53-yard FG DET 25 20 23 4 45 Q3|3:40 8 K. Golladay: 9-yard pass from M. Stafford KC 45 27 30 4 79 9 K. Golladay: 6-yard pass from M. Stafford Q4|4:16 DET 21 3 7 6 70 Q1|5:18 11 J. Brissett: 1-yard run IND 30 10 10 2 61 Q2|2:56 7 A. Vinatieri: 32-yard FG IND 25 10 13 4 74 Q2|1:34 11 A. Vinatieri: 32-yard FG IND 12 10 16 3 35 Q3|8:34 14 Q4: A. Vinatieri: 31-yard FG KC 48 10 19 1 21 Q4|2:35 7 A. Vinatieri: 29-yard FG KC 33 12 49 Q1|4:33 4 10 3 HOU 25 K. Fairbairn: 44-yard FG 10 75 Q1|4:13 5 HOU 25 Q2: D. Johnson: 11-yard pass from D. Watson 17 9 12 80 Q2|5:36 6 17 16 HOU 20 C. Hyde: 2-yard run 1 3 Q2|0:07 1 17 23 KC 3 D. Watson: 3-yard run 12 93 Q4|8:32 7 24 31 HOU 7 D. Watson: 1-yard run 10 75 Q1|5:54 6 0 6 DEN 25 R. Freeman: 1-yard run 10 74 Q1|6:17 4 0 7 GB 26 A. Jones: 4-yard pass from A. Rodgers 4 60 Q1|2:02 2 0 14 GB 40 J. Williams: 1-yard run 15 72 Q3|8:33 6 17 17 GB 11 M. Crosby: 35-yard FG 5 27 Q3|2:22 2 17 24 KC 27 Q4: J. Williams: 3-yard pass from A. Rodgers 2 75 Q4|0:59 1 24 31 GB 25 A. Jones: 67-yard pass from A. Rodgers 12 75 Q1|5:31 5 7 7 MIN 25 B. Johnson: 4-yard pass from K. Cousins 12 57 Q2|1:36 3 10 10 MIN 32 D. Bailey: 29-yard FG 5 38 Q3|3:01 2 10 16 KC 38 A. Abdullah: 16-yard pass from K. Cousins 11 75 Q3|4:31 5 20 23 MIN 25 Q4: K. Rudolph: 3-yard pass from K. Cousins 4 73 Q2|1:34 3 10 7 TEN 27 A. Firkser: 9-yard pass from R. Tannehill 2 74 Q3|0:56 1 19 20 TEN 26 D. Henry: 68-yard run 10 75 6 29 27 TEN 25 Q4|5:28 D. Henry: 1-yard run 4 61 3 TEN 39 Q4|0:58 A. Humphries: 23-yard pass from R. Tannehill 32 35 9 68 Q1|5:29 3 0 3 LAC 23 M. Badgley: 27-yard FG 9 67 Q2|3:44 3 7 6 LAC 25 M. Badgley: 26-yard FG 9 44 Q2|1:43 3 10 9 LAC 25 M. Badgley: 49-yard FG 6 75 Q3|3:12 4 24 17 LAC 25 K. Allen: 7-yard pass from P. Rivers 13 60 Q3|6:55 4 31 3 OAK 25 Q4: D. Carlson: 34-yard FG 10 75 Q4|4:45 5 38 9 OAK 25 D. Carrier: 4-yard pass from D. Carr 5 83 Q1|2:26 3 0 7 NE 17 J. Edelman: 37-yard pass from T. Brady 2 19 Q3|0:51 1 23 13 KC 19 B. Bolden: 10-yard run 9 46 Q3|3:25 3 23 16 NE 43 Q4: N. Folk: 29-yard FG 11 61 Q2|4:28 2 12 3 DEN 25 B. McManus: 32-yard FG 6 23 Q3|2:50 1 17 3 CHI 49 E. Pineiro: 46-yard FG 3 7 5 11 74 Q1|4:45 LAC 26 Q2: K. Allen: 12-yard pass from P. Rivers 3 21 Q3|1:26 2 10 14 M. Gordon III: 5-yard run KC 21 7 24 21 14 86 Q4|7:11 H. Henry: 8-yard pass from P. Rivers LAC 14 8.5 62.3 3:52.14 3.6 474 3,487 216:40 202
CHIEFS OPPONENTS 2019 POSTSEASON SCORING DRIVES DATE OPPONENT 01/12 Houston
ACQUIRED Kickoff Muffed Punt Punt Kickoff 01/19 Tennessee Kickoff Punt Kickoff Kickoff 02/02 San Francisco Punt Kickoff Kickoff Interception AVG TOTALS
DRIVE FIRST START PLAYS YARDS Q|TIME DOWNS SCORING PLAY KC OPP 2 75 Q1|3:01 6 0 7 K. Stills: 54-yard pass from D. Watson HOU 25 1 6 Q1|0:48 2 0 21 D. Fells: 4-yard pass from D. Watson KC 6 2 38 Q1|4:55 9 0 24 Q2: K. Fairbairn: 31-yard FG HOU 49 41 31 5 75 Q3|4:15 9 D. Watson: 5-yard run HOU 25 2 58 Q1|3:31 8 0 3 G. Joseph: 30-yard FG TEN 30 5 58 Q1|4:07 9 0 10 D. Henry: 4-yard run TEN 42 7 75 Q1|9:07 15 Q2: D. Kelly: 1-yard pass from R. Tannehill 7 17 TEN 25 3 80 Q4|3:15 8 A. Firkser: 22-yard pass from R. Tannehill 35 24 TEN 20 3 62 Q1|5:58 10 0 3 R. Gould: 38-yard FG SF 18 6 80 Q2|4:27 7 K. Juszczyk: 15-yard pass from J. Garoppolo 10 10 SF 20 10 13 3 60 Q3|5:31 9 R. Gould: 42-yard FG SF 16 10 20 4 55 Q3|2:48 6 R. Mostert: 1-yard run SF 45 8.2 60.2 4:18.58 3.6 98 722 51:43 43
2019 Regular Season (As of September 3, 2020)
PASSING
6 tds
500 YARDS PASSING Elvis Grbac Warren Moon 400 YARDS PASSING Patrick Mahomes Jared Goff 300 YARDS PASSING Patrick Mahomes Philip Rivers SEVEN TOUCHDOWN PASSES * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * SIX TOUCHDOWN PASSES Patrick Mahomes:
KC 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams
6 tds
* Never Has Happened * FIVE TOUCHDOWN PASSES Patrick Mahomes:
Opp 10/8/2017 @ Houston
5 tds
KC 11/5/2000 @ Oakland 504 yards Opp 12/6/1990 @ Houston Oilers 527 yards KC 11/10/2019 @ Tennessee Opp 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams
446 yards 413 yards
KC 12/15/2019 vs. Denver 340 yards Opp 11/18/2019 @ L.A. Chargers 353 yards KC Opp KC 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams
(25, 21, 8, 4, 73, 10)
Opp
(25, 21, 8, 4, 73, 10)
Deshaun Watson: (6, 9, 48, 34, 1)
KC 9/15/2019 @ Oakland
4 tds
Opp 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams
4 tds
FOUR TOUCHDOWN PASSES Patrick Mahomes: (44, 42, 27, 39)
Jared Goff: (7, 4, 7, 40)
KC 11/10/2019 @ Tennessee
3 tds
THREE TOUCHDOWN PASSES Patrick Mahomes:
Opp 11/3/2019 vs. Minnesota
3 tds
Kirk Cousins:
(3, 11, 63) (4, 16, 3)
KC 12/13/2009 vs. Buffalo 4 ints Opp 11/18/2019 @ L.A. Chargers 4 ints KC 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams 3 ints Opp 11/18/2019 @ L.A. Chargers 4 ints KC 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams 3 ints Opp 12/29/2019 vs. L.A. Chargers 2 ints
FOUR INTERCEPTIONS THROWN Matt Cassel Philip Rivers THREE INTERCEPTIONS THROWN Patrick Mahomes Philip Rivers TWO INTERCEPTIONS THROWN Patrick Mahomes Philip Rivers
RUSHING KC Opp KC 12/23/2012 vs. Indianapolis Opp 12/20/2009 vs. Cleveland
226 yards 286 yards
KC 12/29/2019 vs. L.A. Chargers 124 yards Opp 12/1/2019 vs. Oakland 104 yards KC Opp 12/7/2003 @ Denver
5 tds
300 YARDS RUSHING * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * 200 YARDS RUSHING Jamaal Charles Jerome Harrison 100 YARDS RUSHING Damien Williams Josh Jacobs FIVE TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING * Never Has Happened * Clinton Portis: (11, 1, 59, 28, 53)
KC 10/24/2004 vs. Atlanta
4 tds 4 tds
FOUR TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING Priest Holmes: (15, 2, 2, 1)
Derrick Blaylock: (7, 1, 3, 2)
Opp 12/7/2003 @ Denver
5 tds
Clinton Portis: (11, 1, 59, 28, 53)
KC 9/28/2015 @ Green Bay
3 tds
THREE TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING Jamaal Charles: (9, 4, 7)
Opp 9/22/2019 vs. Baltimore
3 tds
Mark Ingram II: (2, 19, 1)
KC 12/29/2019 vs. L.A. Chargers 2 tds
TWO TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING Damien Williams: (84, 7)
Opp 11/10/2019 @ Tennessee
2 tds
Derrick Henry: (68, 1)
TWO PLAYERS WITH TWO TD RUSHING KC 10/24/2004 vs. Atlanta Opp
* Never Has Happened *
RECEIVING
KC 12/15/2013 @ Oakland
TWO 100-YARD RECEIVERS 172 yards Demarcus Robinson 107 yards Travis Kelce 138 yards Jesse James 121 yards JuJu Smith-Schuster 200 YARDS RECEIVING 215 yards Tyreek Hill 210 yards Amari Cooper 100 YARDS RECEIVING 142 yards Travis Kelce 100 yards Darren Waller FIVE TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * FOUR TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS 4 tds Jamaal Charles:
Opp 12/1/2013 vs. Denver
4 tds
Eric Decker:
3 tds
THREE TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS Sammy Watkins:
KC 9/15/2019 @ Oakland Opp 9/16/2018 @ Pittsburgh
KC 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams Opp 10/19/2017 @ Oakland KC 12/15/2019 vs. Denver Opp 12/1/2019 vs. Oakland KC Opp
(49, 39, 16, 71) (41, 37, 1, 15)
KC 9/8/2019
@ Jacksonville
(68, 49, 3)
Opp 10/8/2017 @ Houston
3 tds
DeAndre Hopkins: (6, 34, 1)
KC 12/15/2019 vs. Denver
2 tds
TWO TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS Tyreek Hill:
Opp 10/27/2019 vs. Green Bay
2 tds
Aaron Jones:
(41, 5) (4, 67)
TWO PLAYERS WITH TWO TD RECEPTIONS KC 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams Opp 10/8/2017 @ Houston
COMBINED YARDS AND TOUCHDOWNS 100-YARD RUSHER AND 300-YARD PASSER 121 yards Kareem Hunt 304 yards Patrick Mahomes Opp 10/14/2018 @ New England 106 yards Sony Michel 340 yards Tom Brady 100-YARD RECEIVER AND 300-YARD PASSER KC 12/15/2019 vs. Denver 142 yards Travis Kelce 340 yards Patrick Mahomes Opp 11/18/2019 @ L.A. Chargers 108 yards Austin Ekeler 353 yards Philip Rivers 100-YARD RUSHER AND 100-YARD RECEIVER KC 11/3/2019 vs. Minnesota 125 yards Damien Williams 140 yards Tyreek Hill Opp 12/1/2019 vs. Oakland 104 yards Josh Jacobs 100 yards Darren Waller 100-YARD RUSHER, 300-YARD PASSER, 100-YARD RECEIVER KC 9/7/2017 @ New England 148 yards Kareem Hunt 368 yards Alex Smith 133 yards Tyreek Hill Opp 12/1/2013 vs. Denver 117 yards Montee Ball 403 yards Peyton Manning 174 yards Eric Decker KC 10/1/2018 @ Denver
DEFENSE INTERCEPTED PASS RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN
(3:52) (Shotgun) 4-D.Carr pass short right intended for 16-T.Williams INTERCEPTED by 22-J.Thornhill at OAK 46. 22-J.Thornhill for 46 yards, TOUCHDOWN. (2:24) (Shotgun) 15-P.Mahomes pass short right intended for 84-D.Harris INTERCEPTED by 50-S.Ebukam at KC 25. 50-S.Ebukam for 25 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
KC 12/1/2019 vs. Oakland
46 yards
Juan Thornhill
Opp 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams
25 yards
Samson Ebukam
KC 10/17/2019 @ Denver
FUMBLE RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN 5 yards Reggie Ragland
Opp 11/10/2019 @ Tennessee
53 yards
KC 11/27/2016 @ Denver
(6:20) (Shotgun) 13-T.Siemian sacked at DEN 0 for -8 yards (50-J.Houston). FUMBLES (50-J.Houston) [50-J.Houston], recovered by DEN-73-R.Okung at DEN -5. 73-R.Okung tackled in End Zone, SAFETY. (12:09) 27-K.Hunt up the middle tackled in End Zone for -1 yards, SAFETY (25-A.Burns, 42-M.Burnett).
Rashaan Evans
(7:17) 5-J.Flacco sacked at DEN 17 for -9 yards (53-A.Hitchens). FUMBLES (53A.Hitchens) [53-A.Hitchens], RECOVERED by KC-59-R.Ragland at DEN 5. 59R.Ragland for 5 yards, TOUCHDOWN. (6:28) (Shotgun) 26-Dam.Williams up the middle to TEN 45 for -1 yards (51-D.Long). FUMBLES (51-D.Long), RECOVERED by TEN-54-R.Evans at TEN 47. 54-R.Evans for 53 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
SAFETY SCORED Opp 9/16/2018 @ Pittsburgh
SHUTOUT KC 10/23/2011 @ Oakland Opp 12/16/2012 @ Oakland
Kansas City 28, Las Vegas 0
KC 9/29/1985 vs. Seattle Opp 10/7/2001 @ Denver
4 int 4 int
Las Vegas 15, Kansas City 0
KC 11/27/2005 vs. New England 3 int Opp 10/7/2001 @ Denver 4 int KC 12/16/2017 vs. L.A. Chargers 2 int Opp 9/7/2014 vs. Tennessee 2 int KC 12/28/2014 vs. San Diego Opp 11/9/2003 vs. Cleveland
4.0 sk 4.0 sk
KC 10/28/2018 vs. Denver 3.0 sk Opp 9/24/2017 @ L.A. Chargers 3.0 sk KC 11/10/2019 @ Tennessee Opp 12/15/2019 vs. Denver
2.0 sk 2.0 sk
FOUR OR MORE INTERCEPTION GAME Derron Cherry Deltha O'Neal THREE INTERCEPTION GAME Greg Wesley Deltha O'Neal TWO INTERCEPTION GAME Marcus Peters Jason McCourty FOUR SACK GAME Justin Houston Andra Davis THREE SACK GAME Dee Ford Melvin Ingram III TWO SACK GAME Chris Jones Shelby Harris
SPECIAL TEAMS KICKOFF RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN KC 12/29/2019 vs. L.A. Chargers 104 yards Mecole Hardman Opp 11/7/2010 @ Oakland
KC 9/9/2018
94 yards
Jacoby Ford
PUNT RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN @ L.A. Chargers 91 yards Tyreek Hill
Opp 12/9/2012 @ Cleveland
KC 12/6/1987 @ Cincinnati Opp 11/28/2010 @ Seattle
93 yards
Travis Benjamin
1-T.Long kicks 69 yards from LAC 35 to KC -4. 17-M.Hardman for 104 yards, TOUCHDOWN. 6-R.Succop kicks 64 yards from KC 30 to OAK 6. 12-J.Ford for 94 yards, TOUCHDOWN. PENALTY on OAK-54S.Williams, Unsportsmanlike Conduct, 15 yards, enforced between downs. (13:24) 8-D.Kaser punts 57 yards to KC 9, Center-47-M.Windt. 10-T.Hill for 91 yards, TOUCHDOWN. (15:00) (Punt formation) 2-D.Colquitt punts 41 yards to CLV 7, Center-43-T.Gafford. 80-T.Benjamin for 93 yards, TOUCHDOWN. Longest Punt Return in Cleveland Franchise History
BLOCKED FIELD GOAL RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN 28 yards Kevin Ross (5:08) 6-R.Succop 43 yard field goal is BLOCKED (93-C.Terrill), Center-43-T.Gafford, Holder-2-D.Colquitt, ball out of bounds at SEA 47. Penalty on KC-6-R.Succop, Illegal Touch Kick, declined. Play Challenged by KC and REVERSED. 6R.Succop 43 yard field goal is BLOCKED (93-C.Terrill), Center-43-T.Gafford, Holder-2-D.Colquitt, recovered by KC-2D.Colquitt at SEA 38. 2-D.Colquitt to SEA 38 for no gain (31-K.Chancellor). Challenge was whether FG att. passed line of scrim
BLOCKED PUNT RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN KC 9/13/2009 @ Baltimore Opp 11/28/2010 @ Seattle
(10:09) (Punt formation) 4-S.Koch punt is BLOCKED by 47-J.McGraw, Center-70-M.Katula, RECOVERED by KC-47J.McGraw at BLT 0. TOUCHDOWN. (:39) 2-D.Colquitt punt is BLOCKED by 39-K.Cox, Center-43-T.Gafford, RECOVERED by SEA-29-E.Thomas at KC 10. 29E.Thomas for 10 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
KC 12/22/2019 @ Chicago
MADE FIELD GOAL OF 50 YARDS OR LONGER 56 yards Harrison Butker
Opp 9/29/2019 @ Detroit
53 yards
KC 11/10/2019 @ Tennessee
52 yards
Matt Prater BLOCKED FIELD GOAL Harrison Butker
(11:46) (Field Goal formation) 7-H.Butker 56 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-41J.Winchester, Holder-2-D.Colquitt. (6:24) 5-M.Prater 53 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-48-D.Muhlbach, Holder-6S.Martin. (:03) (Field Goal formation) 7-H.Butker 52 yard field goal is BLOCKED (46-J.Kalu), Center-41-J.Winchester, Holder-2D.Colquitt, RECOVERED by TEN-36-L.Sims at KC 47. 36-L.Sims to KC 33 for 14 yards (42-A.Sherman).
Nick Folk
(2:06) 2-N.Folk 41 yard field goal is BLOCKED (92-T.Kpassagnon), Center-49J.Cardona, Holder-7-J.Bailey, RECOVERED by KC-35-C.Ward at KC 35. 35-C.Ward to KC 42 for 7 yards (58-J.Collins).
Opp 12/8/2019 @ New England
41 yards
KC 12/8/2019 @ New England Opp 11/4/2018 @ Cleveland
(5:19) 2-D.Colquitt punt is BLOCKED by 43-N.Ebner, Center-41-J.Winchester, ball out of bounds at KC 19.
KC 12/22/2019 @ Chicago Opp 11/10/2019 @ Tennessee
7-H.Butker extra point is No Good, Hit Left Upright, Center-41-J.Winchester, Holder-2-D.Colquitt.
KC 12/1/2019 vs. Oakland
8-D.Carlson extra point is Blocked (92-T.Kpassagnon), Center-47-T.Sieg, Holder-6-A.Cole. DEFENSIVE TWO-POINT ATTEMPT. 35-C.Ward recovered the blocked kick. ATTEMPT SUCCEEDS. 7-H.Butker extra point is Blocked (99-A.Key), Center-41-J.Winchester, Holder-2-D.Colquitt.
BLOCKED PUNT (8:10) (Punt formation) 4-B.Colquitt punt is BLOCKED by 26-Dam. Williams, Center-47-C.Hughlett, ball out of bounds at CLV 21.
MISSED POINT AFTER TOUCHDOWN ATTEMPT 4-R.Succop extra point is No Good, Wide Left, Center-48-B.Brinkley, Holder-6-B.Kern.
POINT AFTER TOUCHDOWN ATTEMPT BLOCKED Opp 12/2/2018 @ Oakland
SUCCESSFUL ONSIDE KICK KC 10/15/2017 vs. Pittsburgh Opp 10/7/2018 vs. Jacksonville
2-D.Colquitt kicks 48 yards from KC 20 to PIT 32. RECOVERED by KC-80-J.Chesson.
KC 12/24/2017 vs. Miami
5 fg
Opp 10/14/2018 @ New England
5 fg
4-J.Lambo kicks onside 13 yards from JAX 35 to JAX 48. RECOVERED by JAX-4-J.Lambo. Kansas City challenged the kick touched ruling, and the play was Upheld. The ruling on the field stands. (Timeout #2.)
FIVE FIELD GOALS Harrison Butker: (31, 32, 21, 29, 49)
Stephen Gostkowski: (48, 24, 39, 50, 28)
KC 11/10/2019 @ Tennessee
4 fg
Opp 10/6/2019 vs. Indianapolis
4 fg
FOUR FIELD GOALS Harrison Butker: (30, 41, 43, 39)
Adam Vinatieri: (32, 32, 31, 29)
3 fg
THREE FIELD GOALS Harrison Butker:
Opp 11/18/2019 @ L.A. Chargers 3 fg
Michael Badgley:
KC 12/15/2019 vs. Denver
(24, 44, 23) (27, 26, 49)
TEAM/MISCELLANEOUS 500 TOTAL YARDS OF OFFENSE KC 11/10/2019 @ Tennessee Opp 10/14/2018 @ New England
Kansas City 530, Tennessee 371 New England 500, Kansas City 446
400 TOTAL YARDS OF OFFENSE Kansas City 419, Denver 251 KC 12/15/2019 vs. Denver Opp 11/18/2019 @ L.A. Chargers L.A. Chargers 438, Kansas City 310 TOUCHDOWN ON OFFENSE, DEFENSE AND SPECIAL TEAMS ST: (8:06) (Shotgun) S.Ware left end for 3 yards, TOUCHDOWN. KC 12/4/2016 @ Atlanta ST: (7:10) A.Smith pass short left to S.Ware for 3 yards, TOUCHDOWN. DEF: (:48) (Shotgun) M.Ryan pass short right intended for T.Gabriel INTERCEPTED by E.Berry at ATL 37. E.Berry for 37 yards, TOUCHDOWN. OFF: (13:02) (Punt formation) A.Wilson right guard for 55 yards, TOUCHDOWN. OFF: (Pass formation) TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. M.Ryan pass to A.Hooper is incomplete. ATTEMPT FAILS. DEFENSIVE TWO-POINT ATTEMPT. E.Berry intercepted the try attempt. ATTEMPT SUCCEEDS.
Opp
* Never Has Happened * MADE TWO-POINT CONVERSION
KC 12/15/2019 vs. Denver Opp 11/18/2019 @ L.A. Chargers
TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. 15-P.Mahomes pass to 14-S.Watkins is complete. ATTEMPT SUCCEEDS.
KC 12/15/2019 vs. Denver Opp 12/8/2019 @ New England
(Kick formation) TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. 2-D.Colquitt pass to 42-A.Sherman is incomplete. ATTEMPT FAILS.
KC 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams Opp 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams
L.A. Rams 54, Kansas City 51
KC 12/1/2019 vs. Oakland Opp 11/19/2018 @ L.A. Rams
Kansas City 40, Las Vegas 9
KC 12/9/2018 vs. Baltimore Opp 11/19/2017 @ N.Y. Giants
Kansas City 27, Baltimore 24
KC 11/19/2017 @ N.Y. Giants Opp 12/9/2018 vs. Baltimore
N.Y. Giants 12, Kansas City 9
KC 11/19/1989 @ Cleveland
Kansas City 10, Cleveland 10
(Pass formation) TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. 17-P.Rivers pass to 86-H.Henry is complete. ATTEMPT SUCCEEDS.
FAILED TWO-POINT CONVERSION Shotgun TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. 28-J.White rushes up the middle. ATTEMPT FAILS.
50 POINTS L.A. Rams 54, Kansas City 51
40 POINTS L.A. Rams 54, Kansas City 51
OVERTIME WIN N.Y. Giants 12, Kansas City 9
OVERTIME LOSS Kansas City 27, Baltimore 24
OVERTIME TIE
Opp 11/19/1989 @ Cleveland
Kansas City 10, Cleveland 10
2019 Postseason (As of September 3, 2020)
PASSING KC Opp KC Opp 1/4/2014
@ Indianapolis
KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston Opp 1/12/2020 vs. Houston KC Opp KC Opp KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston
500 YARDS PASSING * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * 400 YARDS PASSING * Never Has Happened * 443 yards Andrew Luck 300 YARDS PASSING 321 yards Patrick Mahomes 388 yards Deshaun Watson SEVEN TOUCHDOWN PASSES * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * SIX TOUCHDOWN PASSES * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * FIVE TOUCHDOWN PASSES 5 tds Patrick Mahomes: (17, 5, 6, 5, 8)
Opp KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston
5 tds
* Never Has Happened * FOUR TOUCHDOWN PASSES Patrick Mahomes:
Opp 1/4/2014
4 tds
Andrew Luck:
KC 1/19/2020 vs. Tennessee
3 tds
THREE TOUCHDOWN PASSES Patrick Mahomes:
Opp 1/4/2014
4 tds
Andrew Luck:
(17, 5, 6, 5, 8)
@ Indianapolis
(10, 12, 3, 64)
(8, 20, 60)
@ Indianapolis
(10, 12, 3, 64)
KC Opp 1/9/2016
@ Houston
4 ints
KC 1/9/2011 Opp 1/9/2016
vs. Baltimore @ Houston
3 ints 4 ints
KC 2/2/2020 Opp 2/2/2020
vs. San Francisco 2 ints vs. San Francisco 2 ints
FOUR INTERCEPTIONS THROWN * Never Has Happened * Brian Hoyer THREE INTERCEPTIONS THROWN Matt Cassel Brian Hoyer TWO INTERCEPTIONS THROWN Patrick Mahomes Jimmy Garoppolo
RUSHING 300 YARDS RUSHING KC * Never Has Happened * Opp * Never Has Happened * 200 YARDS RUSHING KC * Never Has Happened * Opp * Never Has Happened * 100 YARDS RUSHING KC 2/2/2020 vs. San Francisco 104 yards Damien Williams Opp 1/20/2019 vs. New England 113 yards Sony Michel FIVE TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING KC * Never Has Happened * Opp * Never Has Happened * FOUR TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING KC * Never Has Happened * Opp * Never Has Happened * THREE TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING KC * Never Has Happened * Opp 1/23/1994 @ Buffalo 3 tds Thurman Thomas (12, 3, 3)
KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston
2 tds
TWO TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING Damien Williams: (1, 5)
Opp 1/20/2019 vs. New England 2 tds 2 tds
Rex Burkhead: (4, 2)
Sony Michel: (1, 10)
TWO PLAYERS WITH TWO TD RUSHING * Never Has Happened *
KC Opp 1/20/2019 vs. New England
RECEIVING TWO 100-YARD RECEIVERS KC 12/25/1971 vs. Miami 110 yards Ed Podolak 104 yards Elmo Wright Opp * Never Has Happened * 200 YARDS RECEIVING KC * Never Has Happened * Opp 1/4/2014 @ Indianapolis 224 yards T.Y. Hilton 100 YARDS RECEIVING KC 2/2/2020 vs. San Francisco 105 yards Tyreek Hill Opp 1/12/2020 vs. Houston 118 yards DeAndre Hopkins FIVE TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS KC * Never Has Happened * Opp * Never Has Happened * FOUR TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS KC * Never Has Happened * Opp * Never Has Happened * THREE TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston 3 tds Travis Kelce: (5, 6, 5)
Opp 12/22/1968 @ Oakland
3 tds
Fred Biletnikoff (24, 44, 54)
KC 1/19/2020 vs. Tennessee
2 tds
Opp 1/16/2016 @ New England
2 tds
TWO TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS Tyreek Hill: (8, 20)
Rob Gronkowski: (8, 16)
KC Opp
TWO PLAYERS WITH TWO TD RECEPTIONS * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened *
COMBINED YARDS AND TOUCHDOWNS 100-YARD RUSHER AND 300-YARD PASSER KC * Never Has Happened * Opp 1/20/2019 vs. New England 113 yards Sony Michel 348 yards Tom Brady 100-YARD RECEIVER AND 300-YARD PASSER KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston 134 yards Travis Kelce 321 yards Patrick Mahomes Opp 1/12/2020 vs. Houston 118 yards DeAndre Hopkins 388 yards Deshaun Watson 100-YARD RUSHER AND 100-YARD RECEIVER KC 2/2/2020 vs. San Francisco 104 yards Damien Williams 105 yards Tyreek Hill Opp 1/15/2017 vs. Pittsburgh 170 yards Le'Veon Bell 108 yards Antonio Brown 100-YARD RUSHER, 300-YARD PASSER, 100-YARD RECEIVER KC * Never Has Happened * Opp * Never Has Happened *
DEFENSE INTERCEPTED PASS RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN KC * Never Has Happened * Opp 12/28/1986 @ N.Y. Jets 21 yards Kevin McArthur FUMBLE RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN KC * Never Has Happened * (10:45) (No Huddle, Shotgun) 31-D.Brown up the middle to KC 2 for no gain Opp 1/4/2014 @ Indianapolis 2 yards Andrew Luck (29-E.Berry). FUMBLES (29-E.Berry), recovered by IND-12-A.Luck at KC 5. 12A.Luck for 5 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
KC 12/28/1986 @ N.Y. Jets Opp
SAFETY SCORED Team Safety * Never Has Happened * SHUTOUT
KC 1/9/2016 Opp 1/2/1993
Kansas City 30, Houston 0
@ Houston @ San Diego
San Diego 17, Kansas City 0
KC Opp KC Opp KC 1/4/2014 Opp 1/5/1992
@ Indianapolis @ Buffalo
2 int 2 int
KC Opp KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston Opp 1/9/2016 @ Houston
3.0 sk 3.0 sk
KC 1/19/2020 vs. Tennessee 2.0 sk Opp 1/20/2019 vs. New England 2.0 sk
FOUR OR MORE INTERCEPTION GAME * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * THREE INTERCEPTION GAME * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * TWO INTERCEPTION GAME Husain Abdullah Kirby Jackson FOUR SACK GAME * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * THREE SACK GAME Frank Clark Whitney Mercilus TWO SACK GAME Tanoh Kpassagnon Kyle Van Noy
SPECIAL TEAMS KC 1/9/2016
@ Houston
Opp KC Opp KC Opp KC 12/28/1986 @ N.Y. Jets Opp 1/12/2020 vs. Houston KC Opp 1/6/2007
KICKOFF RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN 8-N.Novak kicks 71 yards from HST 35 to KC -6. 34-K.Davis for 106 yards, 106 yards Knile Davis TOUCHDOWN. * Never Has Happened * PUNT RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * BLOCKED FIELD GOAL RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * BLOCKED PUNT RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN 0 yards Albert Lewis
@ Indianapolis
(10:13) 2-D.Colquitt punt is BLOCKED by 52-B.Mingo, Center-41-J.Winchester, RECOVERED by HST-32-L.Johnson at KC 10. 32-L.Johnson for 10 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
MADE FIELD GOAL OF 50 YARDS OR LONGER * Never Has Happened * (:02) 4-A.Vinatieri 50 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-48-J.Snow, Holder-1750 yards Adam Vinatieri H.Smith. BLOCKED FIELD GOAL * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * BLOCKED PUNT
KC Opp KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston Opp
(10:13) 2-D.Colquitt punt is BLOCKED by 52-B.Mingo, Center-41-J.Winchester, RECOVERED by HST-32-L.Johnson at KC 10. 32-L.Johnson for 10 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
* Never Has Happened * MISSED POINT AFTER TOUCHDOWN ATTEMPT
KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston Opp 1/12/2019 vs. Indianapolis KC Opp KC Opp 1/15/2017 vs. Pittsburgh
7-H.Butker extra point is No Good, Wide Left, Center-41-J.Winchester, Holder-2-D.Colquitt. 4-A.Vinatieri extra point is No Good, Wide Right, Center-46-L.Rhodes, Holder-2-R.Sanchez.
POINT AFTER TOUCHDOWN ATTEMPT BLOCKED * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened * FIVE FIELD GOALS * Never Has Happened * 6 fg Chris Boswell: (22, 38, 36, 45, 43, 43)
KC Opp 1/15/2017 vs. Pittsburgh
6 fg
FOUR FIELD GOALS * Never Has Happened * Chris Boswell: (22, 38, 36, 45, 43, 43)
KC 1/9/2016
@ Houston
3 fg
THREE FIELD GOALS Cairo Santos:
6 fg
Chris Boswell:
(49, 49, 33)
Opp 1/15/2017 vs. Pittsburgh
(22, 38, 36, 45, 43, 43)
TEAM/MISCELLANEOUS 500 TOTAL YARDS OF OFFENSE KC 1/4/2014 @ Indianapolis Opp 1/20/2019 vs. New England
Indianapolis 536, Kansas City 513 New England 524, Kansas City 290
400 TOTAL YARDS OF OFFENSE Kansas City 405, Tennessee 295 KC 1/19/2020 vs. Tennessee Houston 442, Kansas City 434 Opp 1/12/2020 vs. Houston TOUCHDOWN ON OFFENSE, DEFENSE AND SPECIAL TEAMS KC * Never Has Happened * Opp * Never Has Happened * MADE TWO-POINT CONVERSION TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. 10-T.Green pass to 84-K.Wilson is complete. ATTEMPT SUCCEEDS. KC 1/6/2007 @ Indianapolis Opp * Never Has Happened * FAILED TWO-POINT CONVERSION TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. 11-A.Smith pass to 19-J.Maclin is incomplete. ATTEMPT FAILS. KC 1/15/2017 vs. Pittsburgh TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. 8-M.Mariota pass to 18-R.Matthews is complete. ATTEMPT FAILS. Penalty on TEN, Opp 1/6/2018 vs. Tennessee Illegal Shift, declined. TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. 8-M.Mariota is sacked. ATTEMPT FAILS. Sack by D.Sorenson ruled forward progress stopped negating D.Sorenson 58 yard return.
50 POINTS KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston Opp
Kansas City 51, Houston 31
KC 1/12/2020 vs. Houston Opp 1/4/2014 @ Indianapolis
Kansas City 51, Houston 31
KC 1/8/1994 vs. Pittsburgh Opp 1/20/2019 vs. New England
Kansas City 27, Pittsburgh 24
KC 1/20/2019 vs. New England Opp
New England 37, Kansas City 31
* Never Has Happened * 40 POINTS Indianapolis 45, Kansas City 44
OVERTIME WIN New England 37, Kansas City 31
OVERTIME LOSS
KC Opp
* Never Has Happened * OVERTIME TIE * Never Has Happened * * Never Has Happened *
Super Bowl LIV National Football League Game Summary NFL Copyright © 2019 by The National Football League. All rights reserved. This summary and play-by-play is for the express purpose of assisting media in their coverage of the game; any other use of this material is prohibited without the written permission of the National Football League. Updated: 5/26/2020 Date: Sunday, 2/2/2020
San Francisco 49ers at Kansas City Chiefs
Start Time: 6:41 PM ET
at Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, FL Game Day Weather Temp: 64° F (17.8° C) Humidity: 48%, Wind: N 7 mph Played Outdoor on Turf: Natural Grass Officials Referee: Vinovich, Bill (52) Line Judge: Johnson, Carl (101) Back Judge: Steed, Gregory (12)
Umpire: Anderson, Barry (20) Field Judge: Banks, Michael (72) Replay Official: Chase, Michael (0)
Down Judge: Payne, Kent (79) Side Judge: Cheek, Boris (41)
Lineups San Francisco 49ers
Kansas City Chiefs
Offense WR
19 D.Samuel
LT LG C RG RT TE WR QB RB FB
74 75 63 68 69 85 17 10 26 44
Defense LDE
J.Staley L.Tomlinson B.Garland M.Person M.McGlinchey G.Kittle E.Sanders J.Garoppolo T.Coleman K.Juszczyk
LDT RDT RDE MIKE WILL LCB RCB NB FS SS
Offense
Defense
97 N.Bosa
WR
10 T.Hill
LDE
92 T.Kpassagnon
96 99 91 54 57 25 41 24 20 29
LT G C RG RT TE WR QB RB WR
72 61 62 76 71 87 14 15 26 17
LDT RDT RDE LB LB LB LCB RCB FS SS
95 91 55 53 54 59 35 21 49 32
S.Day D.Buckner A.Armstead F.Warner D.Greenlaw R.Sherman E.Moseley K.Williams J.Ward J.Tartt
E.Fisher S.Wisniewski A.Reiter L.Duvernay-Tardif M.Schwartz T.Kelce S.Watkins P.Mahomes Dam.Williams M.Hardman
Substitutions
C.Jones D.Nnadi F.Clark A.Hitchens D.Wilson R.Ragland C.Ward B.Breeland D.Sorensen T.Mathieu
Substitutions
P 6 M.Wishnowsky, K 9 R.Gould, WR 13 R.James Jr., RB 22 M.Breida, CB 23 A.Witherspoon, RB 30 J.Wilson, RB 31 R.Mostert, DB 32 D.Reed Jr., DB 33 T.Moore, S 36 M.Harris, LB 47 E.Lee, LB 53 M.Nzeocha, DL 55 D.Ford, LB 56 K.Alexander, OL 60 D.Brunskill, OL 67 J.Skule, TE 82 R.Dwelley, TE 83 L.Toilolo, WR 84 K.Bourne, LS 86 K.Nelson, DL 92 A.Zettel, DT 93 E.Mitchell, DL 94 S.Thomas
P 2 D.Colquitt, K 7 H.Butker, WR 11 D.Robinson, WR 13 B.Pringle, S 23 A.Watts, S 24 J.Lucas, CB 27 R.Fenton, CB 29 K.Fuller, DB 30 A.Brown, RB 34 D.Thompson, LS 41 J.Winchester, FB 42 A.Sherman, LB 44 D.O'Daniel, LB 56 B.Niemann, DT 64 M.Pennel, G 73 N.Allegretti, T 75 C.Erving, TE 81 B.Bell, TE 82 D.Yelder, OLB 94 T.Suggs, DT 99 K.Saunders
Did Not Play
Did Not Play
QB 4 N.Mullens
QB 8 M.Moore, DE 52 D.Harris, DT 98 X.Williams Not Active
Not Active
QB 3 C.Beathard, WR 18 D.Pettis, CB 35 D.Johnson, TE 43 D.Helm, LB 51 A.AlShaair, WR 81 J.Matthews, DL 90 K.Givens
QB 4 C.Henne, CB 20 M.Claiborne, RB 25 L.McCoy, LB 50 D.Lee, G 60 R.Hunter, T 68 J.Barton, G 77 A.Wylie
Field Goals (made ( ) & missed) R.Gould
(38) (42)
H.Butker 1 3 7
San Francisco 49ers Kansas City Chiefs
VISITOR: HOME:
(31) 2 7 3
3 10 0
4 0 21
OT 0 0
Total 20 31
Scoring Plays Team
Qtr
Time Play Description (Extra Point) (Drive Info)
49ers Chiefs
1 1
7:57 R.Gould 38 yd. Field Goal (10-62, 5:58) 0:31 P.Mahomes 1 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (15-75, 7:26)
Chiefs 49ers 49ers 49ers Chiefs Chiefs Chiefs
2 2 3 3 4 4 4
9:32 5:05 9:29 2:35 6:13 2:44 1:12
H.Butker 31 yd. Field Goal (9-43, 4:36) K.Juszczyk 15 yd. pass from J.Garoppolo (R.Gould kick) (7-80, 4:27) R.Gould 42 yd. Field Goal (9-60, 5:31) R.Mostert 1 yd. run (R.Gould kick) (6-55, 2:48) T.Kelce 1 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (10-83, 2:40) Dam.Williams 5 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (7-65, 2:26) Dam.Williams 38 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (2-42, 0:13)
Visitor
Home
3 3
0 7
3 10 13 20 20 20 20
10 10 10 10 17 24 31
Time: 3:29
Super Bowl LIV National Football League Game Summary NFL Copyright Š 2019 by The National Football League. All rights reserved. This summary and play-by-play is for the express purpose of assisting media in their coverage of the game; any other use of this material is prohibited without the written permission of the National Football League. Updated: 5/26/2020 Paid Attendance: 62,417
Time: 3:29
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs 2/2/2020 at Hard Rock Stadium
Final Individual Statistics San Francisco 49ers RUSHING
Kansas City Chiefs
ATT
YDS
R.Mostert
12
58
D.Samuel
3
53
T.Coleman
5
28
J.Garoppolo
2
2
Total
22
AVG
141
LG
TD
4.8
17
1
Dam.Williams
17.7
32
0
P.Mahomes
5.6
17
0
1.0
3
0
6.4
32
RUSHING
1
ATT
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
17
104
6.1
38
1
9
29
3.2
13
1
T.Kelce
1
2
2.0
2
0
D.Thompson
1
0
0.0
0
0
M.Hardman
1
-6
-6.0
-6
0
29
129
4.4
38
2
Total
ATT
CMP
ATT
CMP
J.Garoppolo
31
20
219
1/9
1
26
2
69.2
P.Mahomes
42
26
286
4/18
2
44
2
78.1
Total
31
20
219
1/9
1
26
2
69.2
Total
42
26
286
4/18
2
44
2
78.1
TAR
REC
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
16
9
105
11.7
44
0
PASSING
PASS RECEIVING
YDS SK/YD TD
LG IN
PASSING
RT
LG IN
RT
TAR
REC
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
D.Samuel
9
5
39
7.8
16
0
T.Hill
G.Kittle
7
4
36
9.0
12
0
T.Kelce
6
6
43
7.2
11
1
K.Juszczyk
3
3
39
13.0
15
1
S.Watkins
6
5
98
19.6
38
0
E.Sanders
5
3
38
12.7
18
0
Dam.Williams
8
4
29
7.3
13
1
K.Bourne
4
2
42
21.0
26
0
B.Bell
1
1
9
9.0
9
0
J.Wilson
1
1
20
20.0
20
0
M.Hardman
1
1
2
2.0
2
0
T.Coleman
1
1
3
3.0
3
0
D.Thompson
1
0
0
0.0
0
0
R.Mostert
1
1
2
2.0
2
0
31
20
219
11.0
26
1
39
26
286
11.0
44
2
Total INTERCEPTIONS
PASS RECEIVING
YDS SK/YD TD
Total
NO
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
NO
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
T.Moore
1
7
7.0
7
0
B.Breeland
1
1
1.0
1
0
F.Warner
1
3
3.0
3
0
K.Fuller
1
0
0.0
0
0
Total
2
10
5.0
7
0
Total
2
1
0.5
1
0
PUNTING
INTERCEPTIONS
NO
YDS
AVG
NET
TB
IN20
LG
PUNTING
NO
YDS
AVG
NET
TB
IN20
LG
M.Wishnowsky
2
86
43.0
43.0
0
1
46
D.Colquitt
2
100
50.0
40.0
1
1
51
Total
2
86
43.0
43.0
0
1
46
Total
2
100
50.0
40.0
1
1
51
NO
YDS
AVG
FC
LG
TD
PUNT RETURNS
NO
YDS
AVG
FC
LG
TD
R.James Jr.
1
0
0.0
0
0
0
M.Hardman
0
0
0.0
2
0
0
[TOUCHBACK]
1
0
0.0
0
0
0
Total
1
0
0.0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0.0
2
0
0
NO
YDS
AVG
FC
LG
TD
NO
YDS
AVG
FC
LG
TD
R.James Jr.
4
61
15.3
0
19
0
M.Hardman
3
58
19.3
0
29
0
[TOUCHBACK]
2
0
0.0
0
0
0
[TOUCHBACK]
2
0
0.0
0
0
0
Total
4
61
15.3
0
19
0
Total
3
58
19.3
0
29
0
PUNT RETURNS
KICKOFF RETURNS
San Francisco 49ers FUMBLES
KICKOFF RETURNS
FUM
LOST
TD
FORCED
OPP-REC
YDS
TD
OUT-BDS
R.James Jr. N.Bosa R.Sherman
1 0 0
0 0 0
1 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 1 1
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
J.Ward Total
0 1
0 0
0 1
0 0
0 0
1 3
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
FUM
LOST
OWN-REC YDS
TD
FORCED
OPP-REC
YDS
TD
OUT-BDS
2 1 3
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
1 1 2
Kansas City Chiefs FUMBLES P.Mahomes Dam.Williams Total
OWN-REC YDS
1 0 1
0 0 0
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs 2/2/2020 at Hard Rock Stadium
Final Team Statistics Visitor 49ers
Home Chiefs
TOTAL FIRST DOWNS
21
26
By Rushing
8
12
By Passing
13
13
By Penalty THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY FOURTH DOWN EFFICIENCY TOTAL NET YARDS
0
1
3-8-38%
6-14-43%
0-1-0%
2-3-67%
351
397
Total Offensive Plays (inc. times thrown passing)
54
75
Average gain per offensive play
6.5
5.3
141
129
NET YARDS RUSHING Total Rushing Plays
22
29
Average gain per rushing play
6.4
4.4
Tackles for a loss-number and yards
1-1
1-6
210
268
Times thrown - yards lost attempting to pass
1-9
4-18
Gross yards passing
219
286
31-20-2
42-26-2
NET YARDS PASSING
PASS ATTEMPTS-COMPLETIONS-HAD INTERCEPTED Avg gain per pass play (inc.# thrown passing) KICKOFFS Number-In End Zone-Touchbacks PUNTS Number and Average Had Blocked FGs - PATs Had Blocked Net Punting Average TOTAL RETURN YARDAGE (Not Including Kickoffs) No. and Yards Punt Returns
6.6
5.8
5-3-2
6-3-2
2-43.0
2-50.0
0
0
0-0
0-0
43.0
40.0
10
1
1-0
0-0
No. and Yards Kickoff Returns
4-61
3-58
No. and Yards Interception Returns
2-10
2-1
5-45
4-24
1-0
3-0
2
4
1
2
PENALTIES Number and Yards FUMBLES Number and Lost TOUCHDOWNS Rushing
1
2
EXTRA POINTS Made-Attempts
Passing
2-2
4-4
Kicking Made-Attempts
2-2
4-4
2-2
1-1
RED ZONE EFFICIENCY
2-2-100%
3-4-75%
GOAL TO GO EFFICIENCY
1-1-100%
3-3-100%
0
0
FIELD GOALS Made-Attempts
SAFETIES FINAL SCORE TIME OF POSSESSION
20
31
26:47
33:13
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs 2/2/2020 at Hard Rock Stadium
Ball Possession And Drive Chart San Francisco 49ers #
Time Recd
Time Lost
1
13:55
7:57
2
0:31
3
9:32
4
Time How Ball Poss Obtained
Drive Began
# Play
Yds Gain
Yds Pen
Net Yds
1st Down
Last Scrm
How Given Up
KC 20
Field Goal
5:58 Punt
SF 18
10
57
5
62
3
14:08
1:23 Kickoff
SF 25
3
16
0
16
1
SF 41
Interception
5:05
4:27 Kickoff
SF 20
7
80
0
80
6
* KC 15
Touchdown
0:59
0:00
0:59 Punt
SF 20
4
24
-10
14
1
SF 35
End of Half
5
15:00
9:29
5:31 Kickoff
SF 16
9
60
0
60
3
KC 24
Field Goal
6
5:23
2:35
2:48 Interception
SF 45
6
55
0
55
4
7
11:57
8:53
3:04 Interception
SF 20
5
22
-5
17
1
SF 37
Punt
8
6:13
5:10
1:03 Kickoff
SF 20
3
5
0
5
0
SF 25
Punt
9
2:44
1:25
1:19 Kickoff
SF 15
7
32
-5
27
2
KC 49
Downs
10
1:12
0:57
0:15 Kickoff
SF 25
2
0
0
0
0
SF 25
Interception
# Play
Yds Gain
Yds Pen
Net Yds
1st Down
Last Scrm
How Given Up
KC 33
Punt
* KC 1
Touchdown
(224) Average SF 22 Kansas City Chiefs #
Time Recd
Time Lost
Time How Ball Poss Obtained
Drive Began
1
15:00
13:55
1:05 Kickoff
KC 26
3
7
0
7
0
2
7:57
0:31
7:26 Kickoff
KC 25
15
75
0
75
6
* SF 1
Touchdown
3
14:08
9:32
4:36 Interception
KC 44
9
43
0
43
2
* SF 13
Field Goal
4
5:05
0:59
4:06 Kickoff
KC 19
7
30
0
30
3
KC 49
Punt
5
9:29
5:23
4:06 Kickoff
KC 9
7
30
0
30
2
KC 39
Interception
6
2:35
11:57
5:38 Kickoff
KC 25
12
52
0
52
4
SF 23
Interception
7
8:53
6:13
2:40 Punt
KC 17
10
68
15
83
5
* SF 1
Touchdown
8
5:10
2:44
2:26 Punt
KC 35
7
65
0
65
3
* SF 5
Touchdown
9
1:25
1:12
0:13 Downs
SF 42
2
42
0
42
1
SF 38
Touchdown
10
0:57
0:00
0:57 Interception
KC 41
4
-15
0
-15
0
KC 26
Downs
(299) Average KC 30 * inside opponent's 20 Time of Possession by Quarter
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
OT
Total
Visitor
San Francisco 49ers
6:29
6:18
8:19
5:41
26:47
Home
Kansas City Chiefs
8:31
8:42
6:41
9:19
33:13
Kickoff Drive No.-Start Average
49ers: 6 - SF 20
Chiefs: 5 - KC 21
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs 2/2/2020 at Hard Rock Stadium
Final Defensive Statistics San Francisco 49ers J.Ward
Regular Defensive Plays TKL 8
AST COMB 2 10
Special Teams
SK / YDS TFL Q IN PD FF 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Misc
FR 0
TKL 0
AST 1
FF 0
FR 0
BL 0
TKL AST FF 0 0 0
FR 0
F.Warner
5
2
7
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
K.Williams
5
1
6
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
D.Buckner
3
3
6
1.5
9.5
1
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
J.Tartt
5
0
5
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
E.Moseley
5
0
5
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
N.Bosa
3
2
5
1
7
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
R.Sherman
3
2
5
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
D.Greenlaw
2
2
4
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
A.Armstead
2
1
3
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
D.Ford
1
1
2
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
K.Alexander
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
E.Mitchell
0
1
1
0.5
0.5
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
S.Day
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
T.Moore
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
E.Lee
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
D.Reed Jr.
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
A.Witherspoon
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
R.James Jr.
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
D.Samuel
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
43
18
61
4
18
4
8
2
6
3
0
1
4
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
Total
TKL = Tackle AST = Assist COMB = Combined QH=QB Hit IN = Interception PD = Pass Defense FF = Forced Fumble FR = Fumble Recovery Kansas City Chiefs
Regular Defensive Plays TKL
AST
FF
FR
TKL
/ YDS TFL QH IN
B.Breeland
6
1
7
0
0
2
0
1
1
0
0
0
D.Sorensen
4
2
6
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
T.Mathieu
4
2
6
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
K.Fuller
3
1
4
0
0
0
0
1
2
D.Nnadi
3
1
4
C.Ward
3
1
4
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
D.Wilson
2
2
4
0
0
0
0
A.Hitchens
1
3
4
0
0
0
R.Ragland
1
1
2
0
0
T.Kpassagnon
1
1
2
0
T.Suggs
0
2
2
0
F.Clark
1
0
1
K.Saunders
1
0
R.Fenton
1
B.Niemann
AST
Misc
FF
FR
BL
TKL
FF
FR
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
9
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
M.Pennel
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
C.Jones
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
B.Pringle
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
D.O'Daniel
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
T.Hill
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
S.Watkins
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
P.Mahomes
SK
Special Teams PD
Total
COMB
AST
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
31
20
51
1
9
4
6
2
6
0
0
5
0
0
0
0
2
0
0
1
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs 2/2/2020 at Hard Rock Stadium
First Half Summary PERIOD SCORES 3 7 = 10 7 3 = 10
49ers Chiefs Team
Qtr
49ers Chiefs Chiefs 49ers
1 1 2 2
TIME OF POSSESSION 12:47 17:13
49ers Chiefs
Scoring Plays Time Play Description (Extra Point) (Drive Info) 7:57 0:31 9:32 5:05
Visitor
Home
3 3 3 10
0 7 10 10
R.Gould 38 yd. Field Goal (10-62, 5:58) P.Mahomes 1 yd. run (H.Butker kick) (15-75, 7:26) H.Butker 31 yd. Field Goal (9-43, 4:36) K.Juszczyk 15 yd. pass from J.Garoppolo (R.Gould kick) (7-80, 4:27) San Francisco 49ers 11
TOTAL FIRST DOWNS First Downs Rushing-Passing-by Penalty THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY
Kansas City Chiefs 11
5-6-0
7-4-0
2-3-67%
1-6-17%
177
155
23
33
TOTAL NET YARDS Total Offensive Plays NET YARDS RUSHING
88
52
NET YARDS PASSING
89
103
89
104
Gross Yards Passing Times thrown-yards lost attempting to pass
0-0
1-1
11 - 9 - 1
18 - 12 - 0
Punts-Number and Average
0-0
2 - 50
Penalties-Number and Yards
2 - 15
2 - 10
Pass Attempts-Completions-Had Intercepted
1-0
1-0
Red Zone Efficiency
1-1-100%
1-2-50%
Average Drive Start
SF 21
KC 28
Fumbles-Number and Lost
San Francisco 49ers RUSHING
Kansas City Chiefs
ATT
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
D.Samuel
2
39
19.5
32
0
Dam.Williams
R.Mostert
5
26
5.2
11
0
P.Mahomes
T.Coleman
4
24
6.0
17
0
J.Garoppolo
1
-1
-1.0
-1
12
88
7.3
32
Total PASSING
LG IN
ATT
YDS
AVG
10
47
2
11
D.Thompson
1
0
M.Hardman
0
Total
RT
PASSING
ATT
CMP
LG
TD
4.7
14
0
5.5
10
1
0
0.0
0
0
1
-6
-6.0
-6
0
14
52
3.7
14
1
YDS SK/YD TD
LG IN
RT
ATT
CMP
J.Garoppolo
11
9
89
0/0
1
20
1
92.8
P.Mahomes
18
12
104
1/1
0
28
0
81.7
Total
11
9
89
0/0
1
20
1
92.8
Total
18
12
104
1/1
0
28
0
81.7
PASS RECEIVING
YDS SK/YD TD
RUSHING
TAR
REC
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
TAR
REC
YDS
AVG
LG
TD
D.Samuel
5
4
23
5.8
16
0
T.Hill
5
4
30
7.5
10
0
J.Wilson
1
1
20
20.0
20
0
S.Watkins
2
2
32
16.0
28
0
E.Sanders
1
1
18
18.0
18
0
T.Kelce
2
2
20
10.0
11
0
K.Juszczyk
1
1
15
15.0
15
1
Dam.Williams
6
2
11
5.5
10
0
G.Kittle
2
1
11
11.0
11
0
B.Bell
1
1
9
9.0
9
0
R.Mostert
1
1
2
2.0
2
0
M.Hardman
1
1
2
2.0
2
0
D.Thompson
1
0
0
0.0
0
0
18
12
104
8.7
28
0
Total
11
9
89
San Francisco 49ers
9.9
20
1
PASS RECEIVING
Total
Regular Defensive Plays TKL
SK
/ YDS TFL
Q
AST
Misc
IN
PD
FF
FR
TKL
FF
FR
BL
TKL
FF
FR
J.Ward
4
2
6
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
J.Tartt
4
0
4
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
F.Warner
3
1
4
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
E.Moseley
3
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
14
3
17
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
AST COMB
Special Teams
AST
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs 2/2/2020 at Hard Rock Stadium
First Half Summary Kansas City Chiefs
Regular Defensive Plays TKL
AST
B.Breeland
4
1
5
0
0
2
0
T.Mathieu
3
1
4
0
0
0
A.Hitchens
1
3
4
0
0
K.Fuller
1
1
2
0
9
6
15
0
Total
COMB
SK
Special Teams
/ YDS TFL QH IN
PD
FF
FR
TKL
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
1
1
AST
Misc
FF
FR
BL
TKL
FF
FR
0
0
0
0
0
AST 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs at Hard Rock Stadium
First Quarter
Play By Play
2/2/2020
SF wins the coin toss and elects to defer. KC elects to Receive, and SF elects to defend the east goal. M.Wishnowsky kicks 68 yards from SF 35 to KC -3. M.Hardman to KC 26 for 29 yards (J.Ward; D.Reed Jr.). Kansas City Chiefs at 15:00, (1st play from scrimmage 14:54) 1-10-KC 26
(14:54) (Shotgun) Dam.Williams right end to KC 33 for 7 yards (D.Greenlaw).
2-3-KC 33
(14:12) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short left to Dam.Williams (N.Bosa).
3-3-KC 33
(14:08) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short right to Dam.Williams.
4-3-KC 33
(14:05) (Punt formation) D.Colquitt punts 49 yards to SF 18, Center-J.Winchester. R.James Jr. MUFFS catch, and recovers at SF 18. R.James Jr. to SF 18 for no gain (B.Pringle). San Francisco 49ers at 13:55 1-10-SF 18
(13:55) T.Coleman right end to SF 17 for -1 yards (D.Nnadi).
2-11-SF 17
(13:18) J.Garoppolo pass short left to G.Kittle to SF 28 for 11 yards (D.Sorensen).
P1
1-10-SF 28
(12:33) (Shotgun) D.Samuel right end pushed ob at KC 40 for 32 yards (T.Mathieu).
R2
1-10-KC 40
(11:51) (Shotgun) T.Coleman left end to KC 33 for 7 yards (D.Wilson; C.Ward).
2-3-KC 33
(11:09) T.Coleman left guard to KC 32 for 1 yard (R.Ragland).
3-2-KC 32
(10:27) (Shotgun) D.Samuel scrambles left guard to KC 25 for 7 yards (A.Hitchens).
1-10-KC 25
(9:38) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to R.Mostert to KC 23 for 2 yards (M.Pennel; T.Suggs).
2-8-KC 23
(8:57) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short right to D.Samuel to KC 25 for -2 yards (B.Breeland, A.Hitchens).
3-10-KC 25
(8:12) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass incomplete short middle to J.Wilson.
R3
PENALTY on KC-T.Kpassagnon, Defensive Offside, 5 yards, enforced at KC 25 - No Play. 3-5-KC 20
(8:07) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass incomplete short left to G.Kittle.
4-5-KC 20
(8:02) (Field Goal formation) R.Gould 38 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-K.Nelson, Holder-M.Wishnowsky. SF 3 KC 0, 10 plays, 62 yards, 1 penalty, 5:58 drive, 7:03 elapsed
M.Wishnowsky kicks 65 yards from SF 35 to end zone, Touchback. Kansas City Chiefs at 7:57 1-10-KC 25
(7:57) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short right to T.Hill to KC 34 for 9 yards (J.Ward; F.Warner).
2-1-KC 34
(7:18) (Shotgun) Dam.Williams left guard to KC 36 for 2 yards (N.Bosa; D.Buckner).
1-10-KC 36
(6:45) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short right to T.Hill to KC 44 for 8 yards (J.Ward; K.Williams).
2-2-KC 44
(6:03) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short right to Dam.Williams.
R1
Penalty on KC-E.Fisher, Ineligible Downfield Pass, declined. 3-2-KC 44
(5:57) (Shotgun) Dam.Williams left guard to KC 49 for 5 yards (F.Warner).
R2
1-10-KC 49
(5:22) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Kelce to SF 42 for 9 yards (J.Tartt).
2-1-SF 42
(4:48) Dam.Williams right guard to SF 28 for 14 yards (R.Sherman).
1-10-SF 28
(4:07) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Hill pushed ob at SF 25 for 3 yards (F.Warner).
2-7-SF 25
(3:32) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Kelce to SF 14 for 11 yards (J.Ward).
R3
P4
Penalty on SF-E.Mitchell, Defensive Offside, declined. 1-10-SF 14
(3:08) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes sacked at SF 15 for -1 yards (sack split by D.Buckner and E.Mitchell).
2-11-SF 15
(2:27) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short right to T.Hill.
3-11-SF 15 4-1-SF 5
(2:22) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes scrambles right end to SF 3 for 12 yards (J.Ward). FUMBLES (J.Ward), ball out of bounds at SF 5. SF-J.Ward was injured during the play. His return is Questionable. (1:57) Direct snap to Dam.Williams. Dam.Williams up the middle to SF 1 for 4 yards (J.Tartt).
1-1-SF 1
(1:14) (Shotgun) D.Thompson left guard to SF 1 for no gain (A.Armstead).
2-1-SF 1
(:36) C.Erving reported in as eligible. P.Mahomes right end for 1 yard, TOUCHDOWN.
R5
R6
H.Butker extra point is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt. SF 3 KC 7, 15 plays, 75 yards, 7:26 drive, 14:29 elapsed H.Butker kicks 65 yards from KC 35 to end zone, Touchback. San Francisco 49ers at 0:31 1-10-SF 25
(:31) J.Garoppolo pass deep right to E.Sanders to SF 43 for 18 yards (B.Breeland).
END OF QUARTER San Francisco 49ers Kansas City Chiefs
Score 3 7
Time Poss 6:29
R 2
8:31
5
First Downs P X 2 0 1
0
T 4 6
P4
Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 1/2 0/0 1/3
1/1
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs at Hard Rock Stadium
Second Quarter
Play By Play
2/2/2020
San Francisco 49ers continued. 1-10-SF 43
(15:00) J.Garoppolo pass short right to D.Samuel to SF 41 for -2 yards (B.Breeland).
