Regular Season Game 2 - Chiefs at Steelers (9-16-18)

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CHIEFS VS. STEELERS SEPTEMBER 16, 2018

Chiefs

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REGULAR SEASON GAME 2

Chiefs COMMUNICATIONS STAFF Contact Information Ted Crews Brad Gee Luke Shanno Cydney Ricker Jordan Trgovac

Vice President of Communications Director of Football Communications Corporate Communications Manager Manager of Football Comm. & Admin. Communications Assistant

(816) 920-4359 (816) 920-4349 (816) 920-4351 (816) 920-4352 (816) 920-4353

tcrews@chiefs.nfl.com bgee@chiefs.nfl.com lshanno@chiefs.nfl.com cricker@chiefs.nfl.com jtrgovac@chiefs.nfl.com

CHIEFS TRAVEL TO PITTSBURGH TO FACE STEELERS AT HEINZ FIELD

vs. The Kansas City Chiefs travel to Pittsburgh to face the Steelers at Heinz Field on Sunday, Sept. 16. Kickoff is slated for 12 p.m. CT. Last week, the Chiefs defeated the Chargers 38-28 in Los Angeles. The victory was KC’s ninth consecutive win over the Chargers and the Chiefs are now 22-9 (.710) in AFC West play since Head Coach Andy Reid’s arrival in 2013. KC has won 33 of its last 43 regular season contests (.767). QB Patrick Mahomes made his debut as the club’s starter last week, posting 15 completions on 27 attempts for 256 yards, four touchdowns and no interceptions for a 127.5 rating. WR Tyreek Hill led the club with seven catches for 169 yards and two receiving TDs. Hill also returned a punt 91 yards for a touchdown, making him the first Chiefs player to have a threescore game since RB Kareem Hunt accomplished the feat in last year’s season opener against New England. Defensively, LB Anthony Hitchens led the club with 15 tackles and S Ron Parker recorded an INT. On special teams, De’Anthony Thomas forced a fumble on a punt return recovered by LS James Winchester that led to a KC touchdown. KC is +2 in turnover differential and has scored 14 points off takeaways. Reid is in his sixth season with the club, recording 54 wins with the Chiefs, marking the highest combined win total of any head coach in franchise history in that time frame. The Chiefs have made the playoffs four out of the past five years under Reid and earned back-to-back AFC West Championships in 2016 and 2017. Reid ranks ninth on the all-time wins chart with 195 victories (regular and postseason combined). He trails only Bill Belichick (279) among active coaches for most combined wins. In 2017, the Chiefs finished with a 10-6 regular season record and earned the fourth seed in the AFC Playoffs. The club had three players earn 2018 Pro Bowl honors (Hill, Hunt and Kelce) along with five alternates. Rookie RB Kareem Hunt earned the NFL’s rushing title last season with 272 carries for 1,327 yards (4.9 avg.) with eight rushing TDs and three receiving touchdowns. WR Tyreek Hill led all KC pass catchers with 75 receptions for 1,183 yards (15.8 avg.) with seven TDs. TE Travis Kelce had 83 catches for 1,038 yards (12.5 avg.) with eight touchdowns. Defensively, the Chiefs had 31.0 team sacks. LB Justin Houston led the club with 9.5 sacks and DL Chris Jones had 6.5. The Chiefs owned a +15 turnover differential last season with 26 takeaways and 11 giveaways. The 2018 Chiefs feature several new faces. Chiefs GM Brett Veach added WR Sammy Watkins, LB Anthony Hitchens, CB Kendall Fuller and DT Xavier Williams among others this offseason to boost the roster. The average age of Kansas City’s current roster is 25.7 years. Kansas City’s 2018 schedule features games against four playoff teams from last season, including the defending AFC Champion New England Patriots. The Chiefs 2018 opponents tallied a 126-130 (.492) combined record in 2017.

Chiefs

Kansas City Chiefs (1-0) at Pittsburgh Steelers (0-0-1) Sunday, Sept. 16, 2018 • 12 p.m. CT • CBS Heinz Field • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania THIS WEEK’S MEDIA AVAILABILITY Date Tuesday, Sept. 11 Wednesday, Sept. 12 Thursday, Sept. 13 Friday, Sept. 14 Saturday, Sept. 15 Sunday, Sept. 16

Practice Coach Media No Media Availability 1:20 p.m. Reid 11:45 a.m. 1:20 p.m. Coords. 11:45 a.m. 11:45 a.m. Reid 1:00 p.m. No Media Availability Chiefs at Steelers - 12 p.m. CT

Players 11:45 a.m. 11:45 a.m. 1:00 p.m.

* All times are approximate and subject to change with little or no notice. OC Bieniemy, DC Sutton and ST Toub will speak to the media Thursday. • Opponent conference call(s) will take place Wednesday. Steelers Head Coach Mike Tomlin will call the Chiefs Media Library at approximately 11:55 a.m. CT.

BROADCAST INFORMATION TV Coverage CBS (KCTV5 Local)

Chiefs FOX Football Radio Network KCFX (101.1 FM)

Play-by-Play: Ian Eagle Analyst: Dan Fouts Sideline: Evan Washburn

Play-by-Play: Mitch Holthus Color: Kendall Gammon Sideline: Dani Welniak

Tico Sports (Kansas City) La Mega 1160 AM / 100.5 FM Spanish Radio Broadcast Play-by-Play: Enrique Morales Color: Oscar Monterroso Sideline: Leo Prieto

Chiefs Pregame & Postgame Show KCFX (101.1 FM) Hosts: Art Hains, Dan Israel and Len Dawson Chiefs Twitter Accounts: @Chiefs @ChiefsReporter @ChiefsPR

CHIEFS MEDIA WEBSITE INFORMATION The Kansas City Chiefs 2018 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? Chiefs punter Dustin Colquitt is part of a family of NFL punters. His father, Craig Colquitt, punted for the Steelers from 1978-84 and won two Super Bowl rings with the club. His brother, Britton, is currently serving as the Cleveland Browns punter and played in two Super Bowls with the Broncos. His uncle Jimmy punted for the Seahawks in 1985.

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CHIEFS VS. STEELERS TEAM COMPARISON Chiefs Steelers Record .................................................. 1-0-0 .................................... 0-0-1 Division Standing ................................ T-1st (AFCW) .......... T-3rd (AFCN) Turnover Margin (NFL Rank) .............. + 2 (T-5th) ...................... -5 (32nd) Offense (NFL Rank) Net Yards Per Game ............................ 362.0 (13th) ................ 472.0 (4th) Yards Per Play...................................... 6.58 (5th) .....................5.90 (11th) Points Per Game .................................. 38.0 (5th) ................. 21.0 (T-18th) Possession Average............................ 25:34 (29th) .............. 30:10 (16th) Net Rushing Yards Per Game ............. 106.0 (20th) ................ 159.0 (5th) Net Passing Yards Per Game ............. 256.0 (11th)................. 313.0 (5th) Had Intercepted/Yards......................... 0/0 ..........................................3/26 Sacks Allowed/Yards ........................... 1/0 (T-4th).................... 4/-22 (T-25th) Fumbles/Lost ....................................... 0/0 ............................................3/3 Third Down Pct. ................................... 40.0% (14th) .............. 46.7% (5th) Red Zone TD Pct. ................................. 100.0% (T-1st) ...... 66.7% (T-10th) Giveaways ............................................ 0 (T-1st) .......................... 6 (32nd) Defense (NFL Rank) Net Yards Per Game ............................ 541.0 (32nd) .......... 327.0 (T-12th) Yards Per Play...................................... 7.31 (30th) .................... 3.85 (3rd) Points Per Game .................................. 28.0 (25th) ............... 21.0 (T-14th) Net Rushing Yds Per Game ................ 123.0 (22nd) ..............177.0 (31st) Net Passing Yards Per Game ............. 418.0 (31st) ................ 150.0 (6th) Intercepted By/Yards ........................... 1/0 ............................................1/0 Sacks For/Yards................................... 1/-6 (T-22nd) ................... 7/-47 (1st) Opponent Fumbles/Lost ..................... 2/1 ............................................1/0 Third Down Pct. ................................... 27.3% (9th) .............. 27.8% (10th) Red Zone TD Pct. ................................. 100.0% (T-27th) .... 66.7% (T-21st) Takeaways ............................................ 2 (T-9th) ........................ 1 (T-21st) Special Teams (NFL Rank) Punts-Average Yards (Gross) ............. 51.2 (8th) .................... 39.3 (28th) Punts-Average Yards (Net) ................. 52.2 (3rd) ................. 37.1 (T-25th) Punt Returns-Average Per .................. 47.5 (1st) .......................11.2 (9th) Punt Returns-Average Per Allowed ... -2.5 (1st) ..................... 15.0 (24th) Kickoff Returns-Average Per .............. 16.5 (T-19th) .............. 23.0 (T-8th) Kickoff Returns-Avg. Per Allowed ..... 18.0 (T-6th) ................... 15.3 (3rd) Field Goals Made/Attempted .............. 1/1 (T-1st) .................. 0/1 (T-29th) Penalties (NFL Rank) Penalties Against/Yards............... ............... 6/50 (T-5th) .................... 12/116 (31st) Opp. Penalties Against/Yds ................ 7/45 (T-17th) ............. 11/87 (T-3rd)

CHIEFS VS. STEELERS IND. COMPARISON Chiefs

Steelers PASSING YARDS Mahomes ............................256 Roethlisberger ......................... 335 RUSHING YARDS K. Hunt................................49 Conner .................................... 135 Ware ...................................32 Roethlisberger ........................... 16 Mahomes ............................21 Switzer ........................................ 8 RECEIVING YARDS Hill.......................................169 Smith-Schuster.........................119 Sherman .............................36 Brown ........................................ 93 Watkins ...............................21 James........................................ 60 POINTS SCORED Hill.......................................18 Conner ...................................... 12 Butker .................................8 Brown .......................................... 6 Sherman .............................6 Boswell ........................................ 3 Thomas...............................6 INTERCEPTIONS Parker .................................1 Sutton .......................................... 1

Ford ....................................1

SACKS Watt ............................................. 4 Bostic .......................................... 1 Dupree ........................................ 1 Heyward ...................................... 1

DEFENSIVE TACKLES Hitchens..............................15 Williams ..................................... 12 Murray ................................9 Watt ............................................11 Parker .................................8 Bostic .......................................... 9 Nelson ................................8 Heyward ...................................... 7 KICKOFF RETURNS (AVG.) Thomas...............................2 (16.5) Switzer .............................. 3 (23.0) PUNT RETURNS (AVG.) Hill.......................................2 (47.5) Switzer .............................. 5 (11.2) FIELD GOALS Butker .................... 1/1 (100.0%) Boswell ..........................0/1 (0.0%) PUNTS (GROSS/NET AVG.) Colquitt .................. 5 (51.2/52.2) Berry.......................... 7 (39.3/37.1)

CHIEFS CHIEFS CHIEFS VS. VS. VS. BUCCANEERS STEELERS TITANS SERIES SERIES SERIES HISTORY HISTORY HISTORY • Sunday’s contest between the Kansas City Chiefs and Pittsburgh Steelers marks the 33rd regular-season meeting between the two clubs. The Steelers hold the edge against the Chiefs with a 22-10 record. • In their last meeting, rookie RB Kareem Hunt had 110 total yards against the Steelers (21 rushing, 89 receiving), marking his sixth-straight game of 100 yards from scrimmage to begin his career. Hunt went on to have sevenstraight games of 100 yards from scrimmage, which is the most in NFL history to start a career. • Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid is 3-5 in the regular season in his career vs. Pittsburgh. This is the fifth season (2014-18) in a row that the Steelers and Chiefs have faced-off, and the sixth game in the last seven seasons.

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CHIEFS VS. STEELERS SERIES LAST 10 GAMES Date Result Of Note 09/14/2003 W, 41-20 Dante Hall 100-yard kick return for a touchdown. 10/15/2006* L, 7-45 Rian Wallace 30-yard interception return for TD. 11/22/2009 W, 27-24 Jamaal Charles 97-yard kick return for touchdown. 11/27/2011 L, 9-13 Ryan Succop (2-for-2) 49-yard FG. 11/12/2012* L, 13-16 Jamaal Charles 12-yd touchdown run. 12/21/2014* L, 12-20 Cairo Santos (4-for-4) 43-yard FG. 10/25/2015 W, 23-13 Chris Conley six-yard TD pass from Alex Smith. 10/02/2016* L, 43-14 Tyreek Hill nine-yard TD pass from Alex Smith. 01/15/2017# L, 16-18 Eric Berry 7 tackles, 1 TFL, 1 interception 10/15/2017 L, 13-19 De’Anthony Thomas 3 catches, 61 yards, 1 TD * - At Heinz Field # - 2016 Divisional Playoffs

Chiefs


CHIEFS HEAD COACH ANDY REID

STEELERS HEAD COACH MIKE TOMLIN

Reid is in his 27th NFL season, 20th as a head coach and sixth with the Chiefs. In six seasons with the club he’s tallied 54 wins, more victories than any other head coach in franchise history in that timeframe.

Mike Tomlin was named the 16th head coach in Pittsburgh Steelers history on January 22, 2007. Hired at the age of 34, Tomlin became only the third head coach hired by the Steelers since 1969.

Under Reid, the Chiefs have made the playoffs four of his first five seasons. The club earned back-to-back AFC West Titles in 2016 and ‘17 for the first time in franchise history. In 2016, Kansas City went 12-4 and won the AFC West, earning a first-round bye in the playoffs. 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. Reid boasts a career record of 184-120-1 (.605) in the regular season. He also owns an 11-13 postseason record. 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 19 times (20-17 record), and he has coached in three Super Bowls and eight NFC Championships.

In his first 11 seasons, Tomlin has compiled a 116-60-1 (.658) record, good for the best start in franchise history. Tomlin also reached 100 career wins in the fewest games (157) in team history. In 2017, Tomlin led the Steelers to a 13-3 record, finishing first in the AFC North for the third time in four years and clinched a playoff berth for the fourth-straight season.

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: 20th Year NFL Coach Overall: 27th Year NFL Overall: 195-133-1 (.594) Reg. Season: 184-120-1 (.605) Postseason: 11-13 (.458)

Record w/ KC: 54-27 (.667) Record w/ PHI: 130-93-1 (.583) Record vs. PIT: 3-5 (.375) College: BYU (’81) Hometown: Los Angeles

Tomlin became the youngest head coach in NFL history to not only coach in, but win a Super Bowl when he led the Steelers to a 27-23 victory over the Arizona Cardinals in Super Bowl XLIII. Tomlin spent the 2006 season as the Minnesota Vikings’ defensive coordinator and the 2001-05 seasons as the defensive backs coach with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. In 2002, Tomlin guided one of the most productive defensive backfields in the NFL, culminating with its winning performance in Super Bowl XXXVII. Tomlin served two seasons as the defensive backs coach at the University of Cincinnati (1999-2000) after spending two seasons at Arkansas State University (1997-98) where he coached wide receivers before switching to defensive backs. Tomlin spent the 1996 season as a graduate assistant at the University of Memphis, where he worked with the Tigers defensive backs and special teams units. He began his coaching career in 1995 as a wide receivers coach at Virginia Military Institute. Tomlin was a three-year starter at wide receiver for William and Mary (199094) and finished his career with 101 receptions for 2,046 yards and a schoolrecord 20 TD catches. A first-team All-Yankee Conference selection in 1994, he established a school record with a 20.2 yards-per-catch average.

NFL Head Coach: 12th Year NFL Coach Overall: 18th Year NFL Overall: 124-67-1 (.648) Reg. Season: 116-60-1(.658) Postseason: 8-7 (.533)

ANDY REID’S CAREER PATH 1979-82 1983-85 1986 1987-88 1989-91 1992-98 1999-2012 2013-2018

MIKE TOMLIN’ S CAREER PATH

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

1990-94 1995 1996 1997-98

William and Mary ...........................................Wide Receiver Virginia Military Institute. ..............................Wide Receivers University of Memphis.............................Graduate Assistant Arkansas State .................................... Wide Receivers (’97) Defensive Backs (’98) University of Cincinnati .............................. Defensive Backs Tampa Bay Buccaneers ............................. Defensive Backs Minnesota Vikings ............................. Defensive Coordinator Pittsburgh Steelers ............................................ Head Coach

1999-00 2001-05 2006 2007-18

MIKE TOMLIN’S HARDWARE

ANDY REID’S HARDWARE 96

97

04

Conference Titles

96 Super Bowls

Chiefs

08

10

02

05

07

08

10

14

16

17

02

Conference Titles

95

96

97

01

02

03

04

06

10

16

Division Titles

Record w/ PIT: 116-60-1 (.658) Record vs. KC: 5-2 (.714) College: William & Mary (‘94) Hometown: Hampton, Va.