2-12-SF 41
(14:15) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass deep right intended for D.Samuel INTERCEPTED by B.Breeland [M.Pennel] at KC 43. B.Breeland ran ob at KC 44 for 1 yard. Kansas City Chiefs at 14:08 1-10-KC 44
(14:08) P.Mahomes pass deep left to S.Watkins to SF 28 for 28 yards (E.Moseley) [N.Bosa].
1-10-SF 28
(13:26) (Shotgun) PENALTY on KC-L.Duvernay-Tardif, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at SF 28 - No Play.
1-15-SF 33
(13:07) (Shotgun) PENALTY on SF-S.Thomas, Neutral Zone Infraction, 5 yards, enforced at SF 33 - No Play.
1-10-SF 28
(13:03) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to M.Hardman to SF 26 for 2 yards (D.Greenlaw).
2-8-SF 26
(12:30) Dam.Williams up the middle to SF 23 for 3 yards (N.Bosa).
3-5-SF 23
(11:49) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to S.Watkins to SF 19 for 4 yards (E.Moseley).
4-1-SF 19
(11:04) (Shotgun) Dam.Williams right end ran ob at SF 16 for 3 yards (J.Tartt).
1-10-SF 16
(10:29) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete deep right to Dam.Williams.
2-10-SF 16
(10:23) (Shotgun) Dam.Williams right tackle to SF 13 for 3 yards (D.Buckner).
3-7-SF 13
(9:41) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short middle to D.Thompson (T.Moore).
4-7-SF 13
(9:36) (Field Goal formation) H.Butker 31 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt.
P7
R8
SF 3 KC 10, 9 plays, 43 yards, 1 penalty, 4:36 drive, 5:28 elapsed H.Butker kicks 58 yards from KC 35 to SF 7. R.James Jr. to SF 20 for 13 yards (D.O'Daniel). San Francisco 49ers at 9:32, (1st play from scrimmage 9:26) 1-10-SF 20
(9:26) R.Mostert right tackle to SF 21 for 1 yard (A.Hitchens; D.Nnadi).
2-9-SF 21
(8:42) R.Mostert left end pushed ob at SF 30 for 9 yards (A.Hitchens; T.Mathieu).
1-10-SF 30
(8:09) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to D.Samuel to SF 46 for 16 yards (T.Mathieu).
P6
1-10-SF 46
(7:19) (Shotgun) R.Mostert right tackle to KC 43 for 11 yards (B.Breeland).
R7
1-10-KC 43
(6:41) T.Coleman left tackle to KC 26 for 17 yards (T.Mathieu).
R8
1-10-KC 26
(5:55) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to D.Samuel to KC 15 for 11 yards (B.Breeland; D.Sorensen).
P9
1-10-KC 15
(5:13) J.Garoppolo pass short right to K.Juszczyk for 15 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
R5
P10
R.Gould extra point is GOOD, Center-K.Nelson, Holder-M.Wishnowsky. SF 10 KC 10, 7 plays, 80 yards, 4:27 drive, 9:55 elapsed M.Wishnowsky kicks 60 yards from SF 35 to KC 5. M.Hardman to KC 19 for 14 yards (E.Lee). Kansas City Chiefs at 5:05, (1st play from scrimmage 4:59) 1-10-KC 19
(4:59) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short right to Dam.Williams ran ob at KC 29 for 10 yards (J.Ward).
1-10-KC 29
(4:27) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to B.Bell to KC 38 for 9 yards (E.Moseley).
P9
2-1-KC 38
(3:49) (Shotgun) Dam.Williams left guard to KC 42 for 4 yards (D.Ford; D.Greenlaw).
R10
1-10-KC 42
(3:09) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Hill to SF 48 for 10 yards (J.Ward).
P11
1-10-SF 48
(2:27) (Shotgun) Dam.Williams up the middle to SF 46 for 2 yards (K.Williams).
Two-Minute Warning 2-8-SF 46
(2:00) M.Hardman right end ran ob at KC 48 for -6 yards (F.Warner).
3-14-KC 48
(1:53) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short right to Dam.Williams to KC 49 for 1 yard (J.Tartt).
4-13-KC 49
(1:08) (Punt formation) D.Colquitt punts 51 yards to end zone, Center-J.Winchester, Touchback.
San Francisco 49ers at 0:59 1-10-SF 20
(:59) (Shotgun) R.Mostert left tackle to SF 23 for 3 yards (K.Fuller).
2-7-SF 23
(:27) (Shotgun) R.Mostert left guard to SF 25 for 2 yards (T.Kpassagnon; B.Niemann). Timeout #1 by KC at 00:20.
3-5-SF 25
(:20) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to J.Wilson to SF 45 for 20 yards (K.Fuller; T.Suggs). Timeout #1 by SF at 00:14.
1-10-SF 45
(:14) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass deep right to G.Kittle to KC 13 for 42 yards (D.Sorensen). PENALTY on SF-G.Kittle, Offensive Pass Interference, 10 yards, enforced at SF 45 - No Play.
1-20-SF 35
(:06) J.Garoppolo kneels to SF 34 for -1 yards.
END OF QUARTER San Francisco 49ers Kansas City Chiefs
Score 10 10
Time Poss 6:18
R 3
8:42
2
First Downs P X 4 0 3
0
T 7 5
Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 1/1 0/0 0/3
1/1
P11
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs at Hard Rock Stadium
Third Quarter
Play By Play
2/2/2020
SF elects to Receive, and KC elects to defend the East goal. H.Butker kicks 63 yards from KC 35 to SF 2. R.James Jr. to SF 16 for 14 yards (B.Pringle). San Francisco 49ers at 15:00, (1st play from scrimmage 14:56) 1-10-SF 16
(14:56) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to E.Sanders to SF 21 for 5 yards (D.Wilson).
2-5-SF 21
(14:18) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to E.Sanders to SF 36 for 15 yards (T.Mathieu).
P12
1-10-SF 36
(13:37) D.Samuel left end pushed ob at 50 for 14 yards (D.Sorensen). KC-B.Breeland was injured during the play. His return is Questionable.
R13
1-10-50
(13:14) (Shotgun) T.Coleman left end pushed ob at KC 46 for 4 yards (D.Nnadi).
2-6-KC 46
(12:36) J.Garoppolo pass short left to K.Juszczyk to KC 32 for 14 yards (C.Ward).
1-10-KC 32
(11:59) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short right to G.Kittle to KC 27 for 5 yards (D.Sorensen).
2-5-KC 27
(11:14) (Shotgun) R.Mostert left end to KC 27 for no gain (D.Wilson).
3-5-KC 27
(10:28) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to T.Coleman to KC 24 for 3 yards (B.Breeland).
4-2-KC 24
(9:34) (Field Goal formation) R.Gould 42 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-K.Nelson, Holder-M.Wishnowsky.
P14
SF 13 KC 10, 9 plays, 60 yards, 5:31 drive, 5:31 elapsed M.Wishnowsky kicks 62 yards from SF 35 to KC 3. M.Hardman to KC 18 for 15 yards (A.Witherspoon; E.Lee). PENALTY on KC-B.Pringle, Offensive Holding, 9 yards, enforced at KC 18. Kansas City Chiefs at 9:29, (1st play from scrimmage 9:23) 1-10-KC 9
(9:23) P.Mahomes pass short right to S.Watkins to KC 28 for 19 yards (R.Sherman; D.Buckner).
1-10-KC 28
(8:40) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short right to T.Kelce to KC 32 for 4 yards (R.Sherman; D.Greenlaw).
2-6-KC 32
(8:07) Dam.Williams right tackle to KC 32 for no gain (S.Day; A.Armstead).
3-6-KC 32
(7:30) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to S.Watkins ran ob at KC 41 for 9 yards.
1-10-KC 41
(7:02) (Shotgun) Dam.Williams up the middle to KC 46 for 5 yards (N.Bosa).
2-5-KC 46
(6:22) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes sacked at KC 37 for -9 yards (N.Bosa). FUMBLES (N.Bosa), and recovers at KC 39. P.Mahomes to KC 39 for no gain (D.Ford). (5:36) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep right intended for T.Hill INTERCEPTED by F.Warner at SF 42. F.Warner to SF 45 for 3 yards (T.Hill).
3-12-KC 39
P12
P13
San Francisco 49ers at 5:23 1-10-SF 45
(5:23) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to D.Samuel to KC 39 for 16 yards (B.Breeland).
P15
1-10-KC 39
(4:42) R.Mostert right guard to KC 37 for 2 yards (K.Saunders).
2-8-KC 37
(4:03) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass incomplete deep left to E.Sanders.
3-8-KC 37
(3:58) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to K.Bourne to KC 11 for 26 yards (C.Ward).
P16
1-10-KC 11
(3:21) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to K.Juszczyk to KC 1 for 10 yards (T.Kpassagnon).
P17
1-1-KC 1
(2:40) R.Mostert right guard for 1 yard, TOUCHDOWN.
R18
R.Gould extra point is GOOD, Center-K.Nelson, Holder-M.Wishnowsky. SF 20 KC 10, 6 plays, 55 yards, 2:48 drive, 12:25 elapsed M.Wishnowsky kicks 65 yards from SF 35 to end zone, Touchback. Kansas City Chiefs at 2:35 1-10-KC 25
(2:35) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short right [D.Ford].
2-10-KC 25
(2:28) (Shotgun) Dam.Williams up the middle to KC 30 for 5 yards (K.Williams).
3-5-KC 30
(1:47) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes scrambles right end ran ob at KC 35 for 5 yards (D.Buckner).
1-10-KC 35
(1:10) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short middle to S.Watkins.
2-10-KC 35
(1:06) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to T.Kelce to KC 44 for 9 yards (F.Warner).
3-1-KC 44
(:31) (Shotgun) Direct snap to T.Kelce. T.Kelce right tackle to KC 46 for 2 yards (F.Warner).
END OF QUARTER San Francisco 49ers Kansas City Chiefs
Score 20 10
Time Poss 8:19
First Downs R P X 2 5 0
T 7
6:41
2
4
2
0
Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 1/2 0/0 3/4
0/0
R14
R15
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs at Hard Rock Stadium
Fourth Quarter
Play By Play
2/2/2020
Kansas City Chiefs continued. 1-10-KC 46
(15:00) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short left to T.Hill (K.Alexander).
2-10-KC 46
(14:53) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to T.Hill pushed ob at SF 40 for 14 yards (E.Moseley).
P16
1-10-SF 40
(14:25) P.Mahomes pass short left to Dam.Williams to SF 27 for 13 yards (K.Alexander).
P17
1-10-SF 27
(13:33) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes sacked at SF 36 for -9 yards (D.Buckner).
2-19-SF 36
(12:51) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes scrambles up the middle to SF 23 for 13 yards (J.Ward).
3-6-SF 23
(12:05) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle intended for T.Hill INTERCEPTED by T.Moore at SF 13. T.Moore to SF 20 for 7 yards (S.Watkins). San Francisco 49ers at 11:57 1-10-SF 20
(11:57) R.Mostert right tackle to SF 26 for 6 yards (R.Ragland; D.Wilson).
2-4-SF 26
(11:18) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to G.Kittle to SF 38 for 12 yards (D.Sorensen).
1-10-SF 38
(10:37) R.Mostert left guard to SF 39 for 1 yard (D.Sorensen; C.Jones).
2-9-SF 39
(9:52) J.Garoppolo pass incomplete short middle to D.Samuel [A.Hitchens].
3-9-SF 39
(9:47) (Shotgun) PENALTY on SF-J.Staley, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at SF 39 - No Play.
3-14-SF 34
(9:47) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo scrambles right end pushed ob at SF 37 for 3 yards (R.Fenton).
4-11-SF 37
(9:01) (Punt formation) M.Wishnowsky punts 46 yards to KC 17, Center-K.Nelson, fair catch by M.Hardman.
P19
Kansas City Chiefs at 8:53 1-10-KC 17
(8:53) (Shotgun) Dam.Williams right end to KC 20 for 3 yards (R.Sherman). FUMBLES (R.Sherman), ball out of bounds at KC 20.
2-7-KC 20
(8:33) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes scrambles left end ran ob at KC 29 for 9 yards (K.Williams).
1-10-KC 29
(8:14) (No Huddle, Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to T.Hill to KC 38 for 9 yards (E.Moseley).
2-1-KC 38
(7:50) (No Huddle, Shotgun) Dam.Williams up the middle to KC 40 for 2 yards (F.Warner; N.Bosa).
1-10-KC 40
(7:25) (No Huddle, Shotgun) PENALTY on KC-L.Duvernay-Tardif, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at KC 40 - No Play.
1-15-KC 35
(7:23) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short left to T.Hill (E.Moseley).
2-15-KC 35
3-15-KC 35
(7:17) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep right to T.Hill to SF 49 for 16 yards (J.Tartt). San Francisco challenged the pass completion ruling, and the play was REVERSED. (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete deep right to T.Hill. (7:13) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep left to T.Hill to SF 21 for 44 yards (J.Ward) [D.Buckner].
1-10-SF 21
(6:35) (No Huddle, Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete deep left to T.Hill.
2-10-SF 21
(6:30) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short right [A.Armstead].
3-10-SF 21
(6:23) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete deep left to T.Kelce (T.Moore).
1-1-SF 1
R18
R19
P20
PENALTY on SF-T.Moore, Defensive Pass Interference, 20 yards, enforced at SF 21 - No Play.
X21
(6:17) P.Mahomes pass short right to T.Kelce for 1 yard, TOUCHDOWN.
P22
H.Butker extra point is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt. SF 20 KC 17, 10 plays, 83 yards, 1 penalty, 2:40 drive, 8:47 elapsed H.Butker kicks 64 yards from KC 35 to SF 1. R.James Jr. to SF 20 for 19 yards (B.Niemann). San Francisco 49ers at 6:13, (1st play from scrimmage 6:06) 1-10-SF 20
(6:06) (Shotgun) R.Mostert left tackle to SF 25 for 5 yards (D.Nnadi).
2-5-SF 25
(5:27) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass incomplete short right to G.Kittle (C.Jones).
3-5-SF 25
(5:23) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass incomplete short right to K.Bourne [B.Niemann].
4-5-SF 25
(5:18) (Punt formation) M.Wishnowsky punts 40 yards to KC 35, Center-K.Nelson, fair catch by M.Hardman.
Kansas City Chiefs at 5:10 1-10-KC 35
(5:10) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to T.Hill to KC 40 for 5 yards (K.Williams).
2-5-KC 40
(4:48) (No Huddle, Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Kelce to KC 49 for 9 yards (J.Ward).
1-10-KC 49
(4:27) (No Huddle, Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short right to T.Hill to SF 48 for 3 yards (R.Sherman).
2-7-SF 48
(3:44) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep right to S.Watkins pushed ob at SF 10 for 38 yards (J.Ward).
1-10-SF 10
(3:37) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes left end ran ob at SF 4 for 6 yards (K.Williams).
2-4-SF 4
(3:30) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes sacked at SF 5 for -1 yards (J.Tartt).
3-5-SF 5
(2:50) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short right to Dam.Williams for 5 yards, TOUCHDOWN. The Replay Official reviewed the runner broke the plane ruling, and the play was Upheld. The ruling on the field stands. H.Butker extra point is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt. SF 20 KC 24, 7 plays, 65 yards, 2:26 drive, 12:16 elapsed
H.Butker kicks 65 yards from KC 35 to SF 0. R.James Jr. to SF 15 for 15 yards (B.Pringle). San Francisco 49ers at 2:44, (1st play from scrimmage 2:39)
P23
P24
P25
1-10-SF 15
San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs at Hard Rock Stadium (2:39) (Shotgun) R.Mostert right tackle to SF 32 for 17 yards (K.Fuller).
1-10-SF 32
(2:02) (Shotgun) PENALTY on SF-E.Sanders, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at SF 32 - No Play.
1-15-SF 27
(2:02) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short right to G.Kittle pushed ob at SF 35 for 8 yards (K.Fuller, T.Mathieu).
R20
Two-Minute Warning 2-7-SF 35
(1:56) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short left to K.Bourne pushed ob at KC 49 for 16 yards (C.Ward).
1-10-KC 49
(1:49) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass incomplete short right to D.Samuel (C.Jones).
2-10-KC 49
(1:44) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass incomplete short middle to K.Bourne (K.Fuller, C.Jones).
3-10-KC 49
(1:40) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass incomplete deep middle to E.Sanders [T.Suggs].
4-10-KC 49
(1:33) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo sacked at SF 42 for -9 yards (F.Clark).
P21
Kansas City Chiefs at 1:25 1-10-SF 42
(1:25) Dam.Williams up the middle to SF 38 for 4 yards (A.Armstead). Timeout #1 by SF at 01:20.
2-6-SF 38
(1:20) Dam.Williams left end for 38 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
R26
H.Butker extra point is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt. SF 20 KC 31, 2 plays, 42 yards, 0:13 drive, 13:48 elapsed H.Butker kicks 65 yards from KC 35 to end zone, Touchback. San Francisco 49ers at 1:12 1-10-SF 25
(1:12) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass incomplete short left to G.Kittle [F.Clark].
2-10-SF 25
(1:08) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass deep middle intended for D.Samuel INTERCEPTED by K.Fuller at KC 41. K.Fuller to KC 41 for no gain (D.Samuel). Kansas City Chiefs at 0:57 1-10-KC 41
(:57) P.Mahomes kneels to KC 36 for -5 yards. Timeout #2 by SF at 00:53.
2-15-KC 36
(:53) P.Mahomes kneels to KC 33 for -3 yards. Timeout #3 by SF at 00:51.
3-18-KC 33
(:51) P.Mahomes kneels to KC 26 for -7 yards. Timeout #1 by KC at 00:05.
4-25-KC 26
(:05) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete deep right.
END OF QUARTER San Francisco 49ers Kansas City Chiefs
Score 20 31
Time Poss 5:41
R 1
9:19
3
First Downs P X 2 0 7
1
T 3 11
Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 0/3 0/1 2/4
0/1
Miscellaneous Statistics Report San Francisco 49ers vs Kansas City Chiefs 2/2/2020 at Hard Rock Stadium Ten Longest Plays for San Francisco 49ers Yards 32 26 20 18 17 17 16
Qtr 1 3 2 1 2 4 2
Play Start 1-10-SF 28 3-8-KC 37 3-5-SF 25 1-10-SF 25 1-10-KC 43 1-10-SF 15 1-10-SF 30
Play Description (12:33) (Shotgun) D.Samuel right end pushed ob at KC 40 for 32 yards (T.Mathieu). (3:58) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to K.Bourne to KC 11 for 26 yards (C.Ward). (:20) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to J.Wilson to SF 45 for 20 yards (K.Fuller; T.Suggs). (:31) J.Garoppolo pass deep right to E.Sanders to SF 43 for 18 yards (B.Breeland). (6:41) T.Coleman left tackle to KC 26 for 17 yards (T.Mathieu). (2:39) (Shotgun) R.Mostert right tackle to SF 32 for 17 yards (K.Fuller). (8:09) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to D.Samuel to SF 46 for 16 yards (T.Mathieu).
16 16
3 4
1-10-SF 45 2-7-SF 35
(5:23) J.Garoppolo pass short middle to D.Samuel to KC 39 for 16 yards (B.Breeland). (1:56) (Shotgun) J.Garoppolo pass short left to K.Bourne pushed ob at KC 49 for 16 yards (C.Ward).
15
2
1-10-KC 15
(5:13) J.Garoppolo pass short right to K.Juszczyk for 15 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
Ten Longest Plays for Kansas City Chiefs Yards
Qtr
Play Start
Play Description
44 38 38
4 4 4
3-15-KC 35 2-7-SF 48 2-6-SF 38
(7:13) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep left to T.Hill to SF 21 for 44 yards (J.Ward) [D.Buckner]. (3:44) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep right to S.Watkins pushed ob at SF 10 for 38 yards (J.Ward). (1:20) Dam.Williams left end for 38 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
28
2
1-10-KC 44
(14:08) P.Mahomes pass deep left to S.Watkins to SF 28 for 28 yards (E.Moseley) [N.Bosa].
19 14 14
3 1 4
1-10-KC 9 2-1-SF 42 2-10-KC 46
(9:23) P.Mahomes pass short right to S.Watkins to KC 28 for 19 yards (R.Sherman; D.Buckner). (4:48) Dam.Williams right guard to SF 28 for 14 yards (R.Sherman). (14:53) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to T.Hill pushed ob at SF 40 for 14 yards (E.Moseley).
13 13 11
4 4 1
1-10-SF 40 2-19-SF 36 2-7-SF 25
(14:25) P.Mahomes pass short left to Dam.Williams to SF 27 for 13 yards (K.Alexander). (12:51) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes scrambles up the middle to SF 23 for 13 yards (J.Ward). (3:32) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Kelce to SF 14 for 11 yards (J.Ward). Penalty on SF-E.Mitchell, Defensive Offside, declined.
Touchdown Scoring Information
Offense
Defense
Special Teams
VISITOR
San Francisco 49ers
2
0
0
HOME
Kansas City Chiefs
4
0
0
Player Scoring Information Club Player
TD Rush TD
Rec KO TD TD
Punt Int TD TD
Fum TD
Misc TD
FG
XP
2Pt Rush
2Pt Rec
Sfty
Points
SF
R.Gould
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
2
0
0
0
8
SF
R.Mostert
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
SF
K.Juszczyk
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
KC
Dam.Williams
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
12
KC
H.Butker
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
4
0
0
0
7
KC
P.Mahomes
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
KC
T.Kelce
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
Possession Detail Largest Lead Drives Leading Time of Possession Leading
First Half
Second Half
Game
Visitor
Home
Visitor
Home
Visitor
Home
3 0
7 1
10 3
11 2
10 3
11 3
0:00
4:36
6:55
1:10
6:55
5:46
Largest Deficit
-7
-3
-11
-10
-11
-10
Drives Trailing
2
1
2
4
4
5
5:50
7:26
1:34
14:50
7:24
22:16
Time of Possession Trailing Times Score Tied Up
1
0
1
Lead Changes
2
2
4
Playtime Percentage Percent of playtime per player on offense, defense and special teams San Francisco 49ers Offense
Kansas City Chiefs
Defense
Special Teams
Offense
Defense
Special Teams
B Garland
C
58 100%
4
17% S Wisniewski
G
79 100%
5
21%
L Tomlinson
G
58 100%
4
17% M Schwartz
T
79 100%
5
21%
M McGlinchey
T
58 100%
4
17% E Fisher
T
79 100%
5
21%
G Kittle
TE
58 100%
L Duvernay-Tardif
G
79 100%
5
21%
J Garoppolo
QB
58 100%
A Reiter
C
79 100%
5
21%
M Person
G
58 100%
P Mahomes
QB
79 100%
E Sanders
WR
55 95%
T Kelce
TE
75
95%
J Staley
T
52 90%
WR
69
87%
D Samuel
WR
51 88%
T Hill
WR
69
87%
R Mostert
RB
36 62%
68
86%
WR
28 48%
8
WR
39
49%
2
8%
K Juszczyk
FB
23 40%
2
D Williams 33% D Robinson 8% B Bell
RB
K Bourne
TE
28
35%
11
46%
T Coleman
RB
17 29%
22
28%
11
46%
TE
7 12%
6
RB
11
14%
13
54%
R James
WR
6 10%
13
FB
7
9%
18
75%
J Skule
T
6 10%
4
WR
3
4%
15
62%
J Wilson
RB
5
9%
2
R Dwelley
TE
4
7%
10
TE
3
4%
2
8%
J Ward
FS
79 100%
10
T
1
1%
J Tartt
SS
79 100%
5
19
79%
F Warner
LB
79 100%
M Hardman 25% D Thompson 54% A Sherman 17% B Pringle 8% D Yelder 42% C Erving 42% D Sorensen 21% T Mathieu
WR
L Toilolo
E Moseley
CB
77 97%
5
21%
R Sherman
CB
77 97%
D Greenlaw
LB
73 92%
5
21%
N Bosa
DE
61 77%
D Buckner
DT
A Armstead
3
12% S Watkins
11
46%
2
8%
60 76%
9
38%
DE
57 72%
9
38%
K Williams
CB
57 72%
S Day
DT
42 53%
6
25%
D Ford
LB
42 53%
S Thomas
DE
24 30%
K Alexander
LB
21 27%
E Mitchell
DT
19 24%
A Zettel
DT
15 19%
T Moore
CB
5
M Harris
SS
2
5
21%
FS
58 100%
SS
58 100%
C Ward
CB
57 98%
B Breeland
CB
56 97%
T Kpassagnon
DE
51 88%
F Clark
DE
51 88%
C Jones
DT
48 83%
4
17%
A Hitchens
LB
38 66%
4
17%
D Wilson
LB
38 66%
2
8%
T Suggs
LB
33 57%
K Fuller
CB
32 55%
D Nnadi
DT
31 53%
4
17%
R Ragland
LB
26 45%
R Fenton
CB
21 36%
13
54%
B Niemann
LB
20 34%
19
79%
M Pennel
NT
15 26%
4
17%
K Saunders
13
54%
13
54%
6%
15
62%
3%
15
62%
DT
4
7%
83% A Watts 83% D O'Daniel
SS
1
2%
LB
19
79%
62% J Lucas 62% H Butker
SS
19
79%
K
11
46%
P
7
29%
E Lee
LB
20
M Nzeocha
LB
20
A Witherspoon
CB
15
M Breida
RB
15
M Wishnowsky
P
11
D Reed
FS
9
46% D Colquitt 38% J Winchester
LS
7
29%
CB
7
29%
C
5
21%
K Nelson
LS
6
25% A Brown
R Gould
K
4
17% N Allegretti
D Brunskill
G
4
17%
CHAD HENNE'S NFL REGULAR SEASON PASSING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2008 Dolphins 2009 Dolphins 2010 Dolphins 2011 Dolphins 2012 Jaguars 2013 Jaguars 2014 Jaguars 2015 Jaguars 2016 Jaguars 2017 Jaguars 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs TOTALS
GP 3 14 15 4 10 15 3 0 1 2 1 0 68
GS 0 13 14 4 6 13 3 0 0 0 0 0 53
ATT. 12 451 490 112 308 503 78 0 0 2 3 0 1,959
CMP. 7 274 301 64 166 305 42 0 0 0 2 0 1,161
PCT. 58.3 60.8 61.4 57.1 53.9 60.6 53.8 0.0 0.0 0.0 66.7 0.0 59.3
YDS 67 2,878 3,301 868 2,084 3,241 492 0 0 0 29 0 12,960
AVG. 5.6 6.4 6.7 7.8 6.8 6.4 6.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 9.7 0.0 6.6
TD 0 12 15 4 11 13 3 0 0 0 0 0 58
INT. 0 14 19 4 11 14 1 0 0 0 0 0 63
LG 19 67 57t 41 81t 62t 63t 0 0 0 22 0 81t
SK 0 26 30 11 28 38 16 0 0 0 0 0 149
LST 0 176 178 67 169 243 105 0 0 0 0 0 938
RATE 74.0 75.2 75.4 79.0 72.2 76.5 80.7 0.0 0.0 39.6 97.9 0.0 75.5
SK 0 0 0 0 0
LST 0 0 0 0 0
RATE 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
CHAD HENNE'S NFL POSTSEASON PASSING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2008 Dolphins 2017 Jaguars 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs TOTALS
GP 0 0 0 0 0
GS 0 0 0 0 0
ATT. 0 0 0 0 0
CMP. 0 0 0 0 0
PCT. 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
YDS 0 0 0 0 0
AVG. 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
INT. 0 0 0 0 0
LG 0 0 0 0 0
CHAD HENNE'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2008 Dolphins 2009 Dolphins 2010 Dolphins 2011 Dolphins 2012 Jaguars 2013 Jaguars 2014 Jaguars 2015 Jaguars 2016 Jaguars 2017 Jaguars 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs TOTALS
1
NO. 0 16 35 15 19 27 4 0 1 5 1 0 123
YDS. 0 32 52 112 64 77 25 0 -2 -5 3 0 358
AVG. 0.0 2.0 1.5 7.5 3.4 2.9 6.3 0.0 -2.0 -1.0 3.0 0.0 2.9
LG 0 12 10 20 15 14 12 0 0 0 3 0 20
TD 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
@CHIEFS
CHAD HENNE'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2008 Dolphins 2017 Jaguars 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs TOTALS
NO. 0 0 0 0 0
YDS. 0 0 0 0 0
AVG. 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
LG 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
MARCUS KEMP'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
2
GP 1 16 0 17
GS 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 1 0 1
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 7 7.0 0.0 0 7 7.0
LG 0 7 0 7
TD 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
MARCUS KEMP'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 1 2 0 3
GS 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0 0
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
NO. 0 0 0 0
LG 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0
MARCUS KEMP'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
RET. 0 0 0 0
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0 0
FC 0 0 0 0
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0
LG 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0
MARCUS KEMP'S NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
RET. 0 0 0 0
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0 0
FC 0 0 0 0
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
HARRISON BUTKER'S NFL REGULAR SEASON KICKING STATISTICS DATE 2017
TEAM Panthers
2017 Chiefs 2017 TOTAL 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
3
GP 0
FGM 0
13 13 16 16 45
38 38 24 34 96
FGA PCT. LG XP 0.0 0 0 0 Went from Carolina to Kansas City. 42 90.5 53 28 42 90.5 53 28 27 88.9 54 65 38 89.5 56 45 107 89.7 56 138
XPA 0
PCT. 0.0
BLK 0
PTS 0
28 28 69 48 145
100.0 100.0 94.2 93.8 95.2
0 0 0 1 1
142 142 137 147 426
@CHIEFS
HARRISON BUTKER'S NFL POSTSEASON KICKING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 1 2 3 6
FGM 0 2 2 4
FGA 1 2 2 5
PCT. 0.0 100.0 100.0 80.0
LG 0 39 31 39
XP 3 8 15 26
XPA 3 8 16 27
PCT. 100.0 100.0 93.8 96.3
BLK 0 0 0 0
PTS 3 14 21 38
HARRISON BUTKER'S NFL REGULAR SEASON FIELD-GOAL ACCURACY STATISTICS DATE 2017
TEAM Panthers
2017 Chiefs 2017 TOTAL 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
1-19 0-0
PCT. 0.0
0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
20-29 PCT. 30-39 PCT. 0-0 0.0 0-0 0.0 Went from Carolina to Kansas City. 8-8 100.0 16-17 94.1 8-8 100.0 16-17 94.1 9-9 100.0 7-7 100.0 9-9 100.0 9-10 90.0 26-26 100.0 32-34 94.1
40-49 0-0
PCT. 0.0
50+ 0-0
PCT. 0.0
10-12 10-12 6-7 13-13 29-32
83.3 83.3 85.7 100.0 90.6
4-5 4-5 2-4 3-6 9-15
80.0 80.0 50.0 50.0 60.0
HARRISON BUTKER'S NFL POSTSEASON FIELD-GOAL ACCURACY STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
1-19 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
PCT. 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
20-29 0-0 0-0 1-1 1-1
PCT. 0.0 0.0 100.0 100.0
30-39 0-0 2-2 1-1 3-3
PCT. 0.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
40-49 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-1
PCT. 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
50+ 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
PCT. 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
TYREEK HILL'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
4
GP 16 15 16 12 59
GS 1 13 16 12 42
NO. 61 75 87 58 281
RECEIVING YDS AVG 593 9.7 1,183 15.8 1,479 17.0 860 14.8 4,115 14.6
LG 49 79t 75t 57t 79t
TD 6 7 12 7 32
NO. 24 17 22 8 71
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 267 11.1 59 3.5 151 6.9 23 2.9 500 7.0
LG 70t 16 33 5 70t
TD 3 0 1 0 4
@CHIEFS
TYREEK HILL'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 1 1 2 3 7
GS 0 1 2 3 6
NO. 4 7 9 17 37
RECEIVING YDS AVG 27 6.8 87 12.4 114 12.7 213 12.5 441 11.9
LG 9 45 42 44 45
TD 0 0 0 2 2
NO. 3 1 1 2 7
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 18 6.0 14 14.0 36 36.0 11 5.5 79 11.3
LG 8 14 36t 7 36t
TD 0 0 1 0 1
LG 95t 82t 91t 0 95t
TD 2 1 1 0 4
LG 0 8 4 0 8
TD 0 0 0 0 0
TYREEK HILL'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 384 27.4 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 384 27.4
RET. 14 0 0 0 14
LG 86t 0 0 0 86t
TD 1 0 0 0 1
NO. 39 25 20 1 85
FC 8 9 3 0 20
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 592 15.2 204 8.2 213 10.7 0.0 0 1,009 11.9
TYREEK HILL'S NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 72 18.0 17 17.0 0.0 0 19 19.0 108 18.0
RET. 4 1 0 1 6
LG 21 17 0 19 21
TD 0 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 2 6 1 9
FC 0 0 2 1 3
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 8 4.0 -5 -0.8 0.0 0 3 0.3
DEMARCUS ROBINSON'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
5
GP 16 16 16 16 64
GS 0 8 5 10 23
NO. 0 21 22 32 75
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 212 10.1 288 13.1 449 14.0 949 12.7
LG 0 33 89t 44t 89t
TD 0 0 4 4 8
NO. 0 0 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
DEMARCUS ROBINSON'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 1 1 2 3 7
GS 0 1 0 2 3
NO. 0 4 1 3 8
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 57 14.3 27 27.0 35 11.7 119 14.9
LG 0 15 27 24 27
TD 0 1 0 0 1
NO. 0 0 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
DEMARCUS ROBINSON'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
RET. 0 0 0 0 0
LG 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 1 1 0 2
FC 0 1 0 0 1
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 -4 -4.0 0.0 0 0.0 0 -4 -2.0
LG 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
LG 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
DEMARCUS ROBINSON'S NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
RET. 0 0 0 0 0
LG 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0 0 0
FC 0 0 0 0 0
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
BYRON PRINGLE'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
6
GP 0 16 16
GS 0 0 0
NO. 0 12 12
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 170 14.2 170 14.2
LG 0 28 28
TD 0 1 1
NO. 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
BYRON PRINGLE'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 0 3 3
GS 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
SAMMY WATKINS' NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2014 Bills 2015 Bills 2016 Bills 2017 Rams 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 16 13 8 15 10 14 76
GS 16 13 8 14 9 13 73
NO. 65 60 28 39 40 52 284
RECEIVING YDS AVG 982 15.1 1,047 17.5 430 15.4 593 15.2 519 13.0 673 12.9 4,244 14.9
LG 84 63 62 67t 50 68t 84
TD 6 9 2 8 3 3 31
NO. 2 1 0 0 5 2 10
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 8 4.0 1 1.0 0.0 0 0.0 0 52 10.4 12 6.0 73 7.3
LG 5 1 0 0 31 11 31
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
SAMMY WATKINS' NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2017 Rams 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
7
GP 1 2 3 6
GS 1 2 3 6
NO. 1 10 14 25
RECEIVING YDS AVG 23 23.0 176 17.6 288 20.6 487 19.5
LG 23 54 60t 60t
TD 0 0 1 1
NO. 0 1 1 2
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 -2 -2.0 14 14.0 12 6.0
LG 0 -2 14 14
TD 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
PATRICK MAHOMES' NFL REGULAR SEASON PASSING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs TOTALS
GP 1 16 14 31
GS 1 16 14 31
ATT. 35 580 484 1,099
CMP. 22 383 319 724
PCT. 62.9 66.0 65.9 65.9
YDS 284 5,097 4,031 9,412
AVG. 8.1 8.8 8.3 8.6
TD 0 50 26 76
INT. 1 12 5 18
LG 51 89t 83t 89t
SK 2 26 17 45
LST 15 171 127 313
RATE 76.4 113.8 105.3 108.9
LST 0 71 20 91
RATE 0.0 98.9 111.5 106.6
PATRICK MAHOMES' NFL POSTSEASON PASSING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs TOTALS
GP 0 2 3 5
GS 0 2 3 5
ATT. 0 72 112 184
CMP. 0 43 72 115
PCT. 0.0 59.7 64.3 62.5
YDS 0 573 901 1,474
AVG. 0.0 8.0 8.0 8.0
TD 0 3 10 13
INT. 0 0 2 2
LG 0 54 60t 60t
SK 0 8 6 14
PATRICK MAHOMES' NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs TOTALS
NO. 7 60 43 110
YDS. 10 272 218 500
AVG. 1.4 4.5 5.1 4.5
LG 5 28 25 28
TD 0 2 2 4
PATRICK MAHOMES' NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs TOTALS
8
NO. 0 5 24 29
YDS. 0 19 136 155
AVG. 0.0 3.8 5.7 5.3
LG 0 9 27t 27t
TD 0 1 2 3
@CHIEFS
300-YARD PASSING GAMES (17): REGULAR SEASON DATE
TEAM
09/16/18 09/23/18 10/01/18 10/07/18 10/14/18 10/21/18 10/28/18 11/04/18 11/19/18 12/09/18 09/08/19 09/15/19 09/22/19 09/29/19 10/06/19 11/10/19 12/15/19
at Steelers 49ERS at Broncos JAGUARS at Patriots BENGALS BRONCOS at Browns at Rams RAVENS at Jaguars at Raiders RAVENS at Lions COLTS at Titans BRONCOS
DATE
TEAM
01/12/20
TEXANS
NO.
YDS.
AVG.
LG
TD
23 24 28 22 23 28 24 23 33 35 25 30 27 24 22 36 27
326 314 304 313 352 358 303 375 478 377 378 443 374 315 321 446 340
14.2 13.1 10.9 14.2 15.3 12.8 12.6 16.3 14.5 10.8 15.1 14.8 13.9 13.1 14.6 12.4 12.6
40 42 35 40 75t 50 40 50t 73t 48 68t 44t 83t 33 31 63t 41t
6 3 1 0 4 4 4 3 6 2 3 4 3 0 1 3 2
300-YARD PASSING GAMES (1): POSTSEASON NO.
YDS.
AVG.
LG
TD
23
321
14.0
48
5
MECOLE HARDMAN'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 16 16
GS 5 5
NO. 26 26
RECEIVING YDS AVG 538 20.7 538 20.7
LG 83t 83t
TD 6 6
NO. 4 4
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 17 4.3 17 4.3
LG 9 9
TD 0 0
MECOLE HARDMAN'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 3 3
GS 1 1
NO. 4 4
RECEIVING YDS AVG 29 7.3 29 7.3
LG 13 13
TD 0 0
NO. 1 1
RUSHING YDS. AVG. -6 -6.0 -6 -6.0
LG -6 0
TD 0 0
LG 36 36
TD 0 0
MECOLE HARDMAN'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
9
RET. 27 27
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 704 26.1 704 26.1
LG 104t 104t
TD 1 1
NO. 18 18
FC 6 6
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 167 9.3 167 9.3
@CHIEFS
MECOLE HARDMAN'S NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
RET. 13 13
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 286 22.0 286 22.0
LG 58 58
TD 0 0
NO. 2 2
FC 2 2
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 8 4.0 8 4.0
LG 7 7
TD 0 0
ANTONIO HAMILTON'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Raiders 2017 Raiders 2018 Giants 2019 Giants NFL TOTALS
GP 4 8 13 16 41
GS TK S 0 3 3 0 9 9 0 0 0 2 12 8 2 24 20
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 5 1 0 0 0 0 4 4 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 4 1 0 0 0 0 4 4 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 11 3 0 0 0 0
ANTONIO HAMILTON'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Raiders NFL TOTALS
10
GP 0 0
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
JUAN THORNHILL'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 16 16
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 16 57 41 16 3 46 46t 1 5 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 16 57 41 16 3 46 46t 1 5 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
JUAN THORNHILL'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 0 0
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ARMANI WATTS' NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 5 16 21
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2 1 1 1 10 1.0 10.0 2 1 0 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 5 2 1 7 1.0 7.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 8 2 0 0 0 0 2 17 2.0 17.0 3 1 0 0 0 9 6 3 0 0 0 0 0 13 10 3 0 0 0 0
ARMANI WATTS' NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
11
GP 0 3 3
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
TEDRIC THOMPSON'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2017 Seahawks 2018 Seahawks 2019 Seahawks NFL TOTALS
GP 9 14 6 29
GS 0 10 6 16
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 2 0 2 0 0 52 38 14 1 3 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 5 3 2 1 0 0 0 19 9 10 2 18 18 2 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 71 47 24 3 18 18 0 5 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 9 5 4 1 2 0 0
TEDRIC THOMPSON'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Seahawks 2019 Seahawks NFL TOTALS
12
GP 1 0 1
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 5 4 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 4 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
RASHAD FENTON'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 12 12
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 1 4 0 3 2 1 1 0 12 9 3 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 12 9 3 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 3 2 1 1 0 0 0
RASHAD FENTON'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
13
GP 3 3
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 7 6 1 1 14 1.0 14.0 1 1 0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 14 1.0 14.0 1 1 0 0 0 7 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
DARREL WILLIAMS' NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 6 12 18
GS 0 0 0
NO. 13 41 54
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 44 3.4 141 3.4 185 3.4
LG 8 41 41
TD 0 3 3
NO. 3 15 18
RECEIVING YDS AVG 27 9.0 167 11.1 194 10.8
LG 11t 52 52
TD 1 1 2
DARREL WILLIAMS' NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
14
GP 2 0 2
GS 0 0 0
NO. 3 0 3
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 9 3.0 0.0 0 9 3.0
LG 6t 0 6t
TD 1 0 1
NO. 0 0 0
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
TYRANN MATHIEU'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2013 Cardinals 2014 Cardinals 2015 Cardinals 2016 Cardinals 2017 Cardinals 2018 Texans 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 13 13 14 10 16 16 16 98
TACKLES GS TK S A TFL YDS SK 11 67 64 3 6 19 1.0 6 38 35 3 2 5 0.0 14 89 80 9 11 26 1.0 10 35 33 2 3 17 1.0 16 74 66 8 6 14 1.0 16 89 70 19 5 25 3.0 16 75 63 12 3 24 2.0 89 467 411 56 36 130 9.0
INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 10.0 3 2 7 7 0 9 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 4 1 9 9 0 4 0 1 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9.0 3 5 92 33t 1 17 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11.0 1 1 9 5 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.0 4 2 16 15 0 7 1 0 0 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 20.0 4 2 6 6 0 8 0 1 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14.0 2 4 70 35 0 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 67.0 21 17 209 35 1 61 4 2 19 5 5 0 0 0 0 0
TYRANN MATHIEU'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2014 Cardinals 2018 Texans 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 1 1 3 5
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 8 8 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 18 13 5 1 2 0.0 0.0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 27 22 5 1 2 0.0 0.0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
DARWIN THOMPSON'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 12 12
GS 0 0
NO. 37 37
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 128 3.5 128 3.5
LG 12 12
TD 1 1
NO. 9 9
RECEIVING YDS AVG 43 4.8 43 4.8
LG 19 19
TD 0 0
DARWIN THOMPSON'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 3 3
GS 0 0
NO. 2 2
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 7 3.5 7 3.5
LG 7 7
TD 0 0
NO. 0 0
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0
TD 0 0
DARWIN THOMPSON'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
15
RET. 1 1
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 27 27.0 27 27.0
LG 27 27
TD 0 0
NO. 0 0
FC 0 0
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0
TD 0 0
@CHIEFS
DARWIN THOMPSON'S NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0
RET. 0 0
LG 0 0
TD 0 0
NO. 0 0
FC 0 0
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0
TD 0 0
CHARVARIUS WARD'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 13 16 29
GS 2 16 18
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 18 17 1 3 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 9 3 0 0 0 0 74 56 18 2 10 10 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 10 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 92 73 19 2 10 10 0 13 1 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 12 9 3 0 0 0 0
CHARVARIUS WARD'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
16
GP 2 3 5
GS TK S 1 11 6 3 9 7 4 20 13
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 5 4 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 5 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
JAMES WINCHESTER'S NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 16 16 16 16 16 80
JAMES WINCHESTER'S NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
17
GP 2 1 1 2 3 9
@CHIEFS
ANTHONY SHERMAN'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2011 Cardinals 2012 Cardinals 2013 Chiefs 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 15 13 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 140
GS 7 4 8 6 2 3 3 1 0 34
NO. 1 0 2 2 1 0 14 1 4 25
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 3 3.0 0.0 0 3 1.5 8 4.0 0.0 0 0.0 0 40 2.9 2 2.0 9 2.3 65 2.6
LG 3 0 2 4 0 0 9 2 5 9
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1
NO. 8 5 18 10 4 4 6 8 2 65
RECEIVING YDS AVG 72 9.0 39 7.8 155 8.6 71 7.1 34 8.5 11 2.8 47 7.8 96 12.0 22 11.0 547 8.4
LG 19 19 26 24 18 6 11 36t 15 36t
TD 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 3
ANTHONY SHERMAN'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 1 2 1 1 2 3 10
GS 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
NO. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NO. 2 2 1 0 0 0 5
RECEIVING YDS AVG 1 0.5 4 2.0 3 3.0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 8 1.6
LG 5t 3 3 0 0 0 5t
TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
ANTHONY SHERMAN'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2011 Cardinals 2012 Cardinals 2013 Chiefs 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
RET. 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 1 0 5
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 13 13.0 20 10.0 0.0 0 7 7.0 5 5.0 0.0 0 45 9.0
LG 0 0 0 13 11 0 7 5 0 13
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
FC 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
LG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ANTHONY SHERMAN'S NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
18
RET. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
FC 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
@CHIEFS
DORIAN O'DANIEL'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 16 14 30
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 29 18 11 2 6 0.0 0.0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 5 3 0 1 0 0 1 29 18 11 2 6 0.0 0.0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 13 8 5 0 1 0 0
DORIAN O'DANIEL'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 0 3 3
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 1 1.0 1.0 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1.0 1.0 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0
NICK KEIZER'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Ravens 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
19
GP 0 0 0
GS 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
NICK KEIZER'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Ravens 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 0 0 0
GS 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
DANIEL SORENSEN'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 9 16 16 15 7 16 79
GS TK S 0 0 0 0 16 14 1 54 47 14 88 66 4 26 14 3 52 39 22 236 180
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 6 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 7 1.0 7.0 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 7 6 1 0 0 0 0 7 4 13 1.0 8.0 3 3 48 48t 1 6 2 2 56 9 8 1 0 1 0 0 22 5 18 1.5 14.0 7 1 3 3 0 6 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 1 1 54 54t 1 2 0 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 1 7 0.0 0.0 2 2 6 6 0 4 0 0 0 5 5 0 0 0 0 0 56 11 45 3.5 29.0 15 7 111 54t 2 20 2 3 56 29 26 3 0 1 0 0
DANIEL SORENSEN'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
20
GP 2 1 1 2 3 9
GS 0 1 1 2 3 7
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 0 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 17 12 5 1 24 24 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 22 14 8 1 6 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 45 29 16 1 6 0.0 0.0 1 24 24 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
21
@CHIEFS
DEMONE HARRIS' NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE 2018 2019
TEAM Buccaneers Buccaneers
2019
Ravens
GP 2 1 0
2019 Chiefs 2019 TOTAL NFL TOTALS
4 5 7
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Went from Tampa Bay to Baltimore. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Went from Baltimore to Kansas City. 4 4 0 2 9 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 4 0 2 9 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 9 0.0 0.0 1 0 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
DEMONE HARRIS' NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 2 2
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ANTHONY HITCHENS' NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2014 Cowboys 2015 Cowboys 2016 Cowboys 2017 Cowboys 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 16 16 16 12 15 15 90
TACKLES GS TK S A TFL YDS 11 73 57 16 3 5 9 71 40 31 5 20 16 78 39 39 4 21 12 92 70 22 8 15 15 135 81 54 7 26 15 88 51 37 4 22 78 537 338 199 31 109
SK 0.0 2.0 1.5 0.0 0.0 2.0 5.5
INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0.0 2 1 8 8 0 4 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 14.0 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 12.0 5 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 7 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 31.0 4 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 57.0 25 1 8 8 0 8 4 0 0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0
ANTHONY HITCHENS' NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2014 Cowboys 2016 Cowboys 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
22
GP 2 1 2 3 8
GS 0 1 2 3 6
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 9 7 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 4 3 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 21 11 10 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 6 5 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 48 28 20 3 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
DAMIEN WILSON'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2015 Cowboys 2016 Cowboys 2017 Cowboys 2018 Cowboys 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 16 16 16 16 16 80
GS TK S 7 4 0 6 30 23 9 39 26 7 36 23 16 81 52 38 193 128
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 3 1 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 6 2 0 0 0 0 7 4 10 0.5 4.0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 13 4 0 0 1.0 1.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 6 6 0 1 0 0 0 13 3 8 1.0 8.0 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 3 3 0 0 0 0 29 3 12 1.5 9.5 4 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 65 11 31 4.0 22.5 15 0 0 0 0 3 2 0 0 24 19 5 1 0 0 0
DAMIEN WILSON'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Cowboys 2018 Cowboys 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
23
GP 1 2 3 6
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 19 13 6 1 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 22 14 8 1 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
FRANK CLARK'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2015 Seahawks 2016 Seahawks 2017 Seahawks 2018 Seahawks 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 15 15 16 16 14 76
GS TK S 0 16 15 5 47 25 12 32 19 16 41 33 11 37 27 44 173 119
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 4 19 3.0 16.0 6 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 22 11 43 10.0 68.5 18 27 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 13 10 64 9.0 73.5 21 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 10 42 13.0 52.5 27 1 26 26 0 2 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 12 64 8.0 51.0 14 1 5 5 0 4 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 54 47 232 43.0 261.5 86 2 31 26 0 10 11 5 27 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
FRANK CLARK'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2015 Seahawks 2016 Seahawks 2018 Seahawks 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 2 2 1 3 8
GS TK S 3 2 0 1 1 0 1 4 2 3 9 6 4 17 11
TACKLES A TFL YDS SK 1 1 10 1.0 0 0 0 1.0 2 1 10 1.0 3 5 51 5.0 6 7 71 8.0
INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 10.0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10.0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 51.0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 77.0 13 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BEN NIEMANN'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 14 16 30
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 8 5 3 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 50 30 20 1 4 0.0 0.0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 5 1 0 1 0 0 2 58 35 23 1 4 0.0 0.0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 7 1 0 1 0 0
BEN NIEMANN'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
24
GP 2 3 5
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 3 3 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 6 3 3 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
AUSTIN REITER'S NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE 2015 2016
TEAM Washingto n Washingto n
GP 0
GS 0
0
0
1 1 16 11 16 44
1 1 0 4 16 21
Went from Washington to Cleveland. 2016 Browns 2016 TOTAL 2017 Browns 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
AUSTIN REITER'S NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
25
GP 2 3 5
GS 0 3 3
@CHIEFS
DANIEL KILGORE'S NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2011 49ers 2012 49ers 2013 49ers 2014 49ers 2015 49ers 2016 49ers 2017 49ers 2018 Dolphins 2019 Dolphins NFL TOTALS
GP 1 16 16 7 5 13 16 4 13 91
GS 0 0 0 7 3 13 16 4 13 56
DANIEL KILGORE'S NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2011 49ers 2012 49ers 2013 49ers NFL TOTALS
GP 0 3 3 6
GS 0 0 0 0
KELECHI OSEMELE'S NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2012 Ravens 2013 Ravens 2014 Ravens 2015 Ravens 2016 Raiders 2017 Raiders 2018 Raiders 2019 Jets NFL TOTALS
GP 16 7 14 14 15 16 11 3 96
GS 16 7 14 14 15 16 11 3 96
KELECHI OSEMELE'S NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2012 Ravens 2014 Ravens 2016 Raiders NFL TOTALS
26
GP 4 2 1 7
GS 4 2 1 7
@CHIEFS
MITCHELL SCHWARTZ'S NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2012 Browns 2013 Browns 2014 Browns 2015 Browns 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 128
GS 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 128
MITCHELL SCHWARTZ'S NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
27
GP 1 1 2 3 7
GS 1 1 2 3 7
@CHIEFS
ERIC FISHER'S NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 14 16 16 16 16 16 8 102
GS 13 16 14 16 15 16 8 98
ERIC FISHER'S NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 0 2 1 1 2 3 9
GS 0 2 1 1 2 3 9
NICK ALLEGRETTI'S NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 7 7
GS 0 0
NICK ALLEGRETTI'S NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
28
GP 3 3
GS 0 0
@CHIEFS
MIKE REMMERS' NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE 2012
TEAM Broncos
GP 0
GS 0 Went from Denver to Tampa Bay.
2012 2012 2013
Buccaneers TOTAL Buccaneers
0 0 0
0 0 0
2013
Chargers
1
0
2013 Vikings 2013 TOTAL 2014 Panthers 2015 Panthers 2016 Panthers 2017 Vikings 2018 Vikings 2019 Giants NFL TOTALS
0 1 5 16 16 11 16 14 79
0 0 5 16 16 11 16 14 78
Went from Tampa Bay to San Diego. Went from San Diego to Minnesota.
MIKE REMMERS' NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2014 Panthers 2015 Panthers 2017 Vikings NFL TOTALS
29
GP 2 3 2 7
GS 2 3 2 7
@CHIEFS
MIKE REMMERS' NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE 2012
TEAM Broncos
GP 0
2012 2012 2013
Buccaneers TOTAL Buccaneers
0 0 0
2013
Chargers
1
2013 Vikings 2013 TOTAL 2014 Panthers 2015 Panthers 2016 Panthers 2017 Vikings 2018 Vikings 2019 Giants NFL TOTALS
0 1 5 16 16 11 16 14 79
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Went from Denver to Tampa Bay. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Went from Tampa Bay to San Diego. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Went from San Diego to Minnesota. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 14 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 78 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0
MIKE REMMERS' NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2014 Panthers 2015 Panthers 2017 Vikings NFL TOTALS
GP 2 3 2 7
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
ANDREW WYLIE'S NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE 2017
TEAM Colts
GP 0
GS 0 Went from Indianapolis to Cleveland.
2017
Browns
0
0
2017
Chargers
0
0
0 0 16 11 27
0 0 10 11 21
Went from Cleveland to L.A. Chargers. Went from L.A. Chargers to Kansas City. 2017 Chiefs 2017 TOTAL 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
30
@CHIEFS
ANDREW WYLIE'S NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 0 2 0 2
GS 0 2 0 2
DEON YELDER'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE 2018
TEAM Saints
GP 0
GS 0
NO. 0
2018 Chiefs 2018 TOTAL 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
3 3 9 12
0 0 1 1
0 0 3 3
31
RECEIVING YDS AVG LG TD 0.0 0 0 0 Went from New Orleans to Kansas City. 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 50 16.7 24 0 50 16.7 24 0
NO. 0 0 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0
LG 0
TD 0
0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
DEON YELDER'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 0 3 3
GS 0 0 0
NO. 0 1 1
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 11 11.0 11 11.0
LG 0 11 11
TD 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
DEON YELDER'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE 2018
TEAM Saints
RET. 0
2018 Chiefs 2018 TOTAL 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
0 0 0 0
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. LG TD NO. 0.0 0 0 0 0 Went from New Orleans to Kansas City. 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0
FC 0 0 0 0 0
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0
LG 0
TD 0
0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
DEON YELDER'S NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
RET. 0 0 0
LG 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0
FC 0 0 0
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
RICKY SEALS-JONES' NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2017 Cardinals 2018 Cardinals 2019 Browns NFL TOTALS
32
GP 10 15 14 39
GS 1 5 3 9
NO. 12 34 14 60
RECEIVING YDS AVG 201 16.8 343 10.1 229 16.4 773 12.9
LG 29t 40 59 59
TD 3 1 4 8
NO. 0 0 0 0
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
RICKY SEALS-JONES' NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2017 Cardinals 2018 Cardinals 2019 Browns NFL TOTALS
KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
RET. 0 0 0 0
LG 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0
NO. 0 0 0 0
FC 0 0 0 0
PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
LG 0 0 0 0
TD 0 0 0 0
TRAVIS KELCE'S NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 1 16 16 16 15 16 16 96
GS 0 11 16 15 15 16 16 89
NO. 0 67 72 85 83 103 97 507
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 862 12.9 875 12.2 1,125 13.2 1,038 12.5 1,336 13.0 1,229 12.7 6,465 12.8
LG 0 34 42t 80t 44 43 47 80t
TD 0 5 5 4 8 10 5 37
NO. 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 4
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 -5 -5.0 7 3.5 0.0 0 4 4.0 6 1.5
LG 0 0 0 -5 4 0 4t 4t
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
LG 0 0 0 0 0 2 2
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TRAVIS KELCE'S NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING/RECEIVING STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
33
GP 0 2 1 1 2 3 9
GS 0 2 1 1 2 3 9
NO. 0 14 5 4 10 19 52
RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 151 10.8 77 15.4 66 16.5 131 13.1 207 10.9 632 12.2
LG 0 48 24 27 30 28 48
TD 0 0 0 1 1 4 6
NO. 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 2 2.0 2 2.0
@CHIEFS
DERRICK NNADI'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 16 16 32
GS 11 16 27
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 35 17 18 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 48 18 30 3 3 1.0 1.0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 83 35 48 3 3 1.0 1.0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
DERRICK NNADI'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 2 3 5
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2 8 1 7 1 6 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 7 4 3 1 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 15 5 10 2 7 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TANOH KPASSAGNON'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
34
GP 16 13 16 45
GS 1 0 8 9
TACKLES TK S A TFL YDS SK 13 7 6 3 20 2.0 4 3 1 1 6 0.0 29 21 8 6 45 4.0 46 31 15 10 71 6.0
INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 17.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 47.0 11 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 64.0 14 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
TANOH KPASSAGNON'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 1 1 3 5
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 5 3 2 2 10 2.0 10.0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 5 3 2 2 10 2.0 10.0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TACO CHARLTON'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE 2017 2018 2019
TEAM Cowboys Cowboys Cowboys
GP 16 11 0
2019 Dolphins 2019 TOTAL NFL TOTALS
10 10 37
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 1 3.0 14.0 11 1 1 0 0 20 14 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 27 13 14 4 18 1.0 13.0 8 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Went from Dallas to Miami. 5 21 14 7 3 15 5.0 34.0 5 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 21 14 7 3 15 5.0 34.0 5 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 68 41 27 8 34 9.0 61.0 24 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TACO CHARLTON'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2018 Cowboys NFL TOTALS
35
GP 2 2
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 0 1 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
CHRIS JONES' NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 16 16 16 13 61
GS TK 11 28 7 32 11 40 12 36 41 136
S 17 22 35 23 97
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 11 5 26 2.0 19.0 10 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 5 24 6.5 42.0 13 1 -3 0 0 7 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 19 112 15.5 122.0 29 1 20 20t 1 5 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 8 63 9.0 75.0 20 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 1 39 37 225 33.0 258.0 72 2 17 20t 1 20 7 1 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
CHRIS JONES' NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
36
GP 1 1 2 2 6
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 2 1 1 2 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 2 1 3 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 7 3 4 2 9 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
ALEX OKAFOR'S NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2013 Cardinals 2014 Cardinals 2015 Cardinals 2016 Cardinals 2017 Saints 2018 Saints 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 1 13 13 15 10 16 10 78
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 30 28 2 11 72 8.0 65.0 13 1 26 26 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 31 25 6 4 9 2.0 1.0 11 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 3 3 36 3.5 28.5 6 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 10 43 27 16 5 17 4.5 26.0 9 0 0 0 0 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 36 25 11 5 27 4.0 20.0 9 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 22 15 7 5 34 5.0 33.0 9 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 60 173 128 45 33 195 27.0 173.5 57 1 26 26 0 10 4 2 0 3 3 0 0 1 0 0
ALEX OKAFOR'S NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2014 Cardinals 2017 Saints 2018 Saints 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
37
GP 1 0 2 0 3
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 1 5 3 2 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 5 3 2 1 4 0.0 0.0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 10 6 4 1 4 0.0 0.0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
KHALEN SAUNDERS' NFL REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
GP 12 12
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 4 22 13 9 2 1 0 0 0 1.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 22 13 9 2 1 0 0 0 0 1.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
KHALEN SAUNDERS' NFL POSTSEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
DATE TEAM 2019 Chiefs NFL TOTALS
38
GP 3 3
TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 3 2 1 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
@CHIEFS
16 Juan Thornhill
Service Most Seasons, Active Players
15 15 14 14 14 14 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 12 12 12 12 12 12 12
Jerrel Wilson Dustin Colquitt Len Dawson Ed Budde Nick Lowery Will Shields Jim Tyrer Buck Buchanan Emmitt Thomas Jan Stenerud Jack Rudnay John Alt Derrick Johnson Johnny Robinson Dave Hill Bobby Bell Mike Livingston Henry Marshall Tony Gonzalez Tamba Hali
1963-77 2005-19 1962-75 1963-76 1980-93 1993-06 1961-73 1963-75 1966-78 1967-79 1970-82 1984-96 2005-17 1960-71 1963-74 1963-74 1968-79 1976-87 1997-08 2006-17
Most Games Played, Career (All 175+)
238 224 212 203 190 186 183 183 182 181 180 179 178 177 177
Dustin Colquitt Will Shields Nick Lowery Jerrel Wilson Tony Gonzalez Jan Stenerud Len Dawson Buck Buchanan Derrick Johnson Emmitt Thomas Jim Tyrer John Alt Jack Rudnay Ed Budde Tamba Hali
2005-19 1993-06 1980-93 1963-77 1997-08 1967-79 1962-75 1963-75 2005-17 1966-78 1961-73 1984-96 1970-82 1963-76 2006-17
Most Games Started, Career (Since 1968)
223 174 171 169 164 *158 157 157
Will Shields Tony Gonzalez Jack Rudnay Derrick Johnson Tim Grunhard Len Dawson (*Since 1962) Derrick Thomas Tamba Hali
1993-06 1997-08 1970-82 2005-17 1990-00 1962-75 1989-99 2006-17
Most Starts, Rookie, Season
16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 1
Sylvester Hicks Art Still Dave Lutz Kevin Ross Dino Hackett Derrick Thomas Greg Wesley Derrick Johnson Tamba Hali Brandon Carr Glenn Dorsey Eric Berry Dontari Poe Marcus Peters Kareem Hunt
2019
Most Consecutive Games Played, Career
1978 1978 1983 1984 1986 1989 2000 2005 2006 2008 2008 2010 2012 2015 2017
224 186 184 180 168 166
Will Shields Jan Stenerud Dustin Colquitt Jim Tyrer Bobby Bell Buck Buchanan
Sept. 5, 1993 - Dec. 31, 2006 Sept. 9, 1967 - Dec. 16, 1979 Nov. 9, 2008 - Dec. 29, 2019 Sept. 10, 1961 - Dec. 2, 1973 Sept. 7, 1963 - Dec. 14, 1974 Sept. 7, 1963 - Dec. 1, 1974
Most Consecutive Games Started (Since 1968)
223 144 134 120 120
Will Shields Emmitt Thomas Jim Lynch Tim Grunhard Tony Gonzalez
Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept.
12, 1993 - Dec. 31, 2006 28, 1968 - Oct. 15, 1978 9, 1968 - Nov. 6, 1977 5, 1993 - Oct. 29, 2000 19, 1999 - Nov. 12, 2006
Most Consecutive Games Started To Begin Career
101 64 51 41 37
Gary Barbaro Brandon Carr Art Still Tamba Hali Greg Wesley
1976-82 2008-11 1978-81 2006-08 2000-02
Most Games Started, Quarterback, Career
158 88 77 76 75 52
Len Dawson Trent Green Bill Kenney Alex Smith Mike Livingston Steve DeBerg
1962-75 2001-06 1979-88 2013-17 1968-79 1988-91
Most Consecutive Games Started, Quarterback
81 44 35 28 28 28
Trent Green Len Dawson Steve DeBerg Steve Bono Elvis Grbac Len Dawson
Sept. 9, 2001 - Sept. 10, 2006 Oct. 31, 1965 - Nov. 3, 1968 Nov. 26, 1989 - Dec. 8, 1991 Sept. 3, 1995 - Nov. 24, 1996 Dec. 26, 1998 - Nov. 19, 2000 Sept. 8, 1962 - Nov. 8, 1963
Most Consecutive Seasons Starting Every Game, QB
5 Trent Green 2 Len Dawson
2001-05 1966-67
Scoring Most Points, Career (All 400+)
1,466 1,231 517 500 462 442
Nick Lowery Jan Stenerud Ryan Succop Priest Holmes Tony Gonzalez Pete Stoyanovich
1980-93 1967-79 2009-13 2001-07 1997-08 1996-00
Most Seasons, 100 or More Points
11 5 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1
Nick Lowery Jan Stenerud Ryan Succop Pete Stoyanovich Lawrence Tynes Cairo Santos Harrison Butker Lin Elliott Morten Andersen Priest Holmes Larry Johnson Jack Spikes Abner Haynes Todd Peterson
1981, ’83-86, ’88-93 1967-71 2009-10, '12-13 1997-99 2004-06 2014-16 2017-19 1994-95 2002-03 2002-03 2005-06 1960 1962 2001
Most Points, Season (All 125+)
162 Priest Holmes 147 Harrison Butker
2003 2019
@CHIEFS
144 142 139 137 129 129 129 126 125
Priest Holmes Harrison Butker Nick Lowery Harrison Butker Jan Stenerud Cairo Santos Cairo Santos Larry Johnson Lawrence Tynes
2002 2017 1990 2018 1968 2015 2016 2005 2005
4 Larry Johnson vs. Seattle 3 42 times; Last, Sammy Watkins at Jacksonville
Abner Haynes Tyreek Hill Billy Jackson Kareem Hunt Johnny Robinson Mike Garrett
11 9 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7
1960 2016 1981 2017 1960 1966
Harrison Butker Cairo Santos Jan Stenerud Jack Spikes Ryan Succop
483 409 164 160 149
2017 2014 1967 1960 2009
Abner Haynes vs. Oakland Jamaal Charles at Oakland Frank Jackson vs. Denver Abner Haynes vs. Boston Frank Jackson at San Diego Bert Coan at Denver Priest Holmes at Cleveland Priest Holmes vs. Atlanta Derrick Blaylock vs. Atlanta Larry Johnson vs. Seattle
Nov. 26, 1961 Dec. 15, 2013 Dec. 10, 1961 Sept. 8, 1962 Dec. 13, 1964 Oct. 23, 1966 Sept. 8, 2002 Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 29, 2006
Most Touchdowns, Career
83 76 64 61 60 58
Priest Holmes (76 rush, 7 rec.) Tony Gonzalez (0 rush, 76 rec.) Jamaal Charles (43 rush, 20 rec., 1 KR) Larry Johnson (55 rush, 6 rec.) Otis Taylor (3 rush, 57 rec.) Abner Haynes(39 rush, 17 rec., 1 KR, 1 fum.)
2001-07 1997-08 2008-16 2003-09 1965-75 1960-64
Most Touchdowns, Season
27 24 21 19 19 19
Priest Holmes (27 rush, 0 rec.) Priest Holmes (21 rush, 3 rec.) Larry Johnson (20 rush, 1 rec) Abner Haynes (13 rush, 6 rec.) Larry Johnson (17 rush, 2 rec.) Jamaal Charles (12 rush, 7 rec.)
2003 2002 2005 1962 2006 2013
Most Touchdowns, Rookie, Season
12 12 11 11 8 8
Abner Haynes (9 rush, 3 rec.) Tyreek Hill (3 rush, 6 rec., 2 PR, 1 KR) Billy Jackson (10 rush, 1 rec.) Kareem Hunt (8 rush, 3 rec.) Johnny Robinson (4 rush, 4 rec.) Mike Garrett (6 rush, 1 rec., 1 PR)
1960 2016 1981 2017 1960 1966
Most Touchdowns, Game
5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
2
Abner Haynes vs. Oakland Jamaal Charles at Oakland Frank Jackson vs. Denver Abner Haynes vs. Boston Frank Jackson at San Diego Bert Coan at Denver Priest Holmes at Cleveland Priest Holmes vs. Atlanta Derrick Blaylock vs. Atlanta
2002 2006 2003-04 2004-05 2018 1993 2004-05 2005 2010 2013
Nick Lowery Jan Stenerud Peteâ&#x20AC;&#x2C6;Stoyanovich Ryan Succop Tommy Brooker
1980-93 1967-79 1996-00 2009-13 1962-66
Most Points After TD Attempted, Season
Most Points, Game
30 30 24 24 24 24 24 24 24 24
Priest Holmes Larry Johnson Priest Holmes Larry Johnson Kareem Hunt Marcus Allen Priest Holmes Larry Johnson Dwayne Bowe Jamaal Charles
Most Points After TD Attempted, Career
Most Points, Kickers, Rookie, Season
142 113 108 104 104
Sept. 15, 2019
Most Consecutive Games Scoring Touchdowns
Most Points, Non-Kickers, Rookie, Season
72 72 66 66 48 48
Oct. 29, 2006
Nov. 26, 1961 Dec. 15, 2013 Dec. 10, 1961 Sept. 8, 1962 Dec. 13, 1964 Oct. 23, 1966 Sept. 8, 2002 Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 24, 2004
69 60 59 52 51 48 46
Harrison Butker Lawrence Tynes Morten Andersen Ryan Succop Morten Andersen Harrison Butker Tommy Brooker
2018 2004 2003 2013 2002 2019 1964
Most Points After TD Attempted, Game
8 8 8 8
Tommy Brooker at Denver Mike Mercer at Denver Lawrence Tynes vs. Atlanta Ryan Succop at Oakland
Sept. 7, 1963 Oct. 23, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 15, 2013
Most Points After TD Made, Career
479 394 163 160 149
Nick Lowery Jan Stenerud Pete Stoyanovich Ryan Succop Tommy Brooker
1980-93 1967-79 1996-00 2009-13 1962-66
Most Points After TD Made, Season
65 58 58 52 51 46
Harrison Butker Morten Andersen Lawrence Tynes Ryan Succop Morten Andersen Tommy Brooker
2018 2003 2004 2013 2002 1964
Most Points After TD Made, Game
8 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7
Tommy Brooker at Denver Mike Mercer at Denver Lawrence Tynes vs. Atlanta Ryan Succop at Oakland Cotton Davidson vs. Denver T. Brooker at N.Y. Titans Jack Spikes vs. Denver Tommy Brooker vs. Houston Morten Andersen vs. Arizona Morten Andersen vs. St. Louis Lawrence Tynes at Tennessee
Sept. 7, 1963 Oct. 23, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 15, 2013 Dec.10, 1961 Nov. 11, 1962 Dec. 8, 1963 Nov. 28, 1965 Dec. 1, 2002 Dec. 8, 2002 Dec. 13, 2004
Most Consecutive Points After TD
197 160 155 149
Nick Lowery Ryan Succop Jan Stenerud Tommy Brooker
1983-89 2009-13 1968-73 1962-66
Highest Point After Percentage, Career (100 PATs)
100.00 Ryan Succop (160-160)
2009-13 @CHIEFS
100.00 99.39 99.17 99.09 97.16
Tommy Brooker (149-149) Pete Stoyanovich (163-164) Nick Lowery (479-483) Morten Andersen (109-110) Lawrence Tynes (137-141)
1962-66 1996-00 1980-93 2002-03 2004-06
Most Field Goals Attempted, Career
436 410 147 115 107 105
Jan Stenerud Nick Lowery Ryan Succop Pete Stoyanovich Harrison Butker Cairo Santos
1967-79 1980-93 2009-13 1996-00 2017-19 2014-17
Most Field Goals Attempted, Season
44 42 42 40
Jan Stenerud Jan Stenerud Harrison Butker Jan Stenerud
1971 1970 2017 1968
Most Field Goals Attempted, Game
7 7 6 6
Cairo Santos at Cincinnati Jan Stenerud vs. Buffalo Tommy Brooker vs. San Diego Jan Stenerud Last; at Washington 6 Todd Peterson vs. Denver 6 Ryan Succop at New Orleans 6 Harrison Butker vs. Miami
October 4, 2015 Dec. 19, 1971 Dec. 16, 1962 6 times Oct. 10, 1976 Dec. 16, 2001 Sept. 23, 2012 Dec. 24, 2017
Most Seasons Leading League, Field Goals Made
3 Jan Stenerud
1967, ’70, ’75
Most Field Goals Made, Career
329 279 119 96 93 89
Nick Lowery Jan Stenerud Ryan Succop Harrison Butker Pete Stoyanovich Cairo Santos
1980-93 1967-79 2009-13 2017-19 1996-00 2014-17
Most Field Goals Made, Season
38 34 34 31 30 30 28
Harrison Butker Nick Lowery Harrison Butker Cairo Santos Jan Stenerud Cairo Santos Ryan Succop
2017 1990 2019 2016 1968, ’70 2015 2012
Most Field Goals Made, Rookie, Season
38 25 25 21 13 12
Harrison Butker Ryan Succop Cairo Santos Jan Stenerud Jack Spikes Tommy Brooker
2017 2009 2014 1967 1960 1962
Most Field Goals Made, Game
7 Cairo Santos at Cincinnati 6 Ryan Succop at New Orleans 5 Jan Stenerud Last; vs. Buffalo 5 Nick Lowery Last; vs. Denver 5 Ryan Succop vs. Minnesota 5 Cairo Santos at Denver 5 Harrison Butker Last; vs. Miami 4 Tommy Brooker vs. San Diego 4 Mike Mercer at N.Y. Jets 4 Lin Elliott vs. Seattle 4 Jan Stenerud 3
Oct. 5, 2015 Sept. 23, 2012 3 times Dec. 19, 1971 4 times Sept. 20, 1993 Oct. 2, 2011 Nov. 15, 2015 3 times Dec. 24, 2017 Dec. 16, 1962 Nov. 27, 1966 Dec. 24, 1995 10 times
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
Nick Lowery Pete Stoyanovich Todd Peterson vs. Denver Lawrence Tynes Last; vs. Denver Nick Novak vs. Denver Ryan Succop Last; at Tennessee Cairo Santos Last; at Carolina Harrison Butker Last; at Tennessee
8 times 2 times Dec. 16, 2001 2 times Nov. 23, 2006 Sept. 28, 2008 4 times Oct. 6, 2013 5 times Nov. 13, 2016 5 times Nov. 10, 2019
Most Consecutive Games Scoring Field Goals
15 14 14 14 12 11 11 11 11
Lawrence Tynes Jan Stenerud Harrison Butker Harrison Butker Pete Stoyanovich Jan Stenerud Jan Stenerud Nick Lowery Morten Andersen
2004-05 1970 2017-18 2019 1997-98 1968-69 1971-72 1985-86 2002
Most Consecutive Games Scoring Field Goals, Single Season
14 13 12 11
Jan Stenerud Harrison Butker Lawrence Tynes Morten Andersen
1970 2017 2005 2002
Most Consecutive Field Goals Made
23 22 22 21 21 16
Harrison Butker Pete Stoyanovich Ryan Succop Nick Lowery Nick Lowery Jan Stenerud
2017 1997-98 2011 1990 1991 1969
Longest Field Goal
58 58 57 56 55 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54
Nick Lowery at Washington Nick Lowery vs. L.A. Raiders Nick Lowery vs. Seattle Harrison Butker at Chicago Jan Stenerud at Denver Jan Stenerud at Houston Jan Stenerud at Denver Jan Stenerud at San Francisco Nick Lowery vs. L.A. Raiders Nick Lowery at Detroit Pete Stoyanovich vs. Denver Ryan Succop vs. Minnesota Cairo Santos at Houston Harrison Butker at Seattle Harrison Butker vs. Minnesota
Sept. 18, 1983 Sept. 12, 1985 Sept. 14, 1980 Dec. 22, 2019 Oct. 4, 1970 Sept. 9, 1967 Oct. 5, 1969 Dec. 6, 1971 Nov. 6, 1983 Nov. 26, 1987 Nov. 16, 1997 Oct. 2, 2011 Sept. 18, 2016 Dec. 23, 2018 Nov. 3, 2019
Highest Field Goal Percentage, Career (100 Attempts)
89.7 84.8 81.0 80.9 80.2 64.0
Harrison Butker (96-107) Cairo Santos (89-105) Ryan Succop (119-147) Pete Stoyanovich (93-115) Nick Lowery (329-410) Jan Stenerud (279-436)
2017-19 2014-17 2009-13 1996-00 1980-93 1967-79
Highest Field Goal Percentage, Season
96.3 91.9 91.6 90.5 89.5 88.9
Pete Stoyanovich (26-27) Nick Lowery (34-37) Nick Lowery (22-24) Harrison Butker (38-42) Harrison Butker (34-38) Nick Lowery (24-27)
1997 1990 1992 2017 2019 1985 @CHIEFS
88.9 Harrison Butker (24-27)
2018
Highest Field Goal Percentage, Career At Arrowhead
88.1 85.7 85.6 82.4 79.2
Pete Stoyanovich (52-59) Harrison Butker (48-56) Nick Lowery (179-209) Ryan Succop (61-74) Cairo Santos (38-48)
1996-00 2017-19 1980-93 2009-13 2014-17
Attempts Less Than 40 Yards, Season (15 Attempts)
23-26 24-25 21-21 20-20 16-20 18-19 17-18 17-18 17-17 16-16 16-16 15-16 14-15
Cairo Santos Harrison Butker Nick Lowery Pete Stoyanovich Ryan Succop Harrison Butker Cairo Santos Cairo Santos Ryan Succop Morten Andersen Harrison Butker Ryan Succop Ryan Succop
2016 2017 1991 1998 2012 2019 2014 2015 2009 2002 2018 2013 2011
Most Field Goals, No Misses, Game
7 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
Cairo Santos at Cincinnati Ryan Succop at New Orleans Jan Stenerud at Buffalo Jan Stenerud vs. Buffalo Nick Lowery vs. L.A. Raiders Nick Lowery at Chicago Nick Lowery vs. Denver Ryan Succop vs. Minnesota Harrison Butker at Houston Harrison Butker vs. Denver
Oct. 4, 2015 Sept. 23, 2012 Nov. 2, 1969 Dec. 7, 1969 Sept. 12, 1985 Dec. 29, 1990 Sept. 20, 1993 Oct. 2, 2011 Oct. 8, 2017 Oct. 30, 2017
Most Field Goals, 50 or More Yards, Career
20 12 9 9 7 6 5
Nick Lowery Jan Stenerud Ryan Succop Harrison Butker Cairo Santos Lawrence Tynes Pete Stoyanovich
1980-93 1967-79 2009-13 2017-19 2014-16 2004-06 1996-99
Most Field Goals, 50 or More Yards, Season
4 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2
Nick Lowery Cairo Santos Harrison Butker Nick Lowery Ryan Succop Harrison Butker Pete Stoyanovich Lawrence Tynes Ryan Succop Cairo Santos Harrison Butker
1980 2015 2017 1985, 2011 2019 1997, 2004, 2009, 2016 2018
’88
’98 2005, 2006 '12
Most Field Goals, 50 or More Yards, Game
2 2 2 2 2 2
Nick Lowery vs. Seattle Nick Lowery at New Orleans Nick Lowery at Detroit Lawrence Tynes at Miami Ryan Succop vs. Minnesota Cairo Santos at Cincinnati
Sept. 14, 1980 Sept. 8, 1985 Nov. 26, 1987 Oct. 21, 2005 Oct. 2, 2011 Oct. 4, 2015
Most Defensive Touchdowns, Career
8 5 5 5
4
Bobby Bell (6 INTs, 2 FRs) Emmitt Thomas (5 INTs) Jim Kearney (5 INTs) Eric Berry (5 INTs)
1963-74 1966-78 1967-75 2010-16
4 4 4 4
Lloyd Burruss (4 INTs) Derrick Thomas (4 FRs) James Hasty (3 INTs, 1 FR) Derrick Johnson (4 INTs)
1981-91 1989-99 1995-99 2005-16
Most Defensive Touchdowns, Season
4 3 3 3 3
Jim Kearney (4 INTs) David Webster (2 INTs, 1 FR) Lloyd Burruss (3 INTs) Charles Mincy (2 INTs, 1 FR) Mark McMillian (3 INTs)
1972 1960 1986 1992 1997
Most Defensive Touchdowns, Game
2 2 2 2
Jim Kearney at Denver Lloyd Burruss vs. San Diego Cris Dishman at Oakland Derrick Johnson at Denver
Oct. 1, 1972 Oct. 19, 1986 Nov. 28, 1999 Jan. 3, 2010
Most Special Teams Touchdowns, Career
11 8 5 4 3 2
Dante Hall (5 PRs, 6 KORs) Tamarick Vanover (4 PRs, 4 KORs) Tyreek Hill (4 PRs, 1 KOR) J.T. Smith (4 PRs) Dexter McCluster (3 PRs) Five players tied
2000-06 1995-99 2016-19 1978-84 2010-13
Most Special Teams Touchdowns, Season
4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2
Dante Hall (2 PRs, 2 KRs) Tamarick Vanover (2 KRs, 1 PR) Dante Hall (2 PRs, 1 KR) Tyreek Hill (2 PRs, 1 KR) J.T. Smith (2 PRs) J.T. Smith (2 PRs) Paul Palmer (2 KRs) Dale Carter (2 PRs) Dante Hall (2 KRs) Dexter McCluster (2 PRs)
2003 1995 2002 2016 1979 1980 1987 1992 2004 2013
Most Safeties, Career
3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Derrick Thomas Bill Maas Dan Saleaumua Joe Phillips Buck Buchanan Willie Lanier John Lohmeyer Ed Beckman Dino Hackett Albert Lewis Rob McGovern Bernard Pollard Tamba Hali Justin Houston D.J. Alexander
1989-98 1984-92 1989-96 1992-97 1963-75 1967-77 1973, ’75-77 1977-84 1986-92 1983-93 1989-90 2006-08 2006-16 2011-18 2015-16
Most Safeties, Season
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Buck Buchanan Willie Lanier John Lohmeyer Ed Beckman Dino Hackett Albert Lewis Bill Maas Rob McGovern Dan Saleaumua Derrick Thomas Joe Phillips Bernard Pollard Tamba Hali Justin Houston
1968 1974 1976 1978 1988 1988 1988, ’90 1989 1991, ’96 1994, ’97, ’98 1997 2007 2009 2012
@CHIEFS
1 D.J. Alexander
2015
Most Two-Point Conversions, Career
3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2
Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Bo Dickinson Curtis McClinton Jerrel Wilson Reg Carolan Trent Green Eddie Kennison
1997-08 2013-19 1960-61 1962-69 1963-77 1964-68 2001-06 2001-07
Most Two-Point Conversions, Season
2 Bo Dickinson 2 Travis Kelce
1961 2015
Most Two-Point Conversion Passes, Career
8 4 4 2 2
Len Dawson Trent Green Alex Smith Randy Duncan Elvis Grbac
1962-75 2001-06 2013-17 1961 1997-00
Rushing Most Seasons Leading League in Rushing
1 1 1 1
Abner Haynes Christian Okoye Priest Holmes Kareem Hunt
1960 1989 2001 2017
Larry Johnson Jamaal Charles Priest Holmes Christian Okoye Ed Podolak
2003-09 2008-16 2001-07 1987-92 1969-77
Most Rushing Attempts, Season
*416 370 336 327 320
Larry Johnson Christian Okoye Larry Johnson Priest Holmes Priest Holmes *NFL RECORD
2006 1989 2005 2001 2003
Most Rushing Attempts, Consecutive Seasons
752 640 633 615 574
Larry Johnson (336, 416) Priest Holmes (327, 313) Priest Holmes (313, 320) Christian Okoye (370, 245) Larry Johnson (416, 158)
2005-06 2001-02 2002-03 1989-90 2006-07
Most Rushing Attempts, Rookie, Season
272 234 174 157 156
Kareem Hunt Joe Delaney Robert Holmes Christian Okoye Abner Haynes
2017 1981 1968 1987 1960
Most Rushing Attempts, Game
39 38 37 36 35
Larry Johnson vs. Seattle Christian Okoye at Green Bay Christian Okoye vs. Seattle Larry Johnson at Houston Barry Word vs. L.A. Raiders
Oct. 29, 2006 Dec. 10, 1989 Nov. 5, 1989 Nov. 20, 2005 Dec. 22, 1991
Most Rushing Yards, Career
7,260 6,070 6,015 4,897 4,451
Jamaal Charles Priest Holmes Larry Johnson Christian Okoye Ed Podolak
2008-16 2001-07 2003-09 1987-92 1969-77
Most Rushing Yards, Season (All 1,000+)
1,789 Larry Johnson 5
Larry Johnson Priest Holmes Priest Holmes Jamaal Charles Christian Okoye Jamaal Charles Priest Holmes Kareem Hunt Jamaal Charles Joe Delaney Jamaal Charles Mike Garrett Tony Reed Abner Haynes Jamaal Charles Christian Okoye Barry Word
2005 2002 2001 2012 1989 2010 2003 2017 2013 1981 2009 1967 1978 1962 2014 1991 1990
Most Rushing Yards, Consecutive Seasons
3,539 3,170 3,035 2,796 2,348
Larry Johnson (1,750, 1,789) Priest Holmes (1,555, 1,615) Priest Holmes (1,615, 1,420) Jamaal Charles (1,509, 1,287) Larry Johnson (1,789, 559)
2005-06 2001-02 2002-03 2012-13 2006-07
Most Rushing Yards, Rookie, Season
Most Rushing Attempts, Career
1,375 1,332 1,321 1,246 1,157
1,750 1,615 1,555 1,509 1,480 1,467 1,420 1,327 1,287 1,121 1,120 1,087 1,053 1,049 1,033 1,031 1,015
2006
1,327 1,121 875 866 801
Kareem Hunt Joe Delaney Abner Haynes Robert Holmes Mike Garrett
2017 1981 1960 1968 1966
Most Rushing Yards, Game (All 200+)
259 233 226 211 201 200
Jamaal Charles at Denver Jamaal Charles at New Orleans Jamaal Charles vs. Indianapolis Larry Johnson at Houston Larry Johnson vs. Cincinnati Barry Word at Detroit
Jan. 3, 2010 Sept. 23, 2012 Dec. 23, 2012 Nov. 20, 2005 Jan. 1, 2006 Oct. 14, 1990
Most Rushing Yards, Rookie, Game (All 150+)
193 172 161 158 157 155 150
Joe Delaney vs. Houston Kareem Hunt at Los Angeles Chargers Mike Garrett at San Diego Robert Holmes at Cincinnati Abner Haynes at N.Y. Titans Kareem Hunt vs. Los Angeles Chargers Kolby Smith vs. Oakland
Nov. 15, 1981 Sept. 24, 2017 Dec. 18, 1966 Nov. 10, 1968 Nov. 24, 1960 Dec. 16, 2017 Nov. 25, 2007
Most Rushing Yards, Consecutive Games (All 300+)
361 343 332 330 327 321 319 311 310 310 301
(102, (132, (131, (211, (155, (233, (121, (154, (197, (143, (104,
259) J. Charles Dec. 27, 2009 - Jan. 3, 2010 211) Larry Johnson Nov. 13-20, 2005 201) L. Johnson Dec. 24, 2005 - Jan. 1, 2006 119) Larry Johnson Nov. 20-27, 2005 172) Larry Johnson Oct. 29 - Nov. 5, 2006 88) Jamaal Charles Sept. 23-30, 2012 198) Larry Johnson Sept. 21-28, 2008 157) Larry Johnson Nov. 19-23, 2006 113) Priest Holmes Nov. 24 - Dec. 1, 2002 167) Larry Johnson Dec. 11-17, 2005 197) Priest Holmes Nov. 17-24, 2002
Most Rushing Yards vs. One Opponent, Season
327 (172, 155) Kareem Hunt vs. Los Angeles Chargers 315 (56, 259) Jamaal Charles vs. Denver 289 (154, 135) Larry Johnson vs. Oakland 283 (126, 157) Larry Johnson vs. Denver 282 (156, 126) Christian Okoye vs. Seattle
2017 2009 2006 2006 1989
Most Games, 100 or More Rushing Yards, Career
30 Larry Johnson
2003-09 @CHIEFS
24 23 14 13
Priest Holmes Jamaal Charles Christian Okoye Abner Haynes
2001-07 2008-16 1987-92 1960-65
49 Larry Johnson 47 Larry Johnson 45 Jamaal Charles Most 10+ Yard Rushes, Game
Most Games, 100 or More Rushing Yards, Season
11 10 9 8 7 7
Larry Johnson Larry Johnson Priest Holmes Christian Okoye Priest Holmes Jamaal Charles
2006 2005 2002 1989 2001 2012
Kareem Hunt Joe Delaney Curtis McClinton Mike Garrett Robert Holmes Abner Haynes Woody Green
10 9 7 7
Priest Holmes at Oakland Priestâ&#x20AC;&#x2C6;Holmes at Seattle Larry Johnson at N.Y. Giants Jamaal Charles vs. Buffalo
Dec. 9, 2001 Nov. 24, 2002 Dec. 17, 2005 Oct. 31, 2010
Highest Rushing Average, Career (400 attempts)
Most Games, 100 or More Rushing Yards, Rookie, Season
6 5 3 2 2 2 2
2006 2005 2010
2017 1981 1962 1966 1968 1960 1974
5.45 4.80 4.60 4.57 4.44
Jamaal Charles (1,332-7,260) Abner Haynes (794-3,814) Priest Holmes (1,321-6,070) Kimble Anders (495-2,261) Ted McKnight (528-2,344)
2008-16 1960-64 2001-07 1991-00 1977-81
Highest Rushing Average, Season (100 attempts)
6.38 6.03 5.89 5.61 5.49
Jamaal Charles (230-1,467) Ted McKnight (104-627) Jamaal Charles (190-1,120) Abner Haynes (156-875) Mack Lee Hill (105-576)
2010 1978 2009 1960 1964
Most Consecutive Games, 100 or More Rushing Yards
Highest Rushing Average, Game (10 attempts)
9 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
14.27 12.25 11.58 11.45 11.29
Larry Johnson Priest Holmes Larry Johnson Jamaal Charles Joe Delaney Christian Okoye Christian Okoye Larry Johnson Larry Johnson Jamaal Charles Kareem Hunt
Nov. 6, 2005 - Jan. 1, 2006 Nov. 17 - Dec. 15, 2002 Nov. 19 - Dec. 10, 2006 Dec. 13, 2009 - Jan. 3 2010 Oct. 4 - Oct. 18, 1981 Sept. 24 - Oct. 8, 1989 Oct. 22 - Nov. 5, 1989 Dec. 5 - Dec. 19, 2004 Oct. 22 - Nov. 5, 2006 Nov. 25 - Dec. 9, 2012 Sept.24 - Oct. 8, 2017
Longest Run From Scrimmage
91 91 86 84 84 82 82 80 80
(TD) (TD) (TD) (TD) (TD) (TD) (TD) (TD) (TD) 80 80 (TD)
Jamaal Charles at New Orleans Damien Williams vs. Minnesota Jamaal Charles vs. Indianapolis Ted McKnight at Seattle Damien Williams vs. L.A. Chargers Joe Delaney vs. Denver Derrick Alexander vs. Pittsburgh Abner Haynes at N.Y. Jets Warren McVea vs. Cincinnati Jamaal Charles at St. Louis Jamaal Charles at Cleveland
Sept. 23, 2012 Nov. 3, 2019 Dec. 23, 2012 Sept. 30, 1979 Dec. 29, 2019 Oct. 18, 1981 Dec. 12, 1999 Nov. 29, 1964 Oct. 26, 1969 Dec. 19, 2010 Dec. 9, 2012
Most Rushing Yards, QB, Career
1,672 1,253 712 692 682
Alex Smith Len Dawson Steve Fuller Trent Green Mike Livingston
Alex Smith Alex Smith Tyler Thigpen Alex Smith Steve Fuller Jamaal Charles Priest Holmes Larry Johnson Marcus Allen Kimble Anders
6
76 55 44 43 40 39
Priest Holmes Larry Johnson Marcus Allen Jamaal Charles Christian Okoye Abner Haynes
2001-07 2003-09 1993-97 2008-16 1987-92 1960-65
Most Rushing Touchdowns, QB, Career
10 9 7 6 6
Alex Smith Len Dawson Mike Livingston Pete Beathard Rich Gannon
2013-17 1962-75 1968-79 1964-73 1995-98
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Season
27 21 20 17 14
Priest Holmes Priest Holmes Larry Johnson Larry Johnson Priest Holmes
2003 2002 2005 2006 2004
2015 2013 2008 2017 1980
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Rookie, Season
2008-16 2001-07 2003-09 1993-97 1991-00
Most 10+ Yard Rushes, Season
53 Priest Holmes 52 Priest Holmes
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Career
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Consecutive Seasons
Most 10+ Yard Rushes, Career
196 190 137 71 63
Nov. 24, 1960 Sept. 30, 1979 Dec. 6, 1970 Dec. 19, 2010 Nov. 26, 1961
2013-17 1962-75 1979-82 2001-06 1968-79
Most Rushing Yards, QB, Season
498 431 386 355 274
A. Haynes at N.Y. Titans (11-157) T. McKnight at Seattle (12-147) E. Podolak vs. Denver (12-139) J. Charles at St. Louis (11-126) A. Haynes vs. Oakland (14-158)
2002 2001
48 41 37 29 29 10 9 8 7 6
Priest Holmes (21, 27) Priest Holmes (27, 14) Larry Johnson (20, 17) Priest Holmes (8, 21) Larry Johnson (9, 20) Billy Jackson Abner Haynes Kareem Hunt Robert Holmes Mike Garrett
2002-03 2003-04 2005-06 2001-02 2004-05 1981 1960 2017 1968 1966
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Game
4 4 4 4 3 3 3
Abner Haynes vs. Oakland Priest Holmes at Cleveland Priest Holmes vs. Atlanta Derrick Blaylock vs. Atlanta Jack Spikes vs. Houston Abner Haynes vs. Boston Bert Coan at Denver
Nov. 26, 1961 Sept. 8, 2002 Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 1, 1961 Sept. 8, 1962 Oct. 23, 1966 @CHIEFS
3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Ed Podolak at Detroit Ed Podolak vs. Cleveland Billy Jackson at Oakland Marcus Allen at Seattle Donnell Bennett at Philadelphia Bam Morris at San Diego Priest Holmes vs. Denver Priest Holmes vs. Pittsburgh Priest Holmes vs. Buffalo Priest Holmes vs. Detroit Priest Holmes at Minnesota Priest Holmes at Denver Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis Larry Johnson at Dallas Larry Johnson vs. Cincinnati Larry Johnson vs. Seattle Larry Johnson vs. Jacksonville Jamaal Charles at Green Bay
Nov. 25, 1971 Dec. 12, 1976 Oct. 25, 1981 Dec. 5, 1993 Sept. 27, 1998 Nov. 22, 1998 Oct. 20, 2002 Sept. 14, 2003 Oct. 26, 2003 Dec. 14, 2003 Dec. 20, 2003 Sept. 12, 2004 Oct. 31, 2004 Dec. 11, 2005 Jan. 1, 2006 Oct. 29, 2006 Dec. 31, 2006 Sept. 28, 2015
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Consecutive Games
7 Priest Holmes 6 Priest Holmes 5 Priest Holmes
Oct. 24-31, 2004 Dec. 14-20, 2003 5 times Last; Dec. 20-28, 2003 3 times Last; Oct. 22-29, 2006
5 Larry Johnson
Most Consecutive Games With Rushing Touchdown
11 8 8 7 7
Priest Holmes Priest Holmes Larry Johnson Larry Johnson Larry Johnson
Sept. 22 - Dec. 8, 2002 Nov. 23, 2003 - Sept. 19, 2004 Nov. 28, 2004 - Sept. 18, 2005 Nov. 20, 2005 - Jan. 1, 2006 Oct. 15 - Nov. 23, 2006
Most Rushing Touchdowns, QB, Season
5 Steve Bono Alex Smith 4 Pete Beathard Steve Fuller 3 Five Players Tied
1995 2016 1965 1980
Passing Most Seasons Leading League in Passing
4 Len Dawson
1962, 1964, 1966, 1968
Highest Passer Rating Career (1,000 attempts)
108.9 94.8 87.3 83.2 81.8 80.6
Patrick Mahomes Alex Smith Trent Green Len Dawson Steve DeBerg Elvis Grbac
2017-19 2013-17 2001-06 1962-75 1988-91 1997-00
Highest Passer Rating, Season (200 attempts)
113.8 105.3 104.7 101.9 98.8 98.4 98.0 96.3
Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes Alex Smith Len Dawson Len Dawson Len Dawson Damon Huard Steve DeBerg
2018 2019 2017 1966 1968 1962 2006 1990
Highest Passer Rating, Rookie, Season
112.3 76.4 66.7 55.8
Todd Blackledge Patrick Mahomes Hunter Enis Steve Fuller
1983 2017 1960 1979
Highest Passer Rating, Game (20 attempts)
158.3 Trent Green vs. Detroit
7
Dec. 14, 2003
158.3 156.6 154.8 154.3 148.6 147.6 146.0
Alex Smith at Oakland Steve Bono at Seattle Patrick Mahomes at Pittsburgh Trent Green at Washington Alex Smith at New England Bill Kenney at San Diego Joe Montana at Tampa Bay
Dec. 15, 2013 Sept. 3, 1995 Sept. 16, 2018 Sept. 30, 2001 Sept. 7, 2017 Dec. 16, 1984 Sept. 5, 1993
Most 100.0+ Passer Rating Games, Career
30 29 27 19 19 14
Len Dawson Alex Smith Trent Green Steve DeBerg Patrick Mahomes Bill Kenney
1962-75 2013-17 2001-06 1988-91 2017-19 1980-88
Most 100.0+ Passer Rating Games, Season
13 10 9 7 7 7 6 6
Patrick Mahomes Steve DeBerg Alex Smith Trent Green Trent Green Patrick Mahomes Alex Smith Matt Cassel
2018 1990 2017 2003 2004 2019 2015 2010
Most Passes Attempted, Career
3,696 2,777 2,436 2,430 1,751 1,616
Len Dawson Trent Green Alex Smith Bill Kenney Mike Livingston Steve DeBerg
1962-75 2001-06 2013-17 1979-88 1968-79 1988-91
Most Passes Attempted, Season (All 500+)
603 580 556 547 523 523 520 508 507 505
Bill Kenney Patrick Mahomes Trent Green Elvis Grbac Trent Green Trent Green Steve Bono Alex Smith Trent Green Alex Smith
1983 2018 2004 2000 2001 2003 1995 2013 2005 2017
Most Passes Attempted, Consecutive Seasons
1,079 1,064 1,063 1,046 994 993 993
Trent Green (523, 556) Patrick Mahomes (580, 484) Trent Green (556, 507) Elvis Grbac (499, 547) Alex Smith (489, 505) Trent Green (523, 470) Trent Green (470, 523)
2003-04 2018-19 2004-05 1999-00 2016-17 2001-02 2002-03
Most Passes Attempted, Rookie, Season
270 54 35 34
Steve Fuller Hunter Enis Patrick Mahomes Todd Blackledge
1979 1960 2017 1983
Most Passes Attempted, Game (All 50+)
55 55 54 54 53 53 53 53 52
Joe Montana at San Diego Steve Bono at Miami Joe Montana at Denver Steve Bono at San Diego Elvis Grbac at Oakland Trent Green at San Diego Matt Cassel at Denver Patrick Mahomes vs. Baltimore Bill Kenney at Denver
Oct. 9, 1994 Dec. 12, 1994 Oct. 17, 1994 Sept. 29, 1996 Nov. 5, 2000 Jan. 2, 2005 Nov. 14, 2010 Dec. 9, 2018 Oct. 30, 1983
@CHIEFS
50 50 50 50 50
Bill Kenney vs. Buffalo Steve DeBerg at Cleveland Rich Gannon at Jacksonville Alex Smith at Pittsburgh Patrick Mahomes at Tennessee
Nov. 30, 1986 Nov. 24, 1991 Nov. 9, 1997 Oct. 2, 2016 Nov. 10, 2019
Most Passes Completed, Career
2,115 1,720 1,587 1,330 934 912
Len Dawson Trent Green Alex Smith Bill Kenney Steve DeBerg Mike Livingston
1962-75 2001-06 2013-17 1979-88 1988-91 1968-79
Most Passes Completed, Season (All 300+)
383 369 346 341 330 328 326 319 317 308 307 303
Patrick Mahomes (580 att.) Trent Green (556 att.) Bill Kenney (603 att.) Alex Smith (505 att.) Trent Green (523 att.) Alex Smith (461 att.) Elvis Grbac (547 att.) Patrick Mahomes (484 att.) Trent Green (507 att.) Alex Smith (508 att.) Alex Smith (470 att.) Alex Smith (464 att.)
2018 2004 1983 2017 2003 2016 2000 2019 2005 2013 2015 2014
Most Passes Completed, Consecutive Seasons (All 600+)
702 699 686 686 669 635 620 617 611 610
Patrick Mahomes (383, 319) Trent Green (330, 369) Trent Green (369, 317) Patrick Mahomes (383, 303) Alex Smith (328, 341) Alex Smith (307, 328) Elvis Grbac (294, 326) Trent Green (287, 330) Alex Smith (308, 303) Alex Smith (303, 307)
2018-19 2003-04 2004-05 2018-19 2016-17 2015-16 1999-00 2002-03 2013-14 2014-15
Most Passes Completed, Rookie, Season
146 30 22 20
Steve Fuller Hunter Enis Patrick Mahomes Todd Blackledge
1979 1960 2017 1983
Most Passes Completed, Game (All 30+)
39 37 36 35 34 34 34 33 33 33 33 32 32 31 31 31 31 31 30 30 30
8
Elvis Grbac at Oakland Joe Montana at San Diego Patrick Mahomes at Tennessee Patrick Mahomes at Baltimore Joe Montana at Denver Trent Green at Denver Alex Smith vs. San Diego Steve Bono at Miami Trent Green at San Diego Matt Cassel at Denver Patrick Mahomes at L.A. Rams Trent Green at Tampa Bay Trent Green vs. Oakland Bill Kenney at San Diego Elvis Grbac vs. Carolina Trent Green at San Diego Alex Smith at Pittsburgh Alex Smith at Cincinnati Steve DeBerg vs. Cleveland Elvis Grbac vs. Seattle Alex Smith at Pittsburgh
Nov. 5, 2000 Oct. 9, 1994 Nov. 10, 2019 Dec. 9, 2018 Oct. 17, 1994 Dec. 7, 2003 Sept. 11, 2016 Dec. 12, 1994 Jan. 2, 2005 Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 7, 2004 Dec. 25, 2004 Dec. 11, 1983 Dec. 10, 2000 Oct. 30, 2005 Dec. 21, 2014 Oct. 4, 2015 Nov. 24, 1991 Nov. 21, 1999 Oct. 2, 2016
30 Patrick Mahomes at Oakland
Sept. 15, 2019
Most Consecutive Passes Completed
15 Len Dawson at Houston 15 Bill Kenney vs. San Diego (13) at Washington (2) 15 Alex Smith at Oakland 15 Alex Smith at Atlanta 14 Trent Green vs. Indianapolis
Sept. 9, 1967 Sept. 12, 1983 Sept. 18, 1983 Oct. 16, 2016 Dec. 4, 2016 Oct. 31, 2004
Most Seasons Leading League
*8 Len Dawson *NFL RECORD
1962, â&#x20AC;&#x2122;64-69, â&#x20AC;&#x2122;75
Most Consecutive Seasons Leading League
*6 Len Dawson *NFL RECORD
1964-69
Highest Completion Percentage, Career (1,000 attempts)
65.88 65.15 61.94 57.97 57.94 57.35
Patrick Mahomes (1,099-724) Alex Smith (2,436-1,587) Trent Green (1,777-1,720) Steve DeBerg (1,616-934) Elvis Grbac (1,548-897) Matt Cassel (1,489-854)
2017-19 2013-17 2001-06 1988-91 1997-00 2009-12
Highest Completion Percentage, Season (100 attempts)
67.52 67.08 66.43 66.37 66.03 65.91 65.32 65.30 63.09 62.52 62.05
Alex Smith (505-341) Alex Smith (489-328) Len Dawson (140-93) Trent Green (556-369) Patrick Mahomes (580-383) Patrick Mahomes (484-319) Alex Smith (470-307) Alex Smith (464-303) Trent Green (523-330) Trent Green (507-317) Damon Huard (206-332)
2017 2016 1975 2004 2018 2019 2015 2014 2003 2005 2007
Highest Completion Percentage, Rookie, Season
62.86 58.82 55.56 54.07
Patrick Mahomes (35-22) Todd Blackledge (34-20) Hunter Enis (54-30) Steve Fuller (270-146)
2017 1983 1960 1979
Highest Completion Percentage, Game (20 attempts)
86.36 86.21 85.00 84.00 84.00
A. A. A. A. A.
Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith
at Oakland (22-19) vs. St. Louis (29-25) at Oakland (20-17) at Baltimore (25-21) at Atlanta (25-21)
Oct. 16, 2016 Oct. 26, 2014 Dec. 15, 2013 Dec. 20, 2015 Dec. 4, 2016
Most Passing Yards, Career (All 10,000+)
28,507 21,459 17,608 17,277 11,873 11,295 10,642
Len Dawson Trent Green Alex Smith Bill Kenney Steve DeBerg Mike Livingston Elvis Grbac
1962-75 2001-06 2013-17 1979-88 1988-91 1968-79 1997-00
Most Passing Yards, Season (All 4,000+)
5,097 4,591 4,348 4,169 4,042 4,039 4,031 4,014
Patrick Mahomes Trent Green Bill Kenney Elvis Grbac Alex Smith Trent Green Patrick Mahomes Trent Green
2018 2004 1983 2000 2017 2003 2019 2005
Most Passing Yards, Consecutive Seasons
9,128 Patrick Mahomes (5,097, 4,031) 8,630 Trent Green (4,039, 4,591)
2018-19 2003-04 @CHIEFS
8,605 7,729 7,558 7,544
Trent Green (4,591, 4,014) Trent Green (3,690, 4,039) Elvis Grbac (3,389, 4,169) Alex Smith (3,502, 4,042)
2004-05 2002-03 1999-00 2016-17
Steve Fuller Hunter Enis Patrick Mahomes Todd Bleckledge
1979 1960 2017 1983
Most Passing Yards, Game (All 400+)
504 478 469 446 443 435 411 400
Elvis Grbac at Oakland Patrick Mahomes at L.A. Rams Matt Cassel at Denver Patrick Mahomes at Tennessee Patrick Mahomes at Oakland Len Dawson vs. Denver Bill Kenney at San Diego Trent Green at Green Bay
Nov. 5, 2000 Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 10, 2019 Sept. 15, 2019 Nov. 1, 1964 Dec. 11, 1983 Oct. 12, 2003
Most Games, 300 Yards Passing, Career
24 17 15 9 8 7 5
Trent Green Patrick Mahomes Bill Kenney Len Dawson Alex Smith Elvis Grbac Steve DeBerg
Patrick Mahomes Matt Cassel Steve DeBerg Joe Montana
2017-19 2009-12 1990-91 1993-94
Most 20+ Yard Passes, Season
Most Passing Yards, Rookie, Season
1,484 357 284 259
127 122 73 68
2001-06 2017-19 1979-88 1962-75 2013-17 1997-00 1988-91
75 59 55 54 52 51 51
Patrick Mahomes Trent Green Elvis Grbac Trent Green Alex Smith Trent Green Trent Green
2018 2004 2000 2003 2017 2001 2005
Most 20+ Yard Passes, Game
9 9 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 6
Matt Cassel at Denver Patrick Mahomes at L.A. Rams Patrick Mahomes at Oakland Dave Krieg at L.A. Raiders Rich Gannon at San Diego Elvis Grbac at Oakland Trent Green at Arizona Trent Green vs. Indianapolis Alex Smith at New York Jets Patrick Mahomes at Cleveland 16 times; Last P. Mahomes vs. IND
Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 19, 2018 Sept. 15, 2019 Dec. 6, 1992 Nov. 22, 1998 Nov. 5, 2000 Oct. 21, 2001 Oct. 31, 2004 Dec. 3, 2017 Nov. 4, 2018 Oct. 6, 2019
Most Seasons Leading League
3 Len Dawson
1962, ’66, ’69
Most Games, 300 Yards Passing, Season
Highest Passing Average, Career (1,000 attempts)
10 8 7 7 5 5 5
8.56 7.73 7.71 7.35 7.23 7.11 6.88
Patrick Mahomes Trent Green Bill Kenney Patrick Mahomes Elvis Grbac Trent Green Alex Smith
2018 2004 1983 2019 2000 2003 2017
Patrick Mahomes (1,099-9,412) Trent Green (2,777-21,459) Len Dawson (3,696-28,507) Steve DeBerg (1,616-11,873) Alex Smith (2,436-17,608) Bill Kenney (2,430-17,277) Elvis Grbac (1,548-10,643)
2017-19 2001-06 1962-75 1988-91 2013-17 1979-88 1997-00
Most Consecutive Games, 300 Yards Passing, Season
Highest Passing Average, Season (Qualifiers: 224 attempts/16 G)
8 5 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 2
9.42 8.90 8.90 8.79
Patrick Mahomes Patrick Mahomes Bill Kenney Trent Green Elvis Grbac Joe Montana Steve Bono Trent Green Trent Green Trent Green
2018 2019 1983 2004 2000 1994 1994 2001 2002 2003
Long Pass Completion (All TDs)
*99 Trent Green vs. San Diego Dec. 22, 2002 (to Marc Boerigter) 93 Mike Livingston vs. Miami Oct. 19, 1969 (to Otis Taylor for 79 yards,lateral to Robert Holmes for 14 yards) 92 Len Dawson at Denver Nov. 18, 1962 (to Tommy Brooker) 92 Len Dawson at Oakland Nov. 3, 1968 (to Gloster Richardson) 90 Len Dawson vs. Houston Nov. 17, 1968 (to Frank Pitts) 90 Steve DeBerg vs. San Diego Nov. 18, 1990 (to J.J. Birden) *NFL RECORD Most 20+ Yard Passes, Career
274 Trent Green 215 Alex Smith 133 Elvis Grbac 9
2001-06 2013-17 1997-00
Len Dawson (224-2,109) Len Dawson (310-2,759) Len Dawson (284-2,527) Patrick Mahomes (580-5,097)
1968 1962 1966 2018
Highest Passing Average, Game (20 attempts)
15.76 14.35 13.90 12.82
S. DeBerg at New England (21-331) A. Smith at Oakland (20-287) T. Green vs. Denver (21-292) L. Dawson vs. Denver (22-282)
Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec.
2, 1990 15, 2013 16, 2001 19, 1965
Most Seasons Leading League
*4 Len Dawson *NFL RECORD
1962, ’63, ’65, ’66
Most Touchdown Passes, Career
237 118 105 102 76 67
Len Dawson Trent Green Bill Kenney Alex Smith Patrick Mahomes Steve DeBerg
1962-75 2001-06 1979-88 2013-17 2017-19 1988-91
Most Touchdown Passes, Season
50 30 29 28 27 27 26 26 26
Patrick Mahomes Len Dawson Len Dawson Elvis Grbac Trent Green Matt Cassel Len Dawson Trent Green Alex Smith
2018 1964 1962 2000 2004 2010 1963, ’66 2002 2017 @CHIEFS
26 Patrick Mahomes
2019
Most Touchdown Passes, Consecutive Seasons
76 56 55 51 51 50 50 50
Patrick Mahomes (50, 26) Len Dawson (26, 30) Len Dawson (29, 26) Len Dawson (30, 21) Trent Green (24, 27) Elvis Grbac (22, 28) Len Dawson (26, 24) Trent Green (26, 24)
2018-19 1963-64 1962-63 1964-65 2003-04 1999-00 1966-67 2002-03
Most Touchdown Passes, Rookie, Season
6 Steve Fuller 3 Todd Blackledge 1 Hunter Enis
1979 1983 1960
Most Touchdown Passes, Game
6 Len Dawson vs. Denver 6 Patrick Mahomes Last; at L.A. Rams 5 Len Dawson Last; vs. Miami 5 Elvis Grbac vs. San Diego 5 Trent Green vs. Miami 5 Alex Smith at Oakland 4 Len Dawson Last; at Baltimore 4 Bill Kenney Last; at Chicago 4 Trent Green at Cleveland 4 Matt Cassel Last; at Indianapolis 4 Alex Smith Last; at New York Jets 4 Patrick Mahomes Last; at Oakland
Nov. 1, 1964 2 times Nov. 19, 2018 2 times Oct. 8, 1967 Sept. 17, 2000 Sept. 29, 2002 Dec. 15, 2013 6 times Sept. 28, 1970 4 times Nov. 1, 1987 Dec. 3, 2006 2 times Oct. 9, 2011 2 times Dec. 3, 2017 6 times Sept. 15, 2019
Most Consecutive Games, Touchdown Passes
15 14 14 12 12
Elvis Grbac Len Dawson Patrick Mahomes Len Dawson Trent Green
Nov. 28, 1999 - Nov. 12, 2000 Oct. 3, 1965 - Oct. 8, 1966 Oct. 14, 2018 - Sept. 22, 2019 Sept. 8, 1962 - Dec. 2, 1962 Nov. 28, 2001 - Oct. 20, 2002
44 43 43 43 43 43 42 42 42 42 41 41 41 41 40 40 40 40
Patrick Mahomes at Oakland Bill Kenney at Houston Rich Gannon at Denver Trent Green at Denver Trent Green at San Diego Matt Cassel vs. Buffalo Trent Green vs. Cleveland Trent Green at Cincinnati Alex Smith at Denver Patrick Mahomes at Detroit Todd Blackledge vs. Houston Steve Bono vs. San Diego Rich Gannon vs. Dallas Tyler Thigpen at San Diego Steve Bono vs. New England Elvis Grbac vs. San Diego Elvis Grbac vs. Oakland Patrick Mahomes at Seattle
Sept. 15, 2019 Oct. 23, 1983 Dec. 6, 1998 Dec. 15, 2002 Oct. 30, 2005 Dec. 13, 2009 Nov. 9, 2003 Nov. 16, 2003 Sept. 14, 2014 Sept. 29, 2019 Nov. 11, 1984 Oct. 9, 1995 Dec. 13, 1998 Nov. 9, 2008 Oct. 15, 1995 Oct. 16, 1997 Oct. 15, 2000 Dec. 23, 2018
Most Passes Had Intercepted, Season
24 23 19 19 17 17
Trent Green Cotton Davidson Len Dawson Bill Kenney Len Dawson Trent Green
2001 1961 1963 1983 1962, '67 2004
Most Passes Had Intercepted, Rookie, Season
14 2 2 1 1 0
Steve Fuller Hunter Enis Brodie Croyle Tyler Thigpen Patrick Mahomes Todd Blackledge
1979 1960 2006 2007 2017 1983
Most Interceptions, Game
6 5 5 5 5 5
Todd Blackledge vs. L.A. Rams Cotton Davidson at Houston Len Dawson vs. Oakland Mike Livingston vs. Pittsburgh Bill Kenney vs. San Diego Steve DeBerg at San Diego
Oct. 20, 1985 Oct. 16, 1960 Nov. 23, 1969 Oct. 13, 1974 Sept. 20, 1981 Sept. 24, 1989
Most Consecutive Passes, None Intercepted
Lowest Percentage, Passes Had Intercepted, Career (1,000 att)
312 297 233 219 202 187
1.35 1.64 2.96 3.04 3.09 3.54
Alex Smith Alex Smith Steve DeBerg Patrick Mahomes Rich Gannon Patrick Mahomes
2015 2016-17 1990 2018-19 1997-98 2017-18
Most Passes Had Intercepted, Career
178 86 85 83 50
Len Dawson Bill Kenney Trent Green Mike Livingston Steve DeBerg
1962-75 1979-88 2001-06 1968-79 1988-91
Most Attempts, No Interceptions, Game (All 40+)
53 47 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 44
10
Matt Cassel at Denver Trent Green at Denver Patrick Mahomes at Denver Alex Smith at Cincinnati Bill Kenney at L.A. Raiders Steve DeBerg at Denver Trent Green at Green Bay Alex Smith at Denver Alex Smith at Pittsburgh Alex Smith at Denver
Nov. 14, 2010 Dec. 7, 2003 Oct. 1, 2018 Oct. 4, 2015 Oct. 9, 1983 Sept. 17, 1990 Oct. 12, 2003 Nov. 17, 2013 Dec. 21, 2014 Nov. 27, 2016
Alex Smith (2,436-33) Patrick Mahomes (1,099-18) Matt Cassel (1,489-44) Elvis Grbac (1,548-47) Steve DeBerg (1,616-50) Bill Kenney (2,430-85)
2013-17 2017-19 2009-12 1997-00 1988-91 1979-88
Lowest Percentage, Passes Had Intercepted, Season (300 att)
0.90 0.99 1.03 1.29 1.38 1.49 1.56 1.64 1.69 1.83
Steve DeBerg (444-4) Alex Smith (505-5) Patrick Mahomes (484-5) Alex Smith (464-6) Alex Smith (508-7) Alex Smith (470-7) Matt Cassel (450-7) Alex Smith (489-8) Rich Gannon (354-6) Joe Montana (493-9)
1990 2017 2019 2014 2013 2015 2010 2016 1998 1994
Times Sacked
195.0 192.0 173.0 133.0 120.0
Bill Kenney Alex Smith Trent Green Mike Livingston Steve Fuller
1979-88 2013-17 2001-06 1968-79 1979-82 @CHIEFS
109.0 Matt Cassel 90.0 Len Dawson
2009-12 1962-75
Times Sacked, Season
49.0 48.0 45.0 45.0 42.0 41.0 39.0 39.0
Steve Fuller Dave Krieg Alex Smith Alex Smith Matt Cassel Bill Kenney Trent Green Alex Smith