17

02

08

Super Bowls

Division Titles

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2018 AFC WEST STANDINGS

2018 CHIEFS TEAM STATS & RANKINGS CATEGORY

TOTAL

Total Offense. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 362.0 Rush Offense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106.0 Pass Offense. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .256.0 Total Defense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .541.0 Rush Defense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .123.0 Pass Defense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .418.0 Points/Game . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38.0 Opp. Pts./Game. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28.0

8th 12th 7th 16th 12th 16th 3rd 12th

13th 20th 11th 32nd 22nd 31st 5th 25th

2018 CHIEFS INDIVIDUAL STATS & RANKINGS CATEGORY

PLAYER

TOTAL

Scoring (NK) Rushing Yards QB Rating Receptions Rec. Yards Interceptions Punting Avg. Punt Ret. Avg. KO Ret. Avg. Sacks

Hill Hunt Mahomes Hill Hill Parker Colquitt Hill Thomas Ford

18 49 127.5 7 169 1 51.2 47.5 16.5 1.0

1st 15th 4th T-9th 2nd T-4th 3rd 1st 10th T-9th

2nd 26th 1st T-15th T-3rd T-5th 7th 1st 15th T-15th

Team Kansas City Chiefs Denver Broncos Oakland Raiders Los Angeles Chargers

W 1 1 0 0

L 0 0 1 1

Pct. 1.000 1.000 .000 .000

PF 38 27 13 28

PA 28 24 33 38

Streak Won 1 Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 1

CHIEFS 2018 SCHEDULE PRESEASON Date Aug. 9 Aug. 17 Aug. 25 Aug. 30

Opponent Houston at Atlanta at Chicago Green Bay

REGULAR SEASON Date Opponent Sept. 9 at L.A. Chargers Sept. 16 at Pittsburgh Sept. 23 San Francisco Oct. 1 at Denver Oct. 7 Jacksonville* Oct. 14 at New England* Oct. 21 Cincinnati* Oct. 28 Denver* Nov. 4 at Cleveland* Nov. 11 Arizona* Nov. 19 at L.A. Rams (Mexico) Nov. 25 BYE WEEK Dec. 2 at Oakland* Dec. 9 Baltimore* Dec. 13 L.A. Chargers Dec. 23 at Seattle* Dec. 30 Oakland*

Time 7:30 p.m. 6:00 p.m. Noon 7:30 p.m.

Results L, 10-17 W, 28-14 L, 20-27 W, 33-21

Time 3:05 p.m. Noon Noon 7:15 p.m. Noon 7:20 p.m. Noon Noon Noon Noon 7:15 p.m. ---3:05 p.m. Noon 7:20 p.m. 7:20 p.m. Noon

Network W, 38-28 CBS FOX ESPN CBS NBC CBS CBS CBS FOX ESPN ---CBS CBS FOX/NFLN NBC CBS

Home games in bold; all kickoffs are Central Time. * Subject to Flexible Scheduling

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, 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 Oakland LA Chargers

OVERALL (REG. SEASON) Record Pct. Longest Win Streak 61-54-0 .530 11 (1964-1969) 61-52-2 .539 9 (2003-2007) 61-54-1 .530 9 (2014-Current )

Team Denver Oakland LA Chargers

AT HOME (REG. SEASON) Record Pct. Longest Win Streak 38-19-0 .667 14 (1960-1973) 33-24-1 .578 10 (1989-1998) 35-23-0 .603 7 (1997-2003)

Team Denver Oakland LA Chargers

ON THE ROAD (REG. SEASON) Record Pct. Longest Win Streak 23-35-0 .397 5 (1965-1969) 28-28-1 .500 7 (2003-2009) 26-31-1 .457 6 (1972-1977)

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“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.”

Chiefs


THE BEST IN CHIEFS HISTORY

CHIEFS ASSISTANT COACHES

In his first five seasons as head coach of the Chiefs, Andy Reid coached his team to a 53-27 record in the first 80 games. His 66.3 winning percentage is the top mark in franchise history for any coach in his first five seasons leading the club. Marty Schottenheimer is second on that list, leading his Chiefs teams to a 50-29-1 (63.1%) record. Most Regular Season Wins, First 5 Years with Team Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Name Reid Schottenheimer Vermeil Stram Levy

Yr. 1 11-5 8-7-1 6-10 8-6 4-12

Yr. 2 9-7 11-5 8-8 6-8 7-9

Yr. 3 11-5 10-6 13-3 11-3 8-8

Yr. 4 12-4 10-6 7-9 5-7-2 9-7

Yr. 5 Tot. Rec. 10-6 53-27 11-5 50-29-1 10-6 44-36 7-7 36-32-2 3-6 31-42

Win % 66.3% 63.1% 55.0% 52.9% 42.5%

In Reid’s 80 total games with the Chiefs, he has registered a 29-11 (72.5%) record at home and a 24-16 (60.0%) record on the road.

OFFENSIVE STAFF Eric Bieniemy Offensive Coordinator

Joe Bleymaier Pass Game Analyst/Assistant Quarterbacks Andy Heck Offensive Line Mike Kafka Quarterbacks Greg Lewis Wide Receivers Corey Matthaei Assistant Offensive Line Deland McCullough Running Backs Tom Melvin Tight Ends David Girardi Offensive Quality Control

DEFENSIVE STAFF Bob Sutton Defensive Coordinator Terry Bradden Defensive Assistant

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 20 seasons and 305 games, Coach Reid has a similar record on the road as he does at home. Home Record 94-58 (.618)

Road Record 90-62-1 (.592)

Total 184-120-1 (.605)

2018 CHIEFS PRO BOWL PLAYERS The National Football League announced on Dec. 19 that three members of the Kansas City Chiefs had been selected to participate in the 2018 NFL Pro Bowl. The below players earned a spot on the AFC’s Pro Bowl roster: Tyreek Hill (Returner) – 2nd Nomination Kareem Hunt (Running Back) – 1st Nomination Travis Kelce (Tight End) – 3rd Nomination The 2018 Pro Bowl returned to Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida, and was televised on ESPN and ESPN Deportes and simulcast on ABC. Last year’s game marked the first time the Pro Bowl aired on both broadcast and cable networks, as well as being streamed live on the ESPN app. The NFL is the only sports league that combines voting by fans, coaches and players to determine its all-star teams. The Chiefs had five alternates including current players P Dustin Colquitt, K Harrison Butker and LB Justin Houston.

Mark DeLeone Inside Linebackers Al Harris Secondary/Cornerbacks Britt Reid Defensive Line Mike Smith Outside Linebackers Emmitt Thomas Defensive Backs Jay Valai Defensive Quality Control Alex Whittingham Defensive Assistant

SPECIAL TEAMS STAFF

Dave Toub Assistant Head Coach/Special Teams Coordinator Rod Wilson Assistant Special Teams

MISCELLANEOUS

Barry Rubin Head Strength and Conditioning Travis Crittenden Assistant Strength and Conditioning Ryan Reynolds Assistant Strength and Conditioning Devin Woodhouse Assistant Strength and Conditioning Mike Frazier Statistical Analysis Coordinator Porter Ellett Senior Assistant to Head Coach

Chiefs

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MISC. NOTES 2018CHIEFS DEFENSIVE RANKINGS Category

NFL Rank

Value

10-Play Drives

T-7th

2 drives

Avg. Yards on 1st Down

6th

6.92 yards

3rd and 4th and 1 Conversion Pct.

T-1st

100.0%

3rd and 1 Conversion Pct.

T-1st

100.0%

3rd and Short (<4 Yds) Conversion Pct. T-1st

100.0%

Avg. Margin of Victory

6th

10.00 points

5-Minute Drives

T-3rd

2 drives

Points on 1st Off. Poss.

T-1st

7 points

Points on 1st Off. Poss. of 2nd Half

T-1st

7 points

Completions of 20+ Yards

T-4th

6 completions

Field Goal Percentage

T-1st

100.0%

Avg. Starting Field Position - Away

7th

29.1 yard line

Offensive Fumbles Lost

T-1st

0 fumbles lost

Giveaway Points Allowed

T-1st

0 points

Total Giveaways

T-1st

0 giveaways

Goal-to-Go Drives

T-5th

2 drives

Goal-to-Go Giveaways

T-1st

0 giveaways

Goal-to-Go Touchdown Efficiency

T-1st

100.0%

Passer Rating Inside the 30-Yard Line

8th

106.7 rating

Touchdown Efficiency Inside the 30

T-3rd

66.7%

Miscellaneous Touchdown Scored

T-2nd

1 touchdown

Offensive Points Scored

5th

31 points

Offensive Touchdown Efficiency

T-7th

45.5%

Opp. Total Takeaways

T-1st

0 takeaways

Overall Passer Rating

3rd

127.5 rating

Penalties Called Against (Accepted)

T-5th

6 penalties

Plays of 20+ Yards

T-3rd

7 plays

Points on Possessions After Takeaways T-1st

14 points

Punt Return Average

1st

47.5 yards

Gross Punting Average

8th

51.2 yards

Points on Drives of 4 or Fewer Plays

T-5th

7 points

Turnover Pct. in 4 or Fewer Plays

T-1st

0.0%

Red Zone 3rd Down Conversions

T-1st

100.0%

Red Zone Giveaways

T-1st

0 giveaways

Red Zone Touchdown Efficiency

T-1st

100.0%

Red Zone Successful Play Pct.

T-2nd

80.0%

Rushing Plays of 20+ Yards

T-2nd

1 rush

Total Points Scored

5th

38 points

Scoring Differential

6th

+10 points

Points Outside the Red Zone

T-4th

17 points

Points Scored at the End of the Half

T-10th

3 points

Offensive Touchdowns

T-4th

4 touchdowns

Drives Starting Inside Opp. 20-Yard Line T-3rd

1 drive

Successful Play Percentage

8th

52.7%

Total Takeaways

T-9th

2 takeaways

Times Sacked

T-4th

1 sack

Points Per Game

5th

38.0 points

Touchdown Drives

T-4th

4 drives

Turnover Differential

T-5th

+2 turnovers

Yards Per Play

5th

6.58 yards

6

2018 CHIEFS OFFENSIVE RANKINGS Category NFL Rank Avg. Opp. Starting Position After Kickoff 3rd Points on Opp. 1st Poss. of 2nd Half T-1st Points on Opp. First Offensive Poss. T-1st Opponent Possessions T-6th Opponent Fumbles Recovered T-4th Opp. Passer Rating Inside the 30 8th Miscellaneous Touchdowns Allowed T-1st Opp. Field Goal Percentage T-7th Opp. Avg. Starting Field Position 2nd Opp. Avg. Starting Field Position - Away 1st Opp. Kickoff Return Pct. of 20+ Yards T-5th Opp. Two-Point Conversion Pct. 5th Opp. 3rd Down Conversion Pct. 9th Opp. 3rd and 4th and 1 Conversion Pct. T-8th Opp. 3rd and 1 Conversion Pct. T-8th Opp. 3rd and 10+ Conversion Pct. T-1st Opp. 3rd and Long (>6) Conversion Pct. T-1st Opp. 3rd and Short (<4) Conversion Pct. T-9th Opp. Rushing Plays of 20+ Yards T-1st Opp. Rushing Plays of 50+ Yards T-1st Opp. 3rd Down Conversion Pct. 9th Opp. Goal-to-Go Drives T-1st Opp. Kickoff Return Average T-6th Opp. Punt Return Average 1st Opp. Points in 4 or Fewer Plays T-1st Opp. Red Zone Drives T-4th Points Allowed on 1st Poss. of 2nd Half T-1st Points Allowed on 1st Off. Poss. T-1st Opp. Points After Turnovers T-1st Opp. Points at End of Half T-1st Opp. Drives Starting Inside Own 20 T-8th Opp. Drives Starting Inside KC’s 20 T-1st Opp. Drives Starting Inside KC’s 50 T-1st Takeaway Points Scored T-1st Takeaways T-9th Points Allowed in Two-Minute Defense T-1st Plays with Less Than 1 YAC Allowed T-1st

Value 20.4 yard line 0 points 0 points 11 possessions 1 recovery 75.0 rating 0 touchdowns 66.7% 20.1 yard line 20.1 yard line 50.0% 66.7% 27.3% 50.0% 50.0% 0.0% 0.0% 50.0% 0 rushes 0 rushes 27.3% 1 drive 18.0 yards -2.5 yards 0 points 2 drives 0 points 0 points 0 points 0 points 4 drives 0 drives 0 drives 14 points 2 takeaways 0 points 0 plays

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CHIEFS VS. STEELERS CONNECTIONS Professional • Steelers Head Coach Mike Tomlin (2006) was the defensive coordinator for the Vikings while Chiefs Offensive Coordinator Eric Bieniemy (2006-10) served as the running backs coach. • Chiefs T Mitchell Schwartz (2012-15) and OL Cam Erving (2015-16) played for the Cleveland Browns with Steelers CB Joe Haden (2010-16). Schwartz (2012-15) also spent a year in Cleveland with Steelers LB L.J. Fort (2012). • Pittsburgh Outside Linebackers Coach Joey Porter (2010-11) was a linebacker for the Cardinals while Chiefs FB Anthony Sherman (2011-12) was on the roster. • Pittsburgh Tight Ends Coach James Daniel (2001-03) served in the same capacity for Atlanta while Kansas City Defensive Backs Coach Emmitt Thomas (2002-09) was the secondary coach. • Chiefs RB Damien Williams (2014-17) played in Miami for the Dolphins with Steelers WR Justin Hunter (2016) for part of the 2016 season. Hunter (2016) also spent part of the season at the Buffalo Bills with Chiefs WR Sammy Watkins (2014-16) and LB Reggie Ragland (2016). • Kansas City Secondary/Cornerbacks Coach Al Harris was a cornerback for Miami during the 2010 season while Pittsburgh Running Backs Coach James Saxon (2008-10) served in the same role. • Chiefs OL Jordan Devey (2016) played for the San Francisco 49ers with Steelers TE Vance McDonald (2013-16). Devey (2014) also spent the 2014 season with Steelers RB Stevan Ridley (2011-14) in New England where they won a Super Bowl with the Patriots. • Pittsburgh Inside Linebackers Coach Jerry Olsavsky and Kansas City Director of Pro Personnel Tim Terry were both linebackers on Cincinnati’s roster for the 1997 season. • Kansas City S Ron Parker (2011) and Pittsburgh WR Darrius HeywardBey (2009-12) spent time on the Oakland Raiders roster together. • Two defensive players for Kansas City, LB Anthony Hitchens (2014-17) and CB Orlando Scandrick (2008-17) played for the Dallas Cowboys with Pittsburgh WR Ryan Switzer (2017).

running backs coach for the 2001-07 seasons. College • Kansas City T Mitchell Schwartz (2007-11) played three seasons with Pittsburgh DE Tyson Alualu (2005-09) at California. • Pittsburgh S Nat Berhe (2009-12) played defensive back collegiately at San Diego State, where Chiefs Wide Receivers Coach Greg Lewis (201213) coached in the same capacity. • Steelers LB L.J. Fort (2008-11) and Chiefs DT Xavier Williams (2010-13) played together for two seasons at Northern Iowa. • Chiefs T Eric Fisher (2009-12) was teammates with Steelers WR Antonio Brown (2007-09) for one season at Central Michigan. • Chiefs WR Sammy Watkins (2011-13), DL Jarvis Jenkins (2007-10), LB Dorian O’Daniel (2013-17) and Steelers CB Coty Sensabaugh (2008-11) all played at Clemson. • Steelers LB Jon Bostic (2009-12) played linebacker at the University of Florida while Chiefs Inside Linebackers Coach Mark DeLeone (2010) worked as a quality control coach for the Gators. • Steelers LB Vince Williams (2008-12) was teammates with Chiefs OL Cam Erving (2010-14) and LB Terrance Smith (2011-14) at Florida State. • Steelers CB Artie Burns (2013-15), LB Anthony Chickillo (2011-14) and Chiefs DL Allen Bailey (2007-10) all were Miami (Fla.) Hurricanes. • Chiefs Wide Receivers Coach Greg Lewis served in the same role for the University of Pittsburgh during the 2014 season while Steelers RB James Conner (2013-16) was on the roster. • Kansas City P Dustin Colquitt (2001-04), S Eric Berry (2007-09), G Kahlil McKenzie (2015-17), TE Alex Ellis (2011-15) and Pittsburgh QB Joshua Dobbs (2013-16), G Ramon Foster (2005-08), WR Justin Hunter (2010-12), DT Daniel McCullers (2010-13), CB Cameron Sutton (2013-16) all played at Tennessee. • Kansas City LB Breeland Speaks (2014-17) played two seasons with Pittsburgh CB Mike Hilton (2012-15) at Mississippi.

• Steelers Defensive Line Coach Karl Dunbar (2012-14) coached defensive line for the Jets alongside Chiefs Defensive Coordinator Bob Sutton (200012) who was the asst. head coach/linebackers coach, Inside Linebackers Coach Mark DeLeone (2012) who was a defensive assistant and Outside Linebackers Coach Mike Smith (2010-10) who served in the same role for New York in the 2012 season.

• Chiefs RB Spencer Ware (2010-12), RB Darrel Williams (2014-17) and Steelers RB Stevan Ridley (2007-10) all played running back for the Tigers at LSU.

• Steelers Offensive Line Coach Mike Munchak (1994-2010) was the offensive assistant and quality control coach before being promoted to the offensive line coach for the Houston Oilers/Tennessee Titans while Chiefs Area Scout Willie Davis (1996-98) was on the roster as a wide receiver.

• Steelers OT Marcus Gilbert (2006-10) was a member of Florida’s football team while Chiefs Inside Linebackers Coach Mark DeLeone (2010) was the Gators quality control coach.

• Newly acquired Kansas City DT Xavier Williams (2015-17) played with Pittsburgh LS Kameron Canaday (2016) for the Arizona Cardinals. • Pittsburgh Special Teams Coordinator Danny Smith (1995-98) and Chiefs Defensive Backs Coach Emmitt Thomas (1995-98) spent three seasons coaching on the Philadelphia Eagles defensive staff, with Smith serving as the defensive backs/special teams coach and Thomas as the defensive coordinator. • Kansas City QB Chad Henne (2012-17) and TE Alex Ellis (2016) played with Pittsburgh DE Tyson Alualu (2010-16) for the Jacksonville Jaguars Henne and Alualu also spent time with Chiefs Offensive Line Coach Andy Heck (2004-12) who served in the same capacity . Former Chiefs • Steelers Running Backs Coach James Saxon was drafted by the Chiefs in the sixth round of the 1988 draft and was on the roster as a running back from 1988-91. Saxon would later go on to join the coaching staff as the

Chiefs

• Chiefs CB Kendall Fuller (2013-15) played with Steelers S Terrell Edmunds (2014-17) in the same secondary for two seasons at Virginia Tech.