1980 1992 2014 2015 2009 1983 2001 2013
Times Sacked, Game
10.0 Steve Fuller vs. Baltimore 8.0 Steve Fuller at Pittsburgh
Nov. 2, 1980 Dec. 5, 1982
Pass Receiving Most Seasons Leading League
1 MacArthur Lane (66 recs.) 1 Tony Gonzalez (102 recs.)
1976 2004
Most Pass Receptions, Career
916 532 507 416 410 391
Tony Gonzalez Dwayne Bowe Travis Kelce Henry Marshall Otis Taylor Chris Burford
1997-08 2007-14 2013-19 1976-87 1965-75 1960-67
Most Seasons, 50 or More Pass Receptions
11 6 6 5 5 4 4 4 3 3 3 3
Tony Gonzalez Dwayne Bowe Travis Kelce Kimble Anders Eddie Kennison Chris Burford Otis Taylor Tyreek Hill Carlos Carson Stephone Paige Derrick Alexander Priest Holmes
1998-08 2007-08, 2010-13 2014-19 1994-98 2002-06 1961, ’63-64, ’66 1966-67, ’71-72 2016-19 1983-84, ’87 1986, ’88, ’90 1998-00 2001-03
Most Pass Receptions, Season (All 80+)
103 102 99 97 96 93 87 87 86 85 81 80
Travis Kelce Tony Gonzalez Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Tony Gonzalez Tony Gonzalez Jeremy Maclin Tyreek Hill Dwayne Bowe Travis Kelce Dwayne Bowe Carlos Carson
2018 2004 2007 2019 2008 2000 2015 2018 2008 2016 2011 1983
Most Pass Receptions, Consecutive Seasons
200 195 186 180 173 172 169
Travis Kelce (103, 97) Tony Gonzalez (99, 96) Travis Kelce (83, 103) Tony Gonzalez (102, 78) Tony Gonzalez (71, 102) Tony Gonzalez (73, 99) Tony Gonzalez (76, 93)
2018-19 2007-08 2017-18 2004-05 2003-04 2006-07 1999-00
Most Pass Receptions, Game (All 10+)
14 Tony Gonzalez at San Diego 13 Dwayne Bowe at Denver 13 Dwayne Bowe at Seattle
11
Jan. 2, 2005 Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 28, 2010
12 12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10
Ed Podolak vs. Denver Travis Kelce at Oakland Chris Burford at Buffalo Emile Harry at Cleveland Kimble Anders vs. N.Y. Giants Tony Gonzalez at New England Dante Hall at Denver Tony Gonzalez vs. Oakland Jeremy Maclin at Cincinnati Travis Kelce vs. Denver Tyreek Hill at Tennessee Travis Kelce vs. Denver Chris Burford at Boston Chris Buford vs. Buffalo Frank Jackson at N.Y. Jets Chris Burford at Boston Otis Taylor vs. Cincinnati Ed Podolak at Houston Stephone Paige at Denver J.J. Birden at Miami Kimble Anders vs. Denver Tony Gonzalez at Denver Tony Gonzalez vs. Carolina Tony Gonzalez vs. Cincinnati Tony Gonzalez vs. Green Bay Tony Gonzalez vs. San Diego Tony Gonzalez at Detroit Tony Gonzalez at San Diego Tony Gonzalez vs. Buffalo Dwayne Bowe at Cincinnati Tyreek Hill at Carolina Albert Wilson at Denver Tyreek Hill at L.A. Rams Travis Kelce at L.A. Rams
Oct. 7, 1973 Dec. 2, 2018 Sept. 22, 1963 Nov. 24, 1991 Sept. 10, 1995 Dec. 4, 2000 Dec. 7, 2003 Dec. 25, 2004 Oct. 4, 2015 Dec. 25, 2016 Nov. 10, 2019 Dec. 15, 2019 Oct. 12, 1962 Oct. 13, 1963 Nov. 29, 1964 Sept. 25, 1966 Oct. 15, 1972 Sept. 29, 1974 Sept. 17, 1990 Dec. 12, 1994 Nov. 16, 1998 Sept. 24, 2000 Dec. 10, 2000 Sept. 10, 2006 Nov. 4, 2007 Dec. 2, 2007 Dec. 23, 2007 Nov. 9, 2008 Nov. 23, 2008 Dec. 28, 2008 Nov. 13, 2016 Dec. 31, 2017 Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 19, 2018
Most Pass Receptions, Half
11 10 9 9 9
T. Gonzalez (2nd) at San Diego E. Harry (2nd) at Cleveland C. Burford (2nd) vs. Buffalo K. Anders (2nd) vs. N.Y. Giants T. Gonzalez (1st) vs. Oakland
Jan. 2, 2005 Nov. 24, 1991 Oct. 13, 1963 Sept. 10, 1995 Dec. 25, 2004
Most Consecutive Games, Pass Receptions
131 95 83 55 48
Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Stephone Paige Eddie Kennison Priest Holmes
Dec. 4, 2000 - Dec. 28, 2008 Sept. 7, 2014 - Dec. 29, 2019 Nov. 17, 1985 - Sept. 29, 1991 Dec. 9, 2001 - Oct. 2, 2005 Sept. 9, 2001 - Sept. 19, 2004
Most Receptions, Running Back, Career
369 288 285 251 197
Kimble Anders Ed Podolak Jamaal Charles Priest Holmes Abner Haynes
1991-00 1969-77 2008-16 2001-07 1960-64
Most Receptions, Running Back, Season
74 70 70 67 66
Priest Holmes Priest Holmes Jamaal Charles Kimble Anders MacArthur Lane
2003 2002 2013 1994 1976
Most Receptions, Tight End, Career
916 507 198 163 135
Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Fred Arbanas Walter White Jonathan Hayes
1997-08 2013-19 1962-70 1975-79 1985-93 @CHIEFS
111 Keith Cash
1992-96
2,374 2,336 2,321 2,255 2,230 2,223 2,188
Most Pass Receptions, Tight End, Season
103 102 99 97 96 93 85
Travis Kelce Tony Gonzalez Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Tony Gonzalez Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce
2018 2004 2007 2019 2008 2000 2016
Dwayne Bowe Tyreek Hill Abner Haynes (RB) Kareem Hunt (RB) Sylvester Morris
2007 2016 1960 2017 2000
Most Receiving Yards, Career (All 6,000+)
10,940 7,306 7,155 6,465 6,454 6,360 6,341
Tony Gonzalez Otis Taylor Dwayne Bowe Travis Kelce Henry Marshall Carlos Carson Stephone Paige
1997-08 1965-75 2007-14 2013-19 1976-87 1980-89 1983-91
Most Seasons, 1,000 or More Receiving Yards
4 4 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1
Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Carlos Carson Dwayne Bowe Otis Taylor Eddie Kennison Tyreek Hill Stephone Paige Andre Rison Derrick Alexander Jeremy Maclin
2000, 2004, 2007-08 2016-19 1983-84, ’87 2008, 2010-11 1966, ’71 2004-05 2017-18 1990 1997 2000 2015
Most Receiving Yards, Season (All 1,000+)
1,479 1,391 1,351 1,336 1,297 1,258 1,229 1,203 1,183 1,172 1,162 1,159 1,125 1,110 1,102 1,092 1,086 1,078 1,058 1,044 1,038 1,034 1,022 1,021
Tyreek Hill Derrick Alexander Carlos Carson Travis Kelce Otis Taylor Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Tony Gonzalez Tyreek Hill Tony Gonzalez Dwayne Bowe Dwayne Bowe Travis Kelce Otis Taylor Eddie Kennison Andre Rison Eddie Kennison Carlos Carson Tony Gonzalez Carlos Carson Travis Kelce Jeremy Maclin Dwayne Bowe Stephone Paige
2018 2000 1983 2018 1966 2004 2019 2000 2017 2007 2010 2011 2016 1971 2005 1997 2004 1984 2008 1987 2017 2015 2008 1990
Most Receiving Yards, Consecutive Seasons
2,662 Tyreek Hill (1,183, 1,479) 2,565 Travis Kelce (1,336, 1,229) 2,429 Carlos Carson (1,351, 1,078)
12
2017-18 2018-19 2010-11 1966-67 2007-08 1999-00 2004-05
Most Receiving Yards, Game
Most Pass Receptions, Rookie, Season
70 61 55 53 48
Travis Kelce (1,038, 1,336) Tyreek Hill (1,479, 860) Dwayne Bowe (1,162, 1,159) Otis Taylor (1,297, 958) Tony Gonzalez (1,172, 1,058) Derrick Alexander (832, 1,391) Eddie Kennison (1,086, 1,102)
2017-18 2018-19 1983-84
309 Stephone Paige vs. San Diego (8 Receptions) 215 Tyreek Hill at L.A. Rams (10 Receptions) 213 Curtis McClinton vs. Denver (5 Receptions) 210 Larry Brunson vs. San Diego (9 Receptions) 206 Stephone Paige at Denver (10 Receptions) 198 Sammy Watkins at Jacksonville (9 Receptions) 197 Carlos Carson at San Diego (9 Receptions)
Dec. 22, 1985 Nov. 19, 2018 Dec. 19, 1965 Nov. 10, 1974 Sept. 17, 1990 Sept. 8, 2019 Oct. 25, 1987
Most Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, Career
26 20 19 18 17 15
Tony Gonzalez Otis Taylor Travis Kelce Carlos Carson Eddie Kennison Dwayne Bowe
1997-08 1965-75 2013-19 1980-88 2001-07 2007-14
Most Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, Season
6 6 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 5
Otis Taylor Carlos Carson Derrick Alexander Tony Gonzalez Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Tyreek Hill Eddie Kennison Eddie Kennison Tony Gonzalez Dwayne Bowe Travis Kelce
1966 1983 2000 2000 2004 2016 2018 2004 2005 2007 2010 2018
Most Consecutive Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, Season
4 4 3 3 3 3
Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Frank Jackson Otis Taylor Willie Davis Dwayne Bowe
2000 2016 1964 1966 1992 2010
Longest Pass Receptions (All TDs)
*99 Marc Boerigter vs. San Diego (from Trent Green) 92 Tommy Brooker at Denver (from Len Dawson) 92 Gloster Richardson at Oakland (from Len Dawson) 90 Frank Pitts vs. Boston (from Len Dawson) 90 J.J. Birden vs. San Diego (from Steve DeBerg) 89 Otis Taylor vs. Miami (from Len Dawson) 89 Demarcus Robinson vs. Oakland
Dec. 22, 2002 Nov. 18, 1962 Nov. 3, 1968 Nov. 17, 1968 Nov. 18, 1990 Nov. 13, 1966
@CHIEFS
(from Patrick Mahomes) Dec. 30, 2018 86 Stephone Paige vs. New England (from Steve DeBerg) Dec. 2, 1990 86 Derrick Alexander at Chicago (from Elvis Grbac)â&#x20AC;&#x2C6; Sept. 12, 1999 *NFL RECORD
995 789 678 611 593 576
Dwayne Bowe Chris Burford Sylvester Morris Johnny Robinson (RB) Tyreek Hill Abner Haynes (RB)
2007 1960 2000 1960 2016 1960
Most Receiving Yards, Running Back, Career
Highest Receiving Average, Career (200 receptions)
2,829 2,739 2,457 2,456 2,377
18.12 17.82 17.30 16.82 16.29
Kimble Anders Abner Haynes Jamaal Charles Ed Podolak Priest Holmes
1991-00 1960-65 2008-16 1969-77 2001-07
Carlos Carson (351-6,360) Otis Taylor (410-7,306) Derrick Alexander (213-3,685) Stephone Paige (377-6,341) Eddie Kennison (321-5,230)
1980-89 1965-75 1998-01 1983-91 2001-07
Most Receiving Yards, Running Back, Season
Highest Receiving Average, Season (24 receptions)
693 690 672 614 590
22.36 Otis Taylor (58-1,297) 21.93 Stephone Paige (43-943) 21.83 Frank Pitts (30-655)
Jamaal Charles Priest Holmes Priest Holmes Priest Holmes Curtis McClinton
2013 2003 2002 2001 1965
Most Receiving Yards, Running Back, Game
213 195 149 130 129 127
Curtis McClinton vs. Denver Jamaal Charles at Oakland Abner Haynes vs. San Diego Johnny Robinson vs. Buffalo Spencer Ware vs. San Diego Abner Haynes at N.Y. Titans
Dec. 19, 1965 Dec. 15, 2013 Oct. 20, 1963 Dec. 18, 1960 Sept. 11, 2016 Dec. 3, 1961
Most Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, RB, Career
5 5 3 3 2 2 2
Abner Haynes Priest Holmes Johnny Robinson Paul Palmer Curtis McClinton Larry Johnson Jamaal Charles
1960-65 2001-07 1960-71 1987-88 1962-69 2003-09 2008-16
Most Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, RB, Season
3 2 2 2
Paul Palmer Johnny Robinson Abner Haynes Priest Holmes
1988 1960 1964 2001
Most Receiving Yards, Tight End, Career (All 1,000+)
10,940 6,465 3,101 2,396 1,541 1,046 1,009
Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Fred Arbanas Walter White Jonathan Hayes Keith Cash Tony Moeaki
1997-08 2013-19 1962-70 1975-79 1985-93 1992-96 2010-12
Most Receiving Yards, Tight End, Season
1,336 1,258 1,229 1,203 1,172 1,125 1,058
Travis Kelce Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Tony Gonzalez Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Tony Gonzalez
2018 2004 2019 2000 2007 2016 2008
Most Receiving Yards, Tight End, Game
168 160 147 144 140 140 140
Travis Kelce at Oakland Travis Kelce vs. Denver Tony Gonzalez at New England Tony Gonzalez at San Diego Tony Gonzalez vs. Miami Tony Gonzalez vs. San Diego Travis Kelce at Atlanta
Dec. 2, 2018 Dec. 25, 2016 Dec. 4, 2000 Jan. 2, 2005 Sept. 29, 2002 Dec. 2, 2007 Dec. 4, 2016
Most Receiving Yards, Rookie, Season
13
1966 1985 1968
Highest Receiving Average, Game (3 receptions)
42.60 C. McClinton vs. Denver (5-213) 40.00 J. Robinson vs. N.Y. Titans (3-120) 39.67 Otis Taylor at Denver (3-119)
Dec. 19, 1965 Oct. 2, 1960 Dec. 14, 1968
Most Receiving Touchdowns, Career
76 57 55 49 44
Tony Gonzalez Otis Taylor Chris Burford Stephone Paige Dwayne Bowe
1997-08 1965-75 1960-67 1983-91 2007-14
Most Receiving Touchdowns, Season
15 12 12 11 11 11 10 10 10 10 10
Dwayne Bowe Chris Burford Tyreek Hill Otis Taylor Stephone Paige Tony Gonzalez Stephone Paige Derrick Alexander Tony Gonzalez Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce
2010 1962 2018 1967 1986 1999 1985 2000 2003 2008 2018
Most Receiving Touchdowns, Consecutive Seasons
21 21 20 20 19 19 19 19
Chris Burford (12, 9) Stephone Paige (10, 11) Tony Gonzalez (11, 9) Dwayne Bowe (15, 5) Otis Taylor (8, 11) Dwayne Bowe (4, 15) Tyreek Hill (7, 12) Tyreek Hill (12, 7)
1962-63 1985-86 1999-00 2010-11 1966-67 2009-10 2017-18 2018-19
Most Receiving Touchdowns, Rookie, Season
6 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 5
Fred Arbanas Stephone Paige Tyreek Hill Mecole Hardman Chris Burford Otis Taylor Bill Jones Tim Barnett Dwayne Bowe
1962 1983 2016 2019 1960 1965 1990 1991 2007
Most Receiving Touchdowns, Game
4 4 3 3 3 3 3
Frank Jackson at San Diego Jamaal Charles at Oakland Chris Burford at Oakland Chris Burford at Boston Otis Taylor at Denver Otis Taylor at N.Y. Jets Sylvester Morris vs. San Diego
Dec. 13, 1964 Dec. 15, 2013 Sept. 23, 1962 Sept. 25, 1966 Dec. 17, 1967 Nov. 16, 1969 Sept. 17, 2000 @CHIEFS
3 3 3 3
Tony Gonzalez vs. Miami Dwayne Bowe at Seattle Tyreek Hill at New England Sammy Watkins at Jacksonville
Sept. 29, 2002 Nov. 28, 2010 Oct. 14, 2018 Sept. 8, 2019
Most Consecutive Games, Touchdown Receptions
7 5 5 4 4 4 4 4
Dwayne Bowe Chris Burford Otis Taylor Curtis McClinton Willie Frazier Otis Taylor Tony Gonzalez Tony Gonzalez
Oct. 17, 2010 - Nov. 28, 2010 Sept. 8, 1962 - Oct. 12, 1962 Oct. 23, 1966 - Nov. 20, 1966 Sept. 11, 1966 - Oct. 2, 1966 Sept. 17, 1972 - Oct. 8, 1972 Sept. 25, 1972 - Oct. 15, 1972 Sept. 24, 2000 - Oct. 22, 2000 Dec. 7, 2008 - Dec. 28, 2008
Highest TD Catch Percentage, Season (20 recs.)
40.0 33.3 27.3 25.0 23.5 23.1
Marc Boerigter (20 recs., 8 TDs) Chris Burford (45 recs., 12 TDs) Gloster Richardson (22 recs., 6 TDs) Fred Arbanas (20 recs., 5 TDs) Fred Arbanas (34 recs., 8 TDs) Mecole Hardman (25 recs., 6 TDs)
2002 1962 1968 1967 1964 2019
Most 20+ Yard Receptions, Career
130 101 89 81 66 64 53
Tony Gonzalez Dwayne Bowe Travis Kelce Eddie Kennison Tyreek Hill Derrick Alexander Willie Davis
1997-08 2007-14 2013-19 2001-07 2016-19 1998-01 1991-95
Tyreek Hill Derrick Alexander Derrick Alexander Tony Gonzalez Dwayne Bowe Dwayne Bowe Travis Kelce Eddie Kennison Travis Kelce
2018 2000 1998 2004 2010 2011 2017 2004 2018
Derrick Alexander at San Diego Tyreek Hill at Los Angeles Chargers Tyreek Hill at Los Angeles Rams Derrick Alexander vs. St. Louis Eddie Kennison vs. Jacksonville Dwayne Bowe at Denver Travis Kelce at Oakland Sammy Watkins at Jacksonville Demarcus Robinson at Oakland 42 times; Last, Tyreek Hill vs. Minnesota
Nov. 22, 1998 Sept. 9, 2018 Nov, 19, 2018 Oct. 22, 2000 Dec. 31, 2006 Nov. 14, 2010 Dec. 2, 2018 Sept. 8, 2019 Sept. 15, 2019 Nov. 3, 2019
Jamaal Charles (1,332 rush, 285 rec.) Priest Holmes (1,321 rush, 251 rec.) Larry Johnson (1,375 rush, 151 rec.) Ed Podolak (1,157 rush, 288 rec.) Christian Okoye (1,246 rush, 42 rec.) Marcus Allen (932 rush, 141 rec.)
2008-16 2001-07 2003-09 1969-77 1987-92 1993-97
Most Attempts From Scrimmage, Season
14
Oct. 29, 2006 Sept. 23, 2012 Dec. Dec. Nov. Nov.
10, 1989 31, 2006 5, 1989 20, 2005
Most Yards From Scrimmage, Career
10,954 9,717 8,447 7,467 7,384
Tony Gonzalez (14 rush, 10,940 rec.) Jamaal Charles (7,260 rush, 2,457 rec.) Priest Holmes (6,070 rush, 2,377 rec.) Otis Taylor (161 rush, 7,306 rec.) Larry Johnson (6,015 rush, 1,369 rec.)
1997-08 2008-16 2001-07 1965-75 2003-09
Most Yards From Scrimmage, Season
2,287 2,199 2,169 2,110 2,093
6.60 6.57 5.89 5.53 5.48
Most Attempts From Scrimmage, Career
457 Larry Johnson (416 rush, 41 rec.) 394 Priest Holmes (320 rush, 74 rec.) 389 Priest Holmes (327 rush, 62 rec.)
41 (39 rush, 2 rec.) L. Johnson vs. Seattle 39 (33 rush, 6 rec.) J. Charles at New Orleans 38 (38 rush, 0 rec.) C. Okoye at Green Bay 38 (33 rush, 5 rec.) L. Johnson vs. JAX 37 (37 rush, 0 rec.) C. Okoye vs. Seattle 37 (36 rush, 1 rec.) L. Johnson at Houston
Priest Holmes (1,615 rush, 672 rec.) Larry Johnson (1,789 rush, 410 rec.) Priest Holmes (1,555 rush, 614 rec.) Priest Holmes (1,420 rush, 690 rec.) Larry Johnson (1,750 rush, 343 rec.)
2002 2006 2001 2003 2005 Dec. 22, 1985 Nov. 24, 2002 Sept. 23, 2012 Dec. 9, 2001 Jan. 3, 2009
Yards Per Touch Average, RB, Career (350 touches)
Total Yards From Scrimmage 1,617 1,572 1,526 1,445 1,288 1,073
Most Attempts From Scrimmage, Game
309 Stephone Paige vs. San Diego (0 rush, 309 rec.) 307 Priest Holmes at Seattle (197 rush, 110 rec.) 288 Jamaal Charles at New Orleans (233 rush, 55 rec.) 277 Priest Holmes at Oakland (168 rush, 109 rec.) 262 Jamaal Charles at Denver (259 rush, 3 rec.)
Most 20+ Yard Receptions, Game
5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3
2002 1989
Most Yards From Scrimmage, Game
Most 20+ Yard Receptions, Season
27 24 20 19 19 19 19 18 18
383 Priest Holmes (313 rush, 70 rec.) 372 Christian Okoye (370 rush, 2 rec.)
2006 2003 2001
Abner Haynes (993-6,553) Jamaal Charles (1,668-10,963) Kimble Anders (864-5,890) Curtis McClinton (916-5,069) Tony Reed (651-3,566)
1960-64 2008-16 1991-00 1962-69 1977-80
Yards Per Touch Average, RB, Season (200 touches)
7.0 6.9 6.6 6.2 6.2
Jamaal Charles (275-1,935) Abner Haynes (211-1,451) Abner Haynes (213-1,399) Abner Haynes (260-1,622) Jamaal Charles (230-1,417)
2010 1960 1961 1962 2009
Combined Yardage Most Combined Attempts, Career (All 1,000+)
1,668 1,572 1,569 1,526 1,289 1,114
Jamaal Charles Priest Holmes Ed Podolak Larry Johnson Christian Okoye Abner Haynes
2008-16 2001-07 1969-77 2003-09 1987-92 1960-65
Most Combined Attempts, Season (All 300+)
457 394 389 383 372 329 325 320
Larry Johnson Priest Holmes Priest Holmes Priest Holmes Christian Okoye Jamaal Charles Kareem Hunt Jamaal Charles
2006 2003 2001 2002 1989 2013 2017 2012
Most Combined Attempts, Game
@CHIEFS
41 39 38 38 37 37 36 36 36 36
Larry Johnson vs. Seattle Jamaal Charles at New Orleans Christian Okoye at Green Bay Larry Johnson vs. Jacksonville Christian Okoye vs. Seattle L. Johnson at Houston Abner Haynes at Denver Derrick Blaylock at New Orleans L. Johnson vs. New England L. Johnson vs. San Diego
Oct. 29, 2006 Sept. 23, 2012 Dec. 10, 1989 Dec. 31, 2006 Nov. 5, 1989 Nov. 20, 2005 Oct. 30, 1960 Nov. 14, 2004 Nov. 27, 2005 Dec. 24, 2005
Most Combined Yards, Career (All 7,500+)
12,356 10,963 10,963 8,447 8,447 8,343 7,677
Dante Hall Tony Gonzalez Jamaal Charles Abner Haynes Priest Holmes Ed Podolak Carlos Carson
2000-06 1997-08 2008-16 1960-65 2001-07 1969-77 1980-89
Most Combined Yards, Season
2,446 2,342 2,287 2,236 2,283
Dante Hall Jamaal Charles Priest Holmes Dante Hall Dante Hall
2003 2009 2002 2004 2005
Most Combined Yards, Game
309 307 296 290 288
Stephone Paige vs. San Diego Priest Holmes at Seattle Dante Hall at Denver Noland Smith at San Diego Jamaal Charles at New Orleans
Dec. 22, 1985 Nov. 24, 2002 Dec. 7, 2003 Oct. 15, 1967 Sept. 23, 2012
Punting Most Seasons Leading League
*4 Jerrel Wilson *NFL RECORD 1 Bob Grupp 1 Jim Arnold
1965, ’68, ’72-73
Dustin Colquitt Jerrel Wilson Louie Aguiar Jim Arnold Bryan Barker
2005-19 1963-77 1994-98 1983-85 1990-93
Most Punts, Season
101 99 98 96 95
Daniel Pope Lewis Colbert Jim Arnold Dustin Colquitt Dustin Colquitt
1999 1986 1984 2009 2007
Most Punts, Game
11 11 11 11 11 10 10 10 10 10 10
Bob Grupp vs. Baltimore Jim Arnold at San Francisco Kelly Goodburn vs. Cleveland Louie Aguiar vs. San Diego Dustin Colquitt at Chicago Jerrel Wilson at N.Y. Jets Jerrel Wilson vs. Denver Kelly Goodburn at N.Y. Jets Todd Sauerbrun at San Diego Dustin Colquitt at N.Y. Jets Dustin Colquitt at Jacksonville
Sept. 2, 1979 Nov. 17, 1985 Nov. 19, 1989 Nov. 13, 1994 Dec. 4, 2011 Sept. 18, 1965 Oct. 6, 1974 Oct. 2, 1988 Nov. 26, 2000 Dec. 30, 2007 Sept. 8, 2013
Longest Punt (All 70+)
81 Dustin Colquitt vs. San Diego 77 Dustin Colquitt at Denver 15
Dan Stryzinski vs. Oakland Bob Grupp vs. San Diego Dustin Colquitt vs. Oakland Jerrel Wilson at San Diego Dustin Colquitt at Oakland Dustin Colquitt at St. Louis Dustin Colquitt at Oakland Jerrel Wilson at Denver Jerrel Wilson vs. Buffalo Jerrel Wilson vs. Houston Dustin Colquitt at Jacksonville
Sept. 9, 2001 Nov. 4, 1979 Sept. 14, 2008 Sept. 29, 1963 Dec. 23, 2006 Dec. 19, 2010 Dec. 16, 2012 Oct. 11, 1964 Oct. 18, 1964 Nov. 28, 1968 Nov. 8, 2009
Most Punting Yards, Career
50,393 44,218 17,930 11,934 11,267
Dustin Colquitt Jerrel Wilson Louie Aguiar Jim Arnold Bryan Barker
2005-19 1963-77 1994-98 1983-85 1990-93
Most Punting Yards, Season
4,397 4,361 4,322 4,218 4,084
Jim Arnold Dustin Colquitt Dustin Colquitt Daniel Pope Dustin Colquitt
1984 2009 2007 1999 2011
Highest Punting Average, Career (200 punts)
44.83 43.44 42.59 42.02
Dustin Colquitt (1,124-50,393) Jerrel Wilson (1,018-44,218) Louie Aguiar (421-17,930) Jim Arnold (284-11,934)
2005-19 1963-77 1994-98 1983-85
Highest Punting Average, Season (50 punts)
46.83 46.03 45.89 45.70 45.53 45.49
Dustin Colquitt (83-3,887) Dustin Colquitt (87-4,005) Dustin Colquitt (89-4,084) Dustin Colquitt (65-2,971) Jerrel Wilson (80-3,642) Dustin Colquitt (95-4,322)
2012 2013 2011 2015 1973 2007
Highest Punting Average, Game (4 punts)
1979 1984
Most Punts, Career
1,124 1,018 421 284 272
76 74 73 72 72 72 71 70 70 70 70
Dec. 2, 2007 Dec. 31, 2017
57.20 56.40 55.60 54.75
Dustin Colquitt vs. San Diego (5-286) Jerrel Wilson vs. Boston (5-282) Louie Aguiar at Arizona (5-278) Jerrel Wilson vs. Boston (4-129)
Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct.
31, 2011 11, 1970 1, 1995 3, 1965
Highest Net Punting Average, Career (200 Punts)
39.74 35.48 35.42 35.13 34.82
Dustin Colquitt Louie Aguiar Jerrel Wilson Bob Grupp Bryan Barker
2005-19 1994-98 1963-77 1979-81 1990-93
Highest Net Punting Average, Season (50 Punts)
41.11 40.84 40.78 40.78 40.66
Dustin Dustin Dustin Dustin Dustin
Colquitt Colquitt Colquitt Colquitt Colquitt
2017 2015 2009 2012 2016
Highest Net Punting Average, Game (4 Punts)
52.50 52.20 52.00 51.86 51.25 48.80
Dustin Dustin Dustin Dustin Dustin Dustin
Colquitt Colquitt Colquitt Colquitt Colquitt Colquitt
vs. Denver at L.A. Chargers at Indianapolis at Oakland vs. San Diego at Miami
Sept. 15, 2015 Sept. 9, 2018 Oct. 10, 2010 Dec. 16, 2012 Sept. 30, 2012 Sept. 21, 2014
Most Consecutive Punts, None Blocked
458 377 256 233
Dustin Colquitt Louie Aguiar Jerrel Wilson Jim Arnold
2013-19 1994-98 1968-71 1983-85
Punts Had Blocked, Career
@CHIEFS
12 5 2 2 2 2
Jerrel Wilson Dustin Colquitt Bob Grupp Jim Arnold Bryan Barker Daniel Pope
1963-77 2005-19 1979-81 1983-85 1990-93 1999
Punts Had Blocked, Season
2 Jerrel Wilson 2 Jim Arnold 2 Daniel Pope
1974 1985 1999
Punts Had Blocked, Game
2 Jim Arnold vs. Denver
Oct. 27, 1985
Most Punts Inside the 20, Career
462 117 62 58 54
Dustin Colquitt Louie Aguiar Bryan Barker Jim Arnold Kelly Goodburn
2005-19 1994-98 1990-93 1983-85 1987-90
Most Punts Inside the 20, Season
45 41 38 37 35
Dustin Dustin Dustin Dustin Dustin
Colquitt Colquitt Colquitt Colquitt Colquitt
2012 2009 2016 2015 2013
Punt Returns J.T. Smith Dante Hall Tamarick Vanover Javier Arenas Ed Podolak Tyreek Hill
1979-84 2000-06 1995-99 2010-12 1969-77 2016-19
Most Punt Returns, Season
58 58 51 51 50
J.T. Smith Dexter McCluster Tamarick Vanover Tamarick Vanover J.T. Smith
1979 2013 1995 1999 1981
Most Punt Returns, Game
8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7
Ed Podolak vs. San Diego De'Anthony Thomas vs. Oakland J.T. Smith vs. Baltimore J.T. Smith vs. N.Y. Giants Tamarick Vanover vs. Detroit Tamarick Vanover at Denver Eddie Drummond at Oakland Dexter McCluster at Jacksonville Dexter McCluster at Washington
Nov. 10, 1974 Dec. 14, 2014 Sept. 2, 1979 Oct. 21, 1979 Sept. 26, 1999 Dec. 5, 1999 Oct. 21, 2007 Sept. 8, 2013 Dec. 8, 2013
Most Seasons Leading League
2 J.T. Smith
1979-80
Most Punt Return Yards, Career
2,322 1,930 1,882 1,029 1,009 959
J.T. Smith Tamarick Vanover Dante Hall Javier Arenas Tyreek Hill Dexter McCluster
1979-84 1995-99 2000-06 2010-12 2016-19 2010-13
Most Punt Return Yards, Season
686 640 612 592 581
Dexter McCluster Tamarick Vanover J.T. Smith Tyreek Hill J.T. Smith
Most Punt Return Yards, Game
16
Dexter McCluster at Washington De'Anthony Thomas vs. Oakland J.T. Smith vs. Oakland Tamarick Vanover vs. New Orleans Dante Hall vs. Arizona
Dec. 8, 2013 Dec. 14, 2014 Sept. 23, 1979 Dec. 21, 1997 Dec. 1, 2002
Longest Punt Return (All TDs)
95 94 93 91 90 89
Tyreek Hill at San Diego Dexter McCluster vs. San Diego Dante Hall vs. Denver Tyreek Hill at L.A. Chargers Dante Hall vs. Arizona Dexter McCluster vs. N.Y. Giants
Jan. 1, 2017 Sept. 13, 2010 Oct. 5, 2003 Sept. 9, 2018 Dec. 1, 2002 Sept. 29, 2013
Most Seasons Leading League
1 1 1 1 1 1
Abner Haynes Noland Smith Ed Podolak J.T. Smith Dante Hall Tyreek Hill
1960 1968 1970 1980 2003 2016
Highest Punt Return Average, Career (50 returns)
12.14 11.87 11.11 10.87 10.66 10.60
Dexter McCluster (79-959) Tyreek Hill (85-1,009) Noland Smith (53-589) Abner Haynes (54-587) Tamarick Vanover (181-1,930) J.T. Smith (216-2,289)
2010-13 2016-19 1967-69 1960-64 1995-99 1978-84
Highest Punt Return Average, Season (12 returns)
Most Punt Returns, Career
220 188 181 105 86 85
177 156 141 130 128
2013 1999 1979 2016 1980
16.28 15.54 15.36 15.18 15.00
Dante Hall (29-472) Dexter McCluster (13-202) Abner Haynes (14-215) Tyreek Hill (39-592) Noland Smith (18-270)
2003 2010 1960 2016 1968
Highest Punt Return Average, Game (3 returns)
35.00 33.33 28.67 28.67 28.25
D. Hall vs. Denver (3-105) D. McCluster vs. San Diego (3-100) M. Garrett at Buffalo (3-86) N. Smith vs. N.Y. Jets (3-86) D. McCluster vs. N.Y. Giants (4-113)
Oct. 5, 2003 Sept. 13, 2010 Sept. 11, 1966 Sept. 15, 1968 Sept. 29, 2013
Most Punt Return Touchdowns, Career
5 4 4 4
Dante Hall J.T. Smith Tamarick Vanover Tyreek Hill
2000-06 1979-84 1995-99 2016-19
Most Punt Return Touchdowns, Season
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
J.T. Smith J.T. Smith Dale Carter Tamarick Vanover Dante Hall Dante Hall Dexter McCluster Tyreek Hill
1979 1980 1992 1999 2002 2003 2013 2016
Most Punt Return Touchdowns, Game
1 28 times Last; Tyreek Hill at L.A. Chargers
Sept. 9, 2018
Kickoff Returns Most Kickoff Returns, Career
360 212 84 72 68
Dante Hall Tamarick Vanover Dave Grayson Knile Davis Noland Smith
2000-06 1995-99 1961-64 2013-16 1967-69
Most Kickoff Returns, Season
68 Dante Hall
2004 @CHIEFS
65 57 57 53
Dante Dante Dante Dante
Hall Hall Hall Hall
2005 2002 2003 2006
4 Tamarick Vanover 2 Paul Palmer 2 Knile Davis
Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Season
Most Kickoff Returns, Game
9 Noland Smith vs. Oakland 9 Paul Palmer at Seattle
Nov. 23, 1967 Sept. 20, 1987
Most Kickoff Return Yards, Career
8,644 5,099 2,231 1,942 1,822 1,326
Dante Hall Tamarick Vanover Dave Grayson Knile Davis Noland Smith Abner Haynes
2000-06 1995-99 1961-64 2013-16 1967-69 1960-64
Most Kickoff Return Yards, Season
1,718 1,560 1,478 1,354 1,308
Dante Hall Dante Hall Dante Hall Dante Hall Tamarick Vanover
2004 2005 2003 2002 1997
Most Kickoff Return Yards, Game (All 200+)
251 244 234 233 221 206
Jon Vaughn at Miami Noland Smith at San Diego Dante Hall vs. Philadelphia Dante Hall vs. San Diego Paul Palmer at Seattle Noland Smith vs. Oakland
Dec. 12, 1994 Oct. 15, 1967 Oct. 2, 2005 Nov. 28, 2004 Sept. 20, 1987 Nov. 23, 1967
Longest Kickoff Return (All TDs)
108 106 104 100 99 99 99 97 97 97 97 97
Knile Davis vs. Denver Noland Smith at Denver Mecole Hardman vs. L.A. Chargers Dante Hall vs. Pittsburgh Dave Grayson at Denver Tamarick Vanover at Seattle Knile Davis vs. St. Louis Boyce Green at Pittsburgh Tamarick Vanover at Denver Dante Hall at Baltimore Dante Hall vs. Denver Jamaal Charles vs. Pittsburgh
Dec. 1, 2013 Dec. 17, 1967 Dec. 29, 2019 Sept. 14, 2003 Sept. 7, 1963 Sept. 3, 1995 Oct. 26, 2014 Dec. 21, 1986 Oct. 27, 1996 Sept. 28, 2003 Dec. 19, 2004 Nov. 22, 2009
Most Seasons Leading League
1 Dave Grayson
1961
Highest Kickoff Return Average, Career (50 returns)
26.97 26.79 26.56 25.17 24.43 24.05
Knile Davis (72-1,942) Noland Smith (68-1,822) Dave Grayson (84-2,231) Abner Haynes (52-1,309) Jamaal Charles (51-1,246) Tamarick Vanover (212-5,099)
2013-16 1967-69 1961-64 1960-64 2008-16 1995-99
Highest Kickoff Return Average, Season (15 returns)
30.06 28.31 28.30 29.71
Quintin Demps (33-992) Dave Grayson (16-453) Larry Marshall (23-651) Dave Grayson (18-535)
2013 1961 1972 1962
Highest Kickoff Return Average, Game (3 returns)
48.67 Dante Hall vs. Pittsburgh (3-146) 45.00 Tremon Smith at New England (4-180) 44.67 Dante Hall vs. St. Louis (3-134) 44.33 Paul Palmer vs. Seattle (3-133) 40.67 Noland Smith at San Diego (6-244) 40.33 L. Williams vs. Cincinnati (3-121) 40.33 Dante Hall at Baltimore (3-121)
Sept. 14, 2003 Oct. 14, 2018 Dec. 8, 2002 Dec. 27, 1987 Oct. 15, 1967 Nov. 21, 1976 Sept. 28, 2003
2 2 2 2
Paul Palmer Tamarick Vanover Dante Hall Dante Hall
1 24 times Last; Mecole Hardman vs. L.A. Chargers
Dec. 29, 2019
Fumbles Most Opponents Fumbles Forced, Career
45 33 29 23 14 13 13
Derrick Thomas Tamba Hali Neil Smith Derrick Johnson Justin Houston Kevin Ross Jared Allen
1989-99 2006-17 1988-96 2005-17 2011-18 1984-93, ’97 2004-07
Most Opponents Fumbles Forced, Season
8 7 7 6 6 6
Derrick Thomas Jared Allen Dee Ford Derrick Thomas Derrick Thomas Tamba Hali
1992 2005 2018 1990 1994 2006
Most Fumbles Forced, Rookie, Season
6 Tamba Hali 4 Kevin Ross 4 Tim Cofield
2006 1984 1986
Interceptions Most Seasons, Leading League
2 Johnny Robinson 2 Emmitt Thomas
1966, ’70 1969, ’74
Most Interceptions By, Career
58 57 50 39 38
Emmitt Thomas Johnny Robinson Deron Cherry Gary Barbaro Albert Lewis
1966-78 1960-71 1981-91 1976-82 1983-93
Most Interceptions By, Season
12 10 10 10 10 9 9
Emmitt Thomas Johnny Robinson Bobby Hunt Johnny Robinson Gary Barbaro Emmitt Thomas Deron Cherry
1974 1966 1966 1970 1980 1969 1986
Most Interceptions By, Rookie, Season
8 8 7 6 4 4 4 4 4 3
Marcus Peters Bobby Hunt Dale Carter Kevin Ross Bobby Ply Emmitt Thomas Lloyd Burruss Albert Lewis Eric Berry 13 players; Last J. Thornhill (2019)
Most Interceptions By, Game
6 Dante Hall
*4 Bobby Ply vs. San Diego
2000-06
1987 1995 2003 2004
Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Game
Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Career
17
1995-99 1987-88 2013-16
2015 1962 1992 1984 1962 1967 1981 1983 2010
Dec. 16, 1962
@CHIEFS
4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Bobby Hunt vs. Houston Deron Cherry vs. Seattle Bobby Ply vs. Denver Johnny Robinson at Baltimore Albert Lewis vs. Atlanta Lloyd Burruss vs. San Diego Albert Lewis vs. Atlanta Greg Wesley vs. Miami Greg Wesley vs. New England *NFL RECORD
Oct. 4, 1964 Sept. 29, 1985 Dec. 9, 1962 Sept. 28, 1970 Dec. 8, 1985 Oct. 19, 1986 Sept. 1, 1991 Sept. 29, 2002 Nov. 27, 2005
Most Consecutive Games, Passes Intercepted By
6 Eric Harris
1980
Most Interception Return Yards, Career
938 771 741 688 674
Emmitt Thomas (58 INTs) Gary Barbaro (39 INTs) Johnny Robinson (57 INTs) Deron Cherry (50 INTs) Bobby Hunt (37 INTs)
1966-78 1975-82 1960-71 1981-91 1962-67
Most Interception Return Yards, Season
280 274 228 214 193 175
Marcus Peters (8 INTs) Mark McMillian (8 INTs) Bobby Hunt (6 INTs) Emmitt Thomas (12 INTs) Lloyd Burruss (5 INTs) Derrick Johnson (3 INTs)
2015 1997 1963 1974 1986 2009
Most Interception Return Yards Gained, Game
121 118 108 105 102
Lloyd Burruss vs. San Diego (3 INTs) Brandon Flowers at N.Y. Jets (2 INTs) Bobby Ply vs. San Diego (4 INTs) Derrick Johnson vs. Denver (2 INTs) Gary Barbaro vs. Seattle (1 INT)
Oct. 19, 1986 Oct. 26, 2008 Dec. 16, 1962 Jan. 3, 2010 Dec. 11, 1977
Longest Interception Return
102 100 100 99 99
Gary Barbaro vs. Seattle Tim Collier at Oakland Sean Smith at Buffalo Dave Grayson vs. N.Y. Titans Kevin Ross at San Diego
Dec. 11, 1977 Dec. 18, 1977 Nov. 3, 2013 Dec. 17, 1961 Sept. 6, 1992
Most Interception Return Touchdowns, Career
6 5 5 5 4 4
Bobby Bell Emmitt Thomas Jim Kearney Eric Berry Lloyd Burruss Derrick Johnson
1963-74 1966-78 1967-75 2010-17 1981-91 2005-17
Most Interception Return Touchdowns, Season
*4 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
Jim Kearney Lloyd Burruss Mark McMillian Sherrill Headrick Emmitt Thomas Charles Mincy Jerome Woods Derrick Johnson Eric Berry Marcus Peters Eric Berry *NFL RECORD
1972 1986 1997 1961 1974 1992 1993 2009 2013 2015 2016
Most Interception Return Touchdowns, Game
*2 Jim Kearney at Denver 2 Lloyd Burruss vs. San Diego 2 Derrick Johnson at Denver *NFL RECORD
Sacks
Oct. 1, 1972 Oct. 19, 1986 Jan. 3, 2010
126.5 89.5 85.5 78.5 73.0 51.0
Derrick Thomas Tamba Hali Neil Smith Justin Houston Art Still Mike Bell
1989-99 2006-17 1988-96 2011-18 1978-87 1979-85, â&#x20AC;&#x2122;87-91
Most Sacks, Season
22.0 20.0 15.5 15.5 15.0 14.5 14.5 14.5 14.5 14.5
Justin Houston Derrick Thomas Jared Allen Chris Jones Neil Smith Art Still Art Still Neil Smith Derrick Thomas Tamba Hali
2014 1990 2007 2018 1993 1980 1984 1992 1992 2010
Most Sacks, Consecutive Seasons
33.5 33.0 30.0 29.5 29.5 28.0 26.5 26.5
Derrick Thomas (20.0, 13.5) Justin Houston (11.0, 22.0) Derrick Thomas (10.0, 20.0) Neil Smith (14.5, 15.0) Justin Houston (22.0, 7.5) Derrick Thomas (13.5, 14.5) Neil Smith (15.0, 11.5) Tamba Hali (14.5, 12.0)
1990-91 2013-14 1989-90 1992-93 2014-15 1991-92 1993-94 2010-11
Most Sacks, Rookie, Season
10.0 9.0 8.0 6.5 5.5 5.5 5.5
Derrick Thomas Jared Allen Tamba Hali Art Still Sylvester Hicks Mike Bell Justin Houston
1989 2004 2006 1978 1978 1979 2011
Most Sacks, Game
*7.0 6.0 4.5 4.0 4.0 4.0 4.0 4.0 4.0
Derrick Thomas vs. Seattle Derrick Thomas vs. Oakland Justin Houston at Philadelphia Wilbur Young at San Diego Art Still at Oakland Derrick Thomas vs. Buffalo Derrick Thomas vs. San Diego Neil Smith vs. L.A. Raiders Justin Houston vs. San Diego *NFL RECORD
Nov. 11, 1990 Sept. 6, 1998 Sept. 19, 2013 Oct. 19, 1975 Oct. 5, 1980 Oct. 7, 1991 Nov. 8, 1992 Oct. 3, 1993 Dec. 28, 2014
Most Sack Yards, Career
699.0 591.5 506.5 452.0 293.0
Derrick Thomas Tamba Hali Neil Smith Justin Houston Eric Hicks
1989-99 2006-17 1988-96 2011-18 1998-06
Most Sack Yards, Season
127.0 122.0 114.5 113.0 111.0 109.0
Neil Smith Chris Jones Neil Smith Derrick Thomas Jared Allen Derrick Thomas
1993 2018 1992 1992 2007 1996
Most Sack Yards, Game
36.0 36.0 35.0 34.0 33.0
Derrick Thomas vs. San Diego Derrick Thomas vs. Oakland Neil Smith vs. Los Angeles Vonnie Holliday vs. San Diego Darren Mickell vs. Denver
Nov. 8, 1992 Sept. 6, 1998 Oct. 3, 1993 Sept. 7, 2003 Dec. 17, 1995
Most Sacks, Career (All 50.0+)
18
@CHIEFS
Most Special Teams Tackles, Season
Tackles Most Tackles, Career
1,262 999 992 927 876 827
Derrick Johnson Gary Spani Art Still Deron Cherry Donnie Edwards Kevin Ross
2005-17 1978-86 1978-87 1981-91 1996-01, 2007-08 1984-93, â&#x20AC;&#x2122;97
Most Tackles, Season
179 162 157 153 151 151 151
Derrick Johnson Mike Maslowski Gary Spani Gary Spani Deron Cherry Donnie Edwards Scott Fujita
2011 2002 1979 1981 1988 1998, 2000 2003
34 29 29 28 27 27 27 27
Gary Spani Dino Hackett Eric Berry Art Still Greg Wesley
1978 1986 2010 1978 2000
63 54 52 51 50 50
Derrick Johnson (147, 179) Gary Spani (157, 149) Derrick Johnson (179, 125) Gary Spani (149, 153) Gary Spani (144, 157)
2010-11 1979-80 2011-12 1980-81 1978-79
Special Team Tackles Most Special Teams Tackles, Career
148 147 97 96 94
19
Gary Stills Greg Manusky Danan Hughes Tony Richardson Louis Cooper
Gary Stills Gary Stills Gary Stills Greg Manusky Greg Manusky Gary Stills
2002-03 2003-04 2001-02 1996-97 1998-99 2004-05
Blocked Kicks Most Opponents Punts Blocked, Career
Most Tackles, Consecutive Seasons
326 306 304 302 301
2002 2003 2005 1984 1983 1990 1992 1999
Most Special Teams Tackles, Consecutive Seasons
Most Tackles, Rookie, Season
144 140 126 120 101
Gary Stills Gary Stills Rich Scanlon Ken Jolly Albert Lewis Todd McNair Bennie Thompson Greg Manusky
1999-05 1994-99 1993-98 1995-05 1985-90
10 3 2 2 2 2 1
Albert Lewis Bernard Pollard Ed Beckman Gary Green Sherrill Headrick Bernard Pollard D.J. Alexander
1983-93 2006-08 1977-84 1977-83 1960-67 2006 2015
Most Opponents Punts Blocked, Season
4 3 2 2
Albert Lewis Albert Lewis Sherrill Headrick Bernard Pollard
1990 1986 1963 2006
Most Opponents Punts Blocked, Game
2 Sherrill Headrick vs. Denver
Dec. 8, 1963
Longest Return of Blocked Field Goal
78 (TD) Lloyd Burruss at Pittsburgh 65 (TD) Kevin Ross at Cincinnati
Dec. 21, 1986 Dec. 6, 1987
@CHIEFS
Games Won Most Consecutive Games Won
11 9 7 6 5
2015-16 2003, 2013, 2017-18 1968-69, 1969, 1995, 1997-98, 2016-17 1968, 1997, 2019 1961-62, 1966-67, 1971, 1984-85, 2014, 2016, 2018-19
Most Consecutive Games Won, Single Season
10 9 7 6 5
2015 2003, 1969, 1968, 1968,
2013 1995 1997, 2019 1971, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018
Most Consecutive Games Won, Start of Season
9 5 4 3
2003, 2017, 1996, 1962,
2013 2018 2018, 2019 1966, 1994, 1995, 2010
Most Consecutive Games Won, End of Season
10 6 5 4 3
2015 1997, 2019 1968 2017, 2018 1960, 1963, 1966, 1967, 1971, 1972, 1984, 1986
Most Consecutive Home Games Won
13 11 10 9
2002-03 1994-96, 1997-98 1968-69, 2015-16 1970-71, 2017-18
Most Consecutive Road Games Won
9 1966-67, 2016-17 6 1967-68 5 1968-69, 1971-72
Games Lost Most Consecutive Games Lost
12 9 8 7
2007-08 1987, 2008-09 1975-76, 2012 1985, 2008
Most Consecutive Games Lost, Start of Season
5 1977, 2009 4 1976, 1980 3 1975, 2004, 2008, 2011 Most Consecutive Games Lost, End of Season
9 2007 6 1977 4 1975, 2008, 2012 Most Consecutive Home Games Lost
10 8 7 6
2008-09 1974-75 1975-76, 2011-12 1977-78, 2007-08
Most Consecutive Road Games Lost
9 2007-08 8 1978-79, 1985-86 6 1988, 2008-09, 2012
Scoring Most Points, Season (All 400+)
565 2018 484 2003 483 2004 20
467 451 448 430 415 408 405 403
2002 2019 1966 2013 2017 1967 2015 2005
Highest Scoring Average, Season
35.3 32.0 30.3 30.2 29.2 29.1
(565 (448 (484 (483 (467 (408
in in in in in in
16 14 16 16 16 14
games) games) games) games) games) games)
2018 1966 2003 2004 2002 1967
Most Points, Consecutive Seasons
1,016 971 967 951 886 856 804
(565, (415, (484, (467, (483, (448, (389,
451) 565) 483) 484) 403) 408) 415)
2018-19 2017-18 2003-04 2002-03 2004-05 1966-67 2016-17
Fewest Points, Season
176 211 212 225 226
1982 (9 games) 2012 2011 1977 2007
Lowest Scoring Average, Season
13.2 13.3 14.1 14.9 15.2 15.9
(211 (212 (226 (238 (243 (254
in in in in in in
16 16 16 16 16 16
games) games) games) games) games) games)
2012 2011 2007 1979 1978 1988
Largest Scoring Differential, Season
201 182 176 156 154
(371 (359 (448 (369 (408
-
170) 177) 276) 233) 254)
1968 1969 1966 1962 1967
Most 40-Point Games, Season
5 4 3 2
2003, 1966, 1961, 1965,
2018 2002, 2004 1962, 1963, 1964, 1967 1968, 1983, 2000, 2010, 2013, 2017, 2019
Most 30-Point Games, Season
12 8 7 6 5
2018 1966, 1999, 1960, 1962, 2016,
2002, 2003, 1967, 1965, 2017
2004 2019 2010 1968, 1983, 1994, 2005, 2006, 2015,
Most Points Scored, Game
59 56 56 56 54 52
at Denver at Denver vs. Atlanta at Oakland vs. St. Louis 4 times; Last vs. Denver
Sept. 7, 1963 Oct. 23, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 15, 2013 Oct. 22, 2000 Oct. 29, 1967
Largest Margin of Victory, Game
52 Kansas City (59) at Denver (7) 49 Kansas City (49) vs. Arizona (0) 48 Kansas City (48) vs. N.Y. Jets (0)
Sept. 7, 1963 Dec. 1, 2002 Dec. 22, 1963 @CHIEFS
46 Kansas City (56) vs. Denver (10) 46 Kansas City (56) vs. Atlanta (10)
Oct. 16, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004
Most Points, Both Teams, Game
105 99 88 88
KC KC KC KC
(51) (48) (49) (54)
at LAR (54) at Seattle (51) vs. Denver (39) vs. St. Louis (34)
Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 27, 1983 (OT) Nov. 1, 1964 Oct. 22, 2000
Fewest Points, Both Teams, Game
3 9 10 12 12
KC (0) KC (3) KC (7) KCâ&#x20AC;&#x2C6;(6) KC (3)
at Tampa Bay (3) vs. Cleveland (6) at Denver (3) vs. St. Louis (6) at Miami (9)
Dec. 16, 1979 Sept. 4, 1988 Jan. 1, 2012 Nov. 22, 1970 Oct. 20, 1974
Most Points Shutout Victory, Game
49 48 41 41 34 34 34 34
vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs.
Arizona N.Y. Jets Miami San Francisco Boston Houston Cleveland San Diego
Dec. 1, 2002 Dec. 22, 1963 Oct. 8, 1967 Oct. 1, 2006 Dec. 11, 1960 Nov. 26, 1989 Sept. 30, 1990 Oct. 31, 1999
Fewest Points, Shutout Victory, Game
14 vs. Baltimore 16 vs. Denver 17 vs. L.A. Chargers
Sept. 2, 1979 Dec. 6, 1970 Sept. 25, 1960
Largest Fourth-Quarter Comebacks
17 17 14 14 14 14
Opponent at Green Bay vs. San Diego at N.Y. Jets vs. N.Y. Giants at Oakland at Carolina
Deficit 14-31 10-27 3-17 3-17 20-34 3-17
Final 40-34 33-27 17-17 20-17 37-34 20-17
(OT) (OT) (OT) (OT)
Date Oct. 12, 2003 Sept. 11, 2016 Oct. 2, 1988 Sept. 10, 1995 Nov. 28, 1999 Nov. 13,2016
Largest Second-Half Comebacks
21 18 17 17 17 16 14 14 14 14 14 14
Opponent vs. San Diego at New Orleans at Buffalo at Oakland at Green Bay at San Diego at N.Y. Jets vs. San Diego vs. N.Y. Giants at Oakland at Oakland at Carolina
Deficit 3-24 6-24 10-27 0-17 14-31 0-16 3-17 0-14 3-17 13-27 20-34 3-17
Final 33-27 27-24 27-27 28-17 40-34 24-23 17-17 20-17 20-17 28-27 37-34 20-17
(OT)
(OT) (OT) (OT) (OT)
Date Sept. 11, 2016 Sept. 23, 2012 Sept. 22, 1963 Oct. 25, 1981 Oct. 12, 2003 Nov. 2, 1986 Oct. 2, 1988 Dec. 8, 1991 Sept. 10, 1995 Sept. 8, 1997 Nov. 28, 1999 Nov. 13, 2016
Most Consecutive Games Scoring
179 139 114 91 84
1963-76 1994-2002 2012-19 1987-92 2003-08 Oct. 23, 1966 - Oct. 30, 1966 Dec. 8, 2013 - Dec. 15, 2013
Most First-Half Points, Game
42 38 38 35 35 35 35 21
vs. Denver at Miami at Washington vs. Arizona vs. St. Louis vs. Atlanta at Oakland
Sept. 23, 2018
158 147 124 113 112 103
1966 2018 2013 2004 2003 1962
Most First-Quarter Points, Game
24 at Miami 21 13 times, last at Pittsburgh
Sept. 28, 1968 Sept. 16, 2018
Most Second-Quarter Points, Season
177 153 150 149 143 137 136
2019 2003 2018 1997 1967 1989, 2004, 2010 2005
Most Second-Quarter Points, Game
28 28 28 28 28 28 24 24
vs. Denver vs. Pittsburgh vs. Denver vs. San Diego at Washington at Oakland vs. Houston vs. Indianapolis
Oct. 29, 1967 Oct. 18, 1971 Dec. 7, 1980 Dec. 22, 1985 Sept. 30, 2001 Sept. 15, 2019 Oct. 30, 1966 Oct. 31, 2004
Most Second-Half Points, Game
35 35 35 34 31 31 30
at Denver at Denver at Tennessee at Denver at Denver at New England vs. Cleveland
Oct. 23, 1966 Dec. 1, 1972 Dec. 13, 2004 Jan. 3, 2010 Sept. 7, 1963 Oct. 14, 2018 Dec. 14, 1975
Most Third-Quarter Points, Season
134 109 106 105 103 94 93
2018 1963 1964 1998 2019 1966 1999, 2004
Most Third-Quarter Points, Game
22 22 22 21 21 21 21
vs. New York Jets vs. Buffalo vs. Oakland at Buffalo at Denver at Denver vs. Oakland
Nov. 5, 1967 Oct. 18, 1969 Nov. 26, 1961 Nov. 6, 1960 Sept. 7, 1963 Oct. 1, 1972 Oct. 3, 1977
Most Fourth-Quarter Points, Season
Most Points, Two Consecutive Games
104 (56, 48) 101 (45, 56)
35 vs. San Francisco
Most First-Quarter Points, Season
Oct. 29, 1967 Sept. 28, 1968 Dec. 8, 2013 Dec. 1, 2002 Dec. 8, 2002 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 15, 2013
168 140 131 129 127
2002 2004 2003, 2018 1962 1960
Most Fourth-Quarter Points, Game
23 23 22 21 20
at at at at at
Buffalo Cleveland N.Y. Titans New England Green Bay
Nov. 2, 1969 Sept. 8, 2002 Nov. 24, 1960 Sept. 7, 2017 Oct. 12, 2003
Most Touchdowns, Season
@CHIEFS
71 63 62 57 55 52
2018 2003 2004 2002 1966 2013
0 1962, 1976, 1978, 1988, 2006, 2012 1 1961, 1975, 1976, 1989, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2007 Most Defensive Touchdowns, Game
3 vs. Denver 2 15 times, last at Baltimore
Most Interception Return TDs, Season
Most Touchdowns, Consecutive Seasons
125 121 120 113 108 104 96
(63, (71, (57, (42, (62, (55, (50,
62) 50) 63) 71) 46) 49) 46)
2003-04 2018-19 2002-03 2017-18 2004-05 1966-67 1962-63
Fewest Touchdowns, Season
17 18 20 23 24
1982 (9 games) 2012 2011 1973 1988, 2007
at Denver at Denver vs. Atlanta at Oakland 12 times; Last at Tennessee
Sept. 7, 1963 Oct. 23, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 15, 2013 Dec. 13, 2004
Most Touchdowns, Both Teams, Game
13 13 12 12 12
Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas
City City City City City
(7) (8) (7) (7) (7)
at Seattle (6) at Oakland (5) vs. Denver (5) vs. St. Louis (5) at Tennesse (5)
Nov. 27, 1983 (OT) Dec. 15, 2013 Nov. 1, 1964 Oct. 22, 2000 Dec. 13, 2004
Most Consecutive Games Scoring Touchdowns
96 64 52 38 35 33
1963-70 1997-01 1960-63 2017-19 1994-96 1976-78
Most Offensive Touchdowns, Season
66 58 56 53 50 46
2018 2004 2003 2002 1962, 1966 1964, 2019
Fewest Offensive Touchdowns, Season
13 17 18 21 23 24 25
1982 (9 games) 2012 2011 1973, 1974 2007 1970, 1977, 1987, 1988 1979
Most Return Touchdowns, Season
11 1992, 1999, 2013 8 2016 7 1995, 1997, 2003 Most Defensive Touchdowns, Season
9 8 6 5 4
1999 1992 2013, 2015 1972, 1974, 1977 1960, 1967, 1981, 1986, 1995, 1997, 2016, 2018
Fewest Defensive Touchdowns, Season
22
6 1992 5 1972, 1974, 1999, 2013 4 1960, 1986, 1997, 2015, 2016 Most Fumble Return TDs, Season
4 1999 3 1997, 1980, 1981, 2017 2 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 2013, 2019 Most Special Teams Touchdowns, Season
5 1986, 1987, 2013 4 1995, 2003, 2016 3 1969, 1992, 2002, 2009 Most Special Teams Touchdowns, Game
Most Touchdowns, Game
8 8 8 8 7
Dec. 27, 1992 Dec. 20, 2015
3 2 2 2
at Pittsburgh vs. Cleveland vs. St. Louis at Washington
Dec. 21, 1986 Sept. 30, 1990 Dec. 8, 2002 Dec. 8, 2013
Most Points After Touchdown, Season
65 58 54 52 48 47
2018 2003, 2004 2002 2013 1966 1962
Fewest Points After Touchdown, Season
17 20 21 23
1982 (9 games), 2012 2011 1973, 2007 1988
Most Points After Touchdown, Game
8 8 8 8
at Denver at Denver vs. Atlanta at Oakland
Sept. 8, 1963 Oct. 23, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 15, 2013
Most Two-Point Attempts, Season
6 5 4 3
2001 1997 1961, 1994, 2008, 2015 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1995, 2002, 2003, 2007
Most Two-Point Conversions, Season
3 1961, 1965, 1994, 2001 2 1966, 1967, 1997, 2015, 2016 1 12 times, Last; 2019 Most Two-Point Attempts, Game
2 2 2 2 2 2
vs. Buffalo at Houston at St. Louis at Denver at Greeb Bay at Oakland
Oct. 18, 1964 Oct. 24, 1965 Oct. 26, 1997 Nov. 14, 2010 Sept. 28, 2015 Nov. 20, 2015
Most Two-Point Conversions, Game
2 at Houston 2 at St. Louis
Oct. 24, 1965 Oct. 26, 1997
Most Field Goals Attempted, Season
45 44 42 40
2017 1971 1970 1968
Fewest Field Goals Attempted, Season
17 1964 18 1977 @CHIEFS
20 2003 22 1979, 2008 Most Field Goals Attempted, Game
7 vs. Buffalo 7 vs. Cincinnati 6 8 times; Last at New Orleans
Dec. 19, 1971 Oct. 4, 2015 Sept. 23, 2012
Most Field Goals Attempted, Both Teams, Game
10 10 10 10
Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas
City City City City
(7) (5) (6) (5)
vs. Buffalo (3) at San Diego (5) vs. Denver (4) vs. Denver (5)
Dec. 19, 1971 Oct. 29, 1972 Dec. 16, 2001 Sept. 28, 2008
Most Field Goals Made, Season
41 34 31 30 28 27
2017 1990, 2019 2016 1968, 1970, 2015 2012 1969, 1988, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2005
Fewest Field Goals Made, Season
7 1961 8 1963, 1964 12 1979 Most Field Goals Made, Game
7 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
at Cincinnati at New Orleans at Buffalo vs. Buffalo vs. Buffalo vs. L.A. Raiders vs. Cincinnati at Chicago vs. Denver vs. Minnesota at Houston vs. Denver vs. Miami
Oct. 4, 2015 Sept. 23, 2012 Nov. 2, 1969 Dec. 7, 1969 Dec. 19, 1971 Sept. 12, 1985 Nov. 13, 1988 Dec. 29, 1990 Sept. 20, 1993 Oct. 2, 2011 Oct. 8, 2017 Oct. 30, 2017 Dec. 24, 2017
Most Field Goals Made, Both Teams, Game
*9 Kansas City (4) at San Diego (5) 8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7
Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas
City City City City City City City City City
(5) (4) (5) (4) (3) (6) (7) (5) (5)
vs. Buffalo (3) vs. Denver (4) vs. Buffalo (2) vs. Denver (3) at Indianapolis (4) at New Orleans (1) at Cincinnati (0) vs. Denver (2) vs. Miami (2)
Sept. 29, 1996 *NFL RECORD Dec. 19, 1971 Sept. 28, 2008 Dec. 7, 1969 Dec. 16, 2001 Oct. 10, 2010 Sept. 23, 2012 Oct. 4, 2015 Oct. 30, 2017 Dec. 24, 2017
Most Consecutive Games Scoring Field Goals
18 16 15 14 11 10
2001-02 2017-18 2005 1970, 2019 1968-69, 1971-72, 1985-86 1980-81, 2013
3 1988, 1997 Most Safeties, Game
First Downs Most First Downs, Season
*398 2004 384 2018 350 2019 23
Fewest First Downs, Season
163 1982 (9 games) 183 1970 208 1973 Most First Downs, Game (All 30+)
36 33 33 32 32 32 31 31 30 30 30 30 30
vs. Atlanta vs. Indianapolis vs. Cincinnati at Houston at Seattle vs. Oakland at Oakland vs. San Francisco vs. Cleveland at L.A. Raiders vs. Seattle at Denver vs. Baltimore
Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 31, 2004 Oct. 21, 2018 Oct. 24, 1965 Nov. 24, 2002 Dec. 25, 2004 Nov. 5, 2000 Sept. 23, 2018 Nov. 9, 2003 Dec. 22, 1991 Oct. 29, 2006 Nov. 14, 2010 Dec. 9, 2018
Fewest First Downs, Game
4 5 7 7 7 7 8
at Tampa Bay at San Diego at Boston at Oakland at Denver at Oakland 12 times; Last at Denver
Dec. 16, 1979 Dec. 12, 2010 Oct. 23, 1964 Dec. 12, 1970 Dec. 9, 2007 Dec. 16, 2012 Dec. 30, 2012
Most First Downs, Both Teams, Game
64 62 59 58
KC KC KC KC
(32) (31) (26) (24)
at at at at
Seattle (32) Oakland (31) Seattle (33) Denver (34)
Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov.
24, 2002 5, 2000 27, 1983 (OT) 18, 1974
Fewest First Downs, Both Teams, Games
15 Kansas City (7) vs. Denver (8) 18 Kansas City (7) at Boston (11)
Dec. 6, 1970 Oct. 23, 1964
Most Rushing First Downs, Season
160 140 138 130 129
1978, 1981 2002 2004, 2005 1980 1969, 1997, 2010
Fewest Rushing First Downs, Season
66 71 79 83 84
2007 1982 (9 games) 1985 1970, 1983, 1986 2000
Most Rushing First Downs, Game
Most Safeties, Season
1 21 times; Last at Denver
348 2003 347 2005 343 2002 334 2019 324 2001 *NFLâ&#x20AC;&#x2C6;RECORD
Nov. 27, 2016
21 20 18 18 18 16
vs. Atlanta vs. Houston vs. Oakland vs. Seattle at Detroit 8 times; Last vs. Buffalo
Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 1, 1961 Oct. 20, 1968 Nov. 22, 1981 Nov. 28, 1996 Oct. 7, 1991
Fewest Rushing First Downs, Game
*0 0 0 0 0
at Cincinnati vs. Pittsburgh at L.A. Raiders at Denver at Arizona
Nov. 24, 1974 Nov. 10, 1985 Dec. 6, 1992 Oct. 27, 1996 Oct. 8, 2006 @CHIEFS
0 vs. Jacksonville 0 at Oakland 1 12 times; Last vs. Pittsburgh
Oct. 7, 2007 Dec. 16, 2012 Oct. 15, 2017 *NFL RECORD
Most Passing First Downs, Season
239 228 211 208 207 206 201
2018 2004 1994, 2019 1983 2000 2019 2003
12,887 12,877 12,817 12,605 11,910 11,673 11,495
1982 (9 games) 1970 1968 1979 1973 vs. Oakland at Denver at Oakland at Dallas at Denver at Denver at Houston at Los Angeles Rams vs. Indianapolis at Tennessee
Dec. 25, 2004 Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 5, 2000 Nov. 20, 1983 Oct. 17, 1994 Dec. 7, 2003 Oct. 8, 2017 Nov. 19, 2018 Oct. 31, 2004 Nov. 10, 2019
Fewest Passing First Downs, Game
1 1 1 2
vs. Oakland vs. Houston at Tampa Bay 5 times; Last at Denver
Oct. 20, 1968 Sept. 10, 1978 Dec. 16, 1979 Dec. 30, 2012
Most Penalty First Downs, Season
46 37 34 33 32 30 29
2019 2018 2013 1996, 1998 2004, 2015 2000 1966, 1978, 1984, 1986, 2017
Fewest Penalty First Downs, Season
4 8 9 10 11
1969 1965 1973 1999 1968, 1972
Most Penalty First Downs, Game
9 7 7 7 6 6 5
vs. L.A. Raiders vs. L.A. Raiders vs. Seattle vs. San Francisco at Tennessee at Oakland 10 times; Last at Detroit
Oct. 3, 1993 Sept. 17, 1989 Oct. 17, 1996 Sept. 23, 2018 Dec. 13, 2004 Nov. 7, 2010 Sept. 29, 2019
Fewest Penalty First Downs, Game
0 Many times; Last, at New York Jets
Dec. 3, 2017
Net Yards Passing and Rushing Most Net Yards, Season
6,810 2018 6,695 2004 24
(6,695, (6,810, (6,007, (5,910, (6,000, (5,673, (5,488,
6,192) 6,067) 6,810) 6,695) 5,910) 6,000) 6,007)
2004-05 2018-19 2017-18 2003-04 2002-03 2001-02 2016-17
Fewest Net Yards, Season
Most Passing First Downs, Game (All 20+)
26 24 23 21 21 21 21 21 20 20
2018 2005 2019 2017 2002 2003
Most Net Yards, Consecutive Seasons
Fewest Passing First Downs, Season
79 86 89 91 93
6,401 6,192 6,067 6,007 6,000 5,910
2,498 3,536 3,577 3,828 3,936
1982 (9 games) 1973 1970 1974 1977
Most Net Yards, Game (All 500+)
614 590 566 552 551 551 546 546 542 540 537 537 537 530 524 521 520 513 512 510 510 508 507 506 504 504 503 503 502 500
at Denver vs. Indianapolis vs. Detroit at Seattle vs. Buffalo vs. Cincinnati at Washington at Los Angeles Rams at Houston vs. Atlanta at San Diego vs. Cincinnati at New England at Tennessee at Denver vs. Detroit vs. Denver at Oakland vs. Seattle vs. Houston at New Orleans at Cincinnati vs. Indianapolis vs. San Diego at New Orleans at N.Y. Jets at Seattle vs. L.A. Chargers at Buffalo at Oakland
Oct. 23, 1966 Oct. 31, 2004 Oct. 14, 1990 Nov. 24, 2002 Sept. 30, 1962 Oct. 21, 2018 Sept. 30, 2001 Nov. 19, 2018 Oct. 24, 1965 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 11, 1983 Jan. 1, 2006 Sept. 7, 2017 Nov. 10, 2019 Jan. 3, 2010 Dec. 14, 2003 Nov. 1, 1964 Nov. 5, 2000 Dec. 27, 1987 Nov. 28, 1965 Sept. 23, 2012 Sept. 28, 1969 Dec. 23, 2012 Oct. 14, 1984 Sept. 8, 1985 Oct. 6, 2002 Nov. 28, 2010 Dec. 29, 2019 Oct. 3, 1976 Dec. 5, 2004
Fewest Net Yards, Game
62 67 80 104 106
vs. Oakland at San Diego at Tampa Bay at Buffalo at Oakland
Nov. 8, 1963 Dec. 12, 2010 Dec. 16, 1979 Oct. 29, 1973 Dec. 8, 1973
Most Net Yards, Both Teams, Game
1,095 1,086 1,036 1,013 1,001 986
KCâ&#x20AC;&#x2C6;(590) KC (552) KC (524) KC (537) KC (546) KC (513)
vs. Indianapolis (505) at Seattle (534) at Denver (512) at San Diego (476) at L.A. Rams (455) at Oakland (473)
Oct. 31, 2004 Nov. 24, 2002 Jan. 3, 2010 Dec. 11, 1983 Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 5, 2000 @CHIEFS
Fewest Net Yards, Both Teams, Game
Most Rushing Attempts, Season
323 KC (178) at N.Y. Jets (145) 335 KC (244) vs. Houston (91) 338 KCâ&#x20AC;&#x2C6;(62) vs. Oakland (276)
663 610 569 559 556 552
Nov. 7, 1971 Oct. 12, 1969 Nov. 8, 1963
Most Games, 400 or More Net Yards, Season
11 9 7 6 5 4 3
2018 2004 2005, 1994, 1969, 1960, 1964, 2009,
2010, 2000, 2001, 1961, 1965, 2011,
2017 2002, 2019 2003 1962, 1976, 1983, 1997, 2016 1966, 1967, 1974, 1981, 1989,1990, 1991, 2012
Most Consecutive Games, 400 or More Net Yards
5 2004 4 1976, 2005, 2018, 2019 3 1974, 2000, 2010, 2018 Most Games, 300 or More Net Yards, Season
15 14 13 12 11 10
2004, 2005, 2002, 1989, 1966, 1964,
2018 2019 2017 1995, 1999, 2003, 2010, 2013, 2015 1983, 1991, 1996, 2016 1968, 1981, 1984, 1993, 1994, 2000, 2001, 2014
Most Consecutive Games, 300 or More Net Yards
18 16 13 11 10 8 7
2017-18 2004-05 2001-02 2005 1966-67, 1989, 2003 2010, 2018-19 1981, 1991
1,098 1,089 1,074 1,063 1,059 1,059
1994 2004 1983 2010 1995 2005
Fewest Plays, Season
573 712 775 831 833 836
at New Orleans at Cincinnati vs. N.Y. Giants vs. Seattle at Jacksonville vs. Denver at San Diego at at at at at at at at
Oakland Tampa Bay San Diego San Diego Oakland Detroit New England Baltimore
Rushing 25
(663, (552, (569, (456, (559,
569) 610) 552) 663) 504)
1978-79 1980-81 1979-80 1977-78 1989-90
Fewest Rushing Attempts, Season
269 375 379 383 387 400
1982 (9 games) 2019 2008 2000, 2007 1983, 2018 1963
Most Rushing Attempts, Game
69 at Cincinnati 60 vs. Oakland 57 vs. Seattle
Sept. 3, 1978 Oct. 20, 1968 Nov. 5, 1989
Fewest Rushing Attempts, Game
at Oakland vs. Jacksonville at Oakland at New England at New York Jets vs. Houston Texans at Oakland at Denver vs. Buffalo at San Diego vs. Pittsburgh at L.A. Raiders at Jacksonville vs. Indianapolis
102 KC (52) at San Diego (50) 100 KC (41) vs. Denver (59)
Nov. 5, 2000 Oct. 7, 2007 Dec. 16, 2012 Oct. 11, 1998 Dec. 3, 2017 Oct. 13, 2019 Dec. 8, 1973 Oct. 27, 1996 Nov. 23, 2008 Sept. 29, 1963 Nov. 10, 1985 Dec. 6, 1992 Nov. 8, 2009 Oct. 6, 2019 Nov. 12, 1978 (OT) Sept. 24, 1978
Fewest Rushing Attempts, Both Teams, Game
37 KC (21) vs. Houston (16) 40 KC (17) at Buffalo (23)
Dec. 16, 1990 Dec. 12, 1965
Most Games, 40 or More Rushing Attempts, Season
Sept. 23, 2012 Sept. 3, 1978 Nov. 3, 1974 Sept. 28, 1997 Nov. 9, 1997 Oct. 24, 1976 Nov. 12, 1978
Fewest Plays, Game
38 38 41 41 42 44 44 44
1,232 1,162 1,121 1,089 1,063
Most Rushing Attempts, Both Teams, Game
1982 (9 games) 2017 1970 1968 1965 1971
Most Plays, Game
92 91 86 86 85 84 84
Most Rushing Attempts, Consecutive Seasons
9 10 10 11 11 11 12 12 13 14 14 14 14 14
Most Plays, Season
1978 1981 1979 1989 2010 1980
Dec. 12, 1970 Dec. 16, 1979 Oct. 7, 1962 Dec. 12, 2010 Dec. 8, 1973 Nov. 25, 1971 Oct. 11, 1998 Sept. 13, 2009
9 8 7 6 5
1978 1973, 1981 1968 1962, 1969, 1989 1976, 1979, 1980, 1997, 2010
Most Games, 30 or More Rushing Attempts, Season
14 13 12 11 10
1978 1981 1971, 1975, 1980 1969, 1989, 1990, 2005, 2006 1968, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1979, 1995, 1999, 2010
Most Consecutive Games, 40 or More Rushing Attempts
4 1968, 1978 3 1962, 1973, 1996 Most Consecutive Games, 30 or More Rushing Attempts
15 1980-81 8 1975, 1977-78 7 1972, 1978, 1978-79 @CHIEFS
6 1970, 1980, 1989, 1999
3 1961, 1967, 1991, 2001, 2004, 2012 2 1960, 1963, 1965, 1966, 1969, 1970, 1975, 2 1989, 1996, 1997, 2005, 2006
Most Rushing Yards, Season
2,986 2,633 2,627 2,407 2,395
1978 1981 2010 1962 2012
Most Rushing Yards, Both Teams, Game
519 Kansas City (168) vs. Cleveland (351) Dec. 20, 2009 502 Texans (398) vs. Houston (104) Oct. 1, 1961 502 Texans (284) vs. Oakland (218) Nov. 26, 1961 479 Kansas City (251) vs. Detroit (228) Nov. 23, 1975
Most Rushing Yards, Home, Season
1,488 1,468 1,463 1,436 1,390
1981 1962 2010 1978 1961
Fewest Rushing Yards, Both Teams, Game
Most Rushing Yards Per Game, Season
213.3 171.9 164.6 164.2 162.4
(2,986 (2,407 (2,633 (2,627 (2,274
in in in in in
16 14 16 16 14
games) games) games) games) games)
1978 1962 1981 2010 1966
Most Rushing Yards Per Game, Home, Season
209.7 198.6 186.0 182.9 179.5
(1,468 (1,390 (1,488 (1,463 (1,436
in in in in in
7 7 8 8 8
games) games) games) games) games)
1962 1961 1981 2010 1978
Most Rushing Yards, Consecutive Seasons
5,302 4,829 4,671 4,590
(2,986, (1,843, (2,289, (2,183,
2,316) 2,986) 2,382) 2,407)
1978-79 1977-78 2004-05 1961-62
Fewest Rushing Yards, Season
943 1,248 1,254 1,351 1,465 1,468
1982 (9 games) 2007 1983 2017 2000 1986
Fewest Rushing Yards Per Game, Season
78.0 78.4 91.6 91.8 92.9
(1,248 (1,254 (1,465 (1,468 (1,486
in in in in in
16 16 16 16 16
games) games) games) games) games)
2007 1983 2000 1986 1985
Most Rushing Yards, Game (All 300+)
398 380 352 320 317 313 310 302
vs. Houston at Denver vs. Indianapolis vs. Buffalo at Denver vs. Cincinnati vs. Detroit at Houston
Oct. 1, 1961 Oct. 23, 1966 Dec. 23, 2012 Sept. 30, 1962 Jan. 3, 2010 Oct. 26, 1969 Oct. 14, 1990 Oct. 24, 1965
Fewest Rushing Yards, Game
vs. Denver vs. Jacksonville at Oakland at New England at Denver at Boston at L.A. Raiders
0 10 10 14 16 17 17
Dec. 19, 1965 Oct. 7, 2007 Dec. 16, 2012 Oct. 11, 1998 Dec. 9, 2007 Nov. 18, 1960 Dec. 6, 1992
Most Games, 200 or More Rushing Yards
8 6 5 4
1978 2010 1962 1968, 1979, 1981, 2002
26
75 105 111 111
KC (20) at Houston (55) KC (27) vs. Boston (78) Dallas Texans (108) at SD (3) KC (48) at San Diego (63)
Sept. 29, 1974 Nov. 17, 1968 Nov. 19, 1961 Oct. 13, 1985
Most 10+ Yard Rushes, Season (Since 1990)
73 72 67 64 63
2002 2010 2005 2012 2001
Most 10+ Yard Rushes, Game (Since 1990)
11 at Oakland (10 Holmes, 1 Cloud) 10 at Seattle (9 Holmes, 1 Morton) 10 vs. Buffalo (7 Charles, 3 Jones) 9 vs. Detroit (5 Word, 3 Okoye, 1 McNair) 9 vs. Denver (5 Richardson, 2 Grbac, 1 Alexander, 1 Moreau) 9 vs. Atlanta (6 Holmes, 3 Blaylock, 1 Hall) 9 vs. Indianapolis (6 Holmes, 2 Morton, 1 Johnson) 9 vs. Indianapolis (4 Charles, 4 Hillis, 1 McCluster)
Dec. 9, 2001 Nov. 24, 2002 Oct. 31, 2010 Oct. 14, 1990 Dec. 17, 2000
Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 31, 2004 Dec. 23, 2012
Highest Rushing Average, Season
5.18 5.15 5.03 4.97 4.91 4.79
1966 2002 1962 1961 2017 2012
Lowest Rushing Average, Season
3.24 3.26 3.39 3.40 3.43
1983 2007 1980 1986 1992
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Season
32 31 26 24 23
2003 2004 2002, 2005 1960 1961
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Consecutive Seasons
*63 58 57 47 44
(32, (26, (31, (24, (23,
31) 32) 26) 23) 21)
2003-04 2002-03 2004-05 1960-61 1961-62 *NFLâ&#x20AC;&#x2C6;RECORD
Fewest Rushing Touchdowns, Season
3 1982 (9 games) @CHIEFS
5 6 7 8
2011 1972, 2007 1987 1988, 2009
10 vs. Denver
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Game
*8 vs. Atlanta 5 at Denver 4 14 times; Last vs. Detroit
Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 23, 1966 Nov. 1, 2015 * NFL RECORD
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Both Teams, Game
8 Kansas City (8) vs. Atlanta (0) 7 Texans (4) vs. Boston (3) 7 Kansas City (4) at Denver (3)
Oct. 24, 2004 Sept. 8, 1962 Oct. 10, 1965
Passing Highest Passer Rating, Season
113.8 104.4 100.8 97.1 96.4 95.4 94.9 93.5
2018 2019 2017 1962 1968 2015 1990, 2004 2002 1961 1977 1979 1974 1978
Most Passes Attempted, Consecutive Seasons
(641, (583, (615, (543, (582, (490, (593, (563,
593) 576) 531) 583) 528) 615) 511) 541)
1983-84 2018-19 1994-95 2017-18 2000-01 1993-94 1984-85 2007-08
Fewest Passes Attempted, Season
264 270 289 313 322
1982 (9 games) 1968 1970 1973 1962
Most Passes Attempted, Game
59 55 55 54 54 54 54
at Dallas at San Diego at Miami at Denver at Denver at San Diego vs. San Diego
Nov. 20, 1983 Oct. 9, 1994 Dec. 12, 1994 Nov. 16, 1986 Oct. 17, 1994 Sept. 29, 1996 Nov. 24, 1996
Fewest Passes Attempted, Game
3 vs. Oakland 6 at Oakland
27
(46) (54) (46) (59) (41)
vs. Tampa Bay (54) at San Diego (41) at L.A. Rams (49) at Dallas (31) at San Diego (49)
Oct. 28, 1964 Sept. 29, 1996 Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 20, 1983 Dec. 11, 1983
26 KC (6) at Oakland (20) 26 KC (13) at Tampa Bay (13) 27 KC (14) vs. Houston (13)
Dec. 13, 1969 Dec. 16, 1979 Sept. 10, 1978
Most Passes Completed, Season
385 378 370 369 366 365 363
2018 2019 2004 1983 1994 2016 2017 (385, (363, (365, (339, (370, (310, (369,
378) 385) 363) 370) 317) 365) 305)
2018-19 2017-18 2016-17 2003-04 2004-05 2015-16 1983-84
Fewest Passes Completed, Season
1983 1994 1984 2018 2000 2019 2007
1,234 1,159 1,146 1,126 1,110 1,105 1,104 1,104
KC KC KC KC KC
Fewest Passes Attempted, Both Teams, Game
763 748 728 709 687 675 674
Most Passes Attempted, Season
641 615 593 583 582 576 563
100 95 95 90 90
Most Passes Completed, Consecutive Seasons
Lowest Passer Rating, Season
52.7 52.9 54.0 55.2 59.3
Sept. 24, 1978
Most Passes Attempted, Both Teams, Game
Oct. 20, 1968 Dec. 13, 1969
145 1982 (9 games) 154 1970 156 1968 Most Passes Completed, Game
39 37 36 34 34 34 33 33 33 33 33 33
at Oakland at San Diego at Tennessee at Denver at Denver vs. San Diego at Dallas at Miami at San Diego at Detroit at Denver at Los Angeles Rams
Nov. 5, 2000 Oct. 9, 1994 Nov. 10, 2019 Oct. 17, 1994 Dec. 7, 2003 Sept. 11, 2016 Nov. 20, 1983 Dec. 12, 1994 Jan. 2, 2005 Dec. 23, 2007 Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 19, 2018
Fewest Passes Completed, Game
2 vs. Oakland 2 at Oakland 5 7 times: Last at Seattle
Oct. 20, 1968 Dec. 13, 1969 Dec. 17, 1978
Most Passes Completed, Both Teams, Game
64 62 59 57 56 55 55
Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas
City City City City City City City
(33) (31) (34) (31) (33) (23) (26)
at L.A. Rams (31) at San Diego (31) vs. San Diego (25) at San Diego (26) at Denver (23) vs. San Diego (32) vs. Tampa Bay (29)
Nov. 19, 2018 Dec. 11, 1983 Sept. 11, 2016 Oct. 30, 2005 Nov. 14, 2010 Oct. 14, 1984 Oct. 28, 1984
Fewest Passes Completed, Both Teams, Game
11 12 13 13
Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas
City City City City
(10) vs. San Diego (1) (7) at Tampa Bay (5) (2) at Oakland (11) (8) vs. Boston (5)
Sept. 20, 1998 Dec. 16, 1979 Dec. 13, 1969 Oct. 11, 1970
Most 20+ Yard Completions, Season (Since 1990)
76 2018 60 2004 59 2000, 2019 @CHIEFS
55 2003 54 2017 53 2001
16 vs. Oakland 18 at Denver 19 at San Diego
Oct. 20, 1968 Oct. 4, 1970 Dec. 12, 2010
Most 20+ Yard Completions, Game (Since 1990)
Most Net Passing Yards, Both Teams, Game
9 vs. St. Louis (6 Grbac, 2 Moon, 1 Morris) 9 at Denver (9 Cassel) 9 at L.A. Rams (9 Mahomes) 8 at Oakland (8 Mahomes) 7 at L.A. Raiders (7 Krieg) 7 at San Diego (7 Gannon) 7 at Oakland (7 Grbac) 7 at Arizona (7 Green) 7 vs. Indianapolis (7 Green) 7 at New York Jets (7 Smith) 7 at Cleveland (7 Mahomes)
859 Kansas (472) 827 Kansas 782 Kansas 764 Kansas 748 Kansas 732 Kansas 716 Kansas 698 Kansas
Oct. 22, 2000 Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 19, 2018 Sept. 15, 2019 Dec. 6, 1992 Nov. 22, 1998 Nov. 5, 2000 Oct. 21, 2001 Oct. 31, 2004 Dec. 3, 2017 Nov. 4, 2018
Most Net Passing Yards, Season
4,955 4,498 4,406 4,341 4,149 4,104 3,981
(4,955, (4,104, (3,981, (4,406, (4,341, (3,740, (4,149,
4,498) 4,955) 4,406) 3,810) 3,568) 4,104) 3,665)
2018-19 2017-18 2003-04 2004-05 1983-84 2016-17 2000-01
Fewest Passing Yards, Season
1,555 1982 (9 games) 1,660 1979 1,719 1970 at Oakland at L.A. Rams at Denver at Tennessee at Oakland vs. Denver at Tennessee at Dallas vs. Denver at San Diego at Green Bay
Nov. 5, 2000 Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 10, 2019 Sept. 15, 2019 Nov. 1, 1964 Nov. 10, 2019 Nov. 20, 1983 Dec. 19, 1965 Dec. 11, 1983 Oct. 12, 2003
Most Net Passing Yards, Game
474 448 433 433 406 400 395
at at at at at at at
Oakland L.A. Rams Denver Oakland San Diego Green Bay New Orleans
Nov. 5, 2000 Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 14, 2010 Sept. 15, 2019 Dec. 11, 1983 Oct. 12, 2003 Sept. 8, 1985
Fewest Gross Passing Yards, Game
16 39 42 44 46
vs. Oakland vs. Houston at Seattle at Denver at Tampa Bay
Oct. 20, 1968 Nov. 15, 1981 Sept. 30, 1979 Oct. 8, 1961 Dec. 16, 1979
Fewest Net Passing Yards, Game
-22 vs. Oakland 15 at Seattle 28
Nov. 19, 2018 Dec. 11, 1983 Sept. 16, 2018 Oct. 19, 2017 Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 5, 2000 Nov. 3, 1968
(448) (406) (322) (331) (433) (474) (229)
at at at at at at at
L.A. Rams (379) San Diego (376) Pittsburgh (442) Oakland (417) Denver (299) Oakland (242) Oakland (469)
67 Kansas City (22) at Tampa Bay (45) 81 Kansas City (34) vs. Houston (47)
Dec. 16, 1979 Sept. 10, 1978
Most Individual 100-Yard Receiving Games, Season
2000, 1964, 2017 1966, 1987,
2004 2018 1983 2003, 2006, 2007, 2016, 2019
7 6 4 3 2
2000 2004 1964, 1966, 1961, 1985, 2008,
2016, 1984, 1962, 1987, 2011,
2018 1992, 1994, 2005, 2007, 2010 1963, 1965, 1968, 1969, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1988, 1989, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2006, 2007, 2017 (3 times), 2018, 2019
Most Times Sacked, Season
57 1980 55 2007 53 1975 Fewest Times Sacked, Season
Most Gross Passing Yards, Game (All 400+)
504 478 469 446 443 435 433 432 412 411 400
City City City City City City City
Most Consecutive Individual 100-Yard Receiving Games, Season
Most Net Passing Yards, Consecutive Seasons
9,453 9,059 8,387 8,216 7,909 7,844 7,814
Oct. 31, 2004
Fewest Passing Yards, Both Teams, Game
14 11 9 8 7
2018 2019 2004 1983 2000 2017 2003
City (387) vs. Indianapolis
Nov. 8, 1963 Sept. 30, 1979
19 1994 21 1978, 1991, 1995, 2003 22 1990 Most Times Sacked, Game
10 9 8 8
vs. Baltimore vs. San Diego at Pittsburgh vs. L.A. Raiders
Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec.
2, 1980 2, 2007 5, 1982 12, 1982
Most Times Sacked, Both Teams, Game
13 Kansas City (2) vs. Cleveland (11) 13 Kansas City (6) vs. Houston (7)
Sept. 30, 1984 Sept. 21, 1986
Most Consecutive Games Without Allowing A Sack
3 1988, 2000 Most Consecutive Seasons Leading League, Completion Percentage
*4 1966-69 *NFL RECORD Highest Completion Percentage, Season
66.85 66.85 66.04 65.95 65.63 65.54 63.25
543-363 546-365 583-385 561-370 576-378 473-310 536-339
2017 2016 2018 2004 2019 2015 2003
Lowest Completion Percentage, Season
44.36 48.05 48.90 49.33
(399-177) (435-209) (409-200) (521-257)
1961 1960 1965 1986
@CHIEFS
50.38 (395-199)
1965
11 11 11 11 10 10 10 10 10 10
Most Passing Touchdowns, Season
50 32 31 30 29
2018 1964 1966 1963, 2019 1983, 2000
Fewest Passing Touchdowns, Season
7 8 10 11 13
1978, 2012 1973, 1974, 1981,
1979 1982 (9 games) 1977 2011
vs. Denver at Pittsburgh at Los Angeles Rams 7 times; Last at Oakland
Nov. 1, 1964 Sept. 16, 2018 Nov. 19, 2018 Dec. 15, 2013
Most Passing Touchdowns, Both Teams, Game
10 9 9 8 8 8
Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas
City City City City City City
(6) (4) (6) (6) (4) (3)
at L.A. Rams (4) at Denver (5) at Pittsburgh (3) vs. Denver (2) at San Diego (4) vs. IND (5)
Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 14, 2010 Sept. 16, 2018 Nov. 1, 1964 Dec. 11, 1983 Oct. 31, 2004
0 at L.A. Raiders 0 vs. Carolina 0 vs. Cincinnati
27 1961 26 1977 25 1974
Highest Punting Average Distance, Season
46.83 45.89 45.53 45.33 45.26
36.06 (54-1,947) 37.83 (64-2,422) 38.53 (70-2,697)
Punt Returns 6 1960, 1968, 1970, 1979-80, 2003 Most Punt Returns, Season (All 50+)
59 2013 58 1979, 1995, 1999 52 2010
Oct. 13, 1974 Nov. 4, 1984 Oct. 20, 1985
9 Kansas City (3) vs. Miami (6) 8 8 times Last; Kansas City (2) at Oakland (6)
Oct. 27, 1985
Most Seasons Leading League (Average Return)
Most Passes Had Intercepted, Both Teams, Game
Nov. 13, 1966 Oct. 23, 2011
Punting Most Seasons Leading League (Average Distance)
*6 1968, 1971-73, 1979, 1984 *NFL RECORD Most Consecutive Seasons Leading League
3 1971-73 Most Punts, Season
104 1999 99 1986 98 1984
Fewest Punt Returns, Season
15 22 24 26
1982 (9 games) 2018 2004 1961, 1963, 2008
Most Punt Returns, Game
9 8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7
at Oakland vs. San Diego at St. Louis vs. Oakland vs. N.Y. Giants vs. Detroit at Denver at Oakland at Jacksonville at Washington
Nov. 15, 2009 Nov. 10, 1974 Dec. 19, 2010 Sept. 23, 1979 Oct. 21, 1979 Sept. 26, 1999 Dec. 5, 1999 Oct. 21, 2007 Sept. 8, 2013 Dec. 8, 2013
Most Punt Returns, Both Teams, Game
15 Kansas City (6) vs. Baltimore (9)
Sept. 2, 1979
Most Punt Return Yards, Season (All 600+)
695 2013 640 1999 612 1979
Fewest Punts, Season
1982 (9 games) 2018 2019 1962 2004 1991
Fewest Punt Return Yards, Season
126 1972 129 1982 (9 games) 150 1971
Most Punts, Game
29
1962 2002 1981
Most Punts Had Blocked, Season
2 vs. Denver
1990, 2019 2014 2015 1982 (9 games), 2010, 2016, 2017 2013 1993, 1994, 1997, 2005
11 at N.Y. Jets 11 vs. Baltimore
2012 2011 1973 2013 1968
Most Punts Had Blocked, Game
Most Passes Had Intercepted, Game
38 45 49 54 55 57
(83-3,887) (89-4,084) (80-3,642) (89-4,034) (65-2,942)
Lowest Punting Average Distance, Season
Fewest Passes Had Intercepted, Season
7 vs. Pittsburgh 6 at Seattle 6 vs. L.A. Raiders
Dec. 22, 1991 Dec. 10, 2000 Oct. 21, 2018
2 1974, 1975, 1985, 1999
Most Passes Had Intercepted, Season
5 6 7 8 9 10
Nov. 17, 1985 Nov. 19, 1989 Nov. 13, 1994 Dec. 4, 2011 Oct. 6, 1974 Oct. 5, 1980 Oct. 2, 1988 Nov. 26, 2000 Dec. 30, 2007 Sept. 8, 2013
Fewest Punts, Game
Most Passing Touchdowns, Game
6 6 6 5
at San Francisco at Cleveland vs. San Diego at Chicago vs. Denver at Oakland at N.Y. Jets at San Diego at N.Y. Jets at Jacksonville
Most Punt Return Yards, Game
Sept. 18, 1965 Sept. 2, 1979
177 at Washington 160 vs. San Diego
Dec. 8, 2013 Sept. 13, 2010
@CHIEFS
141 vs. Oakland 139 at Denver 131 vs. Boston
Sept. 23, 1979 Dec. 5, 1999 Dec. 11, 1960
Highest Punt Return Average, Season
16.42 15.03 14.80 14.53 14.52
(33-542) (33-496) (40-592) (40-581) (31-450)
2003 1960 2016 1980 1968
Lowest Punt Return Average, Season
4.34 4.69 6.29 6.50 6.53
(29-126) (32-150) (35-220) (26-169) (32-209)
1972 1971 2017 2008 2009
Sept. 9, 2018
Most Punt Return Touchdowns, Both Teams, Game
Sept. 11, 1966 *NFL RECORD
Oct. 12, 1969 *NFL RECORD Oct. 12, 1969 *NFL RECORD
2002 2017 1982 (9 games) 2003, 2010, 2018 1967, 1991, 2008, 2015
6 vs. Houston Nov. 23, 2008 Nov. 2, 1967 Sept. 20, 1987 Nov. 10, 1985
1992 1982 (9 games) 1973 1968 1990
Oct. 12, 1969
47 46 41 40
1977 1981 1965, 1987, 1989 1964
Fewest Turnovers, Season
11 12 14 15 17
2017 1982 (9 games) 2010 2002, 2015, 2019 2014, 2016
Most Turnovers, Game
9 vs. Buffalo 9 vs. Pittsburgh 8 vs. San Diego
Oct. 17, 1965 Oct. 13, 1974 Sept. 20, 1981
Most Turnovers, Both Teams, Game
16 Kansas City (7) vs. Houston (9)
Most Kickoff Return Yards, Game
Dec. 12, 1994 Oct. 15, 1967 Nov. 10, 1985
Highest Kickoff Return Average, Season
30
*10 vs. Houston
Most Turnovers, Season
2004 2008 2009 2005 2003
(44-1,316) (53-1,465) (41-1,090) (37-955)
Most Fumbles, Game
*NFL RECORD
Fewest Kickoff Return Yards, Season
*29.91 27.64 26.59 25.81
2002 1982 (9 games), 2003 2017 2010 2015
Most Fumbles Lost, Game
Most Kickoff Return Yards, Season
251 at Miami 245 at San Diego 236 vs. Pittsburgh
7 13 14 15 16
*2 3 4 6 8
Most Kickoff Returns, Game
722 723 725 736 784
Fewest Fumbles, Season
Fewest Fumbles Lost, Season
1973 1982 (9 games) 2015 1962, 2019 1968, 1998 1992
1,820 1,716 1,666 1,591 1,577
Dec. 29, 2019
24 1981, 1987 21 1965, 1977
Fewest Kickoff Returns, Season
Buffalo Oakland Seattle Pittsburgh
1 24 times; Last vs. L.A. Chargers
Most Fumbles Lost, Season
2008 2009 2004 1987, 2000 2005
vs. vs. vs. vs.
Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Game
*14 Kansas City (10) vs. Houston (4)
Most Kickoff Returns, Season
11 10 10 9
2 1987, 1995, 2003, 2004, 2013 1 1961, 1963, 1967, 1969, 1986, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2002, 2005, 2009, 2014, 2016, 2019
Most Fumbles, Both Teams, Game
Kickoff Returns
31 34 35 37 38 39
Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Season
42 1980
Most Punt Return Touchdowns, Game
80 77 75 70 68
1988 1990 1983
Fumbles
2 1968, 1979, 1980, 1992, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2013, 2016 1 1960, 1965, 1966, 1987, 1995, 1997, 2006, 2010, 2017, 2018
*2 Kansas City (1) at Buffalo (1)
16.52 (56-925) 17.04 (46-784) 17.20 (54-929)
Most Fumbles, Season
Most Punt Return Touchdowns, Season
1 29 times; Last at L.A. Chargers
*NFL RECORD Lowest Kickoff Return Average, Season
2013 1961 1969 1962
Oct. 12, 1969
Penalties Fewest Penalties, Season
43 52 56 61
1982 (9 games) 1963 1964 1966
Most Penalties, Season
*158 1998
@CHIEFS
137 127 126 122
24 Kansas City (10) at Oakland (14) 24 Kansas City (9) at Denver (15) 24 Kansas City (12) at Pittsburgh (12)
2018 1994 1999 1993, 1996
Fewest Yards Penalized, Season
*NFL RECORD Fewest Penalties, Game
*0 vs. Buffalo 0 vs. Oakland 1 24 times; Last at San Diego
Oct. 2, 1966 Dec. 8, 1974 Dec. 29, 2013 *NFL RECORD
Most Penalties, Game
17 15 15 14 14
at Seattle vs. San Diego at New England at Atlanta at Denver
Nov. 8, 1998 Sept. 20, 1998 Sept. 7, 2017 Sept. 18, 1994 Oct. 17, 1994
Fewest Penalties, Both Teams, Game
1 Kansas City (0) vs. Buffalo (1)
Oct. 2, 1966
31
Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas
City City City City City City City City City City City
(17) at Seattle (13) (12) at Oakland (15) (7) vs. San Diego (19) (11) vs. Oakland (15) (11) vs. Denver (14) (13) at L.A. Raiders (11) (12) vs. L.A. Raiders (12) (10) vs. L.A. Raiders (14) (14) at Atlanta (10) (14) at Denver (10) (15) vs. San Diego (9)
371 515 577 602 604
1982 (9 games) 1974 2006 2001 1964
Most Yards Penalized, Season
1,304 1998 1,152 2018 Fewest Yards Penalized, Game
0 0 1 3 5
vs. Buffalo vs. Oakland vs. San Diego vs. Buffalo 11 times; Last at San Diego
Oct. 2, 1966 Dec. 8, 1974 Dec. 22, 2002 Sept. 11, 2011 Dec. 29, 2013
Most Yards Penalized, Game
Most Penalties, Both Teams, Game
30 27 26 26 25 24 24 24 24 24 24
Oct. 23, 2011 Nov. 27, 2016 Sept. 16, 2018
Nov. 8, 1998 Nov. 7, 2010 Oct. 16, 1997 Dec. 24, 2011 Sept. 20, 1993 Oct. 9, 1983 Sept. 16, 1984 Dec. 13, 1987 Sept. 18, 1994 Oct. 17, 1994 Sept. 20, 1998
154 vs. Oakland 152 at Seattle 141 at San Diego
Nov. 1, 1970 Nov. 8, 1998 Oct. 25, 1987
Fewest Yards Penalized, Both Teams, Game
10 Kansas City (10) vs. Boston (0) 10 Kansas City (0) vs. Oakland (10) 10 Kansas City (5) at Denver (5)
Nov. 17, 1968 Dec. 8, 1974 Dec. 7, 2008
Most Yards Penalized, Both Teams, Game
259 KC (141) at San Diego (118) 258 KCâ&#x20AC;&#x2C6;(126) vs. L.A. Raiders (132)
Oct. 25, 1987 Sept. 16, 1984
@CHIEFS
152 141 135 133 131 127
Scoring Fewest Points Allowed, Season
170 177 184 192 208
1968 1969 1982 (9 games) 1973 1971
Fewest Second-Quarter Points Allowed, Season
Lowest Scoring Average, Season
12.1 12.6 13.7 14.5 14.9
(170 (177 (192 (232 (208
in in in in in
14 14 14 16 14
games) games) games) games) games)
1968 1969 1973 1997 1971
Most Points Allowed, Season
440 435 425 424
2008 2004 2012 2009
Highest Scoring Average, Season
27.5 27.2 26.9 26.6 26.5
(440 (435 (376 (425 (424
in in in in in
16 16 14 16 16
games) games) games) games) games)
2008 2004 1976 2012 2009
Most Points Allowed, Game
54 54 51 50 49 49
vs. Buffalo at L.A. Rams at Seattle at Buffalo at Oakland at Denver
Nov. 23, 2008 Nov. 19, 2018 Nov. 27, 1983 (OT) Oct. 3, 1976 Nov. 5, 2000 Nov. 14, 2010
Most First-Half Points Allowed, Game
35 35 34 31
at San Diego at Denver vs. Seattle Seven times, last at Pittsburgh
Oct. 25, 1987 Nov. 14, 2010 Dec. 11, 1977 Oct. 15, 2006
Fewest First-Half Points Allowed, Season
74 95 97 101 103
1969 1982 (9 games) 1965 1973 1968 1998 1976, 2012 2009 1997 1987 1963, 1969 1973 1970 1965, 1966 1984
at Buffalo at Pittsburgh at Denver at Denver vs. Oakland at Denver vs. Pittsburgh at Denver vs. San Diego
Most Second-Quarter Points Allowed, Game
28 28 28 28 28 24
vs. San Diego vs. Oakland at Baltimore at Seattle at Seattle at Oakland
Nov. 15, 1964 Oct. 16, 1966 Dec. 21, 1980 Nov. 4, 1984 Sept. 11, 1988 Nov. 3, 1968
Most Third-Quarter Points Allowed, Season
106 103 100 98 95
2008, 2012 2001 2009 1975, 2018 2011
Fewest Third-Quarter Points Allowed, Season
22 29 31 34 35
1971 1995 1982 (9 games) 1974 1973
Most Third-Quarter Points Allowed, Game
28 at Houston 22 at Boston 21 Nine times; Last at Baltimore
Oct. 24, 1965 Nov. 18, 1960 Sept. 13, 2009
Most Fourth-Quarter Points Allowed, Season
139 136 130 129 127 121
1961 2018 1983, 2002 2004 1976 1985
27 44 54 56 57
1968 1997 2013 1973 1960, 1962, 1981
24 at New Orleans 22 vs. Denver 21 13 times; Last at Houston
Sept. 8, 1985 Nov. 1, 1964 Oct. 8, 2017
Most Second-Half Points Allowed, Game
Most First-Quarter Points Allowed, Game
31 22 21 21 17 17 17 17 17
1969 1979, 1982 (9 games) 1968, 1992 1995 1965
Most Fourth-Quarter Points Allowed, Game
Fewest First-Quarter Points Allowed, Season
29 30 32 33 37
45 55 57 59 64
Fewest Fourth-Quarter Points Allowed, Season
Most First-Quarter Points Allowed, Season
101 95 93 92 88
2004 2008 1985 1999 2018 1961, 1984
Sept. 13, 1962 Oct. 2, 2016 Nov. 16, 1986 Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 23, 1967 Oct. 27, 1996 Sept. 14, 2003 Sept. 26, 2005 Sept. 30, 2012
38 37 35 35 31 31 31 31
at Houston at Seattle* vs. San Diego vs. Pittsburgh at Miami at Miami vs. San Diego at L.A. Rams
Oct. 24, 1965 Nov. 27, 1983 Oct. 20, 1963 Nov. 7, 1976 Sept. 22, 1985 Dec. 12, 1994 Nov. 24, 2013 Nov. 19, 2018 *Includes three in OT
Fewest Second-Half Points Allowed, Season
67 1968 89 1982 (9 games)
Most Second-Quarter Points Allowed, Season
32
@CHIEFS
91 1973, 1997 96 1971 101 1972
34 at Cleveland
Fewest Touchdowns Allowed, Season
18 1968 19 1969 21 1971
169 1977 162 1988 149 1975
2004 1976 2018 2008 2009 2012
Fewest Rushing First Downs Allowed, Game
Most Touchdowns Allowed, Game
7 7 7 6
52 1968 53 1969 67 1965 Most Rushing First Downs Allowed, Season
Most Touchdowns Allowed, Season
53 51 51 49 48 47
Oct. 30, 1977
Fewest Rushing First Downs Allowed, Season
at Buffalo at Oakland at Denver 16 times; Last at Pittsburgh
Oct. 3, 1976 Nov. 5, 2000 Nov. 14, 2010 Oct. 2, 2016
*0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
vs. Houston vs. Buffalo at Denver at Oakland vs. Oakland vs. St. Louis vs. N.Y. Jets 19 times; Last vs. Oakland
Dec. 4, 1960 Dec. 3, 1967 Oct. 3, 1971 Dec. 3, 1995 Dec. 7, 1997 Dec. 8, 2002 Sept. 11, 2005 Dec. 24, 2011 *NFL RECORD
Most Shutouts, Season
Most Rushing First Downs Allowed, Game
3 1960 2 1967, 1969
21 vs. Pittsburgh 20 at Oakland 19 at Cleveland
Most Consecutive Shutouts
2 1960
Dec. 4-11, 1960
Most Games Allowed 10 Points or Less, Season
9 1968 7 1969 6 1973, 1979, 1990, 1995 5 1968 3 1960, 1968, 1995, 1997 Largest Opponent Comeback Victories
Opponent Deficit Final vs. Tampa Bay 24-3 27-30 (OT) vs. Philadelphia 24-6 31-37 vs. San Diego 21-3 21-22 at Houston 17-0 36-38 vs. L.A. Raiders 17-0 17-24 at Chicago 17-0 27-28 at San Diego 34-17 37-38 vs. Oakland 17-0 38-41 (OT)
Date Nov. 2, 2008 Oct. 2, 2005 Dec. 14, 2008 Oct. 24, 1965 Oct. 5, 1986 Nov. 13, 1977 Nov. 22, 1998 Jan. 2, 2000
First Downs Fewest First Downs Allowed, Season
170 181 200 204
1982 (9 games) 1969 1965 1964 2018 2002 2017 1987, 2008, 2019 2016 1985 Dec. 7, 1997 Sept. 21, 1969 Oct. 11, 1970 Dec. 29, 1990 Oct. 18, 2009
Most First Downs Allowed, Game
33
2018 2002 2016 2017 2000 2008
Fewest Passing First Downs Allowed, Game
*0 at Houston 0 vs. San Diego 2 8 times; Last at Denver
Oct. 9, 1988 Sept. 20, 1998 Jan. 1, 2012 *NFL RECORD
Most Passing First Downs Allowed, Game
25 25 25 23 23 22 22
at Denver at Denver at Pittsburgh at Oakland at L.A. Chargers at Cincinnati vs. Philadelphia
Nov. 18, 1974 Nov. 14, 2010 Sept. 16, 2018 Oct. 19, 2017 Sept. 9, 2018 Dec. 6, 1987 Oct. 2, 2005
Most Penalty First Downs Allowed, Season
vs. Oakland at Boston vs. Boston at Chicago 10 times; Last at Washington
35 vs. San Diego 35 vs. Houston 34 at Denver
247 227 209 204 202 195
9 1982 (9 games) 11 1964 13 1980
Fewest First Downs Allowed, Game
5 6 6 6 7
92 1982 (9 games) 95 1973 111 1969, 1970
Fewest Penalty First Downs Allowed, Season
Most First Downs Allowed, Season
419 367 352 344 342 336
Fewest Passing First Downs Allowed, Season
Most Passing First Downs Allowed, Season
Most Consecutive Games Allowed 10 Points or Less
21 18 18 17 17 17 17 17
Nov. 7, 1976 Dec. 28, 2002 Oct. 30, 1977
Oct. 19, 1986 Oct. 13, 2019 Nov. 18, 1974
*56 43 40 39 36 34 33
1998 2018 2004 2019 1993, 2017 2015 1987 *NFL RECORD
Most Penalty First Downs Allowed, Game
7 2 times; Last N.Y. Jets 6 12 times; Last vs. Indianapolis
Dec. 11, 2011 Oct. 6, 2019
@CHIEFS
Net Yards Allowed Passing and Rushing Fewest Yards Allowed, Season
2,733 3,163 3,575 3,667 3,749
1982 (9 games) 1969 1973 1970 1965 2018 2008 2002 2009 2004 2016 Dec. 24, 1995 Oct. 12, 1969 Dec. 7, 1997 Sept. 21, 1969 Dec. 14, 1963 Oct. 11, 1970
vs. Houston at N.Y. Jets at Tennessee at L.A. Chargers at Oakland vs. Oakland vs. Denver
Dec. 16, 1990 Oct. 2, 1988 (OT) Dec. 13, 2004 Sept. 9, 2018 Nov. 3, 1968 Oct. 3, 1977 Dec. 1, 2013
556 1982 (9 games) 808 1969 813 1971
Oct. 22, 1967 Dec. 7, 1997 Oct. 13, 1968 Sept. 21, 1969 Oct. 2, 1988 (OT) Oct. 19, 1986 Nov. 8, 1981
Rushing Fewest Rushing Attempts Allowed, Season
279 1982 (9 games) 316 1969 343 1967 Most Rushing Attempts Allowed, Season
634 1977 609 1988 601 1978
1977 1976 1975
Fewest Rushing Yards Allowed, Game
-27 vs. Houston 3 at San Diego 8 at Oakland
Dec. 4, 1960 Nov. 19, 1961 Dec. 3, 1995
Most Rushing Yards Allowed, Game
351 332 330 322 300
vs. Cleveland vs. Tennessee vs. Pittsburgh at Cleveland vs. Oakland
Dec. 20, 2009 Oct. 19, 2008 Nov. 7, 1976 Oct. 30, 1977 Sept. 14, 2008
Fewest Individual 100-Yard Games Allowed, Season
4 5 6 7
1968 2016 1969, 1971 1982 (9 games), 1995, 2013, 2015
Most Rushing Touchdowns Allowed, Season
25 2008 24 1975, 1976 23 1977, 1988 Most Rushing Touchdowns Allowed, Game
5 vs. Pittsburgh 5 at Denver 4 7 times; Last vs Baltimore
Nov. 7, 1976 Dec. 7, 2003 Sept. 22, 2019
Passing Fewest Pass Attempts Allowed, Season
262 324 325 333
1982 (9 games) 1973 1975 1977
Most Pass Attempts Allowed, Season
Fewest Rushing Attempts Allowed, Game
34
211.8 (2,971 in 14 games) 204.4 (2,861 in 14 games) 193.7 (2,712 in 14 games)
Fewest Rushing Touchdowns Allowed, Season
Most Plays Allowed, Game
at Oakland at New Orleans at Oakland vs. Oakland
Most Rushing Yards Per Game Allowed, Season
9 2003 8 1976, 1977, 2007
Fewest Plays Allowed, Game
9 11 11 11
2,971 1977 2,861 1976 2,712 1975
0 1960, 1969, 1971, 1981, 1995
1984 1985 2018 1981
97 at N.Y. Jets 95 vs. San Diego 91 vs. Chicago
1960 1969 1995
Most Individual 100-Yard Games Allowed, Season
Most Plays Allowed, Season
vs. Houston vs. Oakland vs. Cincinnati at Boston
Oct. 29, 1973 Dec. 16, 1979 Dec. 8, 1973 Nov. 8, 1981
Most Rushing Yards Allowed, Season
Fewest Plays Allowed, Season
39 39 40 40
at Buffalo at Tampa Bay at Oakland vs. Chicago
70.0 (980 in 14 games) 77.9 (1,091 in 14 games) 82.9 (1,327 in 16 games)
vs. Seattle vs. Houston vs. Oakland at Boston vs. Boston vs. Boston
1,159 1,126 1,109 1,102
65 62 61 61
Fewest Rushing Yards Per Game Allowed, Season
Most Yards Allowed, Game
563 542 542 541 539 539 535
Most Rushing Attempts Allowed, Game
980 1960 1,066 1982 (9 games) 1,091 1969
Fewest Yards Allowed, Game
89 91 93 100 105 105
Nov. 27, 1966 Nov. 28, 2010
Fewest Rushing Yards Allowed, Season
Most Yards Allowed, Season
6,488 6,291 6,248 6,211 6,037 5,896
12 at N.Y. Jets 12 at Seattle
Dec. 5, 2004 Sept. 4, 1994 Dec. 3, 1995 Dec. 10, 2017
632 616 607 598 596 592
2018 2002 2015 2016 1995 2013
Fewest Pass Attempts Allowed, Game
@CHIEFS
8 9 9 10 10
vs. Denver at N.Y. Jets vs. Oakland vs. L.A. Raiders at San Diego
Nov. 13, 2011 Nov. 7, 1971 Dec. 8, 1974 Sept. 16, 1973 Dec. 18, 1988
Most Pass Attempts Allowed, Game
65 61 61 60 60
vs. San Diego vs. Seattle vs. Jacksonville at Oakland at Pittsburgh
Oct. 19, 1986 Sept. 29, 1985 Oct. 7, 2018 Oct. 5, 1980 Sept. 16, 2018
Fewest Pass Completions Allowed, Season
155 157 175 186 195
2018 2002 2019 2016 2008 2015 2013
vs. San Diego vs. Denver vs. Houston at N.Y. Jets vs. Oakland at San Diego at Houston at New England at Pittsburgh vs. San Diego vs. San Diego vs. New Orleans vs. Oakland vs. L.A. Raiders vs. San Diego at. L.A. Chargers
Sept. 20, 1998 Nov. 13,2011 Oct. 22, 1967 Nov. 7, 1971 Dec. 8, 1974 Nov. 2, 1986 Oct. 9, 1988 Sept. 22, 2002 Sept. 16, 2018 Dec. 22, 1985 Oct. 19, 1986 Oct. 23, 2016 Oct. 27, 2002 Sept. 12, 1985 Dec. 14, 2008 Sept. 9, 2018
1973 1982 (9 games) 1973 1970
Oct. 31, 2004 Nov. 14, 2010 Dec. 1, 2013 Sept. 28, 2015 Oct. 2, 2016 Nov. 19, 2018
60.0 54.0 52.0 51.0 50.0
1990 1997 2018 2000 1984, 1992
Fewest Sacks, Season
*10.0 15.0 22.0 23.0
2008 1982 (9 games) 1976, 2009 1988 *NFL RECORD
Most Sacks, Game
11.0 10.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0
vs. Cleveland vs. Oakland at Buffalo vs. Seattle vs. Oakland at Denver
Sept. 30, 1984 Sept. 6, 1998 Nov. 2, 1969 Nov. 11, 1990 Oct. 13, 2013 Oct. 17, 2019
Most Opponents Yards Lost Attempting to Pass, Season
439 1968 62 2008 120 1982 (9 games) 137 2009
Interceptions By Most Consecutive Seasons Leading League
5 1966-70 Most Passes Intercepted By, Season
Fewest Net Passing Yards Allowed, Game
Sept. 20, 1998 Nov. 7, 1971 Dec. 8, 1974
Most Net Passing Yards Allowed, Game
505 vs. Houston 472 vs. Indianapolis 469 at Oakland
vs. Indianapolis at Denver vs. Denver at Green Bay at Pittsburgh 17 times; Last at L.A. Rams
Fewest Opponents Yards Lost Attempting to Pass, Season
2018 2004 2002 2013 2016 2017
-19 vs. San Diego 9 vs. N.Y. Jets 12 vs. Oakland
5 5 5 5 5 4
4 1960, 1965, 1969, 1990
Most Net Passing Yards Allowed, Season
4,374 4,203 4,181 3,962 3,958 3,952
2004 2018 2012 2002 1964, 1976, 1980, 1987, 2000, 2005, 2009, 2013, 2015 1999
Most Sacks, Season
Fewest Net Passing Yards Allowed, Season
1,619 1,667 1,942 2,010
32 30 29 27 25 24
Sacks
Most Pass Completions Allowed, Game
39 39 37 37 37 35 34 34 34
Most Passing Touchdowns Allowed, Season
Most Seasons Leading League
Fewest Pass Completions Allowed, Game
1 2 3 3 3 4 4
10 1969 11 1971, 1973 12 1982 (9 games), 1988
Most Passing Touchdowns Allowed, Game
1982 (9 games) 1973 1977 1972, 1975 1970
Most Pass Completions Allowed, Season
406 403 352 350 348 349 334
8 2002 Fewest Passing Touchdowns Allowed, Season
Dec. 16, 1990 Oct. 31, 2004 Nov. 3, 1968
Fewest Individual 300-Yard Games Allowed, Season 0 1962, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1977, 1978, 1988, 2000
37 1968 33 1966 32 1960, 1962, 1969 Fewest Passes Intercepted By, Season
7 2012 11 1987 12 1982 (9 games), 1994 Most Passes Intercepted By, Game
7 at San Diego 6 8 times; Last vs. New York Jets
Dec. 8, 1968 Sept. 25, 2016
Most Individual 300-Yard Games Allowed, Season
35
@CHIEFS
Most Consecutive Games, One or More Interceptions By
23 1967-69 18 1966-67 16 1982-83 Most Yards Returning Interceptions, Season
596 1969 578 1967 567 1986 2012 2006 1987 2019 vs. N.Y. Titans at Oakland vs. L.A. Raiders vs. Seattle
Dec. 17, 1961 Dec. 6, 2015 Oct. 28, 1991 Dec. 11, 1977
Most Touchdowns Returning Interceptions, Season
6 1992 5 1972, 1974, 1999, 2013 4 1960, 1967, 1986, 1997, 2015, 2016 vs. N.Y. Titans at Denver at Denver vs. San Diego vs. Denver at Baltimore at Denver at Oakland
6 4 3 2
1990 1986 1963, 1982 1966, 1979, 1980, 1989, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2006
Dec. 17, 1961 Oct. 1, 1972 Dec. 19, 1982 Oct. 19, 1986 Dec. 27, 1992 Oct. 21, 1999 Jan. 3, 2010 Oct. 23, 2011
Most Touchdowns Returning Interceptions, Both Teams, Game
*4 Kansas City (0) at Seattle (4) 3 Kansas City (2) vs. San Diego (1)
3 vs. Denver 2 at Seattle 2 vs. Cleveland
Dec. 8, 1963 Sept. 30, 1979 Sept. 30, 1990
Punt Returns Most Opponents Punt Returns, Season
60 1984 55 1974, 1976 54 1983 Most Opponents Punt Returns, Game
Most Touchdowns Returning Interceptions, Game
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
2011 2012 2013 2005 2010
Most Opponents Punts Blocked, Game
Most Yards Returning Interceptions, Game
188 162 142 136
47.6 46.8 46.6 45.7 45.2
Most Opponents Punts Blocked, Season
Fewest Yards Returning Interceptions, Season
119 124 140 141
Highest Opponents Average Distance, Season
Nov. 4, 1984 Oct. 19, 1986 *NFL RECORD
Opponents Interceptions
9 at Cincinnati
Nov. 24, 1974
Fewest Punt Return Yards Allowed, Season
89 97 157 164 170 179 190
2019 2018 1960, 2016 2017 2015 2005 1991
Most Punt Return Yards Allowed, Season
702 1977 634 1974 572 1986 Most Punt Return Yards Allowed, Game
170 at San Diego
Sept. 26, 1965
Lowest Punt Return Average Allowed, Season
Most Touchdowns Returning Interceptions Opponents, Season
4.68 5.23 5.71 5.81 6.37 6.43 6.47
7 1984
Highest Punt Returns Average Allowed, Season
Most Yards, Interception Returns Opponents, Season
688 1984 Most Yards Interception Returns, Opponent, Game
*325 at Seattle
Nov. 4, 1984 *NFL RECORD
Most Touchdowns Returning Interceptions Opponent, Game
*4 at Seattle
Nov. 4, 1984 *NFL RECORD
Punting Most Opponents Punts, Season
102 1995 98 1999 94 1969 Fewest Opponents Punts, Season
38 50 52 55
1982 (9 games) 2008 2018 1962
Lowest Opponents Average Distance, Season
37.0 1986, 1990 38.6 1982 (9 games) 38.9 1981 36
(19-89) (30-157) (17-97) (27-157) (46-293) (49-315) (38-246)
2019 2016 2018 1960 1981 1979 2013
15.36 (22-338) (9 games) 14.93 (29-433) 14.04 (50-702)
1982 1965 1977
Most Punt Returns Touchdowns Allowed, Season
2 1982, 1990, 2004, 2012
Kickoff Returns Fewest Opponents Kickoff Returns, Season
25 27 35 36 37 40 42
2011, 2017 2012 2016 2018 2019 1973 1982 (9 games)
Most Opponents Kickoff Returns, Season
88 2002 87 2003 85 2004 @CHIEFS
84 1966 Fewest Kickoff Return Yards Allowed, Season
486 605 690 725 794 809 843 958
2017 2011 2012 2019 1982 (9 games) 2018 2016 1977
16 1971 18 1984, 2011 19 2000, 2012, 2015, 2017 Fewest Opponents Fumbles Recovered, Season
Most Kickoff Return Yards Allowed, Season
2,053 2,045 2,043 1,908 1,880
2005 1966 2003 2004 2002 Sept. 7, 1963 Dec. 20, 2009
(81-1,391) (71-1,278) (23-427) (64-1,203)
1990 1986 2017 1992
Highest Kickoff Return Average Allowed, Season
25.78 (40-1,031) 25.56 (27-690) 25.37 (54-1,370)
1973 2012 1974
Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns Allowed, Season
2 1988 2 1989 2 2009
1960 1966 1962, 1965, 1973 1963, 1967, 1996 1982 (9 games), 1986, 1992, 1993, 2003
Most Blocked Field Goals, Game
at San Diego vs. Buffalo at Oakland at Oakland at San Diego at Green Bay at San Diego at San Diego
37
26 1994 25 1990 23 1977
Turnovers Fewest Opponents Turnovers, Season
13 21 22 23 26
2012 2004 1982 (9 games), 2007 2010, 2019 2001, 2011, 2017
Most Opponents Turnovers, Season
Most Opponents Turnovers, Game
Most Blocked Field Goals, Season
3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
Most Opponents Fumbles Recovered, Season
51 1983 49 1962, 1968, 1986
Blocked Field Goals 6 5 4 3 2
2011, 2012 1971, 2015, 2019 1966, 2004, 2007 2010 1982 (9 games), 1996, 2017
42 1981 40 1975 39 1977
Lowest Kickoff Return Average Allowed, Season
17.17 18.00 18.57 18.80
6 7 8 9 10
Most Opponents Fumbles, Season
Most Kickoff Return Yards Allowed, Game
289 at Denver 278 vs. Cleveland
Fumbles Fewest Opponents Fumbles, Season
Oct. 15, 1967 Dec. 18, 1960 Nov. 3, 1963 Sept. 18, 1966 Oct. 15, 1967 Oct. 4, 1973 Oct. 17, 1993 Nov. 30, 2003
9 vs. Houston 9 vs. Houston 9 vs. St. Louis
Oct. 28, 1962 Oct. 12, 1969 Oct. 2, 1983
Best Turnover Ratio, Season
26 22 21 18 18 18
(45 (49 (45 (49 (39 (36
takes/19 takes/27 takes/21 takes/31 takes/21 takes/18
gives) gives) gives) gives) gives) gives)
1990 1968 1999 1962 1992 2013
Worst Turnover Ratio, Season
-24 -13 -11 -8 -8
(13 (28 (22 (33 (33
takes/37 takes/41 takes/33 takes/41 takes/41
gives) gives) gives) gives) gives)
2012 1987 2007 1965 1989
@CHIEFS
Single Game Pass Attempts (All 50+)
61 60 58 56 55 54 54 52 52 52 51 50
Blake Bortles, Jacksonville Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Mark Hermann, San Diego Kyle Orton, Denver Rich Gannon, Oakland Steve DeBerg, Tampa Bay Tom Brady, New England Jim Plunkett, Oakland Derek Carr, Oakland Philip Rivers, L.A. Chargers Philip Rivers, L.A. Chargers Brian Griese, Denver
Oct. 7, 2018 Sept. 16, 2018 Dec. 22, 1985 Jan. 3, 2010 Oct. 27, 2002 Oct. 28, 1984 Sept. 22, 2002 Oct. 5, 1980 Oct. 19, 2017 Nov. 18, 2019 Sept. 9, 2018 Oct. 20, 2002
Pass Completions (All 30+)
39 39 37 37 35 34 34 34 33 33 33 32 32 32 31 31 31 31 31 31 31 30 30 30
Tom Brady, New England Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Mark Hermann, San Diego Drew Brees, New Orleans Rich Gannon, Oakland Jim Plunkett, Oakland Philip Rivers, San Diego Philip Rivers, L.A. Chargers Drew Bledsoe, New England Donovan McNabb, Philadelphia Blake Bortles, Jacksonville Jay Cutler, Denver Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Kyle Orton, Denver Jim Zorn, Seattle Rich Gannon, Oakland Marc Bulger, St. Louis Jeff Garcia, Tampa Bay Derek Carr, Oakland Jared Goff, L.A. Rams Philip Rivers, L.A. Chargers Dan Fouts, San Diego Tony Romo, Dallas Deshaun Watson, Houston
Sept. 22, 2002 Sept. 16, 2018 Dec. 22, 1985 Oct. 23, 2016 Oct. 27, 2002 Sept. 12, 1985 Dec. 14, 2008 Sept. 9, 2018 Dec. 4, 2000 Oct. 2, 2005 Oct. 7, 2018 Dec. 7, 2008 Nov. 22, 2009 Jan. 3, 2010 Sept. 27, 1981 Sept. 9, 2001 Nov. 5, 2006 Nov. 2, 2008 Dec. 6, 2015 Nov. 19, 2018 Dec. 29, 2019 Oct. 14, 1984 Sept. 15, 2013 Oct. 13, 2019
Warren Moon, Houston Peyton Manning, Indianapolis Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Charley Johnson, Denver Kyle Orton, Denver Blake Bortles, Jacksonville Billy Volek, Tennessee Philip Rivers, L.A. Chargers Derek Carr, Oakland Pete Beathard, Houston Jared Goff, L.A. Rams Tom Brady, New England Peyton Manning, Denver John Elway, Denver
Dec. 16, 1990 Oct. 31, 2004 Sept. 16, 2018 Nov. 18, 1974 Jan. 3, 2010 Oct. 7, 2018 Dec. 13, 2004 Sept. 9, 2018 Oct. 19, 2017 Sept. 9, 1968 Nov. 19, 2018 Sept. 22, 2002 Dec. 1, 2013 Dec. 6, 1998
Touchdown Passes
5 5 5 5 5 5
George Blanda, Houston Peyton Manning, Indianapolis Peyton Manning, Denver Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Deshaun Watson, Houston
Oct. 24, 1965 Oct. 31, 2004 Dec. 1, 2013 Sept. 28, 2015 Oct. 2, 2016 Oct. 8, 2017
Interceptions Thrown
6 John Hadl, San Diego
38
Ryan Fitzpatrick, N.Y. Jets George Blanda, Houston John Hadl, San Diego Babe Parilli, Boston George Blanda, Houston Pete Beathard, Houston Marty Domres, San Diego Alan Pastrana, Denver James Harris, San Diego Jim Plunkett, Oakland Jim Zorn, Seattle Dave Krieg, Seattle John Elway, Denver
Sept. 25, 2016 Oct. 28, 1962 Dec. 16, 1962 Dec. 14, 1963 Oct. 4, 1964 Oct. 12, 1969 Nov. 9, 1969 Dec. 6, 1970 Nov. 26, 1978 Oct. 5, 1980 Nov. 9, 1980 Dec. 9, 1984 Dec. 14, 1985
Long Pass (All 80+)
90 89 87 87 82 82 82 80 80
N. Johnson to R. Upchurch, Denver J. Kemp to E. Dubenion, Buffalo S. McNair to M. Clayton, Baltimore M. Hasselbeck to B. Obomanu, SEA J. Lee to A. Denson, Denver D. Lamonica to F. Biletnikoff, Oakland B. Griese to S. Sharpe, Denver J. Lee to B. Groman S. Wyche to B. Trumpy
Sept. 21, 1975 Oct. 13, 1963 Dec. 10, 2006 Nov. 28, 2010 Nov. 1, 1964 Nov. 3, 1968 Oct. 20, 2002 Oct. 22, 1961 Sept. 28, 1969
Pass Receptions
16 14 14 13 13 13 13
Troy Brown, New England Kellen Winslow, San Diego Jabar Gaffney, Denver Joe Washington, Baltimore Terrance Mathis, Atlanta Tim Brown, Oakland Steven Jackson, St. Louis
Sept. 22, 2002 Dec. 11, 1983 Jan. 3, 2010 Sept. 2, 1979 Sept. 18, 1994 Oct. 27, 2002 Nov. 5, 2006
Receiving Yards (All 200+)
250 245 233 232 214 213 210 203
Miles Austin, Dallas Haywood Jeffires, Houston Drew Bennett, Tennessee Lance Alworth, San Diego Shannon Sharpe, Denver Jabar Gaffney, Denver Amari Cooper, Oakland Don Maynard, N.Y. Jets
Oct. 11, 2009 Dec. 16, 1990 Dec. 13, 2004 Oct. 20, 1963 Oct. 20, 2002 Jan. 3, 2010 Oct. 19, 2017 Sept. 15, 1968
Touchdown Receptions
Passing Yards (All 400+)
527 472 452 445 431 430 426 424 417 413 413 410 403 400
6 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
Dec. 8, 1968
4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Eric Decker, Denver Bob Chandler, Buffalo Kellen Winslow, San Diego Shannon Sharpe, Denver Drew Bennett, Tennessee Antonio Gates, San Diego Randall Cobb, Green Bay DeAndre Hopkins, Houston
Dec. 1, 2013 Oct. 3, 1976 Dec. 11, 1983 Dec. 12, 1993 Dec. 13, 2004 Oct. 30, 2005 Sept. 28, 2015 Oct. 8, 2017
Rushing Attempts
39 O.J. Simpson, Buffalo 39 Ricky Bell, Tampa Bay 39 Marion Butts, San Diego
Oct. 29, 1973 Dec. 16, 1979 Dec. 17, 1989
Rushing Yards (All 200+)
286 220 218 217 214 207
Jerome Harrison, Cleveland Tiki Barber, N.Y. Giants Clinton Portis, Denver Gary Anderson, San Diego Greg Pruitt, Cleveland Curt Warner, Seattle
Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Nov.