• Steelers Head Coach Mike Tomlin (1999-2000) was a defensive backs coach at the University of Cincinnati, where Kansas City Chiefs TE Travis Kelce (2009-12) played tight end. Hometown • Steelers C/G B.J. Finney is from Wichita, Kansas, attended Andale High School and went on to play collegiately at Kansas State. • Pittsburgh Inside Linebackers Coach Jerry Olsavsky and Chiefs Running Backs Coach Deland McCullough both hail from Youngstown, Ohio. • Chiefs DT Derrick Nnadi and Steelers WR Justin Hunter grew up in Virginia Beach, Virginia, where they both graduated from Ocean Lakes High School. • Steelers RB Stevan Ridley and Chiefs DT Justin Hamilton both hail from Natchez, Mississippi.

7


HEAD COACH ANDY REID NOTES REID VIA THE NFL DRAFT - HIS 1ST ROUND PICKS Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid has had 16 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 184-120-1 in the regular season, as well as an 11-13 postseason record. Reid’s 195 combined wins rank ninth in NFL history. Reid ranks second among active coaches in regular season and postseason wins. He has defeated all 32 NFL teams as a head coach. • His 54 regular season wins in his first six seasons with Kansas City are more than any other head coach in franchise history in their initial six seasons. The Chiefs won back-to-back AFC West titles in 2016 and 2017 for the first time in franchise history. • 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. • 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 19 playoff appearances, as well as three Super Bowl appearances after playing in a combined eight NFC Championships. Reid owns a .605 regular season winning percentage. • Has three career Super Bowl appearances and won Super Bowl XXXI as an assistant in Green Bay. Reid owns three NFC titles and 11 division titles in his career dating back to his days as an assistant. • 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 --

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

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 Ron Rivera Leslie Frazier Pat Shurmur Brad Childress Steve Spagnuolo Todd Bowles Doug Pederson Sean McDermott Matt Nagy

Team BAL CAR BUF NYG AAF* N/A NYJ PHI BUF CHI

Years 2008-present 2011-present 2018-present Hired in 2018 2013-2017 2009-2011 2015-present 2016-present 2017-present Hired in 2018

Position/Former Position Head Coach Head Coach Former MIN HC Head Coach/Former CLE Former MIN HC Former STL HC Head Coach Head Coach Head Coach Head Coach

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 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 1-0 184-120-1

Pct. .313 .688 .688 .750 .750 .813 .375 .625 .500 .594 .688 .625 .500 .250 .688 .563 .688 .750 .625 1.000 .605

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 0-0 11-13

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 1-0 195-133-1

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 TBD 13 Playoff Berths, 8 Div. Titles, 1 NFC Title

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 184-120-1 in the regular season, as well as 11-13 in the postseason. Reid has 195 total career wins as a head coach.

Andy Reid is one of six active NFL head coaches with over 120 victories. He has 195 overall wins and is one of three active coaches with 10 or more postseason victories.

Opponent Reg. Season vs. Denver Broncos 5-6 vs. Kansas City Chiefs 3-0 vs. Oakland Raiders 9-4 vs. Los Angeles Chargers 11-3 vs. AFC West 28-13

Postseason 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

Total 5-6 3-0 9-4 11-3 28-13

vs. Baltimore Ravens vs. Cincinnati Bengals vs. Cleveland Browns vs. Pittsburgh Steelers vs. AFC North

3-1 1-3-1 6-0 3-5 13-9-1

0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-1

3-1 1-3-1 6-0 3-6 13-10-1

vs. Houston Texans vs. Indianapolis Colts vs. Jacksonville Jaguars vs. Tennessee Titans vs. AFC South

6-1 2-4 3-2 1-6 12-13

1-0 0-1 0-0 0-1 1-2

7-1 2-5 3-2 1-7 13-15

vs. Buffalo Bills vs. Miami Dolphins vs. New England Patriots vs. New York Jets vs. AFC East

5-3 5-1 3-3 5-1 18-8

0-0 0-0 0-2 0-0 0-2

5-3 5-1 3-5 5-1 18-10

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

5-7 6-4 4-3 6-2 21-16

0-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-2

5-8 6-4 4-3 6-3 21-18

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

5-5 4-1 4-4 3-2 16-12

1-0 0-0 1-1 2-0 4-1

6-5 4-1 5-5 5-2 20-13

Rk, 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Coach Bill Belichick, NE/CLE Andy Reid, KC/PHI Mike McCarthy, GB Marvin Lewis, CIN Mike Tomlin, PIT Pete Carroll, SEA

Reg. 251 184 122 126 117 112

Post 28 11 10 0 8 10

Total 279 195 132 126 125 122

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) Tony Dungy (Retired) Mike Shanahan (Retired)

Bill Parcells (Retired) Andy Reid (KC) John Fox (Retired)

MOST NFL WINS AS HEAD COACH Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13t. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Head Coach Don Shula George Halas Bill Belichick Tom Landry Curly Lambeau Chuck Noll Marty Schottenheimer Dan Reeves Andy Reid 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 John Fox Hank Stram Weeb Ewbank

Win Total 347 324 279 270 229 209 205 201 195 193 183 182 178 178 174 171 170 168 161 154 153 148 141 136 134

- Playoffs Included * Bold Denotes Active NFL Coaches

REID’S HEAD COACHING CAREER WHEN... • Scoring on opening drive: 83-25 • Scoring first: 118-37 • Leading at half: 148-29 • Leading after three quarters: 146-28 • Winning time of possession: 115-34-1 • Winning turnover battle: 114-24 • Out-rushing opponent: 112-46-1 • Out-passing opponent: 109-49-1 • Out-gaining opponent: 123-43-1 • 40%+ 3rd down conversions: 93-35 • 50%+ 3rd down conversions: 53-12 • Not throwing an INT: 100-41 • Having a 300-yard passer: 35-18-1

Chiefs

• Having a 100+ yard rusher: 55-18 • Having a 100+ yard receiver: 64-26 • Having two 100+ yard receivers: 8-1 • Having no turnovers: 55-20 • Scoring 20+ points: 152-43 • Scoring 30+ points: 77-7 • Rushing for 150+ yards: 58-15 • Having 20+ first downs: 104-43 • Not allowing a sack: 18-9 • Allowing two or fewer sacks: 113-55-1 • Recording 2+ INTs: 72-16 • Recording 3+ turnovers: 72-12 • Opp. less than 40% on 3rd down: 138-50-1

• Opp. less than 30% on 3rd down: 89-17-1 • Scoring a defensive TD: 45-9 • Recording 3+ sacks: 104-29-1 • Recording 5+ sacks: 42-5-1 • Allowing 17 or fewer points: 126-24-1 • Not allowing a 100-yard rusher: 149-85-1 • Not allowing a 100-yard receiver: 125-81 • Not allowing a 300-yard passer: 163-91-1 • Not allowing a rushing TD: 125-43-1 • Not allowing a passing TD: 55-18 • Not allowing an offensive TD: 32-3 • Having a KR or PR TD: 17-5

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. 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 --

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

QUICK FACTS ON CHIEFS GM BRETT VEACH

MAKING MOVES

• Brett Veach was named the seventh general manager in Kansas City Chiefs history on July 10, 2017. Veach is in his second season as an NFL general manager and his 12th year in the National Football League.

After being named the new GM of the Chiefs on July 10, 2017, Brett Veach immediately started making moves. In his short time as a GM, Veach has made a number of significant trades and signed multiple notable free agents that have contributed to the success of the team.

• Prior to being elevated, he previously served as the Chiefs Co-Director of Player Personnel. • 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. Over the last four seasons he’s played a critical role in building our football team.” • He is in his sixth 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). • 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.

Name LB Reggie Ragland OL Cam Erving K Harrison Butker CB Kendall Fuller WR Sammy Watkins LB Anthony Hitchens DT Xavier Williams

Date 8/28/17 8/30/17 9/26/17 3/14/18 3/15/18 3/15/18 3/21/18

How Acquired TR (BUF) TR (CLE) FA - 17 TR (WAS) FA - 18 FA - 18 FA - 18

VEACH’S FIRST DRAFT CLASS The 2018 NFL Draft marked GM Brett Veach’s first draft as a general manager in the NFL. Posed with the challenge of going into his first draft without a first round pick, Veach produced a noteworthy draft class with the potential to contribute to the Chiefs in the 2018 season. Rd, 2 3 3 4 6 6

No. (Overall) 46 75 100 124 196 198

Selection (School) LB Breeland Speaks (Ole Miss) DT Derrick Nnadi (Florida State) LB Dorian O’Daniel (Clemson) S Armani Watts (Texas A&M) CB Tremon Smith (Central Arkansas) G Kahlil McKenzie (Tennessee)

• 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 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 1-0 104-72-1

Pct. .500 .594 .688 .625 .500 .250 .688 .563 .688 .750 .625 1.000 .590

Playoffs 0-0 2-1 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 1-1 0-1 0-1 0-0 3-7

Overall 8-8 11-7-1 11-6 10-7 8-8 4-12 11-6 9-7 12-6 12-5 10-7 1-0 107-79-1

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 TBD 7 Playoff Appearances, 3 Div. Titles

Chiefs


MISC. OFFENSIVE NOTES KAREEM HUNT EARN’S NFL’S RUSHING TITLE

KELCE JOINS THE 3,000 CLUB - REC. STREAK

Last season as a rookie, RB Kareem Hunt ranked first in the NFL in rushing yards. He ranked second among all backs in 10+ yard carries (35). Hunt ranked third in the league in yards from scrimmage (1,782).

With 103 receiving yards in KC’s game against Philadelphia (9/17/17), TE Travis Kelce became the third tight end in franchise history to cross the 3,000yard plateau for their career, now owning 3,906 career receiving yards. In the MNF game against Washington (10/2/17) Kelce’s 111 yards moved him past TE Fred Arbanas (3,101) for second-most receiving yards in franchise history by a tight end.

Hunt scored 11 touchdowns in his rookie season and had a 50+-yard run in his first three games, two of which went for TDs. He averaged 111.4 yards per game in scrimmage yards. With 116 rushing yards in the game against Oakland (12/10), Hunt became just the second rookie in franchise history to rush for over 1,000 yards. Hunt had a 53-yard rushing touchdown in the win over Philadelphia and a 69-yard rushing TD vs. LA Chargers. Combined with his 78-yard touchdown reception in Week 1 of 2017, Hunt became the first player in NFL history to record a 50+ yard scrimmage touchdown in each of his first three games. 2017 NFL Leaders - Rushing Yards Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Player Kareem Hunt Todd Gurley Le’Veon Bell LeSean McCoy Mark Ingram

Team KC LAR PIT BUF NO

Att. 272 279 321 287 230

Yards 1,327 1,305 1,291 1,138 1,124

Avg. 4.88 4.68 4.02 3.97 4.89

TDs 8 13 9 6 12

2017 NFL Leaders - 10+ Yard Carries (Running Backs) Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4t 6.

Player Todd Gurley Kareem Hunt Melvin Gordon Le’Veon Bell LeSean McCoy Jordan Howard

Team LAR KC LAC PIT BUF CHI

Chiefs Record Book - Most Rec. Yards by a TE, Career Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Player Tony Gonzalez Travis Kelce Fred Arbanas Walter White Jonathan Hayes

Seasons 1997-08 2013-18 1962-70 1975-79 1985-93

TE Travis Kelce has recorded at least one pass reception in 64 consecutive games from Week 1 of the 2014 season (Sept. 7, 2014) through Week 1 of the 2018 season, which is good enough for the third longest streak in franchise history. His seven receptions in the MNF game against Denver (10/30/17) moved him past former Chiefs WR Eddie Kennison (55) for third place. Chiefs Record Book - Consecutive Games with Reception Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

10+ Yard Carries 39 35 34 33 33 32

Yards 10,940 3,906 3,101 2,396 1,541

Games 131 83 64 55 48

Player Tony Gonzalez Stephone Paige Travis Kelce Eddie Kennison Priest Holmes

Years Dec. 4, 2000 – Dec. 28, 2008 Nov. 17, 1985 – Sept. 29, 1991 Sept. 7, 2014 – Present Dec. 9, 2001 – Oct. 2, 2005 Sept. 9, 2001 – Sept. 19, 2004

2017 NFL Leaders - Yards Per Carry (225+ Attempts) Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Player Mark Ingram Kareem Hunt Todd Gurley C.J. Anderson Jordan Howard

Team NO KC LAR DEN CHI

Att. 230 272 279 245 276

Yards/Carry 4.89 4.88 4.68 4.11 4.07

2017 NFL Leaders - Scrimmage Yards Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4.

Player Todd Gurley Le’Veon Bell Kareem Hunt LeSean McCoy

Team LAR PIT KC BUF

Att. 343 406 325 346

KELCE YARDS AFTER CATCH Yards 2,093 1,946 1,782 1,586

Per Gm. 139.5 129.7 111.4 99.1

TDs 19 11 11 8

Since entering the NFL in 2013, Chiefs TE Travis Kelce ranks first among all tight ends in yards after catch. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4t.

Pos. TE TE TE TE TE

Name Travis Kelce Rob Gronkowski Martellus Bennett Jimmy Graham Greg Olsen

Rec. 308 294 293 343 333

Yards 3,906 4,639 3,101 4,160 4,225

YAC 2,140 1,837 1,687 1,497 1,497

KELCE OFF THE CHARTS Chiefs TE Travis Kelce ranks first among all tight ends in receiving yards since Week One of the 2016 season and 11th among all players. Kelce’s stretch is highlighted by 1,125 yards on 85 recptions in 2016. NFL Leaders (Since Week 1 - 2016) Receiving Yards Since Week One Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Chiefs

Pos. TE TE TE TE TE

Name Travis Kelce Rob Gronkowski Zach Ertz Delanie Walker Jimmy Graham

Rec. 169 101 157 143 124

Yards 2,169 1,747 1,688 1,659 1,451

Avg. 12.8 17.3 10.8 11.6 11.7

11


MISC. OFFENSIVE NOTES PUT IT ON THE BOARD

MITCHELL SCHWARTZ ON A STREAK

Through Week 1 of the 2018 regular season, the Chiefs rank fifth in the NFL in points scored per game (38.0) and third in the AFC. The club also is tied for fifth in the NFL in second half points scored (21).

Chiefs T Mitchell Schwartz ranks first among offensive tackles with 97 consecutive games started in his career. He has not missed a snap since entering the league. According to NFLGSIS, Schwartz has a streak of 6,158 consecutive snaps, highest current streak number in the NFL.

NFL Leaders - Points Per Game (2018) Rk. 1t. 3. 4 5.

Team NYJ TB BAL NO KC

Points Per Game 48.0 48.0 47.0 40.0 38.0

4. 5t.

Previous teams with 1,000 yard RB, WR & TE: 2017 Chiefs: K. Hunt (1,327), T. Kelce (1,038), T. Hill (1,183) 2007 Browns: J. Lewis (1,304), K. Winslow Jr. (1,106), B.Edwards (1,289) 1997 Broncos: T.Davis (1,750), S.Sharpe (1,107), R.Smith (1,180) 1981 Chargers: C.Muncie (1,144), K.Winslow Sr. (1,075), C.Joiner (1,188) 1981 Vikings: T.Brown (1,063), J.Senser (1,004), S.White (1,001)

PROTECTING THE FOOTBALL UNDER REID Dating back to Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid’s arrival in 2013, the Kansas City offense has remained among the NFL’s top-five teams when it comes to protecting the football. The Chiefs have just 78 turnovers in that span, trailing only New England (73). G 81 81 81 81 81

Chiefs FB Anthony Sherman has been one of the most consistent players in the NFL. Sherman ranks first among fullbacks in the NFL for consecutive games played.

Rk. Games 1. 81

Player Anthony Sherman

Team Chiefs

2.

Patrick DiMarco

Bills

79

NET YARDS PER PLAY LEADERS

During the 2017 season the Chiefs became only the fifth team in NFL history to feature a 1,000 yard running back, tight end and wide receiver. The Chiefs are the first team in 10 years to accomplish this feat following the 2007 Cleveland Browns. RB Kareem Hunt rushed for 1,327 yards, TE Travis Kelce had 1,038 yards receiving and WR Tyreek Hill finished the season with 1,183 receiving yards.

Team NE KC SEA BUF GB

Team CLE/KC KC

NFL Leaders, Consecutive Games Played, Fullbacks

Team 4th Quarter Pts NYJ 31 CIN 24 GB 24 LAR 23 KC/BAL /CLE 21

1,000 YARD RB, WR, TE

Rk. 1. 2 3 4t.

Player Mitchell Schwartz Eric Fisher

ANTHONY SHERMAN ON A STREAK

NFL Leaders - 2nd Half Points Scored (2018) Rk. 1. 2t.

Games 97 70

TOs 73 78 87 99 99

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 2016, KC had five games of 30 or more points. In 2017, KC scored over 30 five times. In 2018, the club has already scored over 30 points to open the season.

Through Week 1 of the 2018 season, the Chiefs rank fifth in the NFL in yards per play. NFL Leaders - Net Yards Per Play (2018) Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Team TB NO LAC CIN KC

Net Yards Per Play 8.53 8.05 7.31 6.60 6.58

CHIEFS EMBRACING NEW HELMET TECHNOLOGY The Kansas City Chiefs were among the league-leaders when it came to the number of orders placed for the new Vicis ZERO1 helmet, according to Chiefs Director of Equipment Allen Wright. The helmet consists of technology that’s new to the industry. The “ZERO1” features a soft outer shell and an underlying layer of columns designed to mitigate collisions from multiple directions. It’s the first helmet that’s made of a flexible polymer on the outside that deforms upon impact, much like that of a bumper on a car. It reduces the overall impact to the head, and it’s being used by many players around the league and the Chiefs. Kansas City currently has 40 players in Vicis helmets including: QB Patrick Mahomes, WR Sammy Watkins, S Eric Berry, and C Mitch Morse, among others. In collaboration with the NFL and the NFLPA, the 2017 helmet laboratory testing performance results chart, which is posted in locker rooms across the NFL, has the ZERO1 ranked as the best helmet on the market to reduce head impact severity.