20, 2009 17, 2005 7, 2003 18, 1988 14, 1975 27, 1983 (OT)
Rushing Touchdowns
5 Clinton Portis, Denver 3 Jon Keyworth, Denver 3 Greg Pruitt, Cleveland
Dec. 7, 2003 Nov. 18, 1974 Dec. 14, 1975
@CHIEFS
3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Pete Banaszak, Oakland Walter Payton, Chicago Curt Warner, Seattle Marcus Allen, L.A. Raiders Rodney Hampton, N.Y. Giants Terrell Davis, Denver Curtis Martin, N.Y. Jets Clinton Portis, Denver Onterrio Smith, Minnesota Michael Pittman, Tampa Bay Michael Turner, Atlanta LenDale White, Tennessee Jerome Harrison, Cleveland Jeremy Hill, Cincinnati Mike Gillislee, New England Mark Ingram, Baltimore
Dec. 21, 1975 Nov. 13, 1977 Nov. 27, 1983 (OT) Nov. 25, 1990 Dec. 19, 1992 Dec. 6, 1998 Nov. 11, 2001 Dec. 15, 2002 Dec. 20, 2003 Nov. 7, 2004 Sept. 21, 2008 Oct. 19, 2008 Dec. 20, 2009 Oct. 4, 2015 Sept. 7, 2017 Sept. 22, 2019
Long Run (All 80+)
87 Paul Lowe, San Diego 85 LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego 80 LenDale White, Tennessee
Sept. 10, 1961 Dec. 17, 2006 Oct. 19, 2008
Total Touchdowns
5 Clinton Portis, Denver 4 Clinton Portis, Denver 4 Eric Decker, Denver
Dec. 7, 2003 Dec. 15, 2002 Dec. 1, 2013
Interceptions Made
4 Deltha Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Neal, Denver 3 David Fulcher, Cincinnati
Oct. 7, 2001 Oct. 1, 1989
Long Interception Return (All 100+)
39
102 Marcus Coleman, Houston 101 Tony Greene, Buffalo 100 Speedy Duncan, San Diego
Sept. 26, 2004 Oct. 3, 1976 Oct. 15, 1967
Long Punt Return
95 Johnny Bailey, Chicago
Dec. 29, 1990
Long Kickoff Return (All 100+)
103 Joshua Cribbs, Cleveland 100 Nemiah Wilson, Denver 100 Joshua Cribbs, Cleveland
Dec. 20, 2009 Oct. 8, 1966 Dec. 20, 2009
Long Punt (All 80+)
83 Chris Norman, Denver 82 Paul Maguire, San Diego
Sept. 23, 1984 Nov. 5, 1961
Long Field Goal (All 55+)
59 57 56 56 55 55 55 55
Matt Bryant, Atlanta Sebastian Janikowski, Oakland Sebastian Janikowski, Oakland Matt Prater, Denver John Kasay, Seattle Kris Brown, Pittsburgh Sebastian Janikowski, Oakland Nate Kaeding, San Diego
Dec. 4, 2016 Dec. 16, 2012 Sept. 14, 2008 Sept. 28, 2008 Jan. 2, 1994 Oct. 14, 2001 Nov. 25, 2007 Nov. 29, 2009
Times Sacked (All 10.0+)
11 Paul McDonald, Cleveland 10 Jeff George, Oakland
Sept. 30, 1984 Sept. 6, 1998
Touchdowns On Interception Returns
2 Dave Brown, Seattle
Nov. 4, 1984
Fumbles
6 Dave Krieg, Seattle
Nov. 5, 1989
@CHIEFS
2 2 2 2 2 2
Service Most Games Played, Career
12 10 10 10 10 10 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 8 8
Dustin Colquitt John Alt Tim Grunhard Dave Szott Derrick Thomas Anthony Sherman Dan Saleaumua Tracy Simien Neil Smith Travis Kelce Eric Fisher Daniel Sorensen James Winchester Len Dawson Jonathan Hayes Nick Lowery Johnny Robinson Kevin Ross Jim Tyrer Will Shields
2005-19 1984-96 1990-00 1990-00 1989-99 2013-19 1989-96 1991-97 1988-96 2013-19 2013-19 2014-19 2015-19 1962-75 1985-93 1980-93 1960-71 1984-93, â&#x20AC;&#x2122;97 1961-73 1993-06
Mike Garrett at Buffalo Ed Podolak vs. Miami Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis Knile Davis at Indianapolis Damien Williams vs. San Francisco
Jan. 1, 1967 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014 Feb. 2, 2020
Most Points After Touchdown, Career
26 13 8 6 6 5
Harrison Butker (6 games - 27 Att.) Nick Lowery (8 games - 14 Att.) Jan Stenerud (5 games - 8 Att.) Ryan Succop (2 games - 6 Att.) Cairo Santos (3 games - 6 Att.) Mike Mercer (2 games - 5 Att.)
2017-19 1980-93 1967-79 2009-13 2014-17 1966
Most Points After Touchdown, Game
6 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4
Harrison Butker vs. Houston (7 Att.) Ryan Succop at Indianapolis (5 Att.) Harrison Butker (5 Att.) Mike Mercer at Buffalo (4 Att.) Nick Lowery at Houston (4 Att.) Morten Andersen vs. IND (4 Att.) Harrison Butker vs. IND (4 Att.) Harrison Butker vs. NE (4 Att.) Harrison Butker vs. SF (4 Att.)
Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 19, 2020 Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 20, 2019 Feb. 2, 2020
Most Points After Touchdown, No Misses, Career
Scoring
8 Jan Stenerud (5 games)
Most Points, Career
60 38 37 36 35 24 18 18 18 18 18
Damien Williams (5 games - 10 TDs) Harrison Butker (6 games - 4 FGs, 26 PATs) Nick Lowery (8 games - 8 FGs, 13 PATs) Travis Kelce (9 games - 6 TDs) Jan Stenerud (5 games - 9 FGs, 8 PATs) Cairo Santos (3 games - 6 FGs, 6 PATs) Mike Garrett (6 games - 3 TDs) Marcus Allen (6 games - 3 TDs) Knile Davis (3 games - 3 TDs) Tyreek Hill (7 games - 3 TDs) Patrick Mahomes (5 games - 3 TDs)
2018-19 2017-19 1980-93 2013-19 1967-79 2014-16 1966-70 1993-97 2013-15 2016-19 2017-19
Most Points, Game
18 18 18 14 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 11
Damien Williams vs. New England Damien Williams vs. Houston Travis Kelce vs. Houston Ryan Succop at Indianapolis Abner Haynes vs. Houston Mike Garrett at Buffalo Ed Podolak vs. Miami Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis Knile Davis at Indianapolis Cairo Santos at Houston Damien Williams vs. San Francisco Jan Stenerud vs. Minnesota
Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 1, 1967 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 9, 2016 Feb. 2, 2020 Jan. 11, 1970
Most Touchdowns, Career
10 6 3 3 3 3 3
Damien Williams (5 games) Travis Kelce (9 games) Marcus Allen (6 games) Mike Garrett (6 games) Knile Davis (3 games) Tyreek Hill (7 games) Patrick Mahomes (5 games)
2018-19 2013-19 1993-97 1966-70 2013-16 2016-19 2017-19
Most Touchdowns, Game
3 3 3 2
Damien Williams vs. New England Damien Williams vs. Houston Travis Kelce vs. Houston Abner Haynes vs. Houston
40
1967-79
Most Field Goals Attempted, Career
Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 12, 2020 Dec. 23, 1962
17 Jan Stenerud (5 games - 17 Att.) 12 Nick Lowery (8 games - 12 Att.)
1967-79 1980-93
Most Field Goals Attempted, Game
5 Jan Stenerud vs. N.Y. Jets 4 Nick Lowery vs. Miami 4 Jan Stenerud vs. Miami
Dec. 20, 1969 Jan. 5, 1991 Dec. 25, 1971
Most Field Goals, Career
9 Jan Stenerud (5 games - 17 Att.) 8 Nick Lowery (8 games - 12 Att.)
1967-79 1980-93
Most Field Goals, Game
3 3 3 3
Jan Stenerud vs. Minnesota Nick Lowery at Miami Ryan Succop at Indianapolis Cairo Santos at Houston
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
11, 1970 5, 1991 4, 2014 9, 2016
Longest Field Goal
49 49 48 48 43
Cairo Santos at Houston Cairo Santos at Houston Jan Stenerud vs. Minnesota Cairo Santos vs. Pittsburgh Ryan Succop at Indianapolis
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
9, 2016 9, 2016 11, 1970 15, 2017 4, 2014
Rushing Most Rushing Attempts, Career
100 81 61 59 51 41
Marcus Allen (6 games) Damien Williams (5 games) Mike Garrett (6 games) Barry Word (4 games) Wendell Hayes (5 games) Curtis McClinton (3 games)
1993-97 2018-19 1966-70 1990-92 1968-74 1962-69
Most Rushing Attempts, Game
33 25 24 24 22 21 21
Barry Word vs. L.A. Raiders Damien Williams vs. Indianapolis Curtis McClinton vs. Houston Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis Wendell Hayes vs. Miami Marcus Allen vs. Pittsburgh Marcus Allen vs. Indianapolis
Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 12, 2019 Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 11, 2004 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 7, 1996
Most Rushing Yards Gained, Career
386 Marcus Allen (6 games)
1993-97 @CHIEFS
355 208 197 186 176
Damien Williams (5 games) Wendell Hayes (5 games) Barry Word (4 games) Mike Garrett (6 games) Priest Holmes (1 game)
2018-19 1968-74 1990-92 1966-70 2001-07
Most Rushing Yards Gained, Game
176 130 129 104 100 94 85
Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis Barry Word vs. L.A. Raiders Damien Williams vs. Indianapolis Damien Williams vs. San Francisco Wendell Hayes vs. Miami Marcus Allen vs. Indianapolis Ed Podolak vs. Miami
Jan. 11, 2004 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 12, 2019 Feb. 2, 2020 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 7, 1996 Dec. 25, 1971
Most Games, 100 or More Rushing Yards, Career
2 1 1 1
Damien Williams (5 games) Wendell Hayes (5 games) Barry Word (3 games) Priest Holmes (1 game)
2018-19 1968-74 1990-92 2001-07
Longest Run From Scrimmage
48 41 38 36 33 32 27 26 26
Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis Jamaal Charles vs. Baltimore Damien Williams vs. San Francisco Tyreek Hill vs. Indianapolis Jack Spikes vs. Houston Ed Podolak vs. Miami Patrick Mahomes vs. Tennessee Christian Okoye at Miami Damien Williams vs. Houston
Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 9, 2011 Feb. 2, 2020 Jan. 12, 2019 Dec. 23, 1962 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 19, 2020 Jan. 5, 1991 Jan. 12, 2020
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Career
6 3 3 3
Damien Williams (5 games) Marcus Allen (6 games) Mike Garrett (6 games) Patrick Mahomes (5 games)
2018-19 1993-97 1966-70 2017-19
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Game
2 Mike Garrett at Buffalo 2 Priest Holmes vs. Indianpolis 2 Damien Williams vs. Houston
Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 12, 2020
Passing Most Passes Attempted, Career
188 185 184 141 64 54 53
Len Dawson (8 games) Alex Smith (5 games) Patrick Mahomes (5 games) Joe Montana (4 games) Dave Krieg (4 games) Trent Green (2 games) Steve DeBerg (3 games)
1962-75 2013-17 2017-19 1993-94 1992-93 2001-06 1988-91
Most Passes Attempted, Game
50 46 43 42 41 38 37 37
Alex Smith at New England Alex Smith at Indianapolis Joe Montana vs. Pittsburgh Patrick Mahomes vs. San Francisco Patrick Mahomes vs. Indianapolis Joe Montana at Houston Joe Montana at Miami Elvis Grbac vs. Denver
Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 8, 1994 Feb. 2, 2020 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 16, 1994 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 4, 1998
Most Passes Completed, Career
120 115 107 85 33 32 31
Alex Smith (5 games) Patrick Mahomes (5 games) Len Dawson (8 games) Joe Montana (4 games) Dave Krieg (4 games) Trent Green (2 games) Steve DeBerg (3 games)
Most Passes Completed, Game
41
2013-17 2017-19 1962-75 1993-94 1992-93 2001-06 1988-91
30 29 28 27 26 26 24 24
Alex Smith at Indianapolis Alex Smith at New England Joe Montana vs. Pittsburgh Patrick Mahomes vs. Indianapolis Joe Montana at Miami Patrick Mahomes vs. San Francisco Elvis Grbac vs. Denver Alex Smith vs. Tennessee
Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 12, 2019 Dec. 31, 1994 Feb. 2, 2020 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 6, 2018
Highest Completion Percentage, Career (100 attempts)
64.9 62.5 60.3 56.9
Alex Smith (5 games: 185-120) Patrick Mahomes (5 games: 184-115) Joe Montana (4 games: 141-85) Len Dawson (8 games: 188-107)
2013-17 2017-19 1993-94 1962-75
Highest Completion Percentage, Game (15 completions)
77.3 72.7 70.3 69.2
Alex Smith at Houston (22-17) Alex Smith vs. Tennessee (33-24) Joe Montana at Miami (37-26) Len Dawson vs. Miami (26-18)
Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 6, 2018 Dec. 31, 1994 Dec. 25, 1971
Most Passing Yards, Career
1,497 1,474 1,250 1,014 454
Len Dawson (8 games) Patrick Mahomes (5 games) Alex Smith (5 games) Joe Montana (4 games) Dave Krieg (4 games)
1962-75 2017-19 2013-17 1993-94 1992-93
Most Passing Yards, Game
378 314 321 299 295 294 286 278 276
Alex Smith at Indianapolis Joe Montana at Miami Patrick Mahomes vs. Houston Joe Montana at Houston Patrick Mahomes vs. New England Patrick Mahomes vs. Tennessee Patrick Mahomes vs. San Francisco Patrick Mahomes vs. Indianapolis Joe Montana vs. Pittsburgh
Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 19, 2020 Feb. 2, 2020 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 4, 1994
Longest Pass Completion
79 Alex Smith at Indianapolis (to Donnie Avery) 63 Len Dawson vs. Miami (to Elmo Wright) 63 Alex Smith at Indianapolis (to Dwayne Bowe) 61 Len Dawson at N.Y. Jets (to Otis Taylor) 60 Patrick Mahomes vs. Tennessee (to Sammy Watkins)
Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 20, 1969 Jan. 19, 2020
Most Touchdown Passes, Career
13 9 7 6 2 2 2
Patrick Mahomes (5 games) Alex Smith (5 games) Len Dawson (8 games) Joe Montana (4 games) Steve DeBerg (3 games) Dave Krieg (4 games) Trent Green (2 games)
2017-19 2013-17 1962-75 1993-94 1988-91 1992-93 2001-06
Most Touchdown Passes, Game
5 4 3 3 2 2 2 2
Patrick Mahomes vs. Houston Alex Smith at Indianapolis Joe Montana at Houston Patrick Mahomes vs. New England Len Dawson at Buffalo Joe Montana at Miami Alex Smith vs. Tennessee Patrick Mahomes vs. San Francisco
Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 1, 1967 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 6, 2018 Feb. 2, 2020
Most Passes Had Intercepted, Career
@CHIEFS
8 Len Dawson (8 games) 4 Mark Vlasic (1 game) 4 Joe Montana (4 games)
1962-75 1991-92 1993-94
Most Passes Had Intercepted, Game
4 Len Dawson at Oakland 4 Mark Vlasic at Buffalo
Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 5, 1992
Pass Receiving Travis Kelce (9 games) Tyreek Hill (7 games) Otis Taylor (7 games) J.J. Birden (8 games) Sammy Watkins (5 games) Damien Williams (5 games) Keith Cash (6 games) Kimble Anders (7 games)
2013-19 2017-19 1965-75 1990-94 2018-19 2018-19 1992-96 1991-00
Most Pass Receptions, Game
10 9 8 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7
Travis Kelce vs. Houston Tyreek Hill vs. San Francisco Ed Podolak vs. Miami Stephone Paige at Miami Andre Rison vs. Denver Dwayne Bowe at Indianapolis Travis Kelce at Houston Tyreek Hill vs. Indianapolis Keith Cash vs. Pittsburgh Kimble Anders vs. Indianapolis Dexter McCluster at Indianapolis Knile Davis at Indianapolis Tyreek Hill vs. Tennessee Travis Kelce vs. Indianapolis Sammy Watkins vs. Tennessee
Jan. 12, 2020 Feb. 2, 2020 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 5, 1991 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 7, 1996 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 6, 2018 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 19, 2020
Most Receiving Yards, Career
632 487 441 481 363 266 239
Travis Kelce (9 games) Sammy Watkins (5 games) Tyreek Hill (7 games) Otis Taylor (7 games) J.J. Birden (8 games) Keith Cash (6 games) Willie Davis (5 games)
2013-19 2018-19 2016-19 1965-75 1990-94 1992-96 1991-95
Most Receiving Yards, Game (All 100+)
150 142 134 128 117 114 114 110 110 108 105 104 103
Dwayne Bowe at Indianapolis Stephone Paige at Miami Travis Kelce vs. Houston Travis Kelce at Houston Otis Taylor at Oakland Sammy Watkins vs. New England Sammy Watkins vs. Tennessee Ed Podolak vs. Miami Andre Rison vs. Denver Travis Kelce vs. Indianapolis Tyreek Hill vs. San Francisco Elmo Wright vs. Miami Kimble Anders at Miami
Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 5, 1991 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 9, 2016 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 19, 2020 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 12, 2019 Feb. 2, 2020 Dec. 25, 1971 Dec. 31, 1994
Most Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, Career
3 Travis Kelce (7 games) 2 Sammy Watkins (4 games) 1 By nine players; Last, Tyreek Hill vs. San Francisco
2013-19 2018-19 Feb. 2, 2020
Longest Pass Reception
79 Donnie Avery at Indianapolis (from Alex Smith) 63 Elmo Wright vs. Miami
42
Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 20, 1969 Jan. 19, 2020
Most Receiving Touchdowns, Career
Most Pass Receptions, Career
52 37 27 27 25 22 21 19
(from Len Dawson) 63 Dwayne Bowe at Indianapolis (from Alex Smith) 61 Otis Taylor at N.Y. Jets (from Len Dawson) 60 Sammy Watkins vs. Tennessee (from Patrick Mahomes) 6 4 2 2 2 2 2 2
Travis Kelce (9 games) Damien Williams (5 games) Otis Taylor (7 games) Fred Jones (3 games) J.J. Birden (8 games) Tony Gonzalez (3 games) Albert Wilson (3 games) Tyreek Hill (6 games)
2013-19 2018-19 1965-75 1990-93 1990-94 1997-08 2014-16 2016-19
Most Receiving Touchdowns, Game
3 2 2 1
Travis Kelce vs. Houston Damien Williams vs. New England Tyreek Hill vs. Tennessee Numerous times; Last, Damien Williams & Travis Kelce vs. San Francisco
Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 19, 2020 Feb. 2, 2020
Combined Net Yards Most Attempts, Career
147 102 88 63
Marcus Allen (6 games) Damien Williams (5 games) Mike Garrett (6 games) Wendell Hayes (5 games)
1993-97 2018-19 1966-70 1968-74
Most Attempts, Game
34 30 30 29
Barry Word vs. L.A. Raiders Ed Podolak vs. Miami Damien Williams vs. Indianapolis Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis
Dec. 28, 1991 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 11, 2004
Most Net Yards, Career
634 541 540 520 499 481 363 350
Travis Kelce (9 games) Marcus Allen (6 games) Damien Williams (5 games) Tyreek Hill (7 games) Sammy Watkins (5 games) Otis Taylor (7 games) J.J. Birden (8 games) Ed Podolak (4 games)
2013-19 1993-97 2018-19 2016-19 2018-19 1965-75 1990-94 1969-77
Most Net Yards, Game
*350 227 208 154 150 142
Ed Podolak vs. Miami Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis Damien Williams vs. Indianapolis Dwayne Bowe at Indianapolis Stephone Paige at Miami
Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 5, 1991 *NFL RECORD
Punting Most Punts, Career
43 39 38 11
Dustin Colquitt (12 games) Jerrel Wilson (7 games) Bryan Barker (7 games) Louie Aguiar (3 games)
2005-19 1963-77 1990-93 1994-98
Most Punts, Game
8 Jerrel Wilson at Oakland 8 Bryan Barker at San Diego
Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 2, 1993
Longest Punt
Jan. 4, 2014
66 Dustin Colquitt at Indianapolis 62 Louie Aguiar vs. Denver
Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 4, 1998
@CHIEFS
61 59 56 56
Jerrel Wilson vs. Green Bay Jerrel Wilson vs. Minnesota Jerrel Wilson at Oakland Dustin Colquitt vs. Houston
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
15, 1967 11, 1970 4, 1970 9, 2016
Highest Punting Average, Career (20 punts)
44.8 Dustin Colquitt (12 games: 1,938-43) 43.4 Jerrel Wilson (7 games: 1,693-39) 42.4 Bryan Barker (7 games: 1,613-38)
2005-19 1963-77 1990-93
5 John Stephens at Buffalo
Jan. 23, 1994
Most Kickoff Return Yards, Career
286 266 199 196 187 154
Mecole Hardman (3 games) Dante Hall (2 games) John Stephens (3 games) Knile Davis (3 games) Quintin Demps (1 game) Ed Podolak (1 game)
2019 2000-06 1993 2013-15 2013 1969-77
Highest Punting Average, Game (4 punts)
Most Kickoff Return Yards, Game
52.3 50.0 48.5 47.0 46.4
208 187 154 142 106 99 90
Dustin Colquitt at IND (314-6) Dustin Colquitt vs. Tennessee (250-5) Jerrel Wilson vs. Minnesota (194-4) Jerrel Wilson at Oakland (302-6) Louie Aguiar vs. Denver (232-5)
Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 6, 2018 Jan. 11, 1970 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 4, 1998
Punt Returns 1966-70 2016-19 1993-98
Most Punt Returns, Game
5 4 4 4
Tyreek Hill vs. Indianapolis Mike Garrett vs. Oakland Tamarick Vanover vs. Indianapolis Frankie Hammond Jr. at Houston
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
12, 2019 4, 1970 7, 1996 9, 2016
Most Punt Return Yards, Career
84 73 61 44
Danan Hughes (6 games) Mike Garrett (6 games) Frankie Hammond Jr. (2 games) Tamarick Vanover (2 games)
1993-98 1966-70 2015 1995-99
Most Punt Return Yards, Game
42 37 34 34 31
Danan Hughes at Houston Mike Garrett at Buffalo Tamarick Vanover vs. Indianapolis Frankie Hammond Jr. at Houston Danan Hughes vs. Pittsburgh
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
16, 1994 1, 1967 7, 1996 9, 2016 8, 1994
Longest Punt Return
35 Danan Hughes at Houston 27 Mike Garrett at Buffalo 15 Danan Hughes vs. Pittsburgh
Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 8, 1994
106 (TD) Knile Davis at Houston 92 (TD) Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis 78 Ed Podolak vs. Miami 58 Mecole Hardman vs. Houston 46 Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis 36 Dexter McCluster vs. Baltimore 35 Bert Coan at Buffalo
6.6 Mike Garrett (6 games: 11-73)
26.6 Dante Hall (2 games: 10-266) 22.0 Mecole Hardman (3 games: 13-286) 19.9 John Stephens (3 games: 10-199)
14.0 Danan Hughes at Houston (3-42) 12.3 Mike Garrett at Buffalo (3-37) 10.3 Danan Hughes vs. Pittsburgh (3-31)
Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 8, 1994
Most Touchdowns
0
2000-06 2019 1993
Highest Kickoff Return Average, Game (3 returns)
51.3 30.0 29.7 26.7 24.8 24.0 23.7 23.0
Ed Podolak vs. Miami (3-154) Knile Davis at New England (3-90) Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis (7-208) Quintin Demps at Indianapolis (7-187) Tremon Smith vs. New England (4-99) John Stephens vs. Pittsburgh (3-72) Mecole Hardman vs. Houston (6-142) Tamarick Vanover vs. Denver (3-69)
Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 4, 1998
Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Career
1 Dante Hall (2 games) 1 Knile Davis (2 games)
2000-06 2013-15
Interceptions By
1966-70
Highest Punt Return Average, Game (3 returns)
Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 11, 2004 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 9, 2011 Jan. 1, 1967
Highest Kickoff Return Average, Career (10 returns)
Highest Punt Return Average, Career (10 returns)
Most Interceptions, Career
5 4 3 3
Emmitt Thomas (7 games) Johnny Robinson (8 games) Jim Marsalis (4 games) Deron Cherry (4 games)
1966-78 1960-71 1969-75 1981-91
Most Interceptions, Game
Kickoff Returns Most Kickoff Returns, Career
13 10 10 7 6 5 5 5 5
Mecole Hardman (3 games) John Stephens (3 games) Dante Hall (2 games) Quintin Demps (1 game) Tremon Smith (2 games) Bert Coan (2 games) Noland Smith (1 game) Tamarick Vanover (2 games) Tyreek Hill (5 games)
2019 1993 2000-06 2013 2018 1963-68 1967-69 1995-99 2016-19
Most Kickoff Returns, Game
7 7 6 5
Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 16, 2016
Longest Kickoff Return
Most Punt Returns, Career
11 Mike Garrett (6 games) 9 Tyreek Hill (7 games) 7 Danan Hughes (6 games)
Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis Quintin Demps at Indianapolis Ed Podolak vs. Miami Mecole Hardman vs. Houston Knile Davis at Houston Tremon Smith vs. New England Knile Davis at New England
Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis Quintin Demps at Indianapolis Mecole Hardman vs. Houston Noland Smith vs. Oakland
43
Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 12, 2020 Dec. 22, 1968
2 2 2 2 2 2
Johnny Robinson vs. Houston Jim Marsalis at N.Y. Jets Emmitt Thomas at Oakland Deron Cherry vs. L.A. Raiders Ty Law at Indianapolis Husain Abdullah at Indianapolis
Dec. 23, 1962 Dec. 20, 1969 Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 4, 2014
Most Consecutive Games, Interceptions
3 Emmitt Thomas
1969
Most Interception Return Yards, Career
131 Johnny Robinson (8 games) 101 Emmitt Thomas (7 games) 65 Jim Marsalis (4 games)
1960-71 1966-78 1969-75
Most Interception Return Yards, Game
72 Johnny Robinson at Buffalo 69 Emmitt Thomas vs. Oakland 50 Johnny Robinson vs. Houston
Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 23, 1962
Longest Interception Return
@CHIEFS
72 62 43 37
Johnny Robinson at Buffalo Emmitt Thomas at Oakland Ty Law at Indianapolis Johnny Robinson vs. Houston
Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 6, 2007 Dec. 23, 1962
6.5 5.0 5.0 4.0
Neil Smith (9 games) Aaron Brown (6 games) Frank Clark (3 games) Justin Houston (7 games)
Most TDs, Career
Most Sacks, Game
0 0
3 Aaron Brown at Oakland 3 Frank Clark vs. Houston 2 Nine times; By eight players Last: Justin Houston vs. Indianapolis
Sacks Most Sacks, Career
6.5 Derrick Thomas (10 games)
44
1988-96 1966-72 2019 2011-18 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 12, 2019
1989-99
@CHIEFS
Most Rushing Attempts, Game
Scoring Most Points, Game
51 44 35 31 31 31 31 31 30 28
vs. Houston at Indianapolis vs. Tennessee at Buffalo vs. Indianapolis vs. Indianapolis vs. New England vs. San Francisco at Houston at Houston
Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 19, 2020 Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 20, 2019 Feb. 2, 2020 Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 16, 1994
Most Touchdowns, Game
7 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3
vs. Houston at Indianapolis vs. Tennessee at Buffalo at Houston vs. Indianapolis vs. Indianapolis vs. New England vs. San Francisco Four times; Last, vs. Tennessee
Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 19, 2020 Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 20, 2019 Feb. 2, 2020 Jan. 6, 2018
First Downs at Indianapolis vs. Indianapolis vs. Houston vs. Pittsburgh at New England vs. Tennessee vs. San Francisco at Miami vs. Indianapolis vs. Miami
Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 19, 2020 Feb. 2, 2020 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004 Dec. 25, 1971
Fewest First Downs, Game
7 8 13 13 14
at Indianapolis vs. Baltimore at Oakland at Oakland Three times; Last, at Buffalo
Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 9, 2011 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 5, 1992
Net Yards Rushing and Passing Most Net Yards, Game
513 451 434 433 414 408 404 401
at Indianapolis vs. Miami vs. Houston vs. Indianapolis at Miami vs. Indianapolis vs. Tennessee vs. Pittsburgh
Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 12, 2019 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 19, 2020 Jan. 8, 1994
Fewest Net Yards, Game
126 161 204 207 213
at Indianapolis vs. Baltimore vs. L.A. Raiders at Oakland at Buffalo
Rushing 45
Dec. 23, 1962 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 1970
Fewest Rushing Attempts, Game
12 14 16 17 18 19 19
vs. New England vs. Pittsburgh vs. Tennessee at Indianapolis at Houston vs. Green Bay at San Diego
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
20, 2019 15, 2017 6, 2018 6, 2007 16, 1994 15, 1967 2, 1993
Most Rushing Yards, Game
213 199 196 180 151 150
vs. Miami vs. Houston vs. Indianapolis vs. Indianapolis vs. Minnesota at Indianapolis
Dec. 25, 1971 Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 11, 1970 Jan. 4, 2014
Fewest Rushing Yards, Game
41 44 52 61 61 67
vs. New England at Indianapolis at Buffalo at San Diego vs. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Jets
Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 2, 1993 Jan. 15, 2017 Dec. 28, 1968
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Game
Most First Downs, Game
30 29 29 28 27 27 26 24 24 23
54 vs. Houston 44 vs. Miami 41 vs. Minnesota
Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 9, 2011 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 5, 1992
4 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
vs. Indianapolis at Buffalo at Oakland vs. Miami vs. Indianapolis vs. Houston vs. Tennessee vs. San Francisco
Jan. 12, 2019 Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 19, 2020 Feb. 2, 2020
Passing Most Passing Attempts, Game
52 50 46 44 42 41 37 37
at Buffalo at New England at Indianapolis vs. Pittsburgh vs. San Francisco vs. Indianapolis at Miami vs. Denver
Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 8, 1994 Feb. 2, 2020 Jan. 12, 2019 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 4, 1998
Fewest Passing Attempts, Game
14 14 17 17
vs. Houston vs. L.A. Raiders at Oakland vs. Minnesota
Dec. 23, 1962 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 11, 1970
Most Completions, Game
30 29 29 27 26 26 25
at Indianapolis vs. Pittsburgh at New England vs. Indianapolis at Miami vs. San Francisco at Buffalo
Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 12, 2019 Dec. 31, 1994 Feb. 2, 2020 Jan. 23, 1994
Fewest Completions, Game
7 9 9 9
at Oakland vs. Houston vs. L.A. Raiders vs. Baltimore
Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 23, 1962 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 9, 2011
Most Gross Passing Yards, Game
@CHIEFS
378 323 321 314 299 299
at Indianapolis at Buffalo vs. Houston at Miami at Houston vs. Pittsburgh
Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 12, 2020 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 8, 1994
Fewest Gross Passing Yards, Game
70 88 79 107
vs. Baltimore vs. Houston vs. L.A. Raiders at Indianapolis
Jan. 9, 2011 Dec. 23, 1962 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 6, 2007
Most Times Sacked, Game
9 7 6 6
at Buffalo at San Diego vs. Houston vs. Green Bay
Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 2, 1993 Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 15, 1967
Most Passing Touchdowns, Game
5 4 3 3 2
vs. Houston at Indianapolis at Houston vs. Tennessee Five times; Last vs. San Francisco
Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 19, 2020 Feb. 2, 2020
Most Interceptions Thrown, Game
4 4 3 3
at Oakland at Buffalo vs. Indianapolis vs. Baltimore
Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 7, 1996 Jan. 9, 2011
Interceptions By vs. Houston at Oakland vs. L.A. Raiders at Houston
Penalties
at Buffalo vs. Tennessee vs. Tennessee Three times; Last vs. Denver
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
5, 1992 19, 2020 6, 2018 4, 1998
Fewest Penalties, Game
1 2 2 3
at N.Y. Jets at Indianapolis at Indianapolis Twice; Last vs. Indianapolis
Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 7, 1996
Most Yards Penalized, Game
68 65 63 62
vs. Tennessee vs. Denver at N.Y. Jets at San Diego
Jan. 6, 2018 Jan. 4, 1998 Dec. 20, 1969 Jan. 2, 1993
Fewest Yards Penalized, Game
5 13 15 15 20
at N.Y. Jets at Indianapolis at Miami at Indianapolis vs. L.A. Raiders
Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 6, 2007 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 28, 1991
Fumbles Most Fumbles, Game
5 at Oakland 3 Four times; Last, vs. Indianapolis
Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 12, 2019
Most Fumbles Lost, Game
4 at Oakland 2 vs. Miami 2 vs. Baltimore
Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 9, 2011
Most Turnovers, Game
Most Interceptions By, Game
5 4 4 4
10 9 8 7
Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 9, 2016
5 4 4 4 4 4
vs. Baltimore at Oakland at Oakland vs. Miami at Buffalo vs. Indianapolis
Jan. 9, 2011 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 7, 1996
Most Penalties, Game
46
@CHIEFS
Scoring Fewest Points Allowed, Game
0 at Houston 6 at N.Y. Jets 6 vs. L.A. Raiders
Jan. 9, 2016 Dec. 20, 1969 Dec. 28, 1991
Most Points Allowed, Game
45 41 38 37 37 35 35
at Indianapolis at Oakland vs. Indianapolis at Buffalo vs. New England (OT) vs. Green Bay at N.Y. Jets
Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 15, 1967 Dec. 28, 1986
Fewest Touchdowns Allowed, Game
0 0 0 0
at N.Y. Jets vs. L.A. Raiders at Houston vs. Pittsburgh at Indianapolis vs. Green Bay at Oakland at N.Y. Jets vs. Indianapolis vs. New England
Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 15, 1967 Dec. 22, 1968 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 20, 2019
First Downs at Buffalo vs. Minnesota at Houston vs. Indianapolis Three times; Last vs. Denver
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
1, 1967 11, 1970 9, 2016 12, 2019 4, 1998
Most First Downs Allowed, Game
36 30 29 28 28 27
vs. New England at Buffalo at Buffalo at Indianapolis at Indianapolis vs. Indianapolis
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
20, 2019 23, 1994 5, 1992 6, 2007 4, 2014 11, 2004
Net Yards Rushing and Passing Fewest Net Yards Allowed, Game
226 233 235 239 249
at Houston at Oakland at N.Y. Jets vs. Minnesota vs. Indianapolis
Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 20, 1969 Jan. 11, 1970 Jan. 7, 1996
Most Net Yards Allowed, Game
536 524 454 448 442 435 434
at Indianapolis vs. New England at Oakland at Buffalo vs. Houston at Indianapolis vs. Indianapolis
Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 20, 2019 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 11, 2004
Rushing
47
16, 2016 12, 2019 11, 1970 4, 2014
Most Rushing Attempts, Game
48 46 46 43
vs. New England at Buffalo at Buffalo vs. Miami
Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 23, 1994 Dec. 25, 1971
Fewest Rushing Yards Allowed, Game
38 39 40 67
at New England at Houston at Buffalo vs. Minnesota
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
16, 2016 16, 1994 1, 1967 11, 1970
229 202 192 188 180
at Buffalo vs. Tennessee at San Diego at Indianapolis at Buffalo
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
23, 1994 6, 2018 2, 1993 6, 2007 5, 1992
Most Rushing Touchdowns Allowed, Game
4 3 3 2
vs. New England vs. Green Bay at Buffalo Four times; Last, vs. Indianapolis
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
20, 15, 23, 11,
2019 1967 1994 2004
Passing 19 23 23 23
vs. Denver at N.Y. Jets vs. L.A. Raiders at San Diego
Jan. 4, 1998 Dec. 28, 1986 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 2, 1993
Most Passing Attempts Allowed, Game
52 46 46 45 45 43 42 42
vs. Houston vs. Houston vs. New England at Oakland at Indianapolis at Houston at New England vs. Pittsburgh
Jan. 12, 2020 Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 16, 1994
Fewest Completions Allowed, Game
10 12 12 12
vs. Denver at Buffalo vs. L.A. Raiders vs. Indianapolis
Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 1, 1967 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 7, 1996
Most Completions Allowed, Game
32 31 31 30 29 28 25
at Houston at Indianapolis vs. Houston vs. New England at Indianapolis at New England vs. Baltimore
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
16, 1994 6, 2007 12, 2020 20, 2019 4, 2014 16, 2016 9, 2011
Fewest Gross Passing Yards Allowed, Game
112 136 140 153 160
vs. Indianapolis at Houston vs. L.A. Raiders at N.Y. Jets at Buffalo
Jan. 7, 1996 Jan. 9, 2016 Dec. 28, 1991 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 23, 1994
Most Passing Yards Allowed, Game
Fewest Rushing Attempts, Game
13 at Buffalo 14 at Houston
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
Fewest Passing Attempts Allowed, Game
Fewest First Downs Allowed, Game
9 13 14 15 16
at New England vs. Indianapolis vs. Minnesota at Indianapolis
Most Rushing Yards Allowed, Game
Dec. 20, 1969 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 15, 2017
Most Touchdowns Allowed, Game
6 5 5 5 5 5
14 14 19 19
Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 16, 1994
443 388 348 347
at Indianapolis vs. Houston vs. New England at Oakland
Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 20, 2019 Dec. 22, 1968 @CHIEFS
306 at Houston 304 vs. Indianapolis 302 at New England
Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 16, 2016
Most Passing Touchdowns Allowed, Game
5 at Oakland 4 at Indianapolis 3 Fourtimes; Last, vs. Indianapolis
Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 11, 2004
Sacks Most Sacks, Game
9 at Houston 5 at San Diego
48
Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 2, 1993
5 4 4 4
vs. Houston at Oakland at Buffalo vs. Baltimore
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
12, 2020 4, 1970 1, 1967 9, 2011
Interceptions Most Interceptions By, Game
5 4 4 4
vs. Houston at Oakland vs. L.A. Raiders at Houston
Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 9, 2016
@CHIEFS
Touchdown Passes
Single Game Total Points
18 18 18 15 14
Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland Thurman Thomas, Buffalo Chris Boswell, Pittsburgh Scott Norwood, Buffalo Steve Christie. Buffalo
Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 15, 2017 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 23, 1994
Total Touchdowns
3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland Thurman Thomas, Buffalo Max McGee, Green Bay Elijah Pitts, Green Bay Warren Wells, Oakland Freeman McNeil, N.Y. Jets Andre Reed, Buffalo Terrell Davis, Denver Edgerrin James, Indianapolis T.Y. Hilton, Indianapolis Donald Brown, Indianapolis Rob Gronkowski, New England Rex Burkhead, New England Sony Michel, New England
Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 15, 1967 Jan. 15, 1967 Dec. 22, 1968 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 20, 2019
Field Goals
6 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
Chris Boswell, Pittsburgh Scott Norwood, Buffalo Steve Christie, Buffalo Adam Vinatieri, Indianapolis Billy Cundiff, Baltimore George Blanda, Oakland Jim Turner, N.Y. Jets Garo Yepremiam, Miami Jeff Jaeger, L.A. Raiders Al Del Greco, Houston Pete Stoyanovich, Miami Stephen Gostkowski, New England Robbie Gould, San Francisco
Jan. 15, 2017 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 9, 2011 Dec. 22, 1968 Dec. 20, 1969 Dec. 25, 1971 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 16, 1994 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 16, 2016 Feb. 2, 2020
Deshaun Watson, Houston George Blanda, Houston Tom Brady, New England Andrew Luck, Indianapolis Warren Moon, Houston Neil Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Donnell, Pittsburgh Tom Brady, New England Joe Namath, N.Y. Jets
Jan. 12, 2020 Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 16, 2016 Dec. 20, 1969
Pass Completions
32 31 31 30 29 28 25
Warren Moon, Houston Peyton Manning, Indianapolis Deshaun Watson, Houston Tom Brady, New England Andrew Luck, Indianapolis Tom Brady, New England Joe Flacco, Baltimore
Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.
16, 1994 6, 2007 12, 2020 20, 2019 4, 2014 16, 2016 9, 2011
Passing Yards (All 300+)
443 388 348 345 306 304 302
Andrew Luck, Indianapolis Deshaun Watson, Houston Tom Brady, New England Daryle Lamonica, Oakland Warren Moon, Houston Peyton Manning, Indianapolis Tom Brady, New England
Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 20, 2019 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 16, 2016
49
Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004
Interceptions Thrown
5 4 4 3 3 3 3 3
George Blanda, Houston Todd Marinovich, L.A. Raiders Brian Hoyer, Houston Joe Namath, N.Y. Jets Daryle Lamonica, Oakland Jim Kelly, Buffalo Peyton Manning, Indianapolis Andrew Luck, Indianapolis
Dec. 23, 1962 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 9, 2016 Dec. 20, 1969 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 4, 2014
Rushing Attempts
33 31 30 29 26 25 25 25
Thurman Thomas, Buffalo Freeman McNeil, N.Y. Jets Le'Veon Bell, Pittsburgh Sony Michel, New England Edgerrin James, Indianapolis Leroy Thompson, Pittsburgh Terrell Davis, Denver Joseph Addai, Indianapolis
Jan. 23, 1994 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 15, 2017 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 8,1993 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 6, 2007
Rushing Yards (All 100+)
186 170 156 135 125 122 119 113 107 101 100
Thurman Thomas, Buffalo Le'Veon Bell, Pittsburgh Derrick Henry, Tennessee Freeman McNeil, N.Y. Jets Edgerrin James, Indianapolis Joseph Addai, Indianapolis Marion Butts, San Diego Sony Michel, New England Nick Bell, L.A. Raiders Terrell Davis, Denver Thurman Thomas, Buffalo
Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 15, 2017 Jan. 6, 2018 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 2, 1993 Jan. 20, 2019 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 5, 1992
3 2 2 2 2 2 2
Thurman Thomas, Buffalo Elijah Pitts, Green Bay Freeman McNeil, N.Y. Jets Terrell Davis, Denver Edgerrin James, Indianapolis Rex Burkhead, New England Sony Michel, New England
Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 15, 1967 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 20, 2019 Jan. 20, 2019
Long Run
54 Marion Butts, San Diego
Jan. 2, 1993
Pass Receptions
13 10 10 9 9 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7
T.Y. Hilton, Indianapolis Todd Heap, Baltimore Julian Edelman, New England Haywood Jeffires, Houston Dallas Clark, Indianapolis Charles Smith, Oakland Max McGee, Green Bay Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland John Henderson, Minnesota Paul Warfield, Miami Jeff Graham, Pittsburgh Joseph Addai, Indianapolis Rob Gronkowski, New England Julian Edelman, New England
Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 9, 2011 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 15, 1967 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 1, 1970 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 20, 2019
Receiving Yards (All 100+)
Long Pass
69 Jack Kemp to Elbert Dubenion, Buffalo
Daryle Lamonica, Oakland Andrew Luck, Indianapolis Pat Ryan, N.Y. Jets Jim Kelly, Buffalo Neil O'Donnell, Pittsburgh Peyton Manning, Indianapolis
Rushing Touchdowns
Pass Attempts (All 40+)
52 46 46 45 43 42 42 40
5 4 3 3 3 3
Jan. 1, 1967
224 T.Y. Hilton, Indianapolis 180 Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland
Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 22, 1968 @CHIEFS
140 138 127 118 111 108 108 103 100 100
Paul Warfield, Miami Max McGee, Green Bay Bobby Burnett, Buffalo DeAndre Hopkins, Houston John Henderson, Minnesota Todd Heap, Baltimore Antonio Brown, Pittsburgh Dallas Clark, Indianapolis Andre Reed, Buffalo Julian Edelman, New England
Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 15, 1967 Jan. 11, 1967 Jan. 12, 2020 Jan. 11, 1970 Jan. 9, 2011 Jan. 15, 2017 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 16, 2016
Touchdown Receptions
3 2 2 2 2 2
Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland Max McGee, Green Bay Warren Wells, Oakland Andre Reed, Buffalo T.Y. Hilton, Indianapolis Rob Gronkowski, New England
50
Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 15, 1967 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 2016
Interceptions Made
2 Kirby Jackson, Buffalo
Jan. 5, 1992
Long Interception Return
50 Willie Wood, Green Bay
Jan. 15, 1967
Long Punt Return
26 Russell Copeland, Buffalo
Jan. 23, 1994
Long Kickoff Return
52 George Atkinson, Oakland
Jan. 4, 1970
Long Punt
64 Reggie Roby, Miami
Jan. 5, 1991
Long Field Goal (All 50+)
58 Pete Stoyanovich, Miami 50 Adam Vinatieri, Indianapolis
Jan. 5, 1991 Jan. 6, 2007
Sacks
3 Gerald Williams, Pittsburgh 3 Whitney Mercilus, Houston
Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 9, 2016
@CHIEFS
TEAM 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
‘Like it’s a dream’: Kansas City goes wild as Chiefs close out Super Bowl victory (2) Chiefs Super Bowl Parade: Thousands brave the cold to fight for their right to party (6) The Chiefs want to turn Arrowhead Stadium into a voting location this November (14) The Chiefs’ plan to keep their Super Bowl team together was three years in the making (16) Why the Chiefs had no problem re-signing their top players (19) Chiefs players, coaches speak out on shooting of Jacob Blake. Here’s what they’ve said (22) From top down, Chiefs pushing for social justice initiatives (25)
EXECUTIVES/Coaches 1. 2. 3.
Chiefs GM Brett Veach Strengthens Dynasty Talk with Fantastic Offseason (27) ‘I’m into peace’: Andy Reid seeks unity; Chiefs president discusses many topics (30) Chiefs’ Clark Hunt describes the Super Bowl LIV championship ring in detail: ‘It’s big’ (35)
PLAYERS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16.
Chiefs' DT Derrick Nnadi is Making a Difference One Dog at a Time (37) Chiefs receiver Tyreek Hill surprises KC frontline healthcare workers with free meals (39) Chiefs stars Patrick Mahomes, Tyrann Mathieu vow to head up voter-registration effort (41) ‘Enough is enough.’ Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes said he will use his platform to speak out (43) ‘America needs you, Mom’: KC Chiefs defensive end Alex Okafor speaks out for justice (45) Why Chiefs star Frank Clark made special trips to feed the homeless on skid row (48) Frank Clark to Pay Funeral Costs for Local Four-Year-Old Shooting Victim (50) Mahomes’ new deal is a record, and the Chiefs have been right about him at every step (51) Patrick Mahomes' Contract Extension Hits Chiefs' Fans Differently, and Here's Why (54) ‘A watershed moment’: The meaning behind Patrick Mahomes’ Royals ownership (57) Chris Jones plans to collect sacks, rings after 4-year deal with the Chiefs (60) Chiefs star Mahomes having 2020 nobody will soon forget (63) An Extension In -Hand, Travis Kelce Continues Path to All-Time Greatness in KC (65) Travis Kelce’s four-year extension with Chiefs lengthens bond with Pat Mahomes (67) Chiefs’ Kelce to launch STEM project for underserved children (70) Why Chiefs rookie Clyde Edwards-Helaire is worth the hype (72)
1
(Team) ‘Like it’s a dream’: Kansas City goes wild as Chiefs close out Super Bowl victory Luke Nozicka, Steve Vockrodt, Kaitlyn Schwers and Joyce Smith February 2, 2020 KC Star With less than two minutes left in the game, the crowd erupted in the Power & Light District in downtown Kansas City as the referee said over the large television: “The goal on the field stands.” The touchdown, confirmed by the official at Super Bowl LIV in Miami Gardens, Florida, put the Kansas City Chiefs ahead. Fans screamed. There was jumping, hugging and crying. Red and white fireworks lit downtown. “It feels like it’s a dream,” Seth Runyan, 25, said after he cried. “This is unbelievable.” Thousands of fans cheered as the Chiefs closed in on a 31-20 victory over the San Francisco 49ers at Hard Rock Stadium. Returning to the Super Bowl for the first time in 50 years, the Chiefs had won it. “Kansas City is together as one,” said Madison Rae, 25, one of the hundreds of people gathered along Grand Boulevard who couldn’t get into Power & Light, minutes before the game ended. “Ready to prove the naysayers wrong.” Confetti flew into the crowd. “We Are The Champions” blasted over speakers. Many fans said they waited their entire lives for this moment. “It feels like we’re in shock,” said Sam Fink of Amsterdam, Missouri. “Like, is it real?” The three stages of a Super Bowl comeback were grief, bargaining and then, exuberance. “Always bet on red, baby,” Adrienne Lewis said as she slapped the table after the Chiefs recaptured the lead late and looked to seal victory. “Always bet on red.” The celebration stood in marked contrast to moments on edge early in the fo urth quarter. Things had been looking grim. After quarterback Patrick Mahomes threw his second interception during a Kansas City drive in the fourth quarter, the foreheads of fans had sunk into their hands throughout Kelly’s Westport Inn. “We are giving the 49ers too much respect,” Tanisha Wesley said then. “We aren’t playing our game.”
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A nervous feeling took over after the 49ers got the ball back early in the fourth quarter ahead by 10, nullifying the excitement building as Mahomes made a few key plays. Ch iefs devotees were scared, afraid to see another year of getting so close, but not finishing. At Johnny’s Tavern in Shawnee, fan Dave Shockey, 62, said he was feeling the pressure after the 49ers took the lead. Regardless, he believed Sunday’s game wouldn’t be the last time fans will see the Chiefs in the Super Bowl. “Win or lose, it’s just a game,” he said. That kind of talk evaporated as the Chiefs took the lead again and won. “My heart is beating so fast right now,” said Mohamed Elsaid, 36, a fan who dro ve from Springfield, Missouri, to Kansas City to watch the game. He screamed as the clock ran down with the Chiefs ahead. It was, he said, a “life-changing event.” The parade for the Kansas City Chiefs’ victory is set for 11:30 a.m. Wednesday. BUILDING ANTICIPATION Hours before kickoff Sunday morning, fans had lined up along nearby businesses to get into the Power & Light District. Many said they believed the Chiefs would win. “Woah, we’re half way there,” fans sang, shouting the lyrics to the Bon Jovi tune. “Woah, livin’ on a prayer.” Near the front of the stage was Ania Bernacik, who waved her hands in the air while sitting on the shoulders of another Chiefs devotee. The city’s Marching Cobras drill team pumped up the crowd. A beach ball was passed around. Before the game in Westport, Kyle Kelly, co-owner of Kelly’s Westport Inn, said it would be “bedlam” there if the Chiefs beat the 49ers. “We are hoping it will be,” he said. Kelly would know. He worked in Westport when the Kansas City Royals won the World Series in 1985 and again in 2015. “It’s such a unifying factor,” Kelly said of Kansas City’s sports teams. “You meet a stranger, you start talking about football. It just breaks down barriers.” In front of Harpo’s, the Heatley family gathered ahead of the big game. Devoted Chiefs f ans in their own right — the family dog, a German Shepherd, was named Chief. Grace Heatley, who said she wasn’t a huge football fan, was swept up enough by the Chiefs postseason run that she boarded a train from St. Louis, where she lives, to take in the Super Bowl with her family. “There’s nowhere I’d rather be this weekend than Kansas City,” she said, “even if it means a five-hour train ride.”
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Her brother, Matt Heatley, perhaps the biggest Chiefs fan in his family, gave his favorite team a 50-50 chance of winning. But his father Mark Heatley put the chances of a Chiefs victory at 70%. The difference? Mahomes. “We have the best football player in the NFL,” Heatley said. “Hands down.” For Jeff Dayton and Carol Nielsen, a couple who have been together since 1 984, the Super Bowl took on a greater meaning, and not just because the Chiefs were in it. A friend, a devoted Chiefs fan for 45 years, died about a month ago. Their friend seemed healthy, but a cancer diagnosis advanced quickly, they said. They’ve taken in the Chiefs postseason run with their friend in mind. “We are so thrilled,” Nielsen said. “If anyone would have gone to heaven, it would have been him.” Dayton and Nielsen were gathered in a corner at Kelly’s, where most tables were occupied half an hour before kickoff. Both were counting on a Chiefs victory. And Dayton thought a close game was in the offing. “(The Chiefs) have the ability to blow it wide open,” he said. “But I don’t know that will happen.” Nielsen hoped the Chiefs would take the Vince Lombardi Trophy decisively. “I’m too old to go through a close game,” she said. ‘THE ELECTRICITY, THE ENERGY’ Kansas City City Council members representing the third, fourth and fifth districts organized a watch party for residents to enjoy the game at the Southeast Community Center in Swope Park, projecting the game onto a wall in a gymnasium. Among those who came: Faye Jacobs, who was attending her first Sup er Bowl watch party since she was released from prison in Arkansas. Jacobs, 44, spent 26 years in prison for a murder she did not commit, according to the Midwest Innocence Project. Jacobs made Kansas City her home for a fresh start, she said. She volunteers with the Innocence Project and works at a car dealership in Johnson County. She attended Sunday’s watch party with her friend Tracy Bentley, a middle school teacher from Kansas City. Both were confident in seeing a Chiefs win Sunday night. “You cannot be in Kansas City and not feel the heartbeat of the Kansas City Chiefs,” Bentley said, predicting a 34–28 Chiefs win. “The electricity, the energy … if you can’t beat them, join them, and so we’re happy to join them.” The game packed plenty of thrills throughout the night. As Mahomes ran for Kansas City’s first touchdown of the game, the hundreds of Chiefs fans under red light at Power & Light erupted in cheers. They threw their hands into the air, bouncing up and down.
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A large Chiefs flag was waved from the KC Live! stage in front of the sea of red jerseys. Across town, fans at Kelly’s Westport Inn screamed and exchanged high-fives as Mahomes put the Chiefs on the board. Before San Francisco tied up the game, Chiefs devotees boasted of their confidence about their team’s first trip to the Super Bowl in 50 years. “That drive, that Kansas City drive took a lot off the clock,” Rob Mayer said of the Chiefs’ scoring drive, which kept the 49ers defense on their heels for more than seven minutes. “Going for it on fourth down? You have to.” By halftime, excitement ran high. “(I’m) nervous but confident,” 31-year-old Chance Batts said in Shawnee at the end of the second quarter that had some people out of their seat. “We’re going to win.” Terry Knopke, who remembered watching the Chiefs play in their last Super Bowl decades ago, said a first half in which the typically high-scoring Chiefs tallied only 10 points gave her some cause for concern. “I thought we would be ahead at halftime, so I’m disappointed,” Knopke said of the 10 -10 halftime score. “But I think they will step it up in the second half and win.” Knopke issued a warning before her companion, California ex-pat and 49ers supporter Terry Cunningham, chimed in. “If you say anything negative, I’m going to cut you off,” Knopke said. Cunningham proceeded anyway. “I like the score,” Cunningham said. “I think the 49ers win by three.” As the third quarter ended 20-10 with the 49ers up, Chiefs fans grew uneasy. Some said they felt sick. But late in the fourth quarter as the Chiefs surged and took a 24 -20 lead over the 49ers with less than two minutes to go, spirits across the city rose. Fans at Johnny’s Tavern believed again. They chanted: “Defense! Defense! Defense!” It seemed that it truly was Kansas City’s year, after all.
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(Team) Chiefs Super Bowl Parade: Thousands brave the cold to fight for their right to party Sharon Hoffman February 5, 2020 KC Star The meteorologists predicted snow and wind and c-c-c-cold. The police warned of barricades and major traffic jams. And yet like quarterback Patrick Mahomes miraculously spinning and scrambling and sprinting his way into the end zone for a touchdown, the fans found their way to the destination of their dreams: the Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory parade in downtown Kansas City on Wednesday. By comparison, the Royals’ World Series parade in 2015 was a breeze — a balmy, sun-kissed autumn breeze. A parade in the thick of winter is a bit different. But Kansas City is tough. Even a car chase down the full length of the parade route was startling but didn’t dampen spirits. Fans who waited hours were rewarded in style, with red double-decker buses brimming with Chiefs players rolling down Grand Boulevard to the afternoon rally at Union Station ( see Sports for coverage of that event.) Along the parade route, some players got the crowd going by raising their arms, just like in Arrowhead Stadium. Some tossed aluminum bottles of Bud Light beer. (Is that legal?) And Mahomes himself, standing at the back of one of the last buses in the parade, threw a few footballs to the crowd with perfect aim. From before dawn and throughout the day, Chiefs fans took to heart the immortal words of tight end Travis Kelce (borrowing from the Beastie Boys) after last month’s glorious AFC Championship Game: “You’ve gotta fight, for your right, to party!” Here’s how some of the thousands of fans at the parade did just that. HAPPY CAMPERS Hotel rooms were scarce Tuesday night, but a few folks brought their own lodging: tents. As the temperature hovered in the upper 20s, Michael Peters of Blue Springs and his family set up a small tent with a heater at 17th Street and Grand at about 7 a.m. — more than four hours before the parade was due to start.
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“We woke up at 6 o’clock, gathered up all our gear — wife does all the packing,” said Peters, who was huddling with wife Casey and their children, ages 13 and 14. “Took about 30 minutes to get everything loaded up, packed up the heater, got a little tent. We have kids in competitive sports, so we’re used to the weather.” He and his family weren’t alive the last time the Chiefs won the Super Bowl, in 1970. “It’s been 50 years, so it was before my time,” he said. “So getting to witness it with the kids, giving them the day off of school was pretty cool.” Roger Porter said his family and friends spent the night in his real estate office at 33rd and Main streets. “We just brought tents and sleeping bags and had an office party,” Porter said. They arrived at Union Station about 5 a.m. and came prepared with candles tucked under terracotta plant pots to warm their hands, lots of blankets and snacks. One man didn’t bother with a tent — or anything. He just lay down along Grand near 17th Street, right on the concrete with no padding. It seems he needed to rest up before the parade started. PARADE ENTREPRENEURS At 14th and Grand, vendors wove through the crowds selling $20 T -shirts. We can’t tell you all that the shirts proclaimed, but you probably have a good idea: Patrick +@#&%* Mahomes, the front reads. And on the back, *&%#@, I’m a Chief. “I can wear this to the bar,” one woman said. Tamer shirts were selling for $15; pennants were $5. Fans quickly realized that money does make life easier. John Fuller said getting down to the parade from Overland Park was easy: He just paid $50 to park a few blocks from Grand Boulevard. “As a 50 year fan of the Chiefs, I don’t think I would ever miss this,” he said. Tammy Noyes and her family drove up early from Louisburg, Kansas, and staked out a spot around 19th and Grand Boulevard. “We paid $40 to park, but it was just two blocks away,” Noyes said. “And it was worth it.” STARTING EARLY The biggest and earliest gathering was at Union Station, where the rally was scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m. Before 5 a.m., the plaza in front of the building was filling up. Grace Kahn, 15, a student at Lee’s Summit Academy, and Aubrey Kolberg, 21, a hairstylist, arrived at 4:30 a.m. to get a prime spot right up against the gated barriers at Pershing Road and Main Street.
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“We wanted front row seats,” Kahn said. She missed the Royals parade and wanted to be sure to support the Chiefs. They were so close to the front, “we could get a phone number,” Kolberg said, laughing. “Yeah,” said Kahn, “and maybe get a great Instagram pic.” Somehow Jody Feuerborn’s coat didn’t make it when she and her family packed the car around 5:30 Wednesday morning, but on the whole, the day was going smoothly. She and her husband, Matt Feuerborn, and three of their children were lined up hours before the parade, relaxing on blankets five rows from the barricades along Pershing Road near Union Station. To pass the time, the family watched “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” on Matt’s cellphone. “We’re watching Ferris Bueller — skip school and go to the parade,” she said with a laugh. Their commute from Shawnee took only 30 minutes, a far cry from the three hours they spent trying to get to the World Series parade. “I don’t know if we started earlier or the city planned better,” she said. They arrived around 7 a.m. and found a spot in the third row — until the car chase cleared the area after 8 a.m. The first thing Feuerborn noticed was officers shouting, and they scrambled to get up from their spot and away from the barricade. “We didn’t hear really the car coming,” she said. “Just all of sudden everybody goes, ‘Get back, get back, get back!’” Feuerborn said the car had almost reached the spot where they’d been sitting when a police car hit it and spun it around. “We could smell the rubber, smell the burning rubber,” she said. THE EARLY BIRD GETS THE PRIME SPOT Seeing a Chiefs Super Bowl parade “means everything” to Yolanda Holman, who said she became a fan because of her late aunt. “This would have been a day she would have been so happy — getting into the Super Bowl,” she said. Holman and her sister, Kimberly Harvey, set out from Grandview around 6:30 a.m. and found parking up the hill from Union Station. They trekked slowly down down, taking their time because of Holman’s arthritis, and found spots for their lawn chairs along Pershing Road. “It was hard, kind of, because it’s all downhill, but I mean, I just took my time, wasn’t in no rush,” Holman said. “That’s why I came really early so I wouldn’t have to fight too much of a crowd.” The two were settled in their spots more than three hours before the parade began. So they came prepared. “I got my lawn chair. I got about four tops on, my long johns. I have on my warm socks, heated socks, boots. I have hand warmers — the whole shebang,” Holman said.
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M.J Ringstad came to the parade with his best buddies, Bennett Jones, Evan Jurad and Logan Hansen, all of them football players at Olathe Northwest High School. They started planning where they would stand at the parade “as soon as we got to school on Tuesday,” Jones said. Then when they woke Wednesday morning, “we started having second thoughts because we were just so tired,” Jurad said. But it was worth the early rise to claim a spot at 3 a.m. along Grand Boulevard, right up against the metal barriers. “Front row seats,” they cheered in unison. Besides, they were all bundled up, and ever ything was warm and toasty. “Except our toes,” Ringstad said. “I can’t even feel my toes because they are so cold.” Kaitlyn Carey of Independence and her family arrived at 12:30 a.m. to capture a prime spot at Pershing and Grand. “We made sure we had a good parking spot and a sick spot (on the parade route) and we got both — boom,” Carey said. “I have not been to sleep yet. I have been up since 6:30 a.m. yesterday.” But standing at that prime corner didn’t work out for everyone. Poor Marybeth Gilbert, a 5-foot 1-inch-tall teacher at Center Elementary, was surrounded by the crowd as the players passed by. The crowd roared “Go Chiefs,” waved flags and held up their phones taking video. Gilbert couldn’t see any of it. “I bet it looks great,” she said. Nearby, Tein Braughton, 7, sat atop his dad’s shoulders. His mission: “to see Patrick Mahomes.” Shortly before the parade started, what could he see? “Heads!” Braughton shouted. And then there were those who weren’t concerned about seeing the parade. On 12th Street, a block west of the parade route, Ben Stueve, 35, was busy throwing a foam football to his 6-year-old son, Henry in a tiny park. The parade was about to start, but Henry didn’t care. He just wanted to play catch. Dad, who grew up loving the Chiefs, was fine with that. He expects his son will have a great role model in Mahomes for years to come. “It gives me a little bit of comfort knowing that his favorite player and the player who he’ll want to emulate the most is such a good person and a good leader,” he said. THE COLD DOESN’T BOTHER ME ANYWAY Philip Schottel, 59, knows how to keep warm for his Chiefs. A 30-year season ticket holder, he deemed Wednesday’s weather “perfect.” Nothing like that playoff game in the ’90s, he said, when it was so cold “the beer in the neck of my bottle was freezing.”
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A bit down Grand, die-hard fans Grant Mong and daughter Mallory, of Overland Park, said a little cold weather wasn’t going to keep them from celebrating. “Bring it on!” said Mong, who was all decked out in a furry vest, leather chaps, cowboy hat and dark goofy glasses with red boxing gloves draped around his neck. He was ready to celebrate. John Mesa was 13 the last time the Chiefs staged a victory parade through downtown Kansas City. He wasn’t smoking cigars then, but 50 years after his first Chief parade he enjoyed a stogie as he lounged in a lawn chair on the steps of the former federal courthouse at Ninth and Grand. “My wife dumped me off and went back home,” Mesa said. She was cold, but he wouldn’t have missed it short of a blizzard. “I’ve been a season ticket holder 26 years,” he said. Rayshonda Johnson of Kansas City said her family tailgates at every home Chiefs game (their parking spot is J31 at Arrowhead). They know what they’re doing. At 4 a.m. Wednesday, they snagged a parking space at 16th and McGee and set up a grill and fire pit, where they were roasting hot dogs and brats. “We are true fans,” she said. GOING THE DISTANCE Charles Willsie said he and his wife drove 4.5 hours from Sioux City, Iowa, Tuesday night “so that we can celebrate with all of our friends and family in Kansas City.” “It’s important for me to witness this. I grew up in Kansas City,” Willsie said. “I’ve been a lifelong Chiefs fan. I’ve been through all the trials and tribulations with the team. And I’m ready to finally celebrate a victory.” Shawn McMullen and Reggie Oliver weren’t missing this. McMullen, 41, drove 14 hours from Charlotte, North Carolina, to watch the Super Bowl with family in KC. Oliver, 40, spent $600 on a last minute flight to KCI Tuesday. Childhood friends raised in Kansas City, both lined up for the parade at 7 a.m. near its beginning at Sixth and Grand. “Chiefs nation,” McMullen said. “It don’t get any better than this.” They figured the spot would allow them to see the parade and quickly get out of the cold to watch the rally on television later. Bundled up in multiple layers, neither seemed fazed by the freezing temperatures. “It is what it is,” Oliver said. “It’s Kansas City.” Both planned to stick around town for a few more days. “I just want to take it all in,” McMullen said.
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THE SHUTTLE BUS WASN’T THE PROBLEM At the 2015 World Series parade, the shuttle bus system was so slow and crowded that some fans said they waited hours and never made it. Kansas City Area Transportation Authority CEO Robbie Makinen said officials learned from that. This year, he said, twice the number of buses were deployed, made possible with dozens of school buses. In all, more than 400 buses were used. By 10:30 a.m., Makinen said, 30,000 people had used the shuttle service. ”It’s been working really well. The longest wait times I’ve heard is around 30 minutes, so people are happy with that,” he said. ”We learned a lot from 2015. And now we need to do this more often with more victory parades because we’ve got it down.” At Oak Park Mall around 8 a.m., the line for the shuttle bus was moving along, but Bart Putnam still had a challenging morning. The Olathe resident and lifelong Chiefs fan joined a few hundred others at the mall in Overland Park to catch a free ride to the parade — but not without enduring some stress first. “We dropped off the car last night so we could have a way to drive back. But then Uber drivers weren’t coming to Olathe this morning,” he said, adjusting his arrowhead -shaped hat. “So we decided to come to Oak Park Mall and get on the shuttle bus. Well, then I forgot my jacket.” Putnam and his wife returned home, still couldn’t catch an Uber, then arrived back at the mall in Overland Park. In the end, they caught a shuttle after a 30-minute wait. But he said he would do whatever it takes to make it to the parade. “The last time the Chiefs won the Super Bowl was on my birthday, but a year before I was born,” Putnam said. “I never got to see this before. (I’m a) big football fan. I’d def initely go a long way to get there.” By 10 a.m., there were shorter wait times, or no wait times, at all of the shuttle bus stops. At Swope Park, fans said they were grateful to see the long line of buses awaiting them after they walked more than a mile in the snow. Many hopped aboard in a matter of minutes. James Hansen of Leavenworth got to the stop at Worlds of Fun at 5 a.m. He waited outside the gate and eventually got on a bus at 7. He then journeyed from the drop-off at Lydia Avenue and Truman Road all the way to Pershing Road, just outside the Westin Crown Center. As a Chiefs fan for more than 20 years, he said it was important to see this “once in a lifetime” parade. Driving into downtown Kansas City appeared to go rather smoothly as well. Periodic c hecks of KC Scout traffic cameras showed roadways flowing freely for the most part.
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Authorities warned drivers not to park on the highways, like what happened during the World Series parade. For one woman, walking worked just fine, even though she’s on the disabled list. April Keith of Gardner, injured while shopping last December, showed up on a leg scooter. “We just walked five miles on a broken foot because we were not going to miss this,” Keith said near the Liberty Memorial. “Because this is a once in a lifetime opportunity and nothing’s going to hold us back.” CHEERS TO THE CHIEFS Police officially warned against public consumption of alcohol along the parade rout e. But that didn’t seem to stop many people. Grand Slam Convenience store at Sixth and Grand enjoyed a steady stream of customers buying vodka, beer and other drinks. Out front, they sold aluminum bottles of Bud Light in plain view of police officers. On the Grand Avenue bridge over Interstate 35, a couple went to work on two six -packs of frosty Smirnoff Ice. One man in a Chiefs jersey walked around with everything he’d need for mimosas: a gallon of orange juice in one hand and a bottle of champagne in the other. Staff at Anthony’s Restaurant and Lounge blocked off the front and back entrances with folding tables. Outside, employees shouted, “Cold beer! Get your beer here! Hot dogs too!” Tables had only three condiments: ketchup, mustard and Sweet Baby Ray’s barbecue sauce. On Admiral Boulevard, the Red Front Bar and Grill was packed with people pregaming on whiskey sours and bloody marys. But many flocked to the coffee, hot chocolate and doughnuts. “Everyone’s just so excited,” said Jennifer Simone-Mandacina, who owns the bar with her husband, Charles Mandacina III. “People we’re down here at 3,4 in the morning.” Her husband sold spots in the adjoining parking lot early in the morning for $40 apiece. It quickly filled up. She said the bar wasn’t gouging customers on food and drinks. The coffee, hot chocolate and doughnuts weren’t priced — whatever customers offered was accepted. HERE THEY COME Up on Sixth street before the parade, speakers blasted oldies like Def Leppard’s “Pour Some Sugar on Me.” The crowd knew game time was close when the music switched to the Beastie Boys’ “Fight for Your Right” and Tech N9ne’s “Red Kingdom.” The parade started right on time at 11:30 a.m., and cellphones immediately lifted toward the cloudy sky as spectators sought to capture the moment — if they weren’t 10 rows back. Aboard the buses, Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas threw his hands out in celebration, and Missouri Gov. Mike Parson smiled widely.
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The route was littered with confetti cannons, drawing loud applause at each shot. Some fans complained that the players — particularly Mahomes — were hard to spot atop the crowded buses. One woman, though, gushed, saying it was just like the humble quarterback not to hog the spotlight. Farther down the parade route, many of the players left their buses and danced on the street, greeting fans who filled the sidewalks. One fan, clad in red and gold pants, steadied himself on top of a garbage can and yelled to hundreds of strangers: “This is the best day of my life!” Fans dozens of rows from the parade craned for a look at Chiefs royalty. “Andy!” one woman shouted as a man who may or may not have been Chiefs Coach Andy Reid rode by. Near the Westin Crown Center, a man who looked an awful lot like Reid — graying mustache and all — donned a headset and conspicuously chomped his gum for the occasion. He elicited shouts and waves as he made his way along Pershing Road. As the parade moved down Grand, Mahomes became a bit more conspicuous. As Chiefs fullback Anthony Sherman stood by atop the bus, getting the crowd going, Mahomes waved, smiled and launched a few footballs, before heading over to Union Station for the afternoon rally. Touchdown, Kan-Za City!
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(Team) The Chiefs want to turn Arrowhead Stadium into a voting location this November Sam McDowell August 26, 2020 KC Star The aftermath of a Super Bowl title has been overshadowed by one of the most unusual and unpredictable summers in NFL history. Kansas City is not immune. Rather than an offseason defined by a championship celebration, the Chiefs have been occupied instead with real-world issues, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, deciding whether to allow fans at home games, furthering discussions with Native Americans on traditions like headdresses and the chop, as well as Black Lives Matter and voter registration. Chiefs team president Mark Donovan spoke with the media on a Zoom call Wednesday, addressing all of those topics. Below are his comments on turning Arrowhead Stadium into a voting location, as well as social justice causes, edited for length and clarity. You can find his comments on the plan for fans in the stands here and the ban on Native American imagery here. • Quarterback Patrick Mahomes and safety Tyrann Mathieu have pledged to become involved in voter registration movements. As part of their objectives, they said they have spoken with Donovan, as well as Chiefs chairman and CEO Clark Hunt. On Wednesday, Donovan said the organization is trying to make Arrowhead Stadium a polling location in November. “Voting registration and voter engagement, I personally believe, is very important. And people exercising their right to vote, I personally believe, is very important. I think Patrick, Tyrann, others, I’m really proud to be associated with those guys in their efforts. I appreciate that they mentioned we’ve had those discussions, and I’ve been in those discussions. We have some plans to do things in and around this election that are going to be focused on, number one, awareness of the importance of voting; number two, creating awareness of the ways people can register to vote, the ways people can engage and doing that through the experts in that space. “We have a plan right now, which is not final, and I’ll share it with you all that we’re committed to doing it, but it has some challenges — we want to make Arrowhead a polling location. We want to create an opportunity for people to come to Arrowhead and vote. In addition to that, with the awareness, you’re going to see a lot of things around the highest points of awareness for us as
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an organization that are going to be focused on voting, the awareness of voting and ways to vote. “One of the reasons that I personally and I think this organization believes that’s a platform we need to get behind is the beauty of the vote. You can have different opinions. You can vote for different people. But vote. And that’s really what we’re trying to engage in.” • In the aftermath of George Floyd’s death, sports leagues have embraced moments of protest and solidarity among players. The NFL has yet to play a game since Floyd, a Black man, died while in police custody after a white cop knelt on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Mahomes and Mathieu joined other NFL stars in releasing a Black Lives Matter video aimed at garnering the league’s support for the movement, which it later received. The Chiefs also released a statement of support. Asked how the organization might be involved in any future player demonstrations on the field, Donovan said, “I go back to some of the things we said when all of this started to be come as big of an issue as it’s become. It’s definitely something that needs to be addressed. It’s definitely something that needs our attention. If you go back to the end of May or beginning of June, we sat and talked about this as an organization — players, coaches, football operations staff, our own executive staff. And we made a decision to shut our website down and just say (that) right now the important thing is to one of our principles — unite our community. Unity is more important now than ever, and we need to continue to do that. And that’s been our theme. “When the players’ video came out early in this process, I was really proud to be part of the team that we’ve got to support this; we’ve got to go out with a statement. I believe we were the first team in the National Football League to respond to that video. I’m most proud of the message we sent that night. It was late at night. It was Clark (Hunt), myself and a few others on a phone call, just saying, the message we want people to hear and the me ssage we want our players to hear is that we love and support them. We’re part of a family. Just like any family, there are passions on all sides. What we’ve said is, in discussions that I’ve had with our players, with Clark, with Coach (Andy Reid), with (general manager) Brett (Veach) and with others, let’s love each other, let’s support each other and let’s respect each other. That’s really what we’re going to continue to do. We’re going to meet and have more discussions about this. And you’ll be hearing more from us as we go. But that’s the approach we take to issues like this.”
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(Team) The Chiefs’ plan to keep their Super Bowl team together was three years in the making John Clayton August 25, 2020 The Washington Post As he watched rookie Patrick Mahomes develop behind starting quarterback Alex Smith in 2017, Kansas City Chiefs General Manager Brett Veach began to get the feeling he was going to have some difficult salary cap management in his future. Veach and Matt Nagy, then Kansas City’s quarterbacks coach and now head coach of the Chicago Bears, were the first people in the Chiefs’ organization to think Mahomes should be Kansas City’s next quarterback. In 2016, Nagy would get his fellow assistant co aches to watch Texas Tech games featuring Mahomes, and Veach would send repeated video updates to head coach Andy Reid — to the point that it became too much. Eventually, however, Veach’s scouting reports won over Reid, and Kansas City traded up in the fir st round to draft Mahomes. As a rookie, Mahomes sat for the team’s first 15 games, but when the quarterback played against Denver in the 2017 regular season finale, after a full season of shredding the Chiefs’ defense in practice, Veach knew not only that his and Nagy’s instincts were correct, but that he had to start thinking about building the roster around a future second contract for Mahomes that could cost more than $40 million per year. “I think any time you draft a quarterback, your intentions are to eventually sign him to a longterm deal and hope and pray he’s a franchise quarterback,” Veach said. “We certainly got a glimpse of what he could do in that one start in Denver. We had seen a backlog of just tremendous development, and some of the stuff he did in training camp created the thought to have a great plan in place.” That plan, which began in 2017 and culminated this offseason with a contract extension for Mahomes and the retention of several other key players, has the Super Bowl champion Chiefs in position to defend their title this season and for years to come. And for Veach, th e lowest-paid GM in football, according to two people with knowledge of the situation, the work he did in keeping Kansas City’s core together is likely to change his own financial status in the near future. After Mahomes was drafted, Reid did not rush his development, having him sit behind Smith during a year in which the veteran led the Chiefs back to the playoffs. But even while Mahomes was a backup, his ability stood out. “He would just completely eviscerate our number one defense in practice, and he did so easily,” Veach said. “It was like, ‘Oh, my God, this is like our third-team offense,’ and he played with such a carefree attitude back then that something was brewing.”
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In Mahomes’s first NFL game, he led a comeback to beat the Broncos, 27 -24. After the Chiefs, led by Smith, lost in the first round of the playoffs, the team traded Smith to Washington and began the process of building around Mahomes. “Our whole intention that first free agency period in 2018 was to get as much talent as we could,” Veach said. “We knew we had a great tight end in Travis Kelce. We knew we had Tyreek Hill. That’s why we went out and got Sammy Watkins. We just wanted to get as many weapons as we could. But as soon as we were three or four games into the 2018 campaign, we’re thinking he’s going to be the MVP.” Fifty Mahomes touchdown passes later, Veach was right, and the Chiefs came within a game of the Super Bowl. That led to a pivotal offseason, when Veach had to balance filling short -term needs — especially on defense — and positioning the Chiefs to handle Mahomes’s eventual contract extension. “We need a defense to complement this offense, because this kid is the best player in the league,” Veach said of his thinking during the 2019 offseason. “Our offense is always going to score points, and we have to be good enough on defense to win a Super Bowl. We knew we had the offense that we had last year, but the defense wasn’t good enough.’’ Veach’s first big moves were trading outside linebacker Dee Ford to the San Francisco 49ers for a second-round draft pick and cutting outside linebacker Justin Houston. To many on the outside, the moves were curious for a team trying to improve on defense. Ford and Houston were effective edge rushers, but Veach needed to free up some money, and neither was an ideal fit for the new 4-3 defense under coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. That left a void at edge rusher, and Veach began studying then -Seattle Seahawks defensive end Frank Clark. He had been impressed by Clark’s college play at Michigan and the way Pete Carroll had developed him in Seattle. Clark, like Ford, was under the franchise tag. “We knew it was going to cost, but we’re thinking, ‘How can we mitigate that cost?’ ” Veach said. “We made the [Ford] trade with the 49ers so we had the extra second -round choice. If we had to give up a one or a two, we’re going to get something back.” Veach got a Pro Bowl pass-rusher in Clark, 27, at a young age. Then the Chiefs further helped the defense by signing safety Tyrann Mathieu to a three-year, $42 million contract and drafting safety Juan Thornhill, who excelled before suffering a season-ending injury. The result was a much-improved defense that was capable enough, when combined with Mahomes and the highpowered offense, for the Chiefs to win the Super Bowl. But as the 2020 offseason began, there was plenty of work to be done. The novel coronavirus pandemic, which is expected to have a major revenue impact on the NFL because stadiums will be without fans or only partially filled this year, threatened to lower the salary cap in 2021 and perhaps 2022. For the Chiefs, knowing they had to pay Mahomes, that meant they might end up losing some of their core players. But where Veach was fortunate is Mahomes understood he could help himself by being flexible with his contract demands.
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“He didn’t want his contract to be outdated, but at the same time he was cognizant that we have a lot of good players,” Veach said. “To be successful in this league . . . you have to be flexible and creative with your cap space, so he was open to be flexible.” The Chiefs were able to work out a contract extension with tight end Travis Kelce (87) after some creative work with quarterback Patrick Mahomes' contract. (Charlie Riedel/AP) The Chiefs gave Mahomes guarantees that kick in two and three years ahead. In doing so, they were able to lock him up for a total of 12 years, adding 10 years to the final two years of his rookie contract. But the main thing that got the deal done was Mahomes not getting a raise for the first two years. He was scheduled to make $27.2 million in 2020 and 2021, and that’s what he makes under the new deal. His cap numbers also stayed about the same. “If you look at the contract, the first five years average out to about $40 million a year, so we get what we want,” Veach said. “Then in the second half of the contract, it’s like $50 million a year.” By keeping Mahomes’s cap number the same the next two years, Veach was able to lock up Chris Jones, one of the league’s best interior pass rushers, with a four-year, $80 million deal. Jones gets the $16.1 million he was scheduled to make as a franchise player this year and $21.5 million next year. That flexibility left Veach with enough room to sign Kelce to a four -year, $57.25 million contract. The Chiefs now have core contributors Mathieu, Eric Fisher and Mitchell Schwartz signed through 2021; Hill and Mecole Hardman through 2022; and Mahomes, Jones, Kelce and Clyde Edwards-Helaire longer than that. Mahomes’s decision mirrors one Tom Brady made early in the 2010s, when he took less money to allow the New England Patriots to keep the roster that surrounded him at a Super Bowl level. That, along with some careful planning and creative execution by Veach, puts the Chiefs in position to compete for another championship this season — and to potentially replace the Patriots as the NFL’s next dynasty.
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(Team) Why the Chiefs had no problem re-signing their top players Adam Teicher August 26, 2020 ESPN Tight end Travis Kelce had no problem finding reasons he wanted to remain with the Kansas City Chiefs after signing his recent contract extension. "We have great guys in the locker room, great people in the facility and overall it's just a fun atmosphere every single time you come to work," Kelce said. "Guys don't want to leave that. Guys want to keep building off of that. "Going out there and playing football with guys that come to work every single day and fight their tail off for you, it's a beautiful thing." Kelce was speaking for himself but could have been speaking for any of the Chiefs' other high profile players who signed new contracts during the offseason: quarterback Patrick Mahomes, wide receiver Sammy Watkins and defensive tackle Chris Jones. It goes beyond just this group, in fact. The Chiefs, to a large degree, kept intact their Super Bowl championship team from last year. They were set to bring back 20 of their 22 starters from the Super Bowl before Laurent Duvernay-Tardif and Damien Williams opted out of the season because of COVID-19. Before Duvernay-Tardif's departure, the Chiefs looked as if they would be the first defending Super Bowl champions to return every player who started at least 10 games the previous season since the 1981 Raiders from the pre-free agency era. Why did so many players, including a number of lesser-known players, decide to stay? Boiling it down, they wanted to. "We've got a lot of selfless guys on this team, a lot of guys that don't necessarily look in their own mirror," safety Tyrann Mathieu said. "It's about the guys around them. It's a very fortunate situation we're in and I think everybody is just grateful to be a part of it." The Chiefs have doled out a lot of money to keep the gang together. They would pay more than $600 million over the lives of the contracts of Mahomes, Jones and Kelce alone. But Watkins decided to stay for the final season of his contract by agreeing to a pay cut. He was scheduled to make $14 million this season but will instead be paid $9 million, though he could make up the difference and then some by reaching certain performance incentives. "I've made enough money," Watkins said. "I'd love more money, but as far as being smart and [staying] on this team, knowing you've got to pay Pat, you've got to pay Chris, there's a lot of guys you've got to pay. So for me to take a contract like I did was a blessing. ... This is my
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happy place, so why not take a smaller contract and come out and play with the guys I've bee n playing with? "Very important to stay. For what we did in winning the Super Bowl and the type of team and coaches we have, the organization, why wouldn't I stay? I'm a guy that's been in the league going on seven years, and I've been on teams that were not so good and were not winning. We've got a well-established quarterback, a well-established team, coaches, organization. The real fun is in the winning more than anything." As the Chiefs, in their own words, attempt to "run it back," a look at four reaso ns players are eager to stick around: Coach Andy Reid Most Chiefs players seem to like working with Reid. That's particularly true of Mahomes, who before signing his extension extracted a promise from the 62-year-old coach that he wouldn't retire anytime soon. Players generally feel Reid cares about them as much, if not more, as a person than as a player and also believe he can help them reach their potential as a player more than most coaches. "No. 1 is Coach Reid," said backup quarterback Chad Henne, in listing his reasons for resigning with the Chiefs in March. "He's definitely one of the best coaches that I've been around. He knows the ins and outs of the offense and the defense. He's been around for a while and he's a winning coach." Mahomes This is particularly true for pass-catchers like Kelce and Watkins. Kelce's two best statistical seasons have been the last two, since Mahomes was made the starting quarterback. Watkins hasn't hit career bests in two seasons with the Chiefs but might have had he not missed six games in 2018 and two last season. Winning Not only are the Chiefs defending Super Bowl champions, but the future looks good. Many of their better players are still young in football terms. Mahomes is 24, Jones 26, Tyreek Hill 26, Frank Clark 27 and Tyrann Mathieu 28. Among their best players, only Kelce at 30 and Mitchell Schwartz at 31 are at an advanced football age. "Guys want to be around a winning atmosphere," Henne said. "Obviously, a Super Bowl helps, but when you're around guys who want to compete each and every day and fight for one another, I think it's definitely just something that you want to be a part of. Throughout my career, ups and downs, winning [and] losing, winning is the way to go. We have great tradition here and a lot of great people around us.â&#x20AC;? Trust Players trust chairman Clark Hunt and general manager Brett Veach to make the right moves after Reid is finished coaching, whenever that might be. "We trust the front office, Brett Veach, Andy Reid and Clark Hunt, to keep the core," Kelce said. "We trusted that they were going to be able to make it make sense for all of the players, which
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they did. They held their end of the bargain. We're very thankful that we still have the core going into this year and for a few years ahead." This is particularly true for Kelce, who is signed through 2025, and Mahomes, who is signed through 2031. Each may be playing for a different coach by the time his contract expires. "I think that trust is something that's built, and with my three years in the Chiefs organization, you see the trust that everyone has within each other," Mahomes said. "Everything that coach Reid says, everything that Veach says, and what everyone in this organization says, those things happen and they put in the work every single day. "It's almost a challenge if I can beat coach Reid or Veach to the facility some days. They put in as much effort as anyone, and when you have a culture like that from the top down, with Clark Hunt to the 75th, 90th, whatever man on the roster, that trust and that culture was something that I wanted to be a part of."
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(Team) Chiefs players, coaches speak out on shooting of Jacob Blake. Here’s what they’ve said Sam McDowell August 28, 2020 KC Star The story of Jacob Blake, a 29-year-old Black man shot from behind seven times by a police officer in Kenosha, Wisconsin, has sparked pleas for change across the country. In some cases, athletes have led the way. In the NBA, MLB, MLS and the NHL. And in the Chiefs’ locker room. Conversations about social injustice continue to take place among Chiefs coaches and players, with head coach Andy Reid opening the floor for the discussions. Players have hinted they’re considering potential demonstrations for the season opener on Sept. 10, though defensive end Frank Clark said Friday nothing has been finalized. But they’re moved to do something. Quarterback Patrick Mahomes and safety Tyrann Mathieu have turned the efforts toward an increase in voter registration. Chiefs president Mark Donovan said this week the team will attempt to turn Arrowhead Stadium into a voting location in November. The police shooting of Blake Sunday compelled many in the organization to speak about the topic. Here are some snippets of what Chiefs players and coaches have said over th e past few days: • Patrick Mahomes, quarterback Mahomes has been vocal in supporting Black Lives Matter, appearing an a video this summer in which players demanded the league back their cause. They did. Mahomes appeared on SiriusXM NFL Radio this week and was asked about Blake. “It’s just crazy, man, that this is still going on in the world that we live in today. We’re going to try to set the example on it, in whatever way possible, to show that we can get along and we can really respect one another for who they are and not the color of their skin. And we’re hoping that we can get over this. I mean it’s too long. It’s been too long, and we’re going to try to get over this and get to where we treat each other equally.” • Frank Clark, defensive end In a Zoom call with reporters Friday, Clark said the most difficult part of the situation will be one day explaining it to his young kids. He also offered a stark reality of what’s to come.
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“This is something we’re going to continue to deal with. That’s what you gotta understand. That’s what I understand. Our country, if they think that another Black man isn’t going to get killed by a police officer, I feel like everyone’s confused. I feel like if we don’t think it’s going to happen again and continue to happen, we’re confused. At this point, we have to do something about it. Man, it’s just crazy, you know? It’s crazy.” • Andy Reid, head coach Before being asked a question during his news conference Wednesday, Reid opened with an off-script message about Blake. “Listen, I’m just going to put my two cents in on Jacob’s situation. I think you guys know, I’m into team. I’m into peace and people getting along. Right or wrong, we all need to join hands, man, and make this world a better place where we can go into each other’s neighborhoods and be comfortable, and that we appreciate life and how important it is and how hard it is to create life — something that none of us are capable of doing in a test tube. “It’s a precious thing, man. It’s complicated. It is precious. At this time, everybody needs to come together and join hands, like I said, and love each other for what we are, and the privilege that we have in this short period of time that we are on earth, as opposed to walking in fear, to walk with strength and pride and make this country the greatest place ever along with the world. We do that and we’ll be a great example to the world. “My heart goes out to Jacob and his family in that situation. I don’t know the whole story. But I hate seeing the way things are going right now, and we’re better than that. Absolutely better than that.” • Eric Bieniemy, offensive coordinator Bieniemy spent the bulk of his time on the topic Friday complimenting Chiefs players, ownership, members of the coaching staff and front office for their response to social injustice issues in recent months. Then he zeroed in on the possibility of Arrowhead Stadium becoming a voting location this fall. “That would be historical. I remember growing up as young kid. When I turned 18, I had to get a job, I had to go to school or I was gonna join the service. But on top of that, my mother told me, ‘Your ass is gonna vote. You are going to vote. Because we fought for this right.’ “And how about that? These guys have stood up and said, hey, let’s make this right; let’s make it where everybody can have the opportunity to come to this stadium and vote. I’m proud of the people that we have in this building, but I’m also proud of the people that have provided the light and way for them so they can come out and be free to be who they are and speak freely to the world about what’s going on and making the change.” • Travis Kelce, tight end Appearing with Mahomes on the radio show, Kelce echoed Reid’s sentiment. “I think Coach said it best — everybody’s just got to love each other and appreciate one another for who they are, their differences, knowing that we all have differences. We all have crazy different upbringings (with) the people around us, thought of mind, things like that. Everyone has to come together and appreciate everyone for who they are, man. And until we have that peace
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of mind, I think we need to stand up and make a change, make a difference in our commu nities, until we see that.” • Rashad Fenton, cornerback Fenton grew up in Miami, a diverse city in which he said “Everyone treats everyone equally there. That’s how I was raised.” On the shooting of Blake, he said, “Just the fact that could be my father. T hat could be my uncle. That could be me. Just putting that into perspective of just treating everyone equal. I don’t know why it’s so hard (or) why it’s a discussion to get treated fairly.” • Tommy Townsend, punter The Chiefs’ rookie punter, who is white, said his place in the team conversation is different than that of those around him. “The biggest thing for me is just listening and learning from my teammates. It’s always good to step back and learn. I think that’s been something that’s been happening a lot recently. Our vets and team leaders have been doing a great job of bringing awareness and doing everything we can to start moving forward and create change. That’s something I’m looking forward to — keeping the discussions going and continuing to learn. “This is something that’s very new to me. A lot of light is being shed on it now. I think it’s definitely something that’s sparking inside of me that’s making me want to go forward and create change and do what I can to help out. A lot of the stuff going on, it is tiring. Even this short period of time that I’ve been seeing it on social media, it’s exhausting to see. I hate seeing it. I hate seeing how it affects my teammates and how it affects their families. It’s obviously not right. It’s something that we gotta be better at and we gotta change.”
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(Team) From top down, Chiefs pushing for social justice initiatives Dave Skretta The Associated Press August 31, 2020 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Two years before Clark Hunt was born, the Kansas City Chiefs made history by taking Grambling State defensive tackle Buck Buchanan in the American Football League draft, making him the first Black player from any college — much less a historically Black one — to be the first player selected first overall. It was a testament to the progressive nature of Hunt’s father, Chiefs founder Lamar Hunt, the trailblazing son of a Texas oil tycoon who helped form the American Football League when the National Football League refused to grant him an expansion team. Hunt was a champion of Black rights during the Civil Rights era of the 1960s. He grew up in conservative circles yet formed his own opinions of right and wrong. And when his football loving son was born in 1965, those principles that Hunt instilled in his foo tball franchise became instilled in Clark, who years later would succeed him as chairman of the Chiefs. “My dad really encouraged the players to get out there and use their platform to make a difference in the community,” Clark Hunt said. “A lot of those efforts over the decades have been focused on things that benefit the minority communities.” Indeed, the biggest reason the Chiefs are among the most progressive teams in the NFL these days — during a new era of social justice initiatives — is that the reigning Super Bowl champions always have been that way. When star quarterback Patrick Mahomes, fast becoming the face of the league, speaks out in support of the Black Lives Matter movement, the Chiefs in turn support him. When safety Tyrann Mathieu and defensive end Frank Clark discuss the importance of regist ering people to vote, Hunt and his top lieutenants respond: “How can we help?” The answer, by the way, is discussions to turn Arrowhead Stadium into a voting location in November. “What I’ve really appreciated the last couple of years,” Clark Hunt said, “is how engaged the leaders on our team are, and I’ll just take Patrick and Tyrann as examples, that they’re very engaged. They want to make a difference. They want to do some things that are going to make our country better, things that are going to help us get along as a country. “You referenced Arrowhead being a polling station,” Hunt continued. “That’s one of their big issues, is voter registration and getting people out to vote. We’ve worked with them and we’re working with some organizations here locally to try to encourage people to get out to vote. We’ve made an effort to get all of our players registered to vote here. The icing on the cake
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would be if we could have Arrowhead be a polling station. We don’t know if that’s going to work out.” Yet the fact that discussions are taking place at the highest levels of Missouri government is a sign of just how seriously Hunt, team president Mark Donovan and the rest of the Chiefs franchise are taking such initiatives. It’s not as if there aren’t players elsewhere in the NFL that are working for social justice, or for increased voting and better representation in government. But there are few organizations that are so vocally in support of them. It’s not just Hunt, either, though he sets the tone. Chiefs general manager Brett Veach and coach Andy Reid also are outspoken in their support, shrugging off the antiquated notion that having opinions and taking action outside the walls of the football facility can be a distraction or somehow detrimental to what happens on Sunday. “I like when people come together. I’m about that,” said Reid, who grew up in the melting pot of Los Angeles in the 1960s, and whose father was an artist that championed equality. “I’ve had a Native American athlete at Northern Arizona — phenomenal person. I’ve had Hispanic athletes. I’ve had obviously Black athletes, but from different areas of the world. I’ve had white athletes, and it’s so unique how they all get together. I just appreciate the world I get to live in with athletics.” Reid understands taking any kind of stance can be divisive, particularly these days. So do Mahomes and Mathieu, who know that everything they say and do will be dissected and discussed in the wild world of social media. Yet they dismiss any political concerns in favor of a simple idea: “Do what you think is right.” “I’m going to do whatever I can to fight for equality for all people,” said Mahomes, who has a white mother and Black father. “I’m not worried about people and how they’re going to do negative stuff back to me. I am worried about doing what’s right for humanity and making sure that all people feel equal.” There have been missteps over the years, such as the Chiefs’ use of Native American imagery that drew widespread condemnation and has been slowly phased out. Members of the franchise have expressed thoughts and taken stances that have proved regrettable. Opinions on a number of topics, such as Hunt’s preference that players stand for the national anthem, have changed amid the changing landscape of American life. The core values that Lamar Hunt set down remain, though. They’re the values that gave Buchanan a chance with the Chiefs in 1963, and that are giving Mahomes and the rest of the team the platform to speak out nearly 60 years later. “My dad set a great example for me and my siblings on a lot of issues. And probably his greatest strength was how he treated people,” Clark Hunt said. “He didn’t care where you came from, what your background was, what your race was. He treated everybody he met with respect and appreciation. That’s been a lesson that we’ve all learned, and just bring it forward to what’s going on with racial equality and social injustice. I think Andy probably said it as well as anyone: ‘We just need to love our neighbor.’ And if we all do that, this world is going to be a whole lot better place.”
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(Brett Veach) Chiefs GM Brett Veach Strengthens Dynasty Talk with Fantastic Offseason BJ Kissel July 16, 2020 Chiefs.com The word was thrown around after the game down in Miami just a few months ago. The Chiefs Kingdom diehards called for it after Patrick Mahomes' MVP season back in 2018, which fell just short of a Super Bowl trip. For many, the feeling the word may elicit changed following all of us witnessing the thrilling comeback win over the 49ers, and the knowledge that this team is full of young superstars – not seasoned veterans giving it one last shot. But for the remaining few who don't find need to throw around the word "dynasty" regarding the Kansas City Chiefs' current opportunity, perhaps Brett Veach and his staff reportedly turning less than $200 of salary cap space this offseason into keeping Sammy Watkins and Demarcus Robinson, signing Patrick Mahomes to the largest contract in sports' history, and giving the CEO of Sack Nation – Chris Jones – what he rightfully deserved, rightfully where he deserved it – could change their mind. And that wasn't it, but we'll get to the others later. To dig a little bit deeper into the significance of each of these big -money moves and the underlying story that connects each of them – shows the continuity, trust, and relationship between the Chiefs' personnel staff, coaching staff, players and ownership. From the moment Sammy Watkins first stepped into the building and held his very first press conference, he mentioned culture, family, and the Kansas City community as reasons he was excited about joining the organization – not just the chance to play for a historically-good offense. That culture Andy Reid has created and Brett Veach, who got his start under Reid, understands, has built an environment that Watkins wanted to not only be a part of , but wanted to stay in. That hasn't been the case at Watkins' previous stops, as he's been open about before. Therefore, the conversation about players like Watkins re-structuring deals, perhaps taking less money – depending upon incentives and such, are often discussed in only financial terms, which is real, but is also real that the environment had to be right. The culture had to be right. Reid and Veach have gotten that right, and Watkins' return proves that on many levels.
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The conversation surrounding Patrick Mahomes' deal has been about astronomical numbers and overall length of the deal—something that will make Brandt Tilis and Chris Shea – two of the unsung heroes of the offseason that you may never see publicly – names in Chiefs' lore as part of this dynasty construct. But the fact that Mahomes was acutely aware of the structure of his deal and how it would to relate to others, again, shows something of the culture, trust and relationship between all three groups at work – the personnel staff, coaching staff, and ownership. Less than a week later, Jones secured his bag and seemingly the entire team celebrated on social media. From less than the cost of an authentic Mahomes' jersey in the team store to signing a core of players that could rightfully earn them more than the cost of a new stadium, the Chiefs' offseason was a historic chapter written not before our time, or after our time, but during our time, by Veach and company, who still had to time to think up gems like, "The Brett Veach Special." But outside of these big moves, which in some ways could be seen as obvious ones to get done - despite the different financial challenges to do so – the smaller under-the-radar moves could be just as important. Look no further than last year's Super Bowl victory and unsung hero Damien Williams, who many thought had a legitimate case for Super Bowl MVP, or Daniel Sorensen the AFC Divisional Round win over the Texans – his tackle on the fake punt and f orced fumble a few minutes later changed the tide. Williams is tied for 13th all-time in NFL postseason history with 11 touchdowns – the secondmost of any current player in the league (Rob Gronkowski, 12). He's two postseason touchdowns shy of entering the Top 5 in that category. His initial signing wasn't met with an amount of fanfare that he's earned with these numbers, and neither was Sorensen's extension (before Veach's tenure, but same point remains). And that's because it's not always about the big signings. The offseason signings of guys like the versatile Mike Remmers, who has started more than 75 games in his career all across the offensive line, or defensive end Taco Charlton, a former first round pick and a mentee of Chiefs' Super Bowl hero Frank Clark back at the University of Michigan, or even cornerback and standout special teamer Antonio Hamilton, who Dave Toub singled-out as a player he wanted specifically, at some point next season, these guys will all play crucial roles. And most already know about what running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire, linebacker Willie Gay Jr. and the rest of the rookie class is bringing to the table. It was the talk of the offseason until Veach, Tilis and Shea went all Oprah with everyone on new contracts – tossing tens of millions to homegrown players on each side of the ball. They accomplished most of this during a pandemic as well. That will always be a part of this story.
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While Mahomes, Jones, Tyrann Mathieu and others with the big names and contracts get most of the national headlines, and rightfully so, the under-the-radar players who aren't getting their hype now, fight to be the next Damien Williams, Charvarius Ward, or Daniel Sorensen. The re-signing of players like Mike Pennel, Bashaud Breeland and Anthony Sherman shouldn't go unnoticed either. It can seem easy to bring back players to a Super Bowl winning team, but this culture was in place before the Super Bowl was won. Culture comes first in anything that is special. Success without culture is fleeting. It's a culture that shows it rewards people who come in and do the right thing – treats them fairly throughout the process and is something they want to stay a part of. We've seen it play out just like that with this team. The only players on the roster over the age of 30 years old right now are Chad Henne (35), Mitch Schwartz (31), Anthony Sherman (31) and Mike Remmers (31). Led by a Hall of Fame head coach, the league's undisputed best player and a fanbase prepped for the long run—combined with a perfectly executed offseason—there's no reason not to throw around the word "dynasty" when it comes to the Chiefs' opportunity right now. The players haven't shied away from it. They're actively promoting it, and coach Reid shies away from nothing. The Chiefs are looking to become the eighth team in NFL history to win back-to-back Super Bowls, and the first since the 2003-04 New England Patriots. No team in the history of the NFL has won three Super Bowls in a row. If the conversation later becomes how do we quantify the greatest "dynasty stretches" in t he history of the NFL, these are a few of the numbers and stats that'll be used. So, that's the bigger challenge ahead. In the immortal words of Roger Dorn, "I guess there's just one thing left to do." RunItBack
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(Andy Reid) ‘I’m into peace’: Andy Reid seeks unity; Chiefs president discusses many topics Nate Taylor August 26, 2020 The Athletic KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Chiefs held another padded practice Wednesday as part of their training camp, but coach Andy Reid wasn’t interested in talking about football when he arrived at the podium for his usual news conference. In his opening statement, Reid expressed his frustration in the aftermath of Sunday’s shooting in Kenosha, Wis., when a police officer shot Jacob Blake, an unarmed Black man, seven times. The incident, which left Blake paralyzed, was captured on video by a bystander’s smartphone. “I’m into peace and people getting along,” Reid said. “Right or wrong, we all need to join hands, man, and make this world a place where we can go into each other’s neighborhoods and be comfortable, that we appreciate life and how important it is — and how hard it is to create life. It’s a precious thing, man. “We need to, at this time, come together and love each other for what we are and the privilege that we have on this short period of time that we’re on earth. As opposed to walking in fear, walk with strength and pride and make this country the greatest place ever. We do that and we’ll be a great example to the world. My heart goes out to Jacob and his family.” The Chiefs were off Tuesday, and Reid spoke with many of his players about the shooting before Wednesday’s practice. The Chiefs, unlike the Detroit Lions on Tuesday, elected to have their practice to prepare for their season opener in two weeks. Reid, though, wanted to make it clear that the Chiefs, as a team, agreed with what many members of the Lions — such as general manager Bob Quinn, safety Duron Harmon and quarterback Matthew Stafford — said Tuesday in demanding social justice and equality. “I listen,” Reid said of his players’ fears and anger. “I try to do the same thing with my kids and people I come in contact with. You can learn from everybody, and there’s concerns right now. Change is always a little uncomfortable for people. In our business, we have a lot of change, and it’s constantly happening. You’ve got to listen and sit and make sure you keep open communication. I’m lucky to have a locker room that does that and players that talk about it and guys that listen to each other.” In June, Reid voiced several of his emotions — sorrow, anger, empathy, gratitude and, finally, optimism — with regard to the racial and social issues that have gripped America this summer after the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd. Reid told Chiefs fans then that he supports the Black Lives Matter movement to end social injustice, racism and police brutality.
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In reiterating his message Wednesday, Reid used even stronger words in urging Americans to do more to improve the country’s progress toward true equality. “I hate seeing the way things are going right now,” Reid said. “We’re better than that, absolutely better than that.” An hour after Reid’s comments, Mark Donovan, the team president, held his annual news conference during camp, discussing the topics and issues the franchise has addressed since the Super Bowl. Because Donovan’s comments are some of the most significant since camp started, The Athletic decided to publish the full transcript. Donovan’s answers to reporters’ questions have been lightly edited for clarity. Why do the Chiefs feel comfortable selling tickets when many other NFL teams, and other pro sports teams, haven’t felt comfortable, at least to this point? It’s roughly 16,000 tickets out of the 75,000 or so that we typically would have. I think what makes us comfortable is our plan. I was on a league call (Wednesday), and we were talking about that and I was asked to present to the league our plan and our success this past Saturday. And our plan for Saturday and for the opening kickoff. Our plan is only as good as compliance and the following of directions, the following of a protocol for our staff or our players, for our coaches and for our fans. It’s critical. If they do, we feel pretty confident that we can do this. We’re not alone. We are definitely in the minority when you look across the league. We take the responsibility very seriously. We understand that we’ve got to get this right and we’ve got to be very diligent in our processes and protocol in order to be successful, in order to have another game with the fans. We know that other teams and other leagues are looking at us. What system is in place to ensure that the people who are charged to ensure that the safety policies are being followed are actively identifying and correcting violations, such as not wearing a mask when inside the stadium? I was very impressed with our fans and their ability and their compliance with putting on their mask as soon as they are approaching someone. This is not an excuse, and I want to be crystal clear on this: We have to do a lot more to continue to communicate, to make people aware that it’s really important, even in your seats, to wear your mask. I talked to a few of our season ticket members. I said just I need to reinforce the importance of wearing the mask in the stands. And the dad looked at me and said, “Mark, I wore the mask everywhere you told me to. I was sitting in a seat, there’s no one within 10 feet of me and I’m with my family (who I) eat with and spend all my time without a mask. I appreciate it, but it’s 95 degrees and I took my mask off for a minute.” I said, “I hear you, but as we get more people in and we’re closer together, we’ll have more interactions, more cross traffic. We all have to be disciplined.” You’ll see some stuff this Saturday. It’s very in-your-face signage. We’re gonna walk up and down aisles with a sign that says, “Hey, wear your mask, even if you’re sitting.” We’re going to continue to learn to try to understand how we can better enforce that. We don’t want to be in a situation where we’re evicting someone or arresting someone or anything like
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that. But we think that we have enough systems and enough communication in place where we can enforce that. It’s to protect all of us. One of the biggest things we had to our advantages is we’r e an outdoor stadium. But we also have to listen to the experts. And the experts are telling us, “Yeah, you’re an outdoor stadium, but you’re not just sitting and eating dinner. You’re standing and cheering and yelling and screaming. Those are all things that factor into the risks associated. And those risks are significantly decreased if you wear a mask.” So those are the kinds of things we’re really focused on. FC Dallas (a Major League Soccer team), which (Chiefs owner) Clark Hunt also owns, decided to kneel, as a peaceful protest against police brutality and social injustice, during the national anthem earlier this month in its first home match. Some fans booed them. How does that situation impact the Chiefs if those players want to express themselves in a similar manner? We learned a lot from the FC Dallas situation, and I think everyone across sports learned a lot from that situation. We take all that learning into what we’re talking about here. When all of this started to become as big an issue as it’s become — and it’s definitely something that needs to be addressed, and it’s definitely something that needs our attention — we as an organization sat and talked about this: players, coaches, football operations staff, our executive staff. We made a decision to shut our website down and say right now the important thing is to really, as one of our principles, unite our community. Unity is more important now than ever. I believe we were the first team in the NFL to respond to that (George Floyd) video. I’m most proud of the message we sent that night. It was late at night. It was Clark, myself and a few others on a phone call just saying the message we want people and our players to hear is that we love and support them. We’re part of a family. Just like any family, there are passions on all sides. Let’s love each other, let’s support each other and let’s respect each other. That’s really what we’re going to continue to do. We’re going to meet and have more discussions about this. You’ll be hearing more from us. But that’s really the approach that we take to issues like this. What do you want to express to fans who may be upset or try to violate the Chiefs’ rule on banning fans from donning Native American-themed headdresses or face paint worn that appropriates American Indian cultures and traditions? This isn’t a new issue for us. I share some personal stories of the first few meetings (in 2014) I had with John Learned (who founded the American Indian Center of the Great Plains in Kan sas City). He explained how this is viewed and here are some of the issues we should be discussing. I walked away from that first meeting a little bit embarrassed about my lack of knowledge and a little bit inspired. If you have the knowledge, it becomes p retty clear. Everybody is going to have opinions on all these issues. I respect that. Personally, I didn’t understand what a headdress or a war bonnet was or what it represented. To have an American Indian explain the sacredness of that, how every single f eather is earned and what it means in their community, it’s a pretty easy answer. Let’s educate people. Let’s create awareness around that. The realistic goal we had was if we can just explain this to a fan we see in the parking lot who is wearing a headdress, we feel confident we can convert them. You can paint your face.
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You can wear a crazy hat, a wig or a headband. You can create your own character. But understand that just throwing the headdress on because you bought it at a five -and-dime store and think it’s cool, it’s not. What is being discussed about the “Tomahawk Chop” being under review? The drum came back to Arrowhead as part of trying to bring the traditions and honoring the traditions that were started in Municipal (Stadium). Again, a little bit embarrassed and inspired that we didn’t realize the sacred position of the drum in the American Indian culture. When that was explained to us, we went to them and said: “How do we make this work? What are our options?” They shared with us the idea of blessing in the four directions, blessing the drum itself, acknowledging what it is and creating an education. (The drum) is seen as sort of the heartbeat of that culture. When you hear things like that, it’s easy to latch on to that and say, “OK, it’s kind of the heartbeat of the stadium, too.” We can debate that, right? People can argue. But it is a way to unify our fans and it is a way to bring people together at that moment. How do we do it in a respectful way? That’s what we’re working on right now. These aren’t things that we’re going to be able to successfully change, one way or the other, overnight. We’re going to continue to work on that. What is being done and discussed as part of the Chiefs’ voter registration initiative? Voter registration and voter engagement, I personally believe, is very important. We as an organization are really proud to be associated with Patrick (Mahomes) and Tyrann (Mathieu) in their efforts. I’ve been in those discussions. We have some plans to do things in and around this election that are going to be focused on awareness of the importance of voting and creating awareness of the ways people can register to vote. Rise To Vote, (an organization) the league is working with, is (an organization) we’re actively working with and have met with us and our players. They are going to meet with our staff, as well as our stadium staff to make sure that everybody is aware of the opportunities they have to register to vote and to vote. We’ve got a plan right now, which is not final, that we’re committed to doing it. But it has some challenges. We want to make Arrowhead a polling location (on election day). We want to create an opportunity for people to come to Arrowhead and vote. In addition to that, you’re going to see a lot of things around the highest points of awareness for us as an organization that are going to focus on voting, the awareness of voting and ways to vote. This organization believes that that’s a platform that we need to get behind is the beauty of the vote. You can have different opinions. You can vote for different people. That’s really what we’re trying to engage in. Amid the coronavirus pandemic, why are ticket prices higher than usual? How do we take a stadium from 76,000 seats down to 16,000 seats and equally and fairly distribute those tickets to our season ticket members? As you can imagine, when you do the math, it’s pretty quick that you can’t. We said all season ticket members will have the opportunity to move their tickets to 2021. There’ll be benefits and incentives to do that. We’ve locked in their flat pricing for next year. How do we make this fair and equitable in terms of the tickets we do have? In May, when our schedule was released, we announced our single-game ticket price. We were assuming we were going to have 76,000 people in the stadium. Those prices were based on a lot of very complicated algorithms and data that we used to understand the market. Those (16,000 tickets
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for opening night) are single-game prices. We completely understand and expected the response, because it’s a significant jump. We’re pretty good, from a data standpoint, of understanding what the ticket is really worth and (the price) being below that number. The person who buys a ticket to our Houston Texas game today, at the price that we’re selling at, can put that on the secondary market that minute and make more money, hundreds of dollars more based on location, in some cases. A $400 ticket is going for (around) a $1,000 on the secondary marketplace. What we’re trying to do is be fair. How have ticket sales been and does that speak to the passion of Chiefs fans? Sales have gone exactly as we expected. When you look at what the projections are going to be and how our projections have to be right, we’re exactly where we thought we were going to be. Based on the demand, it’s an interesting way of doing it, because we’re doing it by tenure, going back to the point of fairness. We had to figure out a way to give every single season one o f our season ticket members an opportunity. It allowed the longest-tenured season ticket members the opportunity to buy first. We’re probably only 30 percent through our season ticket members. If you look demographically, you could have some people who may be medically challenged, may have conditions, may be in our older demographic and may be less likely to want to come to a game where they’ve got to go through all these protocols. We believe, as our projections show, that as we get closer to the newer-tenured season ticket members, the percentage of people who buy within those pods are going to be much higher. Is there a financial mark the Chiefs must reach this season to make having fans at the games worth it? The numbers don’t pencil out. You can’t really make the numbers work when you’re talking about that amount of tickets. This isn’t about that. This is about creating an experience and continuing the experience at Arrowhead, giving our fans the opportunity to be there for some really special moments. To some, it may sound a little bit contrived. But honestly, we’re raising a banner on Sept. 10. We want our fans to be a part of that. We’re really struggling with the fact that only 16,000 (fans) are going to be able to be a part of that, live and in person, but that’s a lifelong memory. It’s going to be different. It’s not going to be exactly what we wanted. But it is something that was really important to us as a franchise. I will speak for the (Clark) Hunt family on that. That was a big driver on figuring out a way to get our fans in safely. And that’s been a big driver for us as a business.
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(Clark Hunt) Chiefs’ Clark Hunt describes the Super Bowl LIV championship ring in detail: ‘It’s big’ Herbie Teope September 1, 2020 KC Star The Chiefs received their Super Bowl LIV championship rings during a Tuesday night ceremony at Arrowhead Stadium. And the long wait for the unveiling ceremony proved worth it. Much planning went into the making of the jewelry, which apparently cost, well, quite a bit. “You guys are lucky we designed these rings before we signed Patrick’s new contract or they’d probably be a lot smaller,” Chiefs chairman and CEO Clark Hunt jokingly told the assembled team on Mahomes’ 10-year, $503 million extension. Kidding aside, Hunt then dove into the eye-popping specifics of the ring. “The Super Bowl LIV championship ring boasts a total of 10 and a half karats of gem stones, including 255 diamonds and 36 genuine rubies,” Hunt said. “The centerpiece , the ring top, is the Chiefs’ arrowhead logo composed of 60 diamonds in honor of the franchise’s 60th season, and 16 cut rubies, which represents our 10 AFC West division titles and six playoff appearances under Coach (Andy) Reid. “Fifty diamonds surround the logo in the shape of the Lombardi Trophy to mark the 50 years between Super Bowl victories. An additional 122 diamonds cascade along the rings’ top edges marking the club’s 22 playoff appearances and the 100th season of the National Football League.” The rings are also unique to each individual player who earned one. “These rings are also customized to be unique to each of you with your name, jersey number set in diamonds and your signature etched on the inside,” Hunt told the players Tuesday evening. “Under your jersey number on the left side of your ring is the motto from the championship season, ‘Be Great!’” Hunt then paused to tell tight end Travis Kelce that they were going to put the song, “(You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party),” in that spot, but the song title was too long. With the light moment over, Hunt went on to finish describing the rest of the championship jewelry. “The right side of the ring displays the Super Bowl LIV logo, the final score of the game and the words ‘Chiefs Kingdom’ in recognition of our incredible fans,” Hunt said. “Finally, the inside of
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the ring features the final scores of our three playoff victories and the deficits this team overcame in each of those games, recognizing the resilience of this outstanding group of players and coaches. “And on the other side of the ring are the initials L.H. as a reminder of the man who named the Super Bowl, founded this franchise and who my siblings and I were blessed to call, ‘Dad’ — our dad, Lamar Hunt.” Before directing the video board to count down from 10, Hunt emphasized what can happen when people come together to achieve a common goal and greatness. He also pointed out the bond among every member of the organization and how the ring serves as a symbol of camaraderie for the Super Bowl champions. “Every member of our Chiefs family who wears this ring played a part in doing something special,” Hunt said. With Hunt’s remarks finished, the video board inside the stadium counted down from 10 to zero, prompting the assembled team in front of Hunt to open the boxes containing their rings.
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(Derrick Nnadi) Chiefs' DT Derrick Nnadi is Making a Difference One Dog at a Time Matt McMullen February 13, 2020 Chiefs.com It all started with Rocky. The All-ACC honors, the pre-season award watch lists and the various accolades were special, but for defensive tackle Derrick Nnadi, this timid puppy – adopted prior to Nnadi's senior year at Florida State - was about to change his life. Rocky would serve as Nnadi's confidant through the thick and thin, bring him unparalleled joy and – in due time – inspire the future third-round pick to cover the adoption fees for 126 dogs at the Kansas City Pet Project. The story has swept the nation, but for Nnadi, this young pit bull was where it all began. "Everything scared him. If I dropped my phone and it hit the ground, he'd run away," Nnadi recalled. "Because of that, I started taking him anywhere and everywhere I went. I introduced him to new surroundings, people and other dogs just to help him come out of his shell a little bit. Going through all that, it got me thinking about other dogs and what they're going through abused animals and dogs living in shelters that can't seem to find a home. That's how I got the idea." The idea was first put into action at the NFL Scouting Combine two years ago, where Nnadi pledged to support The Humane Society for every rep he tallied on the bench press. It was this past offseason, however, that Nnadi decided to take things a step further. For every game the Kansas City Chiefs won in 2019, Nnadi was going to cover the adoption fees for a dog at the KC Pet Project. "It was all his idea," said Tori Fugate, Chief Communications Officer at the KC Pet Project. "It was so heartwarming for a player to use his platform like this, and we were just hopeful that there would be lots of wins." Indeed, there were plenty of wins to go around – 14, as a matter of fact – as the Chiefs punched their ticket to Super Bowl LIV in Miami. There was just one game left, but this time, Nnadi figured the one-for-one model wasn't going to cut it. "It was a last-minute idea that hit me out of nowhere. The way I saw it, we had the biggest game in the world coming up, and if I was sponsoring one dog for a regular game, then this had to be the biggest gesture imaginable," Nnadi said. "It seemed like the perfect thing to do."