Most 30-Point Games, Season Rk. Games Seasons 1. 8 1966, 2002, 2004 2. 7 1999, 2003 3. 6 1960, 1967, 2010 4. 5 1962, 1965, 1968, 1983, 1994, 2005, 2006, 2015, 2016, 2017 5. 4 1961, 1963, 1969, 1980, 1984, 1985, 1990, 1997, 1998, 2013, 2014

12

Chiefs


MISC. OFFENSIVE NOTES HILL FINDING THE ENDZONE

HILL’S 50+ PRODUCTION

Chiefs WR Tyreek Hill ranks tied for first among all NFL receivers in overall touchdowns since the start of the 2016 season. The WR accounted for three rushing, four receiving and three return scores in the second half of his rookie campaign. Hill has scored two receiving and one return TD in 2018.

WR Tyreek Hill owns 15 plays of at least 50-yards with all but two resulting in a touchdown, including five return TDs (4 PR, 1 KR), six receiving TDs and two rushing TDs. Below is a list of his 50+ yard plays.

NFL Leaders (2016-18) Overall Touchdowns by a WR Rk. Name Touchdowns 1t. Tyreek Hill 23 Davante Adams 23 3. Antonio Brown 22 4. Jordy Nelson 20 5. Mike Evans 18

Date Jan. 1, 2017 Sept. 9, 2018 Nov. 27, 2016 Oct. 8, 2017 Dec. 3, 2017 Dec. 8, 2016 Sept. 7, 2017 Dec. 25, 2016 Dec. 18, 2016 Oct. 19, 2017 Dec. 16, 2017 Sept. 9, 2018 Nov. 5, 2017 Dec. 24, 2017 Oct. 16, 2016

Opp. @ SD @ LAC @ DEN @ HOU @ NYJ OAK @ NE DEN TEN @ OAK LAC @ LAC @ DAL MIA @ OAK

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 70-yard TD rush 68-yard TD rush 64-yard TD reception 64-yard TD reception 58-yard TD reception 56-yard TD reception 52-yard reception 50-yard PR

• The Chiefs are 10-4 in games that Hill records a play of 50+ yards. • He’s recorded a play of 50+ yards in 43.8 percent (14 of the 32) of the games he’s played in. • 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)

HILL’S ROOKIE SEASON 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. Rk. Player 1t. Tyreek Hill Fred Arbanas Stephone Paige 4t. Chris Burford Otis Taylor Bill Jones Tim Barnett Dwayne Bowe

TD 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 5

Season 2016 1962 1983 1960 1965 1990 1991 2007

• 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 for second place in franchise history. • Since 2016, Hill owns seven receptions of 50+ yards, which ranks second in the NFL. • Hill’s13 career touchdowns of at least 50 yards (six receiving, four puntreturn, two rushing, one kick-return) in 32 career games and is tied with Pro Football Hall of Famer GALE SAYERS and DEVIN HESTER for the most 50+ yard touchdowns in a player’s first 35 career games in NFL history. (Credit NFL Stats)

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.

Since entering the NFL in 2014, WR Sammy Watkins has the third most yards per catch among all active pass catchers with 150+ receptions.

Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

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

Avg. 15.2 8.3 12.1 9.0 11.6

Name DeSean Jackson T.Y. Hilton Rob Gronkowski Sammy Watkins Marvin Jones Jr.

Rec. 197 304 255 195 181

Yards 3,516 4,929 4,047 3,073 2,847

Avg 17.8 16.2 15.9 15.8 15.7

• 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. • 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.

Chiefs

13


CHIEFS DEFENSIVE NOTES CHIEFS TAKEAWAYS UNDER REID

INTS SINCE 2013

Dating back to 2013 when Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid and Defensive Coordinator Bob Sutton arrived in Kansas City, the Chiefs defense ranks first in the AFC and third in the NFL when it comes to forcing opponent turnovers, tallying 140 total takeaways.

The Chiefs rank third in the AFC and fifth in the NFL with 84 interceptions since 2013.

Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Team CAR PHI KC ARI TB

G 81 81 81 81 81

Takeaways 144 143 140 138 136

FEWEST YARDS PER PASS ATTEMPT ALLOWED Since 2013, the Chiefs have allowed just under seven yards per pass attempt. They rank fifth in the NFL over that span. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 3. 5.

YPA 6.42 6.46 6.53 6.79 6.90

Team Denver Broncos Cincinnati Bengals Seattle Seahawks Buffalo Bills Kansas City Chiefs

Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

INTs 90 89 86 85 84

Team Cincinnati Bengals Buffalo Bills Arizona Cardinals Carolina Panthers Kansas City Chiefs

POINTS PER GAME ALLOWED Dating back to 2013, Kansas City’s defense ranks third in the NFL in allowing opposing teams to score just 19.1 points per game. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Team Seattle Seahawks New England Patriots Kansas City Chiefs Cincinnati Bengals Carolina Panthers

PPG 17.4 18.9 19.1 19.9 20.5

PASSES DEFENSED Going back to 2013, the club ranks first in the NFL for most passes defensed with 455 passes defensed. Rk. 1. 2. 3.

Team Kansas City Chiefs Cincinnati Bengals Philadelphia Eagles

PD 459 443 439

RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS ALLOWED Since 2013, the Chiefs have allowed only 45 rushing touchdowns, ranking second in the NFL. Rk. 1. 2. 3t. 5.

Team New England Patriots Kansas City Chiefs New York Jets Baltimore Ravens Carolina Panthers

Rushing TDs Allowed 38 45 47 47 48

OPPONENT COMPLETION PERCENTAGE Dating back to 2013, Kansas City’s pass defense is allowing opposing quarterbacks to complete just 57.7 percent of passes, ranking first in the NFL. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Comp. % 57.7 59.2 59.6 60.1 60.3

Team Kansas City Chiefs Denver Broncos Buffalo Bills New England Patriots Philadelpia Eagles

GET YOUR HANDS DIRTY Getting after the opposing quarterback has been a point of pride for the Kansas City Chiefs. The Chiefs totaled 47.0 team sacks in 2015, 28.0 sacks in 2016 by 11 different players and had 31.0 in 2017 by 13 different players. The club started off the 2018 campaign with one sack against the Chargers by LB Dee Ford.

OPPONENT PASSER RATING Since 2013, the Chiefs are holding opposing teams to an 80.7 passer rating, placing them third in the AFC and fourth in the NFL. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

14

Passer Rtg 77.3 79.1 79.9 80.7 81.4

Team Seattle Seahawks Cincinnati Bengals Buffalo Bills Kansas City Chiefs Denver Broncos

Chiefs


CHIEFS DEFENSIVE NOTES JUSTIN HOUSTON BY THE NUMBERS

HOUSTON ON A ROLL LB Justin Houston has 20 career multi-sack games, including a career-high six such performances in 2014. CHIEFS RECORD BOOK MOST MULTI-SACK GAMES, CAREER 1. 27 Derrick Thomas 1989-99 2t. 20 Tamba Hali 2006-17 Justin Houston 2011-18 4. 19 Neil Smith 1988-96 5. 13 Jared Allen 2004-07 Since 2011 (Houston’s first NFL season), he ranks fifth in the NFL and fourth in the AFC in sacks.

Houston Sacks by QB Quarterback Sacks Michael Vick 6.5 Philip Rivers 6.0 Peyton Manning 5.0 Trevor Siemian 5.0 Tom Brady 3.0 Drew Brees 3.0 Caleb Hanie 3.0 Blaine Gabbert 3.0 Austin Davis 3.0 Derek Carr 3.0 Joe Flacco 2.0 Jake Locker 2.0 Drew Stanton 2.0 Ben Roethlisberger 2.0 Matt Ryan 2.0 Brock Osweiler 2.0 Tim Tebow 1.5 Matthew Stafford 1.5 Deshaun Watson 1.5 Carson Wentz 1.0 Mark Sanchez 1.0 Cam Newton 1.0 Ryan Fitzpatrick 1.0 Terrelle Pryor 1.0 Jason Campbell 1.0 Ryan Tannehill 1.0 Jimmy Garoppolo 1.0 Colin Kaepernick 1.0 Brian Hoyer 1.0 Teddy Bridgewater 1.0 Tyrod Taylor 1.0 Case Keenum 0.5

Houston Sacks by Team Team Sacks Denver 13.5 LA Chargers 6.0 Philadelphia 5.5 New England 4.0 Oakland 4.0 Tennessee 3.0 Chicago 3.0 New Orleans 3.0 Jacksonville 3.0 St. Louis 3.0 N.Y. Jets 3.0 Baltimore 2.0 Arizona 2.0 Pittsburgh 2.0 Atlanta 2.0 Houston 3.0 Detroit 1.5 Buffalo 1.0 Carolina 1.0 Cleveland 1.0 Miami 1.0 San Francisco 1.0 Minnesota 1.0

LB Justin Houston owns seven 3.0-plus sack games in his career. Houston has recorded 69.5 sacks in 90 career games played, averaging over a half sack per game (0.77).

Chiefs

Opposing QB Caleb Hanie Drew Brees Blaine Gabbert Michael Vick Austin Davis Philip Rivers Trevor Siemian

HOUSTON IN NFL RECORD BOOK Justin Houston’s franchise record 22.0 sacks in 2014 was just 0.5 sack shy of Michael Strahan’s NFL record 22.5 set in 2001. Houston’s 22.0 sacks tie him with four other players, including Pro Football Hall of Famers Reggie White and Chris Doleman. Rk. Player 1. Michael Strahan* 2t. Justin Houston Jared Allen Chris Doleman* Reggie White* Mark Gastineau

Result W, 10-3 W, 27-24 OT W, 28-2 W, 26-16 W 34-7 W 19-7 W, 30-27 OT

Year 2001 2014 2011 1989 1987 1984

Sacks 22.5 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0

*Pro Football Hall of Famer

WHERE HE RANKS IN CHIEFS HISTORY In 2014, Justin Houston broke the Chiefs franchise record for sacks in a single season with 22.0. Houston’s 22.0 sacks were two more than Pro Football Hall of Famer Derrick Thomas’ 20.0 more than two decades prior in 1990. Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5t.

HOUSTON WE HAVE A PROBLEM

Date Opponent 12/4/11 @ Chicago 9/23/12 @ New Orleans 9/8/13 @ Jacksonville 9/19/13 @ Philadelphia 10/26/14 vs. St. Louis 12/28/14 vs. San Diego 11/28/16 @ Denver

NFL LEADERS SACKS, SINCE 2011 (HOUSTON’S FIRST NFL SEASON) 1. 86.5 Von Miller Denver 2. 76.0 J.J. Watt Houston 3. 72.5 Cameron Wake Miami 4. 71.5 Ryan Kerrigan Washington 5. 69.5 Justin Houston Kansas City

Player Justin Houston Derrick Thomas* Jared Allen Neil Smith Tamba Hali Neil Smith Art Still Derrick Thomas*

Year 2014 1990 2007 1993 2010 1992 1984 1992

Sacks 22.0 20.0 15.5 15.0 14.5 14.5 14.5 14.5

*Pro Football Hall of Famer

Total 3.0 (-15.0 yds) 3.0 (-25.0 yds) 3.0 (-27.0 yds.) 4.5 (-28.0 yds.) 3.0 (-17.0 yds.) 4.0 (-21.0 yds.) 3.0 (-17.0 yds)

15


CHIEFS DEFENSIVE NOTES CHIEFS EXCEL WHEN SACKING THE QB The Chiefs and Defensive Coordinator Bob Sutton have placed an emphasis on putting pressure on opposing quarterbacks. The Chiefs have recorded 6.0 or more team sacks 59 times in team history. In those 59 games, Kansas City has a 53-5-1 (.907) record and has outscored its opponents 1,729-719. Record When Recording 6.0 or More Team Sacks 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

16

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

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

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

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

CHIEFS DEFENSE NO STRANGER TO END ZONE KC’s defense had three TDs in 2017. In 2016, KC found the end zone five times. The Chiefs found the end zone six times on defense in 2015. In 2014, the Chiefs had one returned TD on defense. In 2013, the Chiefs defense found the end zone six times. Below is a look at Kansas City’s most recent defensive touchdowns. Kansas City is 116-29-2 (.796) when producing a defensive score. KC is 107-26-1 (.802) 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. Most Recent Defensive Scores Date Opponent Defensive Score 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, 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

Chiefs


SPECIAL TEAMS NOTES BUTTKICKER.COM

COLQUITT INSIDE THE 20

In his rookie season, K Harrison Butker recorded 142 points, ranking first in franchise history for most points by a kicker in a single season, passing Nick Lowery’s previous mark of 139 set in 1990. His 142 points rank third in franchise history for most points in a single-season by a player at any position. Butker holds the franchise record for most field goals with 38. Butker converted a field goal in 13 consecutive games, the second-longest individual steak in a single-season in franchise history.

Dating back to 2005, Chiefs P Dustin Colquitt leads all NFL punters in pinning opponents inside the 20. His current mark of 423 stands as a Chiefs franchise record.

CHIEFS MOST POINTS, SEASON, KICKER Points Player 1. 142 Harrison Butker 2. 139 Nick Lowery 3t. 129 Jan Stenerud Cairo Santos Cairo Santos

Year 2017 1990 1968 2015 2016

CHIEFS MOST POINTS, SEASON Points Player 1. 162 Priest Holmes 2. 144 Priest Holmes 3. 142 Harrison Butker 4. 139 Nick Lowery 5. 129 Jan Stenerud Cairo Santos Cairo Santos

Year 2003 2002 2017 1990 1968 2015 2016

Player TM Dustin Colquitt KC Sam Koch Bal Donnie Jones --Shane Lechler Hou Andy Lee Ari

Punts 1,036 951 1,084 1,084 1,044

Avg 44.9 45.2 45.7 48.1 46.9

In. 20 423 360 358 355 350

Net Avg. 39.7 39.6 39.7 40.0 40.0

COLQUITT PINS OPPONENTS Chiefs P Dustin Colquitt finished tied for first in the NFL for most punts inside the 20-yard line with 35 in 2013. Colquitt set a personal singleseason career high, a team record and was one punt shy of tying an NFL record for most punts inside the 20 with 45 in 2012. In 2014, 30 of his 66 punts landed inside the 20. He had 37 in 2015. In 2016, he landed 37 inside the 20. In 2017, he had 29 inside the 20. So far this season he has three punts inside the 20 yard line. He is the Chiefs all-time leader in punts inside the 20 with 423. NFL RECORD BOOK: PUNTS INSIDE 20, SINGLE SEASON

QUALITY SPECIAL TEAMS PLAY Over the past six seasons (2013-18) under Special Teams Coordinator Dave Toub, the Chiefs special teams units have performed consistently. In fact, over the six-year span, the club ranks second in the league in kick return average and first in punt return average. Additionally, the Chiefs have a combined 11 return touchdowns, which ranks first in the league. Rk. 1. 2. 3 4. 5.

Team Baltimore Kansas City Minnesota Indianapolis Dallas

KR 179 219 220 186 155

Yds. 1,973 2,562 1,676 1,250 1,330

Avg. 10.7 11.1 10.5 7.5 8.6

TDs 3 7 4 0 2

Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Team Kansas City Baltimore Philadelphia Minnesota Detroit

PR 231 185 158 159 157

Yds. 2,562 1,973 1,679 1,676 1,648

Avg. 11.1 10.7 10.6 10.5 10.5

TDs 7 3 4 4 5

Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4t.

Team Kansas City Minnesota Philadelphia Detroit Baltimore Chicago Los Angeles Rams

PR TDs 7 4 4 5 3 4 4

KR TDs 4 5 4 1 3 1 1

6.

Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Tot TDs 11 9 8 6 6 5 5

Rank 1. 2. 3. 4t.

Inside 20 51 46 45 42

Player Johnny Hekker (LAR) Dave Zastudil (ARI) Dustin Colquitt (KC) Ben Graham (ARI)

Year 2016 2012 2012 2009

CHIEFS RECORD BOOK: PUNTS INSIDE 20, CAREER Rank 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Inside 20 423 117 62 58 54

Player Dustin Colquitt Louie Aguiar Bryan Barker Jim Arnold Kelly Goodburn

Years 2005-18 1994-98 1990-93 1983-85 1987-90

KICK RETURN RECORD The NFL record for highest kickoff return average in a single season was previously 29.4, set by the 1972 Chicago Bears. Under Special Teams Coordinator Dave Toub, the Chiefs took over the the top mark in NFL history in 2013 averaging 29.9 yards per return. NFL RECORD BOOK - KICKOFF RETURN AVERAGE, SEASON Rk. Team Avg. Year 1. Kansas City 29.9 2013 2. Chicago 29.4 1972 3. Pittsburgh 28.9 1952 4. Baltimore 28.3 2014

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 32 games thus far 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

Chiefs

PR 5 4 4 4 3

KR 6 4 1 0 0

Total 11 8 5 4 3

17


MISC. NOTES GLOBAL TIES

2018 DRAFT CLASS ON ROSTER

The 2018 Chiefs roster has several global ties, including two internationally born players.

LB Breeland Speaks was selected 46th overall out of Mississippi after Kansas City traded up eight spots with Cincinnati. Speaks was the first pick of the 2018 Draft for the Chiefs. At Mississippi, Speaks amassed 127 tackles, 15 TFLs and nine sacks. He was the only player from Mississippi taken in the first three rounds of the 2018 NFL Draft.

• G Laurent Duvernay-Tardif is from Quebec, where he attended McGill University and became just the second player out of McGill to be drafted into the NFL. Sticking to his Canadian roots during the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics, Duvernay-Tardif served as a reporter for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

DT Derrick Nnadi was selected in the 3rd round, 75th overall from Florida State. In 44 career games, Nnadi recorded 165 tackles, 24.5 TFLs and 12.0 sacks. Nnadi is the first Seminole drafted by the Chiefs since C Rodney Hudson was drafted 55th overall in 2011. LB Dorian O’Daniel was drafted with the final pick of the 3rd round (100th overall) from Clemson. O’Daniel was the Chiefs second selection in the 3rd round, joining DT Derrick Nnadi. At Clemson, he played in three College Football Playoffs and won the 2016 National Championship. O’Daniel had 116 tackles, 15.5 TFLs and 3.5 sacks in 40 career games. S Armani Watts was taken 124th overall in the 4th round out of Texas A&M. A four-year starter, Watts led the team in interceptions his freshman year (3). He would finish his career with 328 tackles and 10 interceptions. Watts is the first defensive back from Texas A&M drafted by the Chiefs in team history.

• WR Chris Conley, was born in Adana, Turkey, while his father was stationed there with the Air Force. • Despite not being born internationally, LB Tanoh Kpassagnon spent his summers visiting his father, an economist on the Ivory Coast. • After S Daniel Sorensen’s freshman season at BYU in 2008, he missed the next two football seasons while he was serving in the Costa Rica San Jose Mission in 2010-11.

CB Tremon Smith was drafted in the 6th round, 196th overall, from Central Arkansas. He is the first player from Central Arkansas drafted by Kansas City in team history. Smith was a four-year starter at cornerback and had 15 interceptions. He finished his career with 146 tackles and 9.0 TFLs. G Kahlil McKenzie was selected 198th overall out of Tennessee, the Chiefs second 6th round pick of the 2018 Draft. McKenzie played defensive tackle in college, registering 72 tackles and 3.0 sacks. After being drafted, the Chiefs converted him to an offensive guard. Kahlil is the son of the divison rival Oakland Raiders’ General Manager Reggie McKenzie.

• Born in Virginia Beach, Va., DT Derrick Nnadi is a first generation American. His father came to the United States in 1978 from Nigeria in search of a better life for himself and his family.

THE NEW GUYS Since the beginning of 2018, the Kansas City Chiefs signed, traded for or claimed off waivers 11 new players that are currently on the 53-man roster.

2017 ROAD WIN STREAK

Pos. CB LB WR QB DT RB DB S CB S G

Name Kendall Fuller Anthony Hitchens Sammy Watkins Chad Henne Xavier Williams Damien Williams Orlando Scandrick Jordan Lucas Charvarius Ward Ron Parker Ike Boettger

Last Team Washington Dallas L.A. Rams Jacksonville Arizona Miami Washington Miami Dallas Atlanta Buffalo

How Acquired Trade Signed Signed Signed Signed (RFA) Signed Signed Trade Trade Signed Waivers

The Chiefs won their ninth-consecutive road victory in Houston in 2017, a streak that dated back to Week 6 of the 2016 season (at Oakland, Oct. 16, 2016). The club’s nine-game road winning streak tied for the longest such streak in franchise history, matching a nine-game streak that was set in the 1966-67 seasons. Chiefs Record Book - Most Consecutive Road Wins Rk. 1t. 3. 4t.

18

Streak 9 9 6 5

Seasons 1966-67 2016-17 1967-68 1968-69 1971-72

Chiefs


2018 OFFSEASON NOTES HUNT HONORED BY CHIEFS

CHIEFS TRADE FOR CB KENDALL FULLER

After the season, the club announced running back Kareem Hunt earned the team’s Mack Lee Hill Award for the 2017 season.

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on March 14 that the club had acquired CB Kendall Fuller in a trade with the Washington Redskins.

After his breakout rookie campaign, Hunt led the league in rushing yards (1,327), becoming only the sixth rookie to lead the NFL in rushing. In his rookie season, Hunt became the first player in NFL history to record seven consecutive games with 100 or more scrimmage yards to start their rookie campaign and finished with 10 games with 100 yards from scrimmage. He earned AFC Offensive Rookie of the Month honors for September and December and was named to his first Pro Bowl following the 2017 season.

The trade between the Chiefs and the Redskins sent QB Alex Smith to Washington in exchange for a 2018 third-round draft pick and Fuller.

The Mack Lee Hill Award is given to the club’s top rookie performer and was voted on by Hunt’s teammates.

CHIEFS SIGN THREE KEY FREE AGENTS The Kansas City Chiefs signed three key free agents during the 2018 offseason: Wide receiver Sammy Watkins, linebacker Anthony Hitchens and defensive tackle Xavier Williams. Watkins (6-1, 211) has played in 52 games (51 starts) in four NFL seasons with the Los Angeles Rams (2017) and Buffalo Bills (2014-16). His career numbers include 192 receptions for 3,052 yards (15.9 avg.) with 25 touchdowns. In 2015, Watkins eclipsed 1,000 receiving yards, tallying 1,047 yards on 60 catches. He has 11 career games with 100-plus receiving yards, including four games over 150 yards. The Fort Myers, Florida, native originally entered the NFL as a first-round selection (fourth overall) of the Bills in the 2014 NFL Draft. Hitchens (6-0, 235) has played in 60 games (48 starts) in four NFL seasons with the Dallas Cowboys (2014-17). His career numbers include 301 tackles (190 solo), 21 tackles for loss, 3.5 sacks and 14 pressures. He owns two forced fumbles, eight passes defensed and one interception. The Lorain, Ohio, native, originally entered the NFL as a fourth-round selection (119th overall) of the Cowboys in the 2014 NFL Draft. Williams (6-2, 309) has played in 23 games (two starts) in three NFL seasons with the Arizona Cardinals (2015-17). His career numbers include 28 tackles (22 solo), 0.5 sacks (-5.0 yards), two tackles for loss and one forced fumble. He originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Cardinals on May 5, 2015. The Kansas City, Missouri, native, played collegiately at Northern Iowa and prepped at Grandview High School in Grandview, Missouri.

“We’re excited to have Kendall join our secondary,” Chiefs General Manager Brett Veach said. “He’s an ascending player with strong cover skills and a phenomenal work ethic. He’ll add value and versatility to our defense.” Fuller (5-11, 198) played in 29 games (12 starts) in two seasons with the Washington Redskins, logging 94 tackles (74 solo), including two for a loss, four interceptions, 12 passes defensed and a forced fumble. The Baltimore, Maryland, native entered the league as a third-round pick (84th overall) by Washington in the 2016 NFL Draft.

CHIEFS NAME BIENIEMY OC Head Coach Andy Reid and the Kansas City Chiefs announced on Jan. 9 that the club had named Eric Bieniemy the team’s offensive coordinator. “I’ve known Eric a long time, both as a player and a coach,” Reid said. “He’s done a phenomenal job with our running backs and has been involved in every aspect of our offense over the last five years. He’s a great teacher and has earned this opportunity. I know he will do a good job.” Bieniemy will enter his 11th season as a coach in the National Football League in 2018 and his sixth season with the Chiefs, after serving as the club’s running backs coach for five seasons (2013-17). Under Bieniemy’s tutelage in 2017, rookie running back Kareem Hunt earned the NFL’s rushing title and a Pro Bowl berth with 1,327 rushing yards. Hunt had 10 games with 100-plus scrimmage yards. In 2016, RB Spencer Ware and Charcandrick West appeared as a double threat. Ware had 921 rushing yards and three rushing TDs and West rushed for 293 yards with a touchdown. Bieniemy also mentored RB Jamaal Charles, the franchise’s all-time leading rusher, for four seasons (2013-16). He spent nine seasons as an NFL running back with the Chargers (199194) and Bengals (1995-98) and spent the 1999 season with the Eagles under Head Coach Andy Reid.

CHIEFS P DUSTIN COLQUITT SIGNS EXTENSION The Kansas City Chiefs announced on March 15 that punter Dustin Colquitt signed an extension with the club. “Dustin has played an important role in our team’s success the last five seasons, and has consistently performed at a high level his entire career here,” General Manager Brett Veach said. “He wanted to be in Kansas City, and we are happy to keep him here for the foreseeable future.” “Dustin is without a doubt one of the best punters in the National Football League,” Head Coach Andy Reid said. “He’s been critical for us in flipping field position and pinning opponents deep. Off the field he’s been a staple in the community, and we are glad he’s staying with us.” Colquitt (6-3, 210) has played in 206 games in 13 seasons with the Chiefs (2005-17). His career numbers include 1,031 punts for 46,246 yards (44.9 avg.) with 90 touchbacks and 420 inside the 20. He holds a career net average of 39.7 yards and a long of 81 yards. Colquitt holds many Chiefs records for punting, including highest career average (44.9), highest net average (39.7) and most career punts inside the 20 (420). Colquitt has earned Pro Bowl honors twice, his first following the 2012 season and his most recent following the 2016 season. He has the third-most games played in franchise history (206). The Knoxville, Tennessee, native, originally entered the NFL as Kansas City’s third-round draft pick (99th overall) in the 2005 NFL Draft.

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CHIEFS NAME TOUB ASSISTANT HEAD COACH The Kansas City Chiefs announced on April 6 that Head Coach Andy Reid named Dave Toub the team’s assistant head coach. “Dave has had the opportunity to work with our team on both sides of the football, on the field and in the classroom,” Reid said. “His leadership qualities have entrusted me to promote him to Assistant Head Coach.” Toub enters his sixth season with the Chiefs in 2018. Since Toub’s arrival in 2013, the Chiefs have 10 special teams touchdowns (six punt, four kickoff), which is the most in the NFL over that span. The Chiefs took over the top mark for kick return average in NFL history in 2013 averaging 29.9 yards per return.

19


DUVERNAY-TARDIF GETS HIS M.D. To some, playing in the National Football League is the second-most impressive accomplishment on Laurent Duvernay-Tardif’s resume. On May 29, Duvernay-Tardif became the first practicing medical doctor on an NFL roster, graduating from McGill University in Montreal with his M.D. Duvernay-Tardif was finishing his third year of med school at McGill at the time of the 2014 NFL Draft. With hopes of being selected on the second night, Duvernay-Tardif was unable to follow along live. Not that he didn’t want to, he was just preoccupied in the ER assisting an emergency Csection for a premature newborn. Though he wasn’t selected on that second night, the Chiefs eventually used the 200th overall pick to acquire Duvernay-Tardif in the sixth round. While spending much of his rookie season learning from the sidelines, Duvernay-Tardif appeared in 16 games while starting 13 in 2015 and 14 in 2016 and became the starting right guard during the 2017 season. His offseasons are spent back in Montreal at various hospitals on rotations, where patients have begun to recognize the Canadian standout. “It’s been a great journey for the last four years,” Duvernay-Tardif said. “I don’t think it would have been possible if it was not for Coach Reid.” While football remains his number one priority right now, Duvernay-Tardif plans to someday pursue his medical goals of specializing as an Emergency Room doctor.

CHIEFS COACHING STAFF CHANGES The club continued to add to the coaching staff by hiring Deland McCullough to serve as the team’s running backs coach, Jay Valai as a defensive quality control coach and David Girardi as the offensive quality control coach. McCullough joins the Chiefs after spending the last eight years coaching in the collegiate ranks at USC (2017), Indiana (2011-16) and Miami of Ohio (2010). He spent two years as an NFL running back with the Bengals and the Eagles. Valai joins the Chiefs coaching staff after spending the last two seasons as the University of Georgia’s defensive quality control coach. Girardi joins the Chiefs after seven years coaching at the collegiate level at Lafayette College (2017), Northwestern (2014-16), Geneva College (2013) and Seton Hill University (2011-12). Additionally, this offseason, the club promoted Mike Kafka to quarterbacks coach after serving as the offensive quality control coach for the 2017 season. Mike Smith and Mark DeLeone were named the outside linebackers and inside linebackers coaches, respectively. Smith previously served as the assistant defensive line coach (2016-17) and DeLeone served as the club’s assistant linebackers coach (2015-17) and defensive quality control coach (2013-14). After serving two seasons (2016-17) as the club’s offensive quality control coach, Joe Bleymaier was promoted to the passing game analyst/assistant quarterbacks coach. Terry Bradden was also named a defensive quality control coach after serving as the team’s defensive assistant in 2017. Corey Matthaei is now the assistant offensive line coach after serving as the assistant quarterbacks coach from 2015-17.

NEW YEAR NEW CHIEFS Led by 22-year-old Patrick Mahomes at quarterback the 2018 Chiefs have an average age of 25.7 years old. This offseason, GM Brett Veach made significant moves to attract young talent to the Kansas City Chiefs like 25-year-old WR Sammy Watkins, 26-year-old LB Anthony Hitchens, 26-year-old DT Xavier Williams and 23-year-old CB Kendall Fuller. “We have a lot of talent here,” Veach said. “It’s a lot of young talent which is exciting for the fans, but we realize there may be some growing pains, but we have guys that can straight up play football and they’re exciting.”

AN ALL DEFENSIVE 2018 DRAFT CLASS The 2018 NFL Draft marked the first time in the modern era that the Kansas City Chiefs have taken a college defensive player with every selection in the draft. With no first-round draft selection the Chiefs traded up from the 54th overall pick in the second round to the 46th overall pick in the second round to select LB Breeland Speaks. In the third round the Chiefs traded up from the 86th overall pick to the 75th overall pick in the third round to select DT Derrick Nnadi and selected LB Dorian O’Daniel with the 100th overall pick. This sparked a trend of selecting defensive players that lasted throughout the 2018 Draft leading to an all defensive draft class.

With the loss of veteran linebackers Derrick Johnson and Tamba Hali, the Chiefs are looking to their young talent to lead the team more than ever. After 13 seasons with the Chiefs, Johnson and the club decided to part ways following the 2017 season. Johnson left the Chiefs as the team’s all-time leading tackler compiling 1,262 career stops (993 solo). Following a 12-year NFL career all spent with Kansas City, Hali will go down as one of the most successful pass rushers in franchise history. Under the guidance of veteran linebacker Justin Houston, young talent like Anthony Hitchens, third-year LB Reggie Ragland and rookie linebacker and second-round draft pick Breeland Speaks have a chance to make a name for themselves in honor of Chiefs legends Derrick Johnson and Tamba Hali. “Whether it’s the quarterback position, inside linebacker position, outside linebacker position, you’re missing a few of those guys and you have new guys coming in that you have an opportunity to see perform,” Reid said. “That’s exciting to me, I’m looking forward to that.”

With the loss of several key defensive players during the offseason the Chiefs had a need to select young defensive talent to complement the club’s stacked offensive roster.

Protected by a veteran offensive line, second-year QB Patrick Mahomes has multiple young offensive weapons at his disposal. With the addition of WR Sammy Watkins, Mahomes also has third-year WR Tyreek Hill, second-year RB Kareem Hunt and sixth-year TE Travis Kelce to make up, arguably, one of the NFL’s most dynamic offensive units.

The Chiefs selected S Armani Watts with the 124th overall pick in the fourth round and CB Tremon Smith with the 196th overall pick in the sixth round.

In what some might consider a transition year, Reid and the Chiefs are ready to make an impact starting in 2018.

With their final draft choice of 2018 the Chiefs selected G Kahlil McKenzie with the 198th overall pick of the sixth round. Although McKenzie was a defensive tackle throughout college, the Chiefs drafted him with the idea of transforming him into an offensive lineman. The selection of McKenzie made for a record all-defensive draft for the Chiefs going into 2018.

When speaking about his expectations for the 2018 Chiefs, Reid said, “We’re striving to win a championship and then to consistently be in a position where we can win a championship as the years go on. And it starts today.”

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CHIEFS MISCELLANEOUS NOTES BY THE NUMBERS

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 97 86 85 59 59 55

2

Super Bowl appearances

3

AFL Championship appearances

8

AFC West Division Championships

467

Franchise wins including Postseason

11

Pro Football Hall of Famers

48

Chiefs Hall of Famers

217

NFL IMPORTANT DATES 2018 Oct. 14 ................................... NFL London Series, Seattle vs. Oakland Mid Oct. ............. Clubs are Permitted to Practice Players on PUP/NFI Oct. 16-17 ......................... Fall League Meetings, New York, New York Oct. 21 ...................... NFL London Series, Tennessee vs. LA Chargers Oct. 28 .....................NFL London Series, Philadelphia vs. Jacksonville Oct. 30 ...................................... All Trading Ends for 2018 at 3 p.m. CT Nov. 13 .............................Signing Period Ends for Franchised Players Nov. 19 ......................................... NFL Mexio Series, Chiefs vs. Rams Dec. 12 ................................................ League Meetings, Irving, Texas Dec. 30 ......................................... Final Week of Regular Season Play 2019 Jan. 5-6.....................................................................Wild Card Playoffs Jan. 12-13................................................................. Divisional Playoffs Jan. 19 ...................... East-West Shrine Game, St. Petersburg, Florida Jan. 20 ........................................ AFC and NFC Championship Games Jan. 26 ................................................... Senior Bowl, Mobile, Alabama Jan. 27 ......................................................... Pro Bowl, Orlando, Florida Feb. 3 .................................................Super Bowl LII, Atlanta, Georgia Feb.26-March 4 ............................ NFL Combine, Indianapolis, Indiana March 5...................................Deadline to Designate Franchise Player March 11-13...................................................Clubs Begin Negotiations March 13.......................................................2019 League Year Begins March 24-27 ..................... Annual League Meetings, Phoenix, Arizona April 1 ................... Clubs with New Head Coaches to Being Offseason April 15 ................ Clubs Returning Head Coaches to Begin Offseason April 25-27 ..........................................NFL Draft, Nashville, Tennessee

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Number of Chiefs wins vs. AFC West opponents, the most of any other AFC West team in intradivision affairs

10

Retired Chiefs numbers

59

The club is in its 59th season of existence

82,893

Largest crowd (regular season)

142.2

Highest decibel level at Arrowhead Stadium

195

Games won by Head Coach Andy Reid

25.7

Average Age of the Current Chiefs Roster

69.5

Justin Houston has 69.5 Career Sacks with KC

47

Seasons at Arrowhead Stadium 21


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

22

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 .........................1-0 .........................0-0

PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAMER EMMITT THOMAS Pro Football Hall of Fame Cornerback Emmitt Thomas is in his ninth season as defensive backs coach with the Kansas City Chiefs. Thomas works alongside former NFL Cornerback Al Harris, who joined the Chiefs as a defensive assistant/secondary coach in 2013. Harris was promoted to Secondary/Cornerbacks Coach in 2016. One of the best defenders in Chiefs history, Thomas finished his career with 58 interceptions – a Chiefs record – as well as five defensive touchdowns in 181 games, all with Kansas City. Thomas holds the Chiefs record for interception return yardage with 937 yards. Thomas was a member of the Chiefs Super Bowl IV Championship squad and was elected to the Chiefs Hall of Fame in 1986 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2008.