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Nnadi called the Pet Project and told them he was covering the adoption fees for every dog in the shelter. That meant 109 dogs – not to mention the 14 already sponsored during the season – were suddenly available to families free of charge. "We had a line of people waiting the day after the game," Fugate said. "We expected a big response locally, but we never expected this. People just kept showing up to adopt." In hardly any time at all, all 109 dogs had a home because of Nnadi. In a matter of 48 hours, he had won a Super Bowl – tallying a tackle-for-loss in the game – and helped dozens of dogs find a better life. That impact was realized less than a week later, as the KC Pet Project invited back every family that adopted one of Nnadi's sponsored dogs for a parade through the organization's facility. Nnadi took photos and got to know the lives he'd changed – including a three-legged dog fittingly named "Nnadi" by his new family – before presenting the crowd with a check for more than $18,000, officially coming through on his pledge. "It made me feel pretty good just seeing all these dogs have a second chance. They have families now that'll love them," Nnadi said. "It works the other way, too. These dogs will love these families, so it's not just helping dogs, it's helping people." It all seems so simple, but it's a reality that Nnadi made possible. "This was not only a great thing for Kansas City, it also inspired people to do things like this across the country," Fugate said. "This brought so much awareness to shelter animals looking for homes and it encouraged so many families to come out and adopt a new best friend. It's so wonderful." It all started with Rocky, but in just a matter of years, Nnadi's love for animals has touched so many more.
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(Tyreek Hill) Chiefs receiver Tyreek Hill surprises KC frontline healthcare workers with free meals Sam McDowell May 14, 2020 KC Star The line exhausted after 45 minutes, and then these healthcare workers on the front lines of the fight against the coronavirus pandemic removed cell phones from pockets, huddled in front of Saint Luke’s Hospital and posed for a picture. “Tyreek!” a few of them shouted. “Come get in here!” Chiefs wide receiver Tyreek Hill walked to the group, stood front and center and stretched his arms wide. “I’m smiling,” he said, a white mask covering his face. “You just can’t see it.” A nurse removed her own mask, handed it to Hill and made an unusual request, one fitting of the times. She wanted his signature — on the mask. Hill obliged. And thus, one mask inside the hospital’s neuro-oncology ward now reads: “Cheetah speed.” Hill spent Thursday morning at the location just off the plaza, handing out 100 meals to medical workers. Nurses and doctors lined up and met the recent Super Bowl champion. Hill wore not only a mask but gloves, giving people elbow bumps rather than handshakes. “I’m always trying to uplift people,” he said. “I always want to put a smile on people’s faces. That’s the main reason for it. I feel like the time we’re living in now, a lot of people are down; a lot of people are sad. I’m always trying to bring a smile to someone’s face.” Hill and his foundation partnered with Fuel Cafe, a Kansas City company, to provide the food. They served 100 workers. Fuel Cafe has previously provided prepared meals to workers at other hospitals, too. The visit with Hill Thursday had been kept a secret inside Saint Luke’s Hospital. Cassandra Stompoly, the unit’s nurse manager, broke the news during a shift meeting earlier in the morning. “It was very hard to keep it a secret,” Stompoly said. “I knew it was going to be a big deal, so I wanted to make sure they had the same kind of reaction that most people would have to something like this.”
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The late reveal prevented them from wearing their favorite Chiefs garb or having football -related items on hand for Hill to sign. So they got creative. Hence the mask. But a couple of maintenance workers came prepared. After the Chiefs won the Super Bowl, Duane Ferguson had a sign made commemorating an event he wasn’t sure would ever happen. In bold white capital letters on a red background, the sign reads “Super Bowl Champs,” along with the game’s final score — Chiefs 31, 49ers 20. Ferguson turned it into a magnet and sticks it on the maintenance cart he rolls down the facility’s hallways. It got a little more awesome Thursday when Hill added his signature to it. “I might have to get it laminated before I put it back,” Ferguson said, “so nobody smear s it.” Hill told him another title would be coming. He’d have to update his sign. Such lighthearted moments provided a brief break from the reality of a pandemic that has kept people isolated for the better part of two months. For Hill, too. He said he has developed a daily routine — a morning workout followed by time with his kids. “It feels amazing just being around people again,” Hill said. “Seeing their smiles and being around laughter, it makes me feel good. I’m always about energy, bringing good energy. It’s fun. I love it.”
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(Patrick Mahomes and Tyrann Mathieu) Chiefs stars Patrick Mahomes, Tyrann Mathieu vow to head up voterregistration effort Blair Kerkhoff June 10, 2020 KC Star Several NFL stars, including Patrick Mahomes and Tyrann Mathieu, have contributed to a powerful Black Lives Matter video. They’ve shared their feelings about racial and social injustice on social media in the wake of George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police officers. Now, the two Chiefs leaders will do even more. “It’s going to be much more than guys pitching football camps back home,” Mathieu said. “I see a lot more guys really getting involved in their communities and pushing things forward.” To Mathieu and Mahomes, the starting safety and star quarterback of the Super Bowl-winning Chiefs, that means taking an active role in voter registration. “It’s a lot more than just protesting,” Mathieu said. “You have to find a call to action. I think voter registration can impact a lot of people. “If we can make voting cool, if we can make it atrendy thing, then we’re really changing the future, setting these kids up for a great future. ... A lot of folks don’t think that’s cool. Maybe we can make it cool again.” As protests continue around the country, calls for easier and more voter registration have gained momentum in the sports world, especially in the college ranks. Last week, 62 Missouri football players marched peacefully from the Mizzou campus to the Boone County Courthouse and registered to vote. Georgia Tech has led a movement to make Election Day, Nov. 3 this year, an NCAA mandated day off from practice to allow athletes to vote. Mathieu and Mahomes want to see what they can do to get professional athletes involved. They’ve spoken with Chiefs CEO and chairman Clark Hunt and team president Mark Donavan and have more discussions with teammates in the works. “We really want to move forward with this,” Mahomes said. “We’re going to try to find the best way to give money or support or whatever it is to get as many people registered to vote, so they can go in and effect change.” Mathieu sees voter registration as a very worthy cause for the NFL and other sports.
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“If we could get a program going, and to see 30 other football teams do it and 30 basketball teams do it ...” Mathieu said. “It’s going to be our duty, our responsibility, to understand that we may have a million dollars and maybe can fix some things to a certain extent. “But to really see our kids have a future, to see young minorities hold great seats of power, that comes through voter registration.”
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(Patrick Mahomes) ‘Enough is enough.’ Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes said he will use his platform to speak out Sam McDowell June 10, 2020 KC Star A video that has sparked Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes to jump full-fledged into the Black Lives Matter movement is one he still can’t bear to watch. Not completely. But as the images of George Floyd’s death prompt action across the country, they’re also prompting a reflection of Mahomes’ own platform. With permanent changes. “Enough is enough,” Mahomes said via a video call with media Wednesday. “We gotta do something about this. I’m blessed to have this platform. Why not use it?” Protesters have lined the streets of American cities since Floyd died in Minneapolis police custody on May 25. Mahomes said he has watched the nine-minute video only in parts rather than in entirety, saying, “it hurts me too much to my soul.” Mahomes, 24, is the son of a black father and white mother, born in small-town Tyler, Texas. While he said he has not experienced less privilege because of his race, he has studied racial inequality — an education gleaned from conversations with his family and other important figures in his life. In the past two weeks, he has been vocal in his support of the Black Lives Matter campaign to fight racial injustices, initially on his social media accounts and then via participation in a video aimed at the NFL, featuring teammate Tyrann Mathieu and more than a dozen other players. The players requested the league “condemn racism and the systematic oppression of black people.” Mahomes is prominently featured in a powerful clip bolstered by his presence. Looking directly into the camera, he’s the first player to state the movement’s message: “Black Lives Matter.” “That stuff needed to be said,” Mahomes said Wednesday of the video and his own statement on social media. “We needed to come together as players and show that we believe black lives matter. We believe this needs to be informed. We need to be the role models to go out there and take that step.” Along with Mathieu, Mahomes said he plans to address voter registration issues, a blueprint that has not yet been diagrammed but includes ongoing conversations with Chiefs owner Clark Hunt and team president Mark Donovan.
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The video featuring Mahomes and other NFL stars preceded an important shift in the league’s stance — or at least its public stance — on a demonstration that reached its league back in 2016, when San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick knelt during the national anthem before a game. Mahomes commended the support he’s received from the Chiefs and said he has personally spoken with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell. And a day after the players revealed their video, Goodell released his own 81-second video acknowledging the need for change. “We, the National Football League, admit we were wrong for not listening to NFL players earlier and encourage all to speak out and peacefully protest. We, the National Football League, believe black lives matter,” Goodell said in the video. While not outright stated as a direct response to the message from Mahomes and his colleagues throughout the league, the precisely similar wording in Goodell’s statement indicated it was exactly that. “We think that’s the first step,” Mahomes said. “But we wanna make sure it leads to action.”
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(Alex Okafor) ‘America needs you, Mom’: KC Chiefs defensive end Alex Okafor speaks out for justice Alex Okafor June 19, 2020 KC Star
Alex Okafor is a defensive end for the Kansas City Chiefs, former Texas Longhorn and native of East Texas. He wrote the following to share with the audiences of The Kansas City Star and Fort Worth Star-Telegram. After an injury in Week 15 of the 2019 season, I watched my Kansas City Chiefs win the Super Bowl from the stands with my parents. It was a heartfelt experience. There’s nothing that I wanted more than to be on the field, battling with my teammates. But being able to watch our team win, with my parents next to me, is an experience that I wouldn’t trade for the world. I wish time would have stopped and we could live in that moment forever. Just a few months later, Mom was in the hospital, diagnosed with Acute Myeloid Leukemia. Because of coronavirus restrictions, we could not visit her in the hospital during her chemotherapy. Within three weeks, at only age 59, she was gone. Soon after, so were three more African-Americans: Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd. At this point, I’m about to melt down. The pain from my mother’s death is sitting heavily on me, not to mention the rage that has taken over me since these slaughterings. I’m overwhelmed with so many emotions; all I wanted to do is crawl into a cave and hide while the rest of the world burns down. Then I thought to myself, “What would Mom have done?” Sonia Danette Alexander Okafor has always been my biggest role model. She grew up in East Texas, losing her mom at 9, and went to Grambling State University, majoring in criminal justice. She had grown up in the civil rights movement and experienced a lot of racial trauma post segregation. She always made my brother and me aware of the racial injustices in this country. She did her best to prepare us for the obstacles to being Black in the suburbs of Texas: Don’t stay out too late. Don’t wear durags in public. Drive carefully while passing through Williamson County. Put both hands on the steering wheel when being pulled over by the cops.
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She stopped at nothing to assure everyone in my family excelled. She had a kind heart and was always trying to improve society. She worked as a probation officer for 11 years and was certified as an alcohol and drug-abuse counselor. Later, she worked for a nonprofit organization finding housing for underprivileged families. I’m sure if she were alive today, she would say we need more organizations as such to help level the playing field. She was one of the most courageous people I know. My dad moved from Nigeria at 19 and met my mom at Grambling. Shortly after marriage, his mother got sick and he wanted to bring her to the States for better medical care. But he wasn’t a U.S. citizen yet, so Mom volunte ered to bring my grandma back. My mom had never been to Nigeria, and the area my dad grew up in wasn’t safe for foreigners. Nevertheless, she went and brought my grandma back seamlessly. That kind of courage and selflessness are what we need right now. We also need more of her tolerance. Which reminds me of the story in which my dad brought home goat meat for the first time. In Nigeria, the head of a goat is considered a delicacy; my dad was saving it for a special occasion. When Mom opened the freezer door , she screamed: A goat’s head was staring back at her! Initially, she was terrified, but she made it a point to learn about the Nigerian culture so she could understand my dad’s upbringing. (She eventually came to eat goat meat but never would try that goat head.) She knew it wasn’t fair to judge my dad without truly understanding where he came from. We as a nation need to come together to learn more about one another’s upbringing. The more we learn, the more sensitive we will be to other demographics’ stru ggles. Mom was a huge fan of Oprah Winfrey. She recorded every episode of her show and bought all her magazines. Nowadays, I get emotional every time I see or hear someone mention Oprah. I see my mom in her. Both are strong Black women who strive to make this world a better place. Oprah once advocated, “Turn your wounds into wisdom.” This resonates with me because if Mom were alive, I believe this would be her advice for our country. We must learn from the recent murders if we want to end systemic racism in the United States. After Mom passed away, I vowed that I’ll stop at nothing to make her proud. I’ll be the best man I can be while honoring her to the fullest. The first big step is making a legitimate effort to end racism in this country. As much as I wanted to cut off all news networks and social-media outlets so that I could mourn in peace, I know this is not what Mom would have wanted. Because of her, I’m writing this article. Because of her, I want to have this uncomfortable conversation about racism and inequality. Mom worked as an alcohol and drug-abuse counselor for 11 years. There’s a term in that field known as “emotional sobriety.” In order for the Black community to take the next step, we must embrace these emotions of anger. We have to address our pain and agony in a way in which it doesn’t eat at us anymore, but motivates us to take care of our own. We must practice emotional sobriety so that we can take these negative emotions and channel them into concise and conscious efforts. This includes voting, and not just in the presidential election. Mom always urged me to go vote. If I had time in my schedule I would, but I never took it seriously. If I voted it was only because Mom kept bugging me. Growing up, mom used to always say, “If you don’t like what’s going on in your life, what do you plan to do about it?” Well, since my mother is no longer here to pressure me every election, I must take it upon myself to vote while encouraging others to do the same.
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Mom, I love you. Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m more determined than ever to continue your work in creating a better society. A better America.
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(Frank Clark) Why Chiefs star Frank Clark made special trips to feed the homeless on skid row Sam McDowell June 19, 2020 KC Star On Easter morning, Chiefs defensive end Frank Clark woke up in his California home feeling the urge to do something. Feeling a nudge to help the neighborhood in which he spent much of his childhood. But how? As his family cooked a holiday meal, he left for Los Angeles’ Skid Row — a well-known district in downtown L.A. —unsure of his plan. “The first place I thought of was the pizza spot,” he said. The Skid Row residents — many of them homeless — had a celebrity delivery man. Clark himself. And this week, he repeated the gesture. Clark packed up his trunk with dozens of pizzas from Little Caesars, delivering them to his old neighborhood. “Took care of my people today,” he wrote on social media. Clark spent a portion of his childhood homeless with his single mother, Teneka, he told The Star last September, a few months after he signed a five-year, $105 million contract with the Chiefs. They stayed at Union Rescue Mission in Skid Row but bounced around to other shelters and motels, too. He has made a point to remember his past, calling it a purpose. He paid for homeless guests to attend the team’s home opener last fall, providing them a limousine ride to the stadi um and seats in a suite. In his first pizza delivery to Skid Row, over the Easter holiday, Clark and a friend rushed into Little Caesars during the midst of the pandemic and asked for as many pizzas as they could make. How about 100? He offered to buy pizzas from those inside the store who had already ordered. On such short notice, the store said they could make 55 . His jersey number.
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“It’s a coincidence. It’s crazy,” he said. “... I went down there with my friend. He helped me pass out food to the homeless. We made sure we wore our protective stuff. But I feel like I’m more in touch with them than the average person. I know the streets.”
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(Frank Clark) Frank Clark to Pay Funeral Costs for Local Four-Year-Old Shooting Victim Matt McMullen July 4, 2020 Chiefs.com An unthinkable tragedy struck a local family this week when four -year-old LeGend Taliferro was shot and killed while he slept in his home, and as the community grieves a life cut far too short, Kanas City Chiefs' defensive end Frank Clark is doing what he can to help. Clark is covering LeGend's funeral costs, as reported by McKenzie Nelson of 41 Action News. According to Nelson, Clark has been in contact with LeGend's mother about how he can help. The Pro Bowl pass-rusher also tweeted a photo of young LeGend - who was described as having "the heart of a lion" by his mother â&#x20AC;&#x201C; along with a message encouraging the community to remember and honor the four-year-old's memory. "RIP young LeGend Taliferro. Crazy In the midst of a movement we still manage to do foolish things," Clark said in his tweet. "He was killed as he slept in his home due to gun violence. Hi s mother, Charron Powell needs us. Let his name be heard." Clark was a critical component of the Chiefs' championship campaign in 2019 - tallying five sacks in the postseason alone â&#x20AC;&#x201C; but his impact was often felt well beyond the field. He gave away 150 backpacks and school supplies to kids in need last August, threw a Halloween dinner and party for local inner-city families in October and frequently gave back to the underprivileged community in Los Angeles where he grew up, providing families with food, cle aning supplies and hygiene products on a regular basis. Now, as LeGend's family copes with the worst of circumstances, Clark is once again using his platform and resources to make a difference for those who need it.
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(Patrick Mahomes) Mahomes’ new deal is a record, and the Chiefs have been right about him at every step Sam Mellinger July 6, 2020 KC Star Twelve years ago, Chiefs coach Herm Edwards was deciding between Brodie Croyle, Damon Huard and Tyler Thigpen as his quarterback. Twelve years from now, Patrick Mahomes will remain under contract with the Chiefs. Kids who just finished kindergarten will be in college when Mahomes’ new contract expires. Kids who just finished fourth grade will be trying to intercept Mahomes, or perhaps blocking for him. We knew this was coming. We didn’t know this was coming, and not just that the news was broken by a woman who sold champagne for the Chiefs’ front office celebration. The Chiefs all but promised Mahomes’ next contract would be historic, and they outshot that expectation — 10 years, with the contract kicking in after his rookie deal expires in two years, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter. The deal is worth up to $503 million — sports’ first half-billion dollar deal — and includes $477 million in “guarantee mechanisms,” with opt-outs if those aren’t exercised, according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport. This is the first time an NFL player has held sports’ richest contract. No player has ever been tied to a team for a longer period of time. Chris Cabott, the president and COO of Steinberg Sports and Entertainment, helped negotiate a deal that will benefit not just his client but players across the league. The contract is without precedent because Mahomes is without precedent. He is a league and Super Bowl MVP before his 25th birthday while playing the most importan t position in professional sports. His worst season as a starter is either the time he threw for 5,000 yards and 50 touchdowns, or the time he led three consecutive double-digit postseason comebacks in winning the Chiefs’ first Super Bowl since before his father was born. Before Mahomes, the Chiefs were exactly good enough to lose in the playoffs. With Mahomes, damn near anything is possible on any snap, in any game, in any season. A generation of Kansas City kids will graduate from high school knowing nothing but a world in which their local football team employs one of the greatest quarterbacks in league history. What a time to be alive.
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The Chiefs won Super Bowl LIV, return 20 of 22 starters, improved their already absurd offense, retained offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy and signed Mahomes to what is effectively a lifetime contract. We don’t know how defensive lineman Chris Jones’ negotiations will end, but lets just say teams have had worse offseasons. For Mahomes, he won the Super Bowl MVP, slammed many domestics during the parade, influenced Whataburger to expand to Kansas City, starred in a video that forced the commissioner to apologize and now has a contract that will make him his sport’s richest player and benefit the league’s other stars for years. Lets just say players have had less impressive stretches of five months. You cannot have followed the Chiefs for more than a few years and not feel like the world has shifted. For years — for decades, really — the top of the league has felt close enough to see but too far away to touch. The Chiefs made a lot of smart decisions. They hired a lot of good people. They employed stars, from Deron Cherry to Christian Okoye to Derrick Thomas to Priest Holmes to Tony Gonzalez to Justin Houston to Eric Berry. But none of it was enough. In Andy Reid’s seven years, the Chiefs have done more than merely be right on Mahomes . They drafted Travis Kelce and Tyreek Hill and Jones. They signed Mitchell Schwartz and Tyrann Mathieu in free agency. They traded for Frank Clark and Charvarius Ward. But none of these things had an impact like being so undeniably correct about perhaps the most all-in decision in franchise history: trading two first-round picks and a third-round pick at a time when some believed they were better off adding to a team that had just gone 12-4 with a division championship. The Chiefs were almost brazenly right with this — they began planning for this contract extension before Mahomes’ first snap, and general manager Brett Veach called Mahomes the best player he’d ever seen before Mahomes’ first season as a starter. If they were wrong about Mahomes, they had basically no safety net. The Chiefs would be going with Andy Dalton or Cam Newton or Jordan Love at quarterback right now. Instead, they have the league’s best. There is risk in everything. This is no different. Mahomes could be injured, or he could have already played his best two seasons. Andy Reid won’t coach forever, and Mahomes is unlikely to be surrounded by this much skill-position talent for the rest of his career. If this is as good as it gets, then Mahomes and the Chiefs will each feel unfulfilled. This is a percentage play. Because if Mahomes is not going to be widely regarded as one of the best few to ever do it by the time this contract is finished, we have yet to see the reason. Defenses adjusted to him in 2019, and he had to compete through a knee injury that limited his ability to extend plays. He still threw for 2,752 yards, 21 touchdowns and six interceptions in 10 games after the injury, including the playoffs. The Chiefs averaged more than 30 points in the postseason. The only professional disappointment he’s suffered so far is the time the 2018 Chiefs’ defense beat him in the AFC Championship Game.
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Mahomes is outrageously talented but also intensely smart. He has shown himself to be at his best in the biggest moments, with a natural leadership that won over a locker room filled with older teammates almost immediately. He won a league MVP trophy in his first year as a starter, and then worked harder and became even more effective. Just spitballing, but the likeliest reasons for Mahomes’ career to be sidetracked from historic are injury, his work ethic fading with success and the Chiefs failing to surround him with enough talent. The first is true with any athlete, the second has so far gone the opposite way, and the Chiefs’ GM is just 41 years old. Guarantees don’t exist, but which way would you bet about whether the Chiefs just locked up one of the best 10 quarterbacks of all time? The Chiefs have been right about Mahomes every step so far. He’s given them nothing but reasons to believe that the biggest contract in league history will also be one of the best.
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(Patrick Mahomes) Patrick Mahomes' Contract Extension Hits Chiefs' Fans Differently, and Here's Why BJ Kissel July 7, 2020 Chiefs.com It's done. The best football player in the world will stay in Kansas City for the foreseeable future. The news of Patrick Mahomes' historic contract extension hit the internet Monday morning and social media caught fire, and for good reason. It wasn't a surprise that it happened – nobody thought it wouldn't eventually, but the deal still raised plenty of eyebrows all across the country, and for multiple reasons. The guy with the best start of any player in NFL history – the NFL MVP Award in his first year as a starter, and then a Super Bowl MVP following three-straight playoff comeback wins of doubledigits in his follow-up campaign, was always going to be the highest paid player in football. It's the nature of the position and his resume to this point. But the details – mainly the length of 12 years he's now under contract – means the professional career and continued story of the best football player any of us have ever seen (to this point) will forever be a Chiefs' story - a Kansas City story. It means the kind of moments we've all experienced over the last two years have just begun. The crazy throws, the electrifying runs and improbable comebacks, are just getting started. Kids who can't read right now will be driving cars when Mahomes' newest contract is up. Husbands and wives who haven't even met yet will get married and start a family before he could even possibly go to another team. And Mahomes' future Chiefs' teammates who will be a part of his 2030 Super Bowl run – to be watched by more than 100 million people – aren't barely teenagers and haven't yet played in front of even 1,000 people. In addition to that, Mahomes didn't just sign the largest contract for a football player of all-time, he signed the biggest contract for any athlete, ever – surpassing the Los Angeles Angels' outfielder Mike Trout's mega-contract signed last year. Mahomes, who put up this video on his social media accounts following the announcement, stated that they're "chasing a dynasty" right now. It's the same word – dynasty – that players like Travis Kelce, Frank Clark and Tyreek Hill were using on the field and in the locker room following the Super Bowl victory down in Miami a few months ago.
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No team has won back-to-back Super Bowls since the 2004-05 New England Patriots, and no team has ever won three Super Bowls in a row. In fact, the prop bets have already begun on the over/under on number of titles the Chiefs will win between now and the end of this contract. This contract, which Mahomes made sure would be structured in a way that his teammates can still get paid and talent can still be added around him, will be talked about forever. It's history making. If you're a college kid wanting to be a sports agent, you're going to learn about what Mahomes' representatives - Chris Cabott, Leigh Steinberg and the folks at Steinberg Sports and Entertainment – were able to pull off. A football player is the highest paid athlete in the world for the first time, ever. They negotiated the biggest deal anyone has ever seen, and everyone came out looking good. You'll also learn about what Brett Veach, Brandt Tilis, Chris Shea and company were able to do on the Chiefs' side. It's the longest deal in football history. It's the biggest deal in football history, and from all accounts by those familiar with contracts, salary caps and future business planning, the deal is a win-win for both parties. Neither side comes out looking selfish or bad—something Veach noted in his media availability is unique considering the size and impact of the deal. Veach shared the story of Tilis coming down to his office last Spring, not long after Trout's deal with the Angels was signed and said that Mahomes "was going to get a baseball contract." He did, and current and former players across the league have been u nited in saying, "He's worth every penny." It took years to negotiate this deal, and the price kept going up with each touchdown and comeback win—something Veach said they all laughed about over the past couple of years, but now it's done, and the Chiefs say they have flexibility to win in the present, and the future. This was a "legacy-deal, not a cash deal," Veach noted. But one of the underrated storylines of this contract is also the validation it g ives Mahomes for a decision he made years ago as a teenager – giving up the guarantee of more than a million dollars to pursue professional baseball right out of high school. Mahomes had that opportunity, but he wanted to chance to continue his passion of playing football in college at Texas Tech and so he passed it up. He bet big on himself in a way that a lot of others might not have, and he was rewarded for it. Less than six years later and only five as a "full-time football player," Mahomes surpassed that financial mark by more than 500X's and doesn't seem fazed by any of it. Before Mahomes, the Chiefs hadn't drafted a quarterback that started and actually won a game for them in more than three decades. They had never drafted a quarterback who won a playoff game for them. It was a thing. It was discussed every year around the draft. "Would the Chiefs draft a quarterback in the first round for the first time since 1983?
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Well, they did, and it was worth the wait. In his two years as a starter, Mahomes has started five postseason games – going 4-1 while scoring 16 touchdowns and tossing just two interceptions—just to hit the tip of his long and distinguished resume—at 24 years old. The record books will keep being written by the reigning Super Bowl MVP and cu rrent face of the NFL. There's another big reason this move just hits differently for Chiefs' fans. They've had to endure some of the worst playoff losses and off-the-field tragedies of any fan base in the entire league over the past few decades. They deserve this time. From Joe Delaney and Derrick Thomas, to the no-punt game, missed field goals, phantom hits to the quarterback's head and the most-sudden "forward progress" call in football history, any many, many more, through it all, this fan base has remained loyal. They show up to games – not to watch, but to participate – and created an atmosphere that's praised by outsiders who pop in to visit Arrowhead Stadium to see what the fuss is all about. They quickly learn and the mystique carries on. But now, that same stadium - born of a defensive identity led by the tenacity of No. 58 coming off the edge – will continue to echo the cheers and shouts of disbelief in watching another player born of special skill and character, and another one they can call their own. Patrick Mahomes is the best player in football. He loves being a Chief and absolutely loves being a part of this community—something he mentioned multiple times as to why he signed a deal that would keep him in town for the next 12 years. He's chasing a dynasty, and we get to witness the journey—something we should never take for granted, because after all, we know better than most how rare this really is.
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(Patrick Mahomes) ‘A watershed moment’: The meaning behind Patrick Mahomes’ Royals ownership By Alec Lewis and Nate Taylor July 28, 2020 The Athletic KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Angel McGee was sitting at her desk at the Kansas City Urban Youth Academy on Tuesday morning when an internal news release pinged her phone. She glanced over and saw the name all of Kansas City has come to revere in connection with owne rship of the city’s baseball team. She wasn’t sure whether she was seeing things. “I was like, ‘Hold on, did I read this right?’” McGee said. She shifted from her phone to her monitor, furiously clicking her email to enlarge what she semi could-not-believe she had read. Sure enough, the news was real: Kansas City Chiefs superstar quarterback and Super Bowl MVP Patrick Mahomes had been announced as the newest member of the Kansas City Royals’ ownership group. McGee, the Urban Youth Academy’s manager of communication and outreach, continued reading. There was a statement from Royals principal owner John Sherman, lauding Mahomes’ leadership. There was a statement from Mahomes himself, explaining his vision to deepen his roots within Kansas City. McGee’s jaw remained dropped. The wowed reaction Tuesday, of course, was widespread across Kansas City. Bob Kendrick, the president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, was playing a round of golf Tuesday morning when he learned Mahomes became a part owner of the Royals. He, too, was ecstatic. It wasn’t just the marriage between two of Kansas City’s civic institutions. It was also the idea that Mahomes, of biracial heritage, became a part owner in the major leagues during the moment in which America resides. “The timing,” Kendrick said, “just seems to be so appropriate.” Kendrick first met Mahomes in 2017, a few weeks after the draft. Mahomes, as part of the Chiefs’ annual program to educate new players on the history of professional athletes, toured the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum. Kendrick shared stories of Jackie Robinson entering the major leagues in 1947, Henry Aaron starting his Hall of Fame career in the Negro Leagues and Andrew “Rube” Foster, the former Black pitcher who led seven other owners in establishing the Negro National League 100 years ago. “If you’re African American or Hispanic and you play a team sport in this country, it all starts with the Negro Leagues,” Kendrick said. “I don’t think that’s been lost on Patrick. He understands his father’s role in this sport as an African American.”
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Indeed, Mahomes’ father, Pat, pitched in the major leagues for 11 seasons. He would become pals with fellow pitcher LaTroy Hawkins, who would watch Mahomes take the field as a Chiefs quarterback months after Mahomes’ visit to the museum. As Mahomes no-look-passed his way to being looked upon as one of football’s next greats in 2018, Hawkins watched his godson’s love for Kansas City grow. Success early in 2019 only amplified that love, which started to show in the form of nods to the city’s roots. In October, Kendrick received a phone call from an official from the Chiefs. Four days later, Kendrick delivered to Mahomes a replica No. 25 jersey from the 1942 Kansas City Monarchs. Mahomes wanted to wear the No. 25 Monarchs jersey when he entered Arrowhead Stadium last season before the Chiefs hosted the Indianapolis Colts in a prime -time game. He wanted to honor Leroy “Satchel” Paige, the Hall of Fame pitcher who had donned it before the major leagues’ color barrier was broken. “It’s just cool to know that when I go to Kansas City that he’s there and he’s making an impact on everybody that he comes in contact with,” Hawkins, also a special assistant within the Minnesota Twins organization, said. “For me, that’s the most important thing. I don’t know much about football — other than what he’s taught me over the years — but I do know that having relationships and doing your part to give back to the community and investing where you’re going to be employed at is very important.” While Mahomes was parading the Chiefs to victories in winter 2019, a sale was surfacing across the Truman Sports Complex lot. Sherman, a Kansas City businessman who had given back in the form of his support for Teach for America and the Truman Library Institut e, among many other philanthropic endeavors, was set to purchase the club. He was introduced as the new owner in November. A few months later, Mahomes’ parade of victories turned into an actual parade. For the first time in 50 years, on Feb. 2, the Chiefs won the Super Bowl. Spring’s absence of sports — and the Royals, specifically — because of the COVID-19 pandemic gave way to conversation about a potential long-term contract for Mahomes. Meanwhile, Mahomes was conversing about baseball. He asked Hawkins about his job with the Twins as their special assistant in the baseball operation. Mahomes, as the Chiefs’ top representative in the NFL’s players union, was also intrigued to get Hawkins’ thoughts on how the MLB was building its approach and procedures to start its shortened season amid the coronavirus pandemic. “I hope you guys get it right so we can play football,” Mahomes told Hawkins. “What kind of testing are you guys doing?” At some point, the conversation shifted toward an opportunity that had arisen , one for Mahomes to purchase a piece of ownership with the Royals. He and Hawkins talked about it. Mahomes also discussed the idea with his agents, Chris Cabott and Leigh Steinberg, and even his dad. “I always tell him, if it feels right and it makes sense, that’s what matters,” Hawkins said. “Everybody doesn’t get that opportunity to be able to become a part owner of a professional team in any sport.” That conversation was shelved in the days after May 25, the days following George Floyd’s death. On his social media platforms, Mahomes expressed sadness about the deaths of Floyd,
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Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor while also condemning police brutality, social injustice and racial inequality. Mahomes also gave his support, along with other star NFL players, f or the Black Lives Matter movement. Kendrick observed Mahomes’ stances and marveled at them. At the same time, he was participating in conversations among the Royals brass, which was listening and learning itself. Reggie Sanders, a special assistant with the Royals, hopped on Zoom calls with leadership from the top to Urban Youth Academy employees such as McGee to even players. They discussed diversity, inclusion and equity. Among all of MLB, one glaring issue was o bvious: the very small presence of minority owners. That number grew by one with Tuesday’s news, which goes lengths toward explaining McGee’s reaction. “Now we’re in this stage of equity,” Sanders said. “The thing that never was in the forefront of that was the equity piece. Equity in terms of thought, in terms of policy, governorship and action. Inside of our organization, we’re trying to be intentional about our practices in terms of who we bring on. So the Patrick Mahomes scenario is very fitting to that pragmatic equity solution.” Kendrick, thinking through the news on the golf course, was not surprised to see that pragmatism because of the people involved. There’s Sherman, who has long embraced the Black culture and heritage of baseball. And there’s Mahomes, who is aware of his potential impact beyond the turf. “It couldn’t have come at a better time because of what’s going on in America at this particular moment and what has transpired — and has been transpiring for a long time — but most recently with the George Floyd situation,” Hawkins said. “It’s another indication of being able to push the needle, being about to create a legacy and showing Black people that you can do it, it’s possible. “I wish I had done more when I was playing, but he’s comfortable in himself to be able to be a trailblazer. It’s important because now we see somebody that looks like us that is able to own part of a team. He gives hope.” In saying that, Hawkins referenced young boys and girls, those of whom the Urban Youth Academy works to develop. McGee, thinking of the time, said this news “couldn’t be more perfect.” “This allows us to show our kids — look at the face, a face that resembles a lot of you,” McGee said. On Tuesday, when the news broke, when McGee was fumbling around he r desk and Kendrick was beaming at the golf course, Hawkins and Mahomes texted each other. “I want to build something special (with the Royals),” Mahomes told Hawkins. Hawkins’ response conveyed the importance of the draft and player development, of buildi ng from within. In essence, this is exactly what Mahomes has done civically in becoming a part owner for the Royals. “This is, I think,” Kendrick said, “a watershed moment for sports here in Kansas City.”
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(Chris Jones) Chris Jones plans to collect sacks, rings after 4-year deal with the Chiefs Nate Taylor July 20, 2020 The Athletic KANSAS CITY, Mo. — In his first public comments to reporters since becoming a champion, Chris Jones took a quick pause from speaking Monday during his Zoom video conference. As one of the Chiefs’ most vibrant players, Jones, the star defensive tackle, flashed his wide smile before praising general manager Brett Veach. Jones, with all his swagger, called Veach, the man who helped execute his lucrative contract last week, his dog, further fortifying their already strong relationship. Since the Super Bowl, Jones never wanted to leave the Chiefs, even though he could’ve become an unrestricted free agent. The Chiefs, led by Veach, wanted to keep Jones, who at age 26 is expected to enter the prime of his career. On Monday, the two parties celebrated once again, via Zoom, after Jones signed his four-year, $80 million deal Wednesday, a contract that has the potential to bring him as much as $85 million through incentives. At each step in his five-year career, Jones has been an overachiever, becoming a rare premier interior pass rusher, breaking the NFL record for consecutive games with at least one sack and even convincing his employer to forgo a season on the franchise tag. After Veach and the Chiefs demonstrated their faith in him, Jones was eager Monday to share what he wants to accomplish through his new deal. Jones wasn’t afraid to raise the expectations on himself to as high as they can be. “It’s about having a Hall of Fame career, getting a gold jacket,” he said in a calm manner. “Honestly, if somebody would’ve told me you can choose $20 million or 20 sacks this year, I’d choose the sacks every day. That’s where my mind and heart is at — getting sacks, winning championship rings and having fun. “The game is bigger than just money. It’s my passion, and I want to get the gold jacket, man.” Though Jones is a lovable personality in the Chiefs’ locker room, he also understands the legacy he can create for himself by helping the franchise win multiple Super Bowls. He desires to earn the league’s defensive player of the year award within the next four seasons. He has dreamed of being the league’s leader in sacks, with the crowd inside Arrowhead Stadium roaring as he devours opposing quarterbacks. He wants to one day be at an event alongside superstar quarterback Patrick Mahomes and star defensive end Frank Clark — two of his closest teammates — in which all three men show multiple Super Bowl rings on one of their hands.
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In the past month, several members of the Chiefs have been open about th e franchise’s desire to become the NFL’s next dynasty. Jones was the latest person Monday, as he described the text message he received from Mahomes on July 6, the day the quarterback signed the largest contract in sports history. “As soon as his deal got done, Pat texted me and said, ‘Hey, let’s get this thing done; I left something on the table,’” Jones said. “That’s when I had the feeling that me and the Chiefs were going to work something out.” Mahomes allowed the Chiefs to structure his 10-year extension — by in essence spreading out at least $477 million over that time — by having the deal start after the 2021 season. That decision gave the Chiefs the short-term salary cap flexibility to offer an extension to Jones. When Jones agreed to his extension, Mahomes sent him a short text message Tuesday that was full of excitement: “Let’s fucking go!” Jones appreciated Mahomes’ loyalty to him at every stage of the offseason. “For me, it was just about the understanding that me and Pat have about bringing a dynasty in Kansas City,” Jones said. “We both have the same goal of building something special in Kansas City with Coach (Andy) Reid and all the talent we have. We all have the same mindset: We want to keep this team together.” Veach’s message to Jones and his agents, Michael Katz and Jason Katz, was one of patience after the men met during the NFL Scouting Combine. Similar to everyone in America, the men were forced to adjust their plans and the negotiation for an extension after the coronavirus became a pandemic that impacted the business of every industry. Veach felt the Chiefs needed as much time as possible before the league’s franchise tag deadline Wednesday to better understand the potential changes to the salary cap in future years if the league loses significant revenue this upcoming season. Jones, similar to Mahomes, gave the Chiefs some immediate cash flow help by not receiving a signing bonus upon signing his contract. His base salary for the season also stays at $16.1 million, which is what he would’ve made on the franchise tag. “We were driven and determined this whole time,” Veach said. “Our plan was to do a lot of the things we’ve done this offseason. Right at the top of that list was Pat Mahomes and Chris Jones — and everyone knew that. You just don’t draft these guys year after year. Chris is not a guy that you can just find in any draft. When you have a player that talented, that special, we were determined to make sure Chris Jones was a Chief.” In the past two seasons, Jones has been the Chiefs’ best defensive player, recording 24.5 sacks and 27 tackles for loss during that stretch. Since 2018, Jones has earned the second highest pass-rushing grade (91.4), according to Pro Football Focus. Only Aaron Donald of the Los Angeles Rams has more sacks (52) than Jones (33) among defensive tackles since 2016. Listed at 6-foot-6 and 310 pounds, Jones is one of the quickest and strongest defensive tackles in the league. He also has been a major contributor for the Chiefs without having to record a sack. In the Chiefs’ comeback victory in the Super Bowl, Jones produced perhaps the best performance of his career, deflecting three passes to keep the San Francisco 49ers scorele ss in
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the fourth quarter. He also pressured 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo into throwing an interception before halftime. “He’s unblockable as an interior pass rusher,” Veach said of Jones. “With his size and athleticism and his quickness, it takes two guys to block him. All you have to do is turn the Super Bowl on and see what he did against a very good 49ers team. “He’s a young guy, and we certainly feel that he’s going to keep getting better and better and better. When we announced, via Twitter, that we signed him, (one of) his goals were to be defensive player of the year. If he can stay healthy and stay on this upward trajectory, there’s no doubt in my mind he has all the tools needed to do that.” Since Jones is so confident and exuberant, Reid said he can understand why some opponents, analysts and fans might have misconceptions about work ethic and professionalism. But Reid described Jones as a brilliant defender, a player who enjoys studying, per forming his best in the game’s biggest moments and having his teammates rally around his enthusiastic voice. “He’s very talented, and he brings a great personality to our team,” Reid said of Jones. “Nothing is impossible in his mind, and that’s the way he goes about it. I’ve been proud of the commitment he’s given to the organization and how he’s handled himself.” The biggest example Reid and Veach shared of Jones’ mature devotion to the Chiefs was actually last offseason. In seeking an extension last summer, Jones wasn’t with his teammates when the Chiefs began their offseason program. He stayed away when the team held its organized practices and even took an $88,650 fine for skipping the team’s mandatory minicamp. But Jones ended his holdout at exactly the moment the Chiefs held their first team meeting at the start of training camp. He respected Reid enough not to be a distraction for the team, and he wanted to do his part to learn the Chiefs’ new 4-3 base scheme under new defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. Jones was also willing to share and exchange pass-rushing techniques with Clark, whom the team acquired via a blockbuster trade and signed to a five-year, $105.5 million contract. “It would’ve been very easy for Chris to show up late or to complain,” Veach said. “But Chris was dedicated to this team, he wanted to win the Super Bowl and the really cool thing — and Coach and I talk about this all the time — was how was Chris going to handle the first few weeks of practice with Frank. Within a few days, I remember being at training camp last year and seeing Frank and Chris just hit it off.” Before signing his contract, Jones loved his relationship with the Chiefs. Beyond Veach and Reid, Jones expressed his gratitude for Brandt Tilis, one of the team’s salary-cap specialists who helped figure out how to ensure the extensions for Jones and Mahomes worked in concert. Jones acknowledged Ryne Nutt, too. As the director of college scouting, Nutt was instrumental in the Chiefs identifying and selecting Jones in the 2016 NFL Draft. Five days after signing his contract, Jones believes his deep love for the Chiefs can only grow. “I always wanted to stay with the Chiefs,” he said. “It’s not about being the highest -paid player. It’s about getting what you deserve. Thankfully, I’m here for the long haul.”
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(Patrick Mahomes) Chiefs star Mahomes having 2020 nobody will soon forget Dave Skretta August 10, 2020 The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The world is in the grips of the worst pandemic in more than a century, the country is going through the kind of social upheaval unseen in decades, and the vast majority of people would prefer 2020 just grind to an end. Patrick Mahomes might be having the best year of anyone. The Chiefs quarterback began it by leading the franchise to its first Super Bowl championship in 50 years, a game in which he cemented his status as the league’s premier quarterback by rallying his team past the San Francisco 49ers in the second half and earning the MVP award on a warm February night in Miami. Mahomes proceeded to sign a record-setting 10-year contract extension that could pay him nearly a half-billion dollars, yet managed to structure it so that the Chiefs could continue to afford talent around him. He used some of that money to buy a piece of the Kansas City Royals, allowing the son of former major league pitcher Pat Mahomes to fulfill a baseball itch and simultaneously endear himself to his adopted hometown on a whole new level. He played in the celeb-studded American Century Championship, finishing in a respectable tie for 38th in Lake Tahoe. His social media following has grown exponentially. He’s become the face of the NFL after just two full years as a starter. “It’s been a crazy time for sure,” Mahomes said in a wide-ranging interview with The Associated Press. “The pandemic and the movements across our country — it’s been different. We won the Super Bowl. That was awesome. The parade and everything, and then the world changed. You’re able to step back and think about a lot of different stuff, and then go out there and try to be the best person you can be every single day.” That isn’t just hyperbole. And make no mistake: The year hasn’t just been one long party. As the new player representative for the Chiefs, Mahomes had a major voice in negotiations between the NFL and its players’ union on return-to-play protocols. He has expressed his support for the Black Lives Matter movement, and along with Chiefs safety Tyrann Mathieu, he has spearheaded a voter registration effort in Kansas City. “I think the whole point of 2020 is you never know what’s going to happen the next day,” Mahomes said. “You try to do your part to make the world a better place. It’s a different time in the world. You have to talk about these things.” All of which makes the confines of Arrowhead Stadium a sanctuary these days.
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The Chiefs are entering the meat of training camp, with veterans joining the rookies and fullcontact padded practices about a week away. The moment Mahomes walks through the doors — and gets his temperature checked and picks up his tracking device and all the other things that football in the age of COVID-19 entails — he can be just one of the guys for a couple of hours. He can joke with his wide receivers. He can throw behind-the-back passes to offensive linemen. He can throw out the most audacious suggestions for coach Andy Reid, who quite often turns those thoughts into equally audacious plays. “He brings a different energy, a different style to the game that even I was a little more accustomed to, just going out and playing ball in the backyard-type football,” said Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, one of Mahomes’ best friends on the team. “I think it’s a fun time to be a Kansas City Chief and it’s because 15 is in the building, for sure.” Not just be a Kansas City Chief, but be a fan of the Kansas City Chiefs. “It’s exciting to know that he’s going to be here forever,” Chiefs offensive lineman Mitchell Schwartz said. “Obviously, the Royals ownership stake just cements him more into the city. There’s a pretty special connection.” Mahomes is not exactly a reluctant superstar. He bought a Ferrari 812 Superfast, which has a starting list price of about $350,000. He spent the summer months embracing the boating life with his longtime girlfriend, Brittany Matthews. He hasn’t let all the trappings go to his head, though. He grew up around professional at hletes, often trailing his dad into major league clubhouses. His down-to-earth parents have made it a point to keep their high-flying son grounded, as if his very nature would allow Mahomes to think he’s better than anyone else. “You know how he’s wired,” said Reid, who couldn’t help but grin when asked about the Royals purchase. “He loves baseball, so it’s a match. I joked with him that he can’t play and do both, but he can be part-owner of one and play the other.” Now that training camp has begun, Mahomes insisted that his focus is squarely on football. Even with a pair of starters opting out in running back Damien Williams and offensive lineman Laurent Duvernay-Tardif, the Chiefs return 18 of 22 who started during their Super Bowl run, and expectations are high for a repeat — or three-peat, or four-peat, or five-peat. Tyreek Hill and several other players have made such a run of championships their goal this offseason. Mahomes is the unquestionable linchpin for the Chiefs becoming a Patriots-like dynasty “Obviously winning the Super Bowl and how fun it was, the adversity and overcoming, we’re trying to have that same mentality. We understand it’s going to be hard,” Mahomes said. “I think the biggest thing is just starting over. You start with a blank slate. You go through the process of being the best quarterback you can be every day. You accept the challenges.” Then you get back to work.
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(Travis Kelce) An Extension In-Hand, Travis Kelce Continues Path to All-Time Greatness in KC Matt McMullen August 14, 2020 Chiefs.com Travis Kelce gazed out across the crowd in the midst of his legendary speech at the Kansas City Chiefs' championship parade back in February. His words were both hilarious and powerful, punctuating a truly unforgettable celebration with an address nobody will soon forget. "I just want to say I love you all," Kelce said as his words boomed from Union Station. "I love this team." The speech fueled the party for the next several minutes, and as the confetti flew and Beastie Boys' lyrics were belted, Kelce's genuine affection for his home of seven years was clear as ever. That love was demonstrated yet again six months later as Kelce signed a contract extension with the Chiefs on Friday that will keep the All-Pro tight end in Kansas City through the next six seasons. The move further positions the reigning Super Bowl Champions for a run at multiple titles, and for Kelce, it means he can continue to chase down all-time greatness in the red and gold. In fact, it's not hyperbole to suggest that Kelce is already among the best to ever play his position in NFL history. No tight end has ever amassed more than Kelce's 6,465 receiving yards through their first seven seasons in the league. He's the fastest tight end in NFL history to 500 catches – doing so in just 95 games – and with another 1,000-yard campaign in 2019, Kelce became the only tight end in the history of the game to reach the milestone in four -straight seasons. The past two seasons, in particular, have been especially prolific. His 2,565 yards through the air are fifth among all players in that span, trailing only the New Orleans Saints' Michael Thomas, the Atlanta Falcons' Julio Jones, the Arizona Cardinals' DeAndre Hopkins and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' Mike Evans. His consistency in that time is equally remarkable, as Kelce has racked up at least 60 receiving yards in 26 of his last 32 regular-season games. For context, only Jones has accomplished that same feat since the beginning of the 2018 campaign. And as unprecedented as the on-field exploits are, Kelce's desire to give back to the Kansas City community has been even more substantial. Through his foundation – Eighty-Seven & Running – Kelce has changed the lives of children and families throughout the metro,
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specifically through his support of Operation Breakthrough, where he helped open a robotics lab back in 2018. The lab provides more than 300 area students with an educational opportunity that they would have never had otherwise and earned Kelce NFLPA Community MVP of the Week honors following its grand opening, adding yet another accolade to a career chock-full of them. The Lombardi Trophy also joined that collection last season, as Kelce played an instrumental role in the Chiefs' three postseason double-digit comebacks with four touchdowns and 207 yards through the air. It all led to Kansas City's victory in Super Bowl LIV, wh ich brings us back to Kelce's speech for the ages. "This the most beautiful scene I have ever witnessed in my life," Kelce said as he wrapped up his remarks at the championship parade. "I love this city to death. I promise you, from here to the end, I cherish every moment with you all." A contract extension now in hand, there are plenty of those moments left.
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(Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes) Travis Kelce’s four-year extension with Chiefs lengthens bond with Pat Mahomes Nate Taylor August 13, 2020 The Athletic KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Since they became teammates in 2017, Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes have had a small tradition reserved for when the Chiefs open their training camp. As a way of expressing their excitement for the new season, both men smile and laugh as Kelce, the star tight end, gives Mahomes, the superstar quarterback, a piggyback ride as they enter the practice fields. One of the Chiefs’ biggest bromances just happens to be one of the NFL’s most dominant duos. Over the past two seasons, Kelce has collected the most receptions from Mahomes’ gifted right arm, and together, they led the Chiefs to their first Super Bowl victory in 50 seasons. Meanwhile, this summer has featured Kelce and Mahomes golfing together and they vacationed together in Nevada, as well as holding their usual workout sessions. And now both players, before their summer concluded, made sure they remained co -workers — and piggyback partners — for several years. Following Mahomes’ contract extension last month, Kelce agreed Thursday to a four-year contract extension with the Chiefs worth $57.25 million, a source confirmed to The Athletic. The deal, which Kelce is expected to sign Friday, includes $28 million in guarantees. When the Chiefs started camp, Kelce voiced his desire to play alongside Mahomes for the remainder of his career. “I’m a big fan of Pat’s,” Kelce said of Mahomes, the reigning Super Bowl MVP, two weeks ago. “I think he’s the best player in the NFL. You can’t tell me there’s a better quarterback than him, that’s for sure. He led us to a Super Bowl because he is that. It’s a fun time to be a Kansas City Chief, and it’s because 15 is in the building.” Kelce’s deal was the latest benchmark in a busy offseason for the franchise, as the Chiefs were able to accomplish their grand mission of keeping most of the team’s star players together for this season and beyond. Just as Mahomes did last month with his historic 10-year extension, Kelce gave the Chiefs an advantage in terms of their salary cap sheet by not having his extension begin until after the 2021 season. Even when Kelce begins his extension, the Chiefs know he will not be the NFL’s highest-paid player at his position, although he has the statistical production worthy of such a distinction.
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Hours before Kelce agreed to his deal, star tight end George Kittle agreed to a five -year contract extension with the San Francisco 49ers that can bring him as much as $75 million — making him the league’s highest-paid tight end — with $30 million guaranteed. In late January, just before the Chiefs faced the 49ers in the Super Bowl, four NFL coordinators spoke to The Athletic to compare Kelce and Kittle. “They are both outstanding,” one coordinator said. “Kelce is probably the most difficult guy to defend, and part of that is, when you get ready to play them, you have to defend two routes. There is the route Kelce is running normally, then there is the one he runs after Mahomes starts moving in the pocket and scrambling and doing all that. You have a guy completely covered, then bang, the quarterback moves and he changes direction and he takes off. You are in a bind.” In the Super Bowl, Kelce statically outperformed Kittle. The six times Mahomes targeted Kelce led to six receptions for 43 yards, including a fourth-quarter touchdown. Kittle finished with four receptions on seven targets for 36 yards. Throughout the Chiefs’ postseason run, Kelce played at his best when the team was trailing, as he collected 19 receptions for 207 yards and four touchdowns. “The biggest thing for us is just being who we are,” Mahomes said of playing with Kelce before the Super Bowl. “That’s something we do every day. We take advantage of every single rep, we let our personalities show and try to find a way to win in any way possible.” When Mahomes learned of Kelce’s extension, he celebrated on his Twitter account by posting a GIF of himself jumping and patting his teammate’s helmet after they connected for a touchdown during the 2018 season. Mahomes’ message to his Twitter followers was just three words and seven exclamation marks: “6 MORE YEARS!!!!!!!” On critical third-down plays, Mahomes relies most on Kelce, who is faster than linebackers and bigger than defensive backs while running smooth routes in the middle of the field. One way coach Andy Reid has maximized the talents of Kelce, who is listed at 6-foot-5 and 260 pounds, is by having the tight end line up as a receiver on the perimeter on more than one-fourth of his snaps last season, according to Pro Football Focus. Such advantageous matchups have led Kelce to record, since 2017, 100 receptions in which he gained at least 15 yards, 31 more times than any other tight end during that stretch. As Mahomes enters the prime of his career, he and Reid are confident that Kelce will continue to be a reliable receiver, particularly in the red zone. Kelce is also the first tight end in league history to record at least 1,000 receiving yards in four consecutive seasons. “He’s definitely one of the best I’ve ever played with, and I’m blessed to have him on this team,” receiver Tyreek Hill said of Kelce last season. “He makes all of us better. He’s passionate with everything that he does, and he loves the challenge.” For Kelce, the extension allows him to have a similar career as Tony Gonzalez, the Hall of Fame tight end who spent his first 12 seasons with the Chiefs. The two men have been friends throughout Kelce’s eight-year career, and Gonzalez has always provided lessons and
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encouraged Kelce to accomplish more and build a greater legacy in Kansas City than even he did. In 2018, Kelce broke one of the franchise’s single-season records, which Gonzalez held, by recording 1,336 receiving yards during Mahomes’ first season as the Chiefs’ leading man. Kelce also broke Gonzalez’s record for the most receptions (103) in a season. When last season ended, Kelce had captured what eluded Gonzalez’s illustrious career: a Super Bowl victory. If Kelce, 30, reaches the end of his extension, he will have played 13 seasons in a Chiefs uniform, becoming the longest-tenured player at the position in the franchise’s history. When thinking of his future two weeks ago, Kelce allowed himself only to co nsider how he could improve this season based on the conversations he has had with tight end assistant Tom Melvin. “He’s always harping on me to sharpen the tolls, get better at your strengths but also the weaknesses (because) we have to rise to the occasion,” Kelce said of Melvin. “It’s definitely a fun process, but getting better is a year-long thing. It’s a career-long thing. You can never be satisfied with where you are.”
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(Travis Kelce) Chiefs’ Kelce to launch STEM project for underserved children Tod Palmer August 14, 2020 KSHB KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce is giving back to Kansas City’s kids. Fresh off signing a four-year contract extension, which will keep two-time All-Pro tight end with the Chiefs through the 2025 season, the 30-year-old Kelce announced Friday on social media that he is creating a STEM career program for inner-city children. Through a partnership with Operation Breakthrough, Kelce’s Eighty-Seven and Running Foundation is purchasing a building that will serve as the home for the Ignition Lab: Powered by 87&Running, Kelce said via Twitter in a post titled “Dear KC… from my heart!!!” Kelce, a third-round pick by Kansas City in the 2013 NFL Draft, said he can’t “begin to tell you how much this city means to me” and vowed to recommit to important “work I have left to do off the field.” The Ignition Lab provides Kelce’s teen fans in underserved KCMO neighborhoods who are “navigating a world that doesn’t always have their back” with “a co-working space where these teens will have the support, resources, and opportunity to explore careers in STEM, launch their own entrepreneurial ventures and gain real-world experience.” Operation Breakhtrough is excited about this new partnership and what this lab is going to bring to KC. "We know for sure there is going to be a co-working space," Operation Breakthrough CEO Mary Esselman said. "We know we are working on a high school robotics practice fie ld. One of the things we started when we opened the Makers City was our kids start coding at an early age. They are participating in robotics and we want to make sure we can continue that. We are hoping to have an electronics lab, a green tech lab." Kelce, a five-time Pro Bowl selection, said he’s grown to be “profoundly aware of the difference in opportunity, exposure, and privilege I grew up with compared to others.” He hopes this project helps bridge the gap for children in Kansas who lack the same opportunity, exposure and privilege. “Where you live, the situation you were born into or the color of your skin should have no impact on the dreams you can dream,” Kelce said. “And it’s a beautiful thing when a kid’s dream comes true,” Kelce said. Kelce, a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s All-2010s Team, would know after hoisting the Lombardi Trophy five months ago in Miami after the Chiefs’ 31-20 victory in Super Bowl LIV.
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He is the only tight end in NFL history with four consecutive 1,000 -yard seasons and is the Chiefsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; all-time leader with 5.3 receptions per game, while ranking second with 67.3 receiving yards per game in his career. Kelce, who missed his rookie season with a knee injury, has managed to reach the Chiefsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; all time top five for career receptions (507) and receiving yards (6,465) in only six seasons and ranks sixth in franchise history with 37 career receiving touchdowns.
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(Clyde Edwards-Helaire) Why Chiefs rookie Clyde Edwards-Helaire is worth the hype Adam Teicher September 2, 2020 ESPN KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- As a freshman at LSU in 2017, running back Clyde EdwardsHelaire received most of his playing time in practice against a defense loaded with future NFL players. He would rush for just 31 yards during games that season, but thriving during those sessions against LSU's star-studded defense showed him he belonged. Over the next two seasons, Edwards-Helaire rushed for 1,916 yards and 24 total touchdowns before being drafted in the first round by the Kansas City Chiefs. "My freshman year, I had guys across from me like Devin White and Arden Key, NFL-type caliber players on the defensive side of the ball and everything is pretty much live," Edwards Helaire said. "It tends to just be fast. As far as coming here and making an adjustment, it was no real speed adjustment. The biggest adjustment is understanding what you have to do and what the details are and being a professional." Edwards-Helaire arrived in Kansas City with plenty of hype. He was a star last season for LSU's national championship team and the first running back selected in the draft. By joining coach Andy Reid, quarterback Patrick Mahomes and one of the NFL's most imaginative and potent offensive teams, expectations on the field and in the world of fantasy football are already high. In training camp, at least, he's lived up to those expectations. The Chiefs made him the featured back from the first snap of camp, and he looks like a fit. He has showed reliable hands, nifty moves and the ability to stay on his feet after contact. "He's a hard worker," Mahomes said. "I think that's the first thing you can see from Day 1. He's always wanting to learn more. He's always wanting to get in every single rep they get him in and he's someone that's gotten better every single day, so I'm excited to have him, adapt him and evolve him more and more in the offense. And as he learns more, he'll progress and have more success every single day." Edwards-Helaire was a significant part of the Chiefs' offensive plans from the moment he was drafted. He became a bigger figure shortly before camp started, when Damien Williams, the Chiefs' leading rusher last season and one of the stars of Super Bowl LIV, opted out of the season because of COVID-19 concerns. Williams' decision was a significant one for the Chiefs, but the ground did not shift below Edwards-Helaire.
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"I've always been a guy that felt like I just needed to be 100 percent tuned in from the beginning," Edwards-Helaire said. "I didn't have to flip a switch and feel like, 'Oh, now is the time.' Since the day I was drafted, I felt like, 'Get this playbook, start rolling and do my job.' There was never really a shell-shocking moment for me." That doesn't mean Edwards-Helaire doesn't understand what he's walking into with the Chiefs. "He's very hard on himself, and that can be good and bad," running backs coach Deland McCullough said. "He's somebody who is a perfectionist, who wants to have perfect practices. You know it would be nice to say you're going to have those, but you 're not going to have those all the time, so you need to be able to take the good with the bad, but more in his case, take the bad and move forward. That's something we're really working on him with: 'Hey, you just got to play to the next play.' "But very impressed with his demeanor, his approach to the game, things he does on the field, and he will correct himself even if there's something that goes off the rails. He'll come off and say, 'Man, I was supposed to run this,' or 'I should've looked the other way.' He's somebody who's constantly self -checking himself." Nowhere is being on point as important as it is in pass protection, where Edwards-Helaire must pick up the blitz to give Mahomes time to throw. There's a lot to know: First comes the technique, then there's recognizing who's coming and from where, and then there's learning the Chiefs' blocking scheme. Reid doesn't always trust rookies with the job, but offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy said he's satisfied with Edwards-Helaire's efforts. "He understands the importance," Bieniemy said. "If you don't protect the quarterback, you can't play." A preseason game or two could have allowed Edwards-Helaire to prove his ability as a blocker at live speed, but that's not an option in 2020. The last rookie feature back for the Chiefs, Kareem Hunt in 2017, earned regular-season playing time by knocking a pass-rusher off his feet during a preseason game. "He's a real smart kid, so he's picking it up," Reid said. "He wants to be good, so that's a good combination to have, and he has the talent to go with it. He's strong. He's short, but he's strong. So he gets himself in good position with his quickness and his leverage and does a good job of protection. He has a pretty good base of what's going on with it -- who's coming, who the offensive line has and his responsibility. Reps will continue to help that."
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