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 52 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 granddaughter Gracie 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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RED FRIDAY TAKES OVER KANSAS CITY

CHIEFS D-LINE VISITS RONALD MCDONALD HOUSE

For the 27th annual year, the Chiefs celebrated the kickoff of football season with Red Friday, a tradition started by Chiefs Founder Lamar Hunt. The Chiefs again partnered with Kansas City- and Springfield-area McDonald’s to sell Chiefs Kingdom flags. The flags were sold for $5 each with net proceeds donated to Ronald McDonald House Charities. The flags were also sold at Kansas City-area Hy-Vee and CommunityAmerica Credit Union locations. Ten select golden Chiefs Kingdom flags were purchased by lucky fans who received the signed golden flag, a Chiefs prize pack that included tickets to the Chiefs opener at Arrowhead Stadium vs. the San Francisco 49ers on Sept. 23 and free Big Macs for a year from McDonald’s. Surprised fans were greeted at various locations by Chiefs Chariman and CEO Clark Hunt, Chiefs Hall of Famers, including Bobby Bell, KC Wolf, Chiefs Cheerleaders and Chiefs Red Coaters.

The Ronald McDonald House Charities of Kansas City serves as a safe haven for those dealing with the most difficult of times, providing a place to stay for more than 80 families with children in the hospital on any given night. Five members of the defensive line – Allen Bailey, Justin Hamilton, Jarvis Jenkins, Derrick Nnadi and Xavier Williams – lent their time to that effort on Tuesday, as the players spent their day off from practice by competing in a series of “Minute to Win It” games with families staying at the facility. “Anytime you can get out in the community and work with some kids, it’s something you want to do,” Williams said. “There’s no greater feeling than being out here with some kids and seeing the smiles on their faces.” There was a water balloon toss, an egg-and-spoon race and even a pieeating competition to wrap things up at the end. Following the activities, the players stuck around to sign autographs, take pictures and talk about the upcoming season with the families in attendance.

The Chiefs Kingdom flags were the culmination of a week-long build up to Red Friday before the Chiefs opened the 2018 campaign against the Los Angeles Chargers.

“Man, I had a blast…the best part of this was just hanging out with the kids,” Nnadi said. “As a little kid, I didn’t really have this type of thing growing up – guys like us that would just come and hang out. You can tell that it really means a lot to them.”

TAYLOR SWIFT AT ARROWHEAD

The flags were flown along the streets and bridges of Country Club Plaza in Kansas City and Chiefs Kingdom murals were painted across the city, featuring the Kingdom logo from this year’s flag and Tyreek Hill, among others. KC Wolf helped place the jerseys of Hill, Eric Berry, Patrick Mahomes, Sammy Watkins and more on statues across the city. Chiefs Arrowhead logos were painted in front of the Jackson County Courthouse and the Liberty Memorial Lawn, as well. Thursday night, Kansas City landmarks including Union Station, the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, the Kauffman Center for Performing Arts and the Marriott Downtown lit the Kansas City skyline red. To kickoff the flag sales on Friday morning, Kansas City’s famous fountains were dyed red.

On Saturday, Sept. 8, Taylor Swift’s “Reputation Tour” presented by the Cocherl Family Foundation came to Arrowhead Stadium to entertain 58,611 fans. Fans enjoyed Swift’s hits old and new, including “Love Story,” “You Belong With Me,” We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together,” “Blank Space” and Swift’s newest album, “Reputation.” The stage included massive LED video screens and fireworks as Swift showed her versatile music style from acoustic ballads to up-beat hits. Camila Cabello and Charlie XCX opened the show, which was the second of three concerts as part of the Arrowhead Concert Series. In July, country singer Kenny Chesney with Thomas Rhett, Old Dominion and Brandon Lay played Arrowhead. On Oct. 13, Ed Sheeran will wrap the series at Arrowhead Stadium as part of his “÷” tour with Snow Patrol and Lauv.

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23


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 nearly four 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 “It’s a great feeling (playing at Arrowhead). On 3rd-and-long when you hear the crowd and you see the opposing quarterback yelling, trying to change the play and struggling to communicate with the offensive linemen. That’s a great feeling because you know your percentage of getting a sack just went up. I love playing in front of our fans.” - LB Justin Houston “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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2018 NFL STANDINGS

Team Miami New England New York Jets Bills

W 1 1 1 0

L 0 0 0 1

T 0 0 0 0

PCT 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000

PF 27 27 48 3

AFC East PA 20 20 17 47

Home 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

Road 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0

AFC 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

NFC 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0

DIV 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

Streak Won 1 Won 1 Won 1 Lost 1

Team Baltimore Cincinnati Cleveland Pittsburgh

W 1 1 0 0

L 0 0 0 0

T 0 0 1 1

PCT 1.000 1.000 .500 .500

PF 47 34 21 21

AFC North PA 3 23 21 21

Home 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-1 0-0-0

Road 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-1

AFC 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-1 0-0-1

NFC 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

DIV 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-1 0-0-1

Streak Won 1 Won 1 Tie 1 Tie 1

Team Jacksonville Houston Tennessee Indianapolis

W 1 0 0 0

L 0 1 1 1

T 0 0 0 0

PCT 1.000 .000 .000 .000

PF 20 20 20 23

AFC South PA 15 27 27 34

Home 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

Road 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

AFC 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

NFC 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

DIV 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

Streak Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 1 Lost 1

Team Kansas City Denver Oakland L.A. Chargers

W 1 1 0 0

L 0 0 1 1

T 0 0 0 0

PCT 1.000 1.000 .000 .000

PF 38 27 13 28

AFC West PA 28 24 33 38

Home 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

Road 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

AFC 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

NFC 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

DIV 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

Streak Won 1 Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 1

Team Washington Philadelphia New York Giants Dallas

W 1 1 0 0

L 0 0 1 1

T 0 0 0 0

PCT 1.000 1.000 .000 .000

PF 24 18 15 8

NFC East PA 6 12 20 16

Home 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

Road 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

NFC 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

AFC 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

DIV 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

Streak Won 1 Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 1

Team Green Bay Minnesota Detroit Chicago

W 1 1 0 0

L 0 0 1 1

T 0 0 0 0

PCT 1.000 1.000 .000 .000

PF 24 24 17 23

NFC North PA 23 16 48 24

Home 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

Road 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

NFC 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

AFC 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

DIV 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

Streak Won 1 Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 1

Team Tampa Bay Carolina Atlanta New Orleans

W 1 1 0 0

L 0 0 1 1

T 0 0 0 0

PCT 1.000 1.000 .000 .000

PF 48 16 12 40

NFC South PA 40 8 18 48

Home 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

Road 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

NFC 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

AFC 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

DIV 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

Streak Won 1 Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 1

Team L.A. Rams Seattle San Francisco Cardinals

W 1 0 0 0

L 0 1 1 1

T 0 0 0 0

PCT 1.000 .000 .000 .000

PF 33 24 16 6

NFC West PA 13 27 24 24

Home 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

Road 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

NFC 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

AFC 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

DIV 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

Streak Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 1 Lost 1

Chiefs

25


CHIEFS

CUMULATIVE STATS & GAME SUMMARIES


KANSAS CITY CHIEFS / WEEK 1 / THROUGH SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2018 WON 1, LOST 0 09/09 W 38-28 09/16 09/23 10/01 10/07 10/14 10/21 10/28 11/04 11/11 11/19 12/02 12/09 12/13 12/23 12/30

at L.A. Chargers 25,351 at Pittsburgh San Francisco at Denver Jacksonville at New England Cincinnati Denver at Cleveland Arizona at L.A. Rams at Oakland Baltimore L.A. Chargers at Seattle Oakland K.C. Opp. TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 19 33 Rushing 7 7 Passing 10 23 Penalty 2 3 3rd Down: Made/Att 4/10 3/11 3rd Down Pct. 40.0 27.3 4th Down: Made/Att 0/0 1/1 4th Down Pct. 0.0 100.0 POSSESSION AVG. 25:34 34:26 TOTAL NET YARDS 362 541 Avg. Per Game 362.0 541.0 Total Plays 55 74 Avg. Per Play 6.6 7.3 NET YARDS RUSHING 106 123 Avg. Per Game 106.0 123.0 Total Rushes 27 22 NET YARDS PASSING 256 418 Avg. Per Game 256.0 418.0 Sacked/Yards Lost 1/0 1/6 Gross Yards 256 424 Att./Completions 27/15 51/34 Completion Pct. 55.6 66.7 Had Intercepted 0 1 PUNTS/AVERAGE 5/51.2 3/48.0 NET PUNTING AVG. 5/52.2 3/16.3 PENALTIES/YARDS 6/50 7/45 FUMBLES/BALL LOST 0/0 2/1 TOUCHDOWNS 5 3 Rushing 0 0 Passing 4 3 Returns 1 0 * SCORE BY PERIODS Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT PTS TEAM 14 3 14 7 0 38 OPPONENTS 6 6 0 16 0 28 * SCORING TD-Ru-Pa-Rt K-PAT FG S PTS Hill 3 0 2 1 0 18 Butker 0 0 0 0 5/ 5 1/ 1 0 8 Sherman 1 0 1 0 0 6 Thomas 1 0 1 0 0 6 TEAM 5 0 4 1 5/ 5 1/ 1 0 38 OPPONENTS 3 0 3 0 0/ 0 2/ 3 0 28 2-Pt Conv: TM 0-0, OPP 2-3 SACKS: Ford 1, TM 1, OPP 1 FUM/LOST: * PASSING Mahomes TEAM OPPONENTS

* RUSHING Hunt Ware Mahomes Hill Dam. Williams TEAM OPPONENTS * RECEIVING Hill Watkins Sherman Conley Ware Kelce Thomas TEAM OPPONENTS * INTERCEPTIONS Parker TEAM OPPONENTS * PUNTING Colquitt TEAM OPPONENTS * PUNT RETURNS Hill TEAM OPPONENTS * KICKOFF RETURNS Thomas TEAM OPPONENTS * FIELD GOALS Butker TEAM OPPONENTS Butker: (46G) OPP: (45G,39G,48N)

Att Cmp Yds Cmp% Yds/Att TD 27 15 256 55.6 9.48 4 27 15 256 55.6 9.48 4 51 34 424 66.7 8.31 3

No. Yds Avg Long TD 16 49 3.1 13 0 3 32 10.7 27 0 5 21 4.2 8 0 2 4 2.0 7 0 1 0 0.0 0 0 27 106 3.9 27 0 22 123 5.6 19 0 No. Yds Avg Long TD 7 169 24.1 58t 2 3 21 7.0 16 0 1 36 36.0 36t 1 1 15 15.0 15 0 1 8 8.0 8 0 1 6 6.0 6 0 1 1 1.0 1t 1 15 256 17.1 58t 4 34 424 12.5 30 3 No. Yds Avg Long TD 1 0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 --- --0 No. Yds Avg Net TB In Lg B 5 256 51.2 52.2 0 3 67 0 5 256 51.2 52.2 0 3 67 0 3 144 48.0 16.3 0 1 63 0 Ret FC Yds Avg Long TD 2 0 95 47.5 91t 1 2 0 95 47.5 91t 1 2 1 -5 -2.5 -1 0 No. Yds Avg Long TD 2 33 16.5 26 0 2 33 16.5 26 0 2 36 18.0 23 0 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 1/ 1 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 1/ 1 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 1/ 1 1/ 2 0/ 0

TD% Int Int% Long Sack/Lost Rating 14.8 0 0.0 58t 1/ 0 127.5 14.8 0 0.0 58t 1/ 0 127.5 5.9 1 2.0 30 1/ 6 103.7


2018 REGULAR SEASON KANSAS CITY CHIEFS DEFENSIVE STATS (THROUGH WEEK 1) POS. PLAYER SOLO ASST. TOTAL TFL SACKS/YDS. PR FR FF INT./YDS. PD LB Hitchens, Anthony 7 8 15 2 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 DB Murray, Eric 4 5 9 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 DB Nelson, Steven 4 4 8 0.0/0 0/0 1 0 0 0 0 DB Parker, Ron 6 2 8 0.0/0 1/0 2 0 0 0 0 LB Ragland, Reggie 2 5 7 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 DB Fuller, Kendall 3 3 6 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 LB Smith, Terrance 2 3 5 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 DE Ford, Dee 4 4 1 1.0/6 4 0/0 0 0 0 0 DT Williams, Xavier 1 3 4 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 DT Jones, Chris 3 3 1 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 DE Kpassagnon, Tanoh 1 1 2 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 LB Houston, Justin 1 1 0.0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CB Scandrick, Orlando 1 1 0.0/0 0/0 1 0 0 0 0 0 DE Bailey, Allen 0.0/0 1 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS 38 35 73 4 1.0/6 5 1/0 4 0 0 DEFENSIVE SCORES 2018 REGULAR SEASON CHIEFS SPECIAL TEAMS STATS INT (0) POS. PLAYER TKIS. ASST. TOTAL FR (0) WR Kemp, Marcus 1 1 2 Safety (0) DB Smith, Tremon 1 1 0 SPECIAL TEAMS BIG PLAYS WR Thomas, 1 1 0 FR (1) (10:35) D.Colquitt punts 59 yards to LAC 14, Center-J.Winchester. De'Anthony J.Jones MUFFS catch, and recovers at LAC 6. J.Jones to LAC 6 for no DB Watts, Armani 1 1 0 gain (D.Thomas). FUMBLES (D.Thomas), RECOVERED by KCJ.Winchester at LAC 2. @ LAC (09/09/18) TOTALS 3 2 5

TD (1) (13:24) D.Kaser punts 57 yards to KC 9, Center-M.Windt. T.Hill for 91 yards. @ LAC (09/09/18)

Regular Season defensive and special teams statistics are based on press box statistics.


PITTSBURGH STEELERS / WEEK 1 / THROUGH SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2018 WON 0, LOST 0, TIED 1 09/09 T 21-21 OT at Cleveland 67,431 09/16 Kansas City 09/24 at Tampa Bay 09/30 Baltimore 10/07 Atlanta 10/14 at Cincinnati 10/28 Cleveland 11/04 at Baltimore 11/08 Carolina 11/18 at Jacksonville 11/25 at Denver 12/02 L.A. Chargers 12/09 at Oakland 12/16 New England 12/23 at New Orleans 12/30 Cincinnati Pitt. Opp. TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 25 22 Rushing 7 10 Passing 17 6 Penalty 1 6 3rd Down: Made/Att 7/15 5/18 3rd Down Pct. 46.7 27.8 4th Down: Made/Att 0/0 0/1 4th Down Pct. 0.0 0.0 POSSESSION AVG. 30:10 29:50 TOTAL NET YARDS 472 327 Avg. Per Game 472.0 327.0 Total Plays 80 85 Avg. Per Play 5.9 3.8 NET YARDS RUSHING 159 177 Avg. Per Game 159.0 177.0 Total Rushes 35 38 NET YARDS PASSING 313 150 Avg. Per Game 313.0 150.0 Sacked/Yards Lost 4/22 7/47 Gross Yards 335 197 Att./Completions 41/23 40/15 Completion Pct. 56.1 37.5 Had Intercepted 3 1 PUNTS/AVERAGE 7/39.3 12/43.5 NET PUNTING AVG. 7/37.1 12/37.2 PENALTIES/YARDS 12/116 11/87 FUMBLES/BALL LOST 3/3 1/0 TOUCHDOWNS 3 3 Rushing 2 2 Passing 1 1 Returns 0 0 * SCORE BY PERIODS Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT PTS TEAM 0 7 14 0 0 21 OPPONENTS 0 0 7 14 0 21 * SCORING TD-Ru-Pa-Rt K-PAT FG S PTS Conner 2 2 0 0 0 12 Brown 1 0 1 0 0 6 Boswell 0 0 0 0 3/ 3 0/ 1 0 3 TEAM 3 2 1 0 3/ 3 0/ 1 0 21 OPPONENTS 3 2 1 0 3/ 3 0/ 1 0 21 2-Pt Conv: TM 0-0, OPP 0-0 SACKS: Watt 4, Bostic 1, Dupree 1, Heyward 1, TM 7, OPP 4 FUM/LOST: Roethlisberger 2/2, Conner 1/1 * PASSING Roethlisberger TEAM OPPONENTS

* RUSHING Conner Roethlisberger Switzer TEAM OPPONENTS * RECEIVING Brown Smith-Schuster Conner James Hunter TEAM OPPONENTS * INTERCEPTIONS Sutton TEAM OPPONENTS * PUNTING Berry TEAM OPPONENTS * PUNT RETURNS Switzer TEAM OPPONENTS * KICKOFF RETURNS Switzer TEAM OPPONENTS * FIELD GOALS Boswell TEAM OPPONENTS Boswell: (42N) OPP: (43B)

Att Cmp Yds Cmp% Yds/Att TD 41 23 335 56.1 8.17 1 41 23 335 56.1 8.17 1 40 15 197 37.5 4.93 1

No. Yds Avg Long TD 31 135 4.4 22t 2 3 16 5.3 15 0 1 8 8.0 8 0 35 159 4.5 22t 2 38 177 4.7 24 2 No. Yds Avg Long TD 9 93 10.3 22t 1 5 119 23.8 67 0 5 57 11.4 19 0 3 60 20.0 37 0 1 6 6.0 6 0 23 335 14.6 67 1 15 197 13.1 39 1 No. Yds Avg Long TD 1 0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0.0 0 0 3 26 8.7 26 0 No. Yds Avg Net TB In Lg B 7 275 39.3 37.1 0 3 53 0 7 275 39.3 37.1 0 3 53 0 12 522 43.5 37.2 1 6 57 0 Ret FC Yds Avg Long TD 5 2 56 11.2 22 0 5 2 56 11.2 22 0 1 3 15 15.0 15 0 No. Yds Avg Long TD 3 69 23.0 28 0 3 69 23.0 28 0 3 46 15.3 24 0 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 1 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 1 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 1 0/ 0

TD% Int Int% Long Sack/Lost Rating 2.4 3 7.3 67 4/ 22 60.5 2.4 3 7.3 67 4/ 22 60.5 2.5 1 2.5 39 7/ 47 51.8


GAME 1 Chiefs 38, Chargers 28 September 9, 2018 • StubHub Center • 25,351 Kansas City Chiefs .............. 14 3 14 7 Los Angeles Chargers .......... 6 6 0 16

KC — T.Hill 91 yd. punt return (H.Butker kick) LAC — C.Sturgis 45 yd. Field Goal (8-48, 3:43) KC — T.Hill 58 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (5-75, 2:41) LAC — C.Sturgis 39 yd. Field Goal (6-39, 3:41) LAC — A.Ekeler 13 yd. pass from P.Rivers (pass failed) (12-96, 6:11) KC — H.Butker 46 yd. Field Goal (11-47, 5:47) KC — D.Thomas 1 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (11-75, 5:35) KC — A.Sherman 36 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (6-86, 3:28) LAC — K.Allen 20 yd. pass from P.Rivers (P.RiversA.Gates pass) (9-91, 3:44) KC — T.Hill 1 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (3-2, 0:40) LAC — Ty.Williams 4 yd. pass from P.Rivers (M.Gordon run) (10-75, 4:41) TEAM STATISTICS CHIEFS CHARGERS First Downs .......................................... 19 33 Total Net Yards .................................. 362 541 Rushes/Net Yards .......................... 27/106 22/123 Net Passing ........................................ 256 418 Pass Attempts/Completions ............ 27/15 51/34 Had Intercepted ..................................... 0 1 Sacked/Yards Lost .............................. 1/0 1/6 Punts/Average ............................... 5/51.2 3/48.0 Penalties/Yards ................................. 6/50 7/45 Fumbles/Lost ...................................... 0/0 2/1 Possession Time ............................. 25:34 34:26

— 38 — 28

RUSHING KC — K. Hunt 16-49; S. Ware 3-32; P. Mahomes 5-21; T. Hill 2-4; D. Williams 1-(0) LAC — M. Gordon III 15-64; A. Ekeler 5-39; T. Benjamin 1-19; D. Watt 1-1 RECEIVING KC — T. Hill 7-169, 2 TDs; A. Sherman 1-36, TD; S. Watkins 3-21; C. Conley 1-15; S. Ware 1-8; T. Kelce 1-6; D. Thomas 1-1, TD LAC — K. Allen 8-108, TD; M. Gordon III 9-102; A. Ekeler 5-87, TD; M. Williams 5-81; V. Green 2-21; A. Gates 2-16; T. Williams 2-8, TD; T. Benjamin 1-1 PASSING KC — P. Mahomes 27-15-256, 4 TDs, 0 INT LAC — P. Rivers 51-34-424, 3 TDs, 1 INT INTERCEPTIONS KC — R. Parker 1 LAC — None SACKS KC — D. Ford 1.0 LAC — D. James 1.0 FIELD GOALS KC — H. Butker(46) LAC — C. Sturgis(45) (39) 48WL


CHIEFS ROSTER, DEPTH & TRANSACTIONS


2018 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS NUMERICAL ROSTER (As of September 11, 2018) NO. NAME 2 Dustin Colquitt 4 Chad Henne 7 Harrison Butker 10 Tyreek Hill 11 Demarcus Robinson 13 De'Anthony Thomas 14 Sammy Watkins 15 Patrick Mahomes 17 Chris Conley 19 Marcus Kemp 20 Steven Nelson 21 Eric Murray 22 Orlando Scandrick 23 Kendall Fuller 24 Jordan Lucas 25 Armani Watts 26 Damien Williams 27 Kareem Hunt 29 Eric Berry 31 Darrel Williams 32 Spencer Ware 35 Charvarius Ward 38 Ron Parker 39 Tremon Smith 41 James Winchester 42 Anthony Sherman 44 Dorian O'Daniel 48 Terrance Smith 50 Justin Houston 53 Anthony Hitchens 55 Dee Ford 56 Ben Niemann 57 Breeland Speaks 59 Reggie Ragland 61 Mitch Morse 62 Austin Reiter 65 Jordan Devey 66 Kahlil McKenzie 69 Ike Boettger 71 Mitchell Schwartz 72 Eric Fisher 74 Justin Hamilton 75 Cam Erving 76 Laurent Duvernay-Tardif 77 Andrew Wylie 82 Alex Ellis 84 Demetrius Harris 87 Travis Kelce 91 Derrick Nnadi 92 Tanoh Kpassagnon 94 Jarvis Jenkins 95 Chris Jones 97 Allen Bailey 98 Xavier Williams Practice Squad 6 Josh Crockett 8 Chase Litton 12 Gehrig Dieter 30 Arrion Springs 34 Leon McQuay 40 D'Montre Wade Ryan Hunter 60 65 Rob McCray 67 Jimmy Murray 90 Joey Ivie Reserved/Injured 1 Byron Pringle 30 Keith Reaser 43 J.D. Moore 47 Step Durham 49 Daniel Sorensen 64 Dillon Gordon 73 Tejan Koroma

POS. P QB K WR WR WR WR QB WR WR CB DB CB CB S S RB RB S RB RB CB S CB LS FB LB LB LB LB LB LB LB LB C OL G G G T T DT OL G T TE TE TE DT LB DL DL DL DT

HT. 6-3 6-3 6-4 5-10 6-1 5-8 6-1 6-3 6-3 6-4 5-11 5-11 5-10 5-11 6-1 5-11 5-11 5-11 6-0 5-11 5-10 6-1 6-0 6-0 6-3 5-10 6-1 6-2 6-3 6-0 6-2 6-2 6-3 6-2 6-6 6-3 6-6 6-3 6-6 6-5 6-7 6-2 6-5 6-5 6-6 6-4 6-7 6-5 6-1 6-7 6-4 6-6 6-3 6-2

WT. 210 222 205 185 203 176 211 230 205 210 194 199 196 198 190 205 224 216 212 224 229 198 206 190 240 242 220 235 258 235 252 235 285 252 305 300 320 320 313 320 315 315 313 321 309 245 230 260 312 289 300 310 288 309

AGE 36 33 23 24 23 25 25 22 25 23 24 24 31 23 25 22 26 23 29 23 26 22 31 22 29 29 24 25 29 26 27 23 22 24 26 26 30 21 23 29 27 25 26 27 24 25 27 28 22 24 30 24 29 26

EXP. 14 10 2 3 3 5 5 2 4 1 4 3 11 3 3 R 5 2 9 R 5 R 8 R 4 8 R 3 8 5 5 R R 3 4 3 5 R R 7 6 2 4 5 1 2 5 6 R 2 8 3 8 4

COLLEGE Tennessee Michigan Georgia Tech West Alabama Florida Oregon Clemson Texas Tech Georgia Hawaii Oregon State Minnesota Boise State Virginia Tech Penn State Texas A&M Oklahoma Toledo Tennessee LSU LSU Middle Tennessee State Newberry Central Arkansas Oklahoma Connecticut Clemson Florida State Georgia Iowa Auburn Iowa Ole Miss Alabama Missouri South Florida Memphis Tennessee Iowa California Central Michigan Louisiana Florida State McGill Eastern Michigan Tennessee UW-Milwaukee Cincinnati Florida State Villanova Clemson Mississippi State Miami (Fla.) Northern Iowa

HOW ACQ. D3-05 UFA-18 FA-17 D5b-16 D4c-16 D4-14 UFA-18 D1-17 D3a-15 FA-17 D3b-15 D4b-16 FA-18 T (WAS)-18 T (MIA)-18 D4-18 UFA-18 D3-17 D1-10 CFA-18 FA-14 T (DAL)-18 FA-18 D6a-18 FA-15 T (ARI)-13 D3b-18 CFA-16 D3a-11 UFA-18 D1-14 CFA-18 D2-18 T (BUF)-17 D2-15 W (CLE)-18 FA-17 D6b-18 W (BUF)-18 UFA-16 D1-13 FA-17 T (CLE)-17 D6b-14 FA-17 W (NO)-18 CFA-13 D3a-13 D3a-18 D2-17 UFA-17 D2-16 D3b-11 RFA-18

HOMETOWN Knoxville, Tenn. West Lawn, Pa. Decatur, Ga. Pearson, Ga. Fort Valley, Ga. Los Angeles, Calif. Fort Myers, Fla. Tyler, Texas Dallas, Ga. Layton, Utah Warner Robins, Ga. Milwaukee, Wis. Los Alamitos, Calif. Baltimore, Md. New Rochelle, N.Y. Forney, Texas San Diego, Calif. Willoughby, Ohio Fairburn, Ga. Marrero, La. Eunice, La. McCombs, Miss. St. Helena Island, S.C. Anniston, Ala. Washington, Okla. North Attleborough, Mass. Olney, Md. Decatur, Ga. Statesboro, Ga. Lorain, Ohio Odenville, Ala. Sycamore, Ill. Jackson, Miss. Madison, Ala. Austin, Texas Bradenton, Fla. American Fork, Utah Walnut Creek, Calif. Cedar Falls, Iowa Pacific Palisades, Calif. Rochester, Mich. Natchez, Miss. Moultrie, Ga. Montreal, Quebec Midland, Mich. Delmar, Del. Little Rock, Ark. Cleveland Heights, Ohio Virginia Beach, Va. Kalamazoo, Mich. Clemson, S.C. Houston, Miss. Sapelo Island, Ga. Kansas City, Mo.

WR QB WR DB S DB T LB C DT

6-4 6-5 6-3 5-10 6-1 5-11 6-3 6-2 6-5 6-3

195 230 207 208 195 206 316 280 305 301

23 22 25 22 23 23 23 22 23 23

R R 1 R 1 R R R R 1

Central Oklahoma Marshall Alabama Oregon USC Murray State Bowling Green Indiana Holy Cross Florida

CFA-18 CFA-18 CFA-17 CFA-18 D6-17 CFA-18 CFA-18 CFA-18 CFA-18 FA-18

Bristow, Okla. Tampa, Fla. South Bend, Ind. San Antonio, Texas Seffner, Fla. Columbia, Tenn. North Bay, Ontario Rockdale, Ga. Evanston, Ill. Pasco, Fla.

WR CB RB DB S T OL

6-1 6-0 6-2 5-11 6-2 6-4 6-0

203 190 235 194 208 322 290

24 27 23 23 28 25 22

R 4 R R 5 2 R

Kansas State Florida Atlantic LSU Georgia Tech BYU LSU BYU

CFA-18 FA-17 CFA-18 CFA-18 CFA-14 FA-17 CFA-18

Tampa, Fla. Miami, Fla. Ruston, La. Jacksonville, Fla. Colton, Calif. River Ridge, La. Allen, Texas

HEAD COACH: Andy Reid OFFENSE: Eric Bieniemy (Offensive Coordinator); Joe Bleymaier (Pass Game Analyst/Asst. QB); Andy Heck (Offensive Line); Mike Kafka (Quarterbacks); Greg Lewis (Wide Receivers); Corey Matthaei (Asst. Offensive Line); Deland McCullough (Running Backs); Tom Melvin (Tight Ends); David Girardi (Offensive Quality Control).

DEFENSE: Bob Sutton (Defensive Coordinator); Terry Bradden (Defensive Asst.); Mark DeLeone (Inside Linebackers); Al Harris (Secondary/Cornerbacks); Britt Reid (Defensive Line); Mike Smith (Outside Linebackers); Emmitt Thomas (Defensive Backs); Alex Whittingham (Defensive Assistant); Jay Valai (Defensive Quality Control).

SPECIALISTS: Dave Toub (Assistant Head Coach/Special Teams Coordinator); Rod Wilson (Asst. Special Teams). MISCELLANEOUS: Barry Rubin (Head Strength & Conditioning); Travis Crittenden (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Ryan Reynolds (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Devin Woodhouse (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Mike Frazier (Statistical Analysis Coordinator); Porter Ellett (Senior Asst. to Head Coach).


2018 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS ALPHABETICAL ROSTER (As of September 11, 2018) NO. NAME 97 Bailey, Allen 29 Berry, Eric 69 Boettger, Ike 7 Butker, Harrison 2 Colquitt, Dustin 17 Conley, Chris 65 Devey, Jordan 76 Duvernay-Tardif, Laurent 82 Ellis, Alex 75 Erving, Cam 72 Fisher, Eric 55 Ford, Dee 23 Fuller, Kendall 74 Hamilton, Justin 84 Harris, Demetrius 4 Henne, Chad 10 Hill, Tyreek 53 Hitchens, Anthony 50 Houston, Justin 27 Hunt, Kareem 94 Jenkins, Jarvis 95 Jones, Chris 87 Kelce, Travis 19 Kemp, Marcus 92 Kpassagnon, Tanoh 24 Lucas, Jordan 15 Mahomes, Patrick 66 McKenzie, Kahlil 61 Morse, Mitch 21 Murray, Eric 20 Nelson, Steven 56 Niemann, Ben 91 Nnadi, Derrick 44 O'Daniel, Dorian 38 Parker, Ron 59 Ragland, Reggie 62 Reiter, Austin 11 Robinson, Demarcus 22 Scandrick, Orlando 71 Schwartz, Mitchell 42 Sherman, Anthony 48 Smith, Terrance 39 Smith, Tremon 57 Speaks, Breeland 13 Thomas, De'Anthony 35 Ward, Charvarius 32 Ware, Spencer 14 Watkins, Sammy 25 Watts, Armani 26 Williams, Damien 31 Williams, Darrel 98 Williams, Xavier 41 Winchester, James 77 Wylie, Andrew Practice Squad 6 Crockett, Josh 12 Dieter, Gehrig 60 Hunter, Ryan 90 Ivie, Joey 8 Litton, Chase 65 McCray, Rob 34 McQuay, Leon 67 Murray, Jimmy 30 Springs, Arrion 40 Wade, D'Montre Reserved/Injured 47 Durham, Step 64 Gordon, Dillon 73 Koroma, Tejan 43 Moore, J.D. Pringle, Byron 1 30 Reaser, Keith 49 Sorensen, Daniel

POS. DL S G K P WR G G TE OL T LB CB DT TE QB WR LB LB RB DL DL TE WR LB S QB G C DB CB LB DT LB S LB OL WR CB T FB LB CB LB WR CB RB WR S RB RB DT LS T

HT. 6-3 6-0 6-6 6-4 6-3 6-3 6-6 6-5 6-4 6-5 6-7 6-2 5-11 6-2 6-7 6-3 5-10 6-0 6-3 5-11 6-4 6-6 6-5 6-4 6-7 6-1 6-3 6-3 6-6 5-11 5-11 6-2 6-1 6-1 6-0 6-2 6-3 6-1 5-10 6-5 5-10 6-2 6-0 6-3 5-8 6-1 5-10 6-1 5-11 5-11 5-11 6-2 6-3 6-6

WT. 288 212 313 205 210 205 320 321 245 313 315 252 198 315 230 222 185 235 258 216 300 310 260 210 289 190 230 320 305 199 194 235 312 220 206 252 300 203 196 320 242 235 190 285 176 198 229 211 205 224 224 309 240 309

AGE 29 29 23 23 36 25 30 27 25 26 27 27 23 25 27 33 24 26 29 23 30 24 28 23 24 25 22 21 26 24 24 23 22 24 31 24 26 23 31 29 29 25 22 22 25 22 26 25 22 26 23 26 29 24

EXP. 8 9 R 2 14 4 5 5 2 4 6 5 3 2 5 10 3 5 8 2 8 3 6 1 2 3 2 R 4 3 4 R R R 8 3 3 3 11 7 8 3 R R 5 R 5 5 R 5 R 4 4 1

COLLEGE Miami (Fla.) Tennessee Iowa Georgia Tech Tennessee Georgia Memphis McGill Tennessee Florida State Central Michigan Auburn Virginia Tech Louisiana-Lafayette UW-Milwaukee Michigan West Alabama Iowa Georgia Toledo Clemson Mississippi State Cincinnati Hawaii Villanova Penn State Texas Tech Tennessee Missouri Minnesota Oregon State Iowa Florida State Clemson Newberry Alabama South Florida Florida Boise State California Connecticut Florida State Central Arkansas Ole Miss Oregon Middle Tennessee State LSU Clemson Texas A&M Oklahoma LSU Northern Iowa Oklahoma Eastern Michigan

HOW ACQ. D3b-11 D1-10 W (BUF)-18 FA-17 D3-05 D3a-15 FA-17 D6b-14 W (NO)-18 T (CLE)-17 D1-13 D1-14 T (WAS)-18 FA-17 CFA-13 UFA-18 D5b-16 UFA-18 D3a-11 D3-17 UFA-17 D2-16 D3a-13 FA-17 D2-17 T (MIA)-18 D1-17 D6b-18 D2-15 D4b-16 D3b-15 CFA-18 D3-18 D3b-18 FA-18 T (BUF)-17 W (CLE)-18 D4c-16 FA-18 UFA-16 T (ARI)-13 CFA-16 D6a-18 D2-18 D4-14 T (DAL)-18 FA-14 UFA-18 D4-18 UFA-18 CFA-18 RFA-18 FA-15 FA-17

HOMETOWN Sapelo Island, Ga. Fairburn, Ga. Cedar Falls, Iowa Decatur, Ga. Knoxville, Tenn. Dallas, Ga. American Fork, Utah Montreal, Quebec Delmar, Del. Moultrie, Ga. Rochester, Mich. Odenville, Ala. Baltimore, Md. Natchez, Miss. Little Rock, Ark. West Lawn, Pa. Pearson, Ga. Lorain, Ohio Statesboro, Ga. Willoughby, Ohio Clemson, S.C. Houston, Miss. Cleveland Heights, Ohio Layton, Utah Kalamazoo, Mich. New Rochelle, N.Y. Tyler, Texas Walnut Creek, Calif. Austin, Texas Milwaukee, Wis. Warner Robins, Ga. Sycamore, Ill. Virginia Beach, Va. Olney, Md. St. Helena Island, S.C. Madison, Ala. Bradenton, Fla. Fort Valley, Ga. Los Alamitos, Calif. Pacific Palisades, Calif. North Attleborough, Mass. Decatur, Ga. Anniston, Ala. Jackson, Miss. Los Angeles, Calif. McCombs, Miss. Eunice, La. Fort Myers, Fla. Forney, Texas San Diego, Calif. Marrero, La. Kansas City, Mo. Washington, Okla. Midland, Mich.

WR WR T DT QB LB S C DB DB

6-4 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-5 6-2 6-1 6-5 5-10 5-11

195 207 316 301 230 280 195 305 208 206

23 25 23 23 22 22 23 23 22 23

R 1 R 1 R R 1 R R R

Central Oklahoma Alabama Bowling Green Florida Marshall Indiana USC Holy Cross Oregon Murray State

CFA-18 CFA-17 CFA-18 FA-18 CFA-18 CFA-18 D6-17 CFA-18 CFA-18 CFA-18

Bristow, Okla. South Bend, Ind. North Bay, Ontario Pasco, Fla. Tampa, Fla. Rockdale, Ga. Seffner, Fla. Evanston, Ill. San Antonio, Texas Columbia, Tenn.

DB T OL RB WR CB S

5-11 6-4 6-0 6-2 6-1 6-0 6-2

194 322 290 235 203 190 208

23 25 22 23 24 27 28

R 2 R R R 4 5

Georgia Tech LSU BYU LSU Kansas State Florida Atlantic BYU

CFA-18 FA-17 CFA-18 CFA-18 CFA-18 FA-17 CFA-14

Jacksonville, Fla. River Ridge, La. Allen, Texas Ruston, La. Tampa, Fla. Miami, Fla. Colton, Calif.

HEAD COACH: Andy Reid OFFENSE: Eric Bieniemy (Offensive Coordinator); Joe Bleymaier (Pass Game Analyst/Asst. QB); Andy Heck (Offensive Line); Mike Kafka (Quarterbacks); Greg Lewis

(Wide Receivers); Corey Matthaei (Asst. Offensive Line); Deland McCullough (Running Backs); Tom Melvin (Tight Ends); David Girardi (Offensive Quality Control).

DEFENSE: Bob Sutton (Defensive Coordinator); Terry Bradden (Defensive Asst.); Mark DeLeone (Inside Linebackers); Al Harris (Secondary/Cornerbacks); Britt Reid (Defensive Line); Mike Smith (Outside Linebackers); Emmitt Thomas (Defensive Backs); Alex Whittingham (Defensive Assistant); Jay Valai (Defensive Quality Control). SPECIALISTS: Dave Toub (Assistant Head Coach/Special Teams Coordinator); Rod Wilson (Asst. Special Teams). MISCELLANEOUS: Barry Rubin (Head Strength & Conditioning); Travis Crittenden (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Ryan Reynolds (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Devin Woodhouse (Asst. Strength & Conditioning); Mike Frazier (Statistical Analysis Coordinator); Porter Ellett (Senior Asst. to Head Coach).


2018 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS POSITION-BY-POSITION ROSTER (As of September 11, 2018)

NO. 4 15

NAME Henne, Chad Mahomes, Patrick

POS. QB QB

HT. 6-3 6-3

WT. 222 230

NO. 27 42 32 26 31

NAME Hunt, Kareem Sherman, Anthony Ware, Spencer Williams, Damien Williams, Darrel

POS. RB FB RB RB RB

HT. 5-11 5-10 5-10 5-11 5-11

WT. 216 242 229 224 224

NO. 17 10 19 11 13 14

NAME Conley, Chris Hill, Tyreek Kemp, Marcus Robinson, Demarcus Thomas, De'Anthony Watkins, Sammy

POS. WR WR WR WR WR WR

HT. 6-3 5-10 6-4 6-1 5-8 6-1

WT. 205 185 210 203 176 211

NO. 82 84 87

NAME Ellis, Alex Harris, Demetrius Kelce, Travis

POS. TE TE TE

HT. 6-4 6-7 6-5

WT. 245 230 260

NO. 69 65 76 75 72 66 61 62 71 77

NAME Boettger, Ike Devey, Jordan Duvernay-Tardif, Laurent Erving, Cam Fisher, Eric McKenzie, Kahlil Morse, Mitch Reiter, Austin Schwartz, Mitchell Wylie, Andrew

POS. G G G OL T G C OL T T

HT. 6-6 6-6 6-5 6-5 6-7 6-3 6-6 6-3 6-5 6-6

WT. 313 320 321 313 315 320 305 300 320 309

NO. 97 74 94 95 91 98

NAME Bailey, Allen Hamilton, Justin Jenkins, Jarvis Jones, Chris Nnadi, Derrick Williams, Xavier

POS. DL DT DL DL DT DT

HT. 6-3 6-2 6-4 6-6 6-1 6-2

WT. 288 315 300 310 312 309

NO. 55 53 50 92 56 44 59 48 57

NAME Ford, Dee Hitchens, Anthony Houston, Justin Kpassagnon, Tanoh Niemann, Ben O'Daniel, Dorian Ragland, Reggie Smith, Terrance Speaks, Breeland

POS. LB LB LB LB LB LB LB LB LB

HT. 6-2 6-0 6-3 6-7 6-2 6-1 6-2 6-2 6-3

WT. 252 235 258 289 235 220 252 235 285

NO. 29 23 24 21 20 38 22 39 35 25

NAME Berry, Eric Fuller, Kendall Lucas, Jordan Murray, Eric Nelson, Steven Parker, Ron Scandrick, Orlando Smith, Tremon Ward, Charvarius Watts, Armani

POS. S CB S DB CB S CB CB CB S

HT. 6-0 5-11 6-1 5-11 5-11 6-0 5-10 6-0 6-1 5-11

WT. 212 198 190 199 194 206 196 190 198 205

NO. 7 2 41

NAME Butker, Harrison Colquitt, Dustin Winchester, James

POS. K P LS

HT. 6-4 6-3 6-3

WT. 205 210 240

QUARTERBACKS (2) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 10 Michigan 33 2 Texas Tech 22 RUNNING BACKS (5) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 2 Toledo 23 Connecticut 29 8 5 LSU 26 5 Oklahoma 26 23 R LSU WIDE RECEIVERS (6) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 4 Georgia 25 3 West Alabama 24 1 Hawaii 23 3 Florida 23 5 Oregon 25 5 Clemson 25 TIGHT ENDS (3) AGE EXP. COLLEGE Tennessee 25 2 5 UW-Milwaukee 27 6 Cincinnati 26 OFFENSIVE LINE (10) AGE EXP. COLLEGE R Iowa 23 4 Memphis 30 27 5 McGill 4 Florida State 26 27 6 Central Michigan R Tennessee 21 4 Missouri 26 3 South Florida 26 7 California 29 1 Eastern Michigan 24 DEFENSIVE LINE (6) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 8 Miami (Fla.) 29 2 Louisiana 25 8 Clemson 30 3 Mississippi State 24 R Florida State 22 4 Northern Iowa 26 LINEBACKERS (9) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 5 Auburn 27 5 Iowa 26 8 Georgia 29 2 Villanova 24 23 R Iowa R Clemson 24 Alabama 24 3 3 Florida State 25 R Ole Miss 22 DEFENSIVE BACKS (10) AGE EXP. COLLEGE 9 Tennessee 29 3 Virginia Tech 23 3 Penn State 25 3 Minnesota 24 4 Oregon State 24 8 Newberry 31 10 Boise State 31 R Central Arkansas 22 R Middle Tennessee State 22 R Texas A&M 22 SPECIALISTS (3) AGE EXP. COLLEGE Georgia Tech 23 2 36 14 Tennessee Oklahoma 29 4

HOMETOWN West Lawn, Pa. Tyler, Texas

HOW ACQ. UFA-18 D1-17

HOMETOWN Willoughby, Ohio North Attleborough, Mass. Eunice, La. San Diego, Calif. Marrero, La.

HOW ACQ. D3-17 T (ARI)-13 FA-14 UFA-18 CFA-18

HOMETOWN Dallas, Ga. Pearson, Ga. Layton, Utah Fort Valley, Ga. Los Angeles, Calif. Fort Myers, Fla.

HOW ACQ. D3a-15 D5b-16 CFA-17 D4c-16 D4-14 UFA-18

HOMETOWN Delmar, Del. Little Rock, Ark. Cleveland Heights, Ohio

HOW ACQ. W (NO)-18 CFA-13 D3a-13

HOMETOWN Cedar Falls, Iowa American Fork, Utah Montreal, Quebec Moultrie, Ga. Rochester, Mich. Walnut Creek, Calif. Austin, Texas Bradenton, Fla. Pacific Palisades, Calif. Midland, Mich.

HOW ACQ. W (BUF)-18 FA-17 D6b-14 T (CLE)-17 D1-13 D6b-18 D2-15 W (CLE)-18 UFA-16 FA-17

HOMETOWN Sapelo Island, Ga. Natchez, Miss. Clemson, S.C. Houston, Miss. Virginia Beach, Va. Kansas City, Mo.

HOW ACQ. D3b-11 FA-17 UFA-17 D2-16 D3-18 RFA-18

HOMETOWN Odenville, Ala. Lorain, Ohio Statesboro, Ga. Kalamazoo, Mich. Sycamore, Ill. Olney, Md. Madison, Ala. Decatur, Ga. Jackson, Miss.

HOW ACQ. D1-14 UFA-18 D3a-11 D2-17 CFA-18 D3b-18 T (BUF)-17 CFA-16 D2-18

HOMETOWN Fairburn, Ga. Baltimore, Md. New Rochelle, N.Y. Milwaukee, Wis. Warner Robins, Ga. St. Helena Island, S.C. Los Alamitos, Calif. Anniston, Ala. McCombs, Miss. Forney, Texas

HOW ACQ. D1-10 T (WAS)-18 T (MIA)-18 D4b-16 D3b-15 FA-18 FA-18 D6a-18 T (DAL)-18 D4-18

HOMETOWN Decatur, Ga. Knoxville, Tenn. Washington, Okla.

HOW ACQ. FA-17 D3-05 FA-15


2018 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS UNOFFICIAL DEPTH CHART (As of September 11, 2018) OFFENSE WR LT LG C RG RT TE WR QB RB FB

10 72 75 61 76 71 87 14 15 27 42

Tyreek Hill Eric Fisher Cam Erving Mitch Morse Laurent Duvernay-Tardif Mitchell Schwartz Travis Kelce Sammy Watkins Patrick Mahomes Kareem Hunt Anthony Sherman

11 77 66 65 69 77 84 17 4 32

Demarcus Robinson Andrew Wylie Kahlil McKenzie Jordan Devey Ike Boettger Andrew Wylie Demetrius Harris Chris Conley Chad Henne Spencer Ware

LDE NT RDE LOLB LILB RILB ROLB LCB RCB S S

95 98 97 50 53 59 55 20 23 29 38

Chris Jones Xavier Williams Allen Bailey Justin Houston Anthony Hitchens Reggie Ragland Dee Ford Steven Nelson Kendall Fuller Eric Berry Ron Parker

94 91 74 92 48 56 57 22 39 21 25

Jarvis Jenkins Derrick Nnadi Justin Hamilton Tanoh Kpassagnon Terrance Smith Ben Niemann Breeland Speaks Orlando Scandrick Tremon Smith Eric Murray Armani Watts

P K H LS PR KR

2 7 2 41 10 13

Dustin Colquitt Harrison Butker Dustin Colquitt James Winchester Tyreek Hill De'Anthony Thomas

13 De'Anthony Thomas 62 Austin Reiter 82 Alex Ellis 19 Marcus Kemp 26 Damien Williams

DEFENSE

44 Dorian O'Daniel 35 Charvarius Ward 24 Jordan Lucas SPECIALISTS

7 Harrison Butker 2 Dustin Colquitt 13 De'Anthony Thomas 39 Tremon Smith

Rookies Underlined PRONUNCIATION GUIDE Ike Boettger BOT-gir Jordan Devey dev-EE Laurent (Larry) Duvernay-Tardif Luh-RON doo-VER-nay tar-diff Tyreek Hill tie-REEK Travis Kelce KEL-see Tanoh Kpassagnon TAWN-o pass-N-yo Ben Niemann NEE-man Derrick Nnadi NAH-dee Austin Reiter RIGHT-er Tremon Smith Tray-mon De'Anthony Thomas DEE-anthony Charvarius Ward CHAR-Vair-EE-us Xavier Williams EX-zay-vier Andrew Wylie WHY-lee

31 Darrel Williams


HOW THE 2018 CHIEFS ROSTER WAS BUILT (As of September 11, 2018) YEAR DRAFT

2005 P Dustin Colquitt (3) 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 S Eric Berry (1) 2011 LB Justin Houston (3a) DL Allen Bailey (3b) 2012 2013 T Eric Fisher (1) TE Travis Kelce (3a) 2014 LB Dee Ford (1) WR De'Anthony Thomas (4) G Laurent Duvernay-Tardif (6b)

FREE AGENTS

TRADE/WAIVERS

TE Demetrius Harris (CFA)

FB Anthony Sherman (T/ARI)

RB Spencer Ware (FA)

2015 C Mitch Morse (2) WR Chris Conley (3a) CB Steven Nelson (3b)

LS James Winchester (FA)

2016 DL Chris Jones (2) DB Eric Murray (4b) WR Demarcus Robinson (4c) WR Tyreek Hill (5b)

T Mitchell Schwartz (UFA) LB Terrance Smith (CFA)

2017 QB Patrick Mahomes (1) DL Tanoh Kpassagnon (2) RB Kareem Hunt (3)

DL Jarvis Jenkins (UFA) OL Jordan Devey (FA) K Harrison Butker (FA) DT Justin Hamilton (FA) WR Marcus Kemp (FA)

LB Reggie Ragland (T/BUF) OL Cam Erving (T/CLE)

2018 LB Breeland Speaks (2) DT Derrick Nnadi (3a) LB Dorian O'Daniel (3b) S Armani Watts (4) CB Tremon Smith (6a) G Kahlil McKenzie (6b)

OL Andrew Wylie (FA) WR Sammy Watkins (UFA) LB Anthony Hitchens (UFA) QB Chad Henne (UFA) DT Xavier Williams (RFA) RB Damien Williams (UFA) LB Ben Niemann (CFA) RB Darrel Williams (CFA) CB Orlando Scandrick (FA) S Ron Parker (FA)

CB Kendall Fuller (T/WAS) TE Alex Ellis (W/NO) CB Charvarius Ward (T/DAL) S Jordan Lucas (T/MIA) G Ike Boettger (W/BUF) OL Austin Reiter (W/CLE)

TOTAL ROSTER BREAKDOWN 25 Draft Choices

6 Unrestricted Free Agents 9 Free Agents 4 College Free Agents 1 Restricted Free Agent

3 Waiver Claims 6 Trades


2018 CHIEFS ROSTER BY EXPERIENCE (As of September 11, 2018) 14th Year (1) P Dustin Colquitt 11th Year (1) CB Orlando Scandrick 10th Year (1) QB Chad Henne 9th Year (1) S Eric Berry 8th Year (4) DL Allen Bailey LB Justin Houston DL Jarvis Jenkins FB Anthony Sherman 7th Year (1) T Mitchell Schwartz

5th Year (10) G Jordan Devey G Laurent Duvernay-Tardif LB Dee Ford TE Demetrius Harris LB Anthony Hitchens S Daniel Sorensen WR De'Anthony Thomas RB Spencer Ware WR Sammy Watkins RB Damien Williams 4th Year (6) WR Chris Conley OL Cam Erving C Mitch Morse CB Steven Nelson DT Xavier Williams LS James Winchester

3rd Year (9) CB Kendall Fuller WR Tyreek Hill DL Chris Jones S Jordan Lucas DB Eric Murray LB Reggie Ragland OL Austin Reiter WR Demarcus Robinson LB Terrance Smith 2nd Year (6) K Harrison Butker TE Alex Ellis DT Justin Hamilton RB Kareem Hunt DL Tanoh Kpassagnon QB Patrick Mahomes

1st Year (2) WR Marcus Kemp T Andrew Wylie Rookies (10) G Ike Boettger G Kahlil McKenzie LB Ben Niemann DT Derrick Nnadi LB Dorian O'Daniel CB Tremon Smith LB Breeland Speaks CB Charvarius Ward S Armani Watts RB Darrel Williams

6th Year (2) T Eric Fisher TE Travis Kelce

2018 CHIEFS ROSTER BY DRAFT ROUND [Overall selection in brackets] 1st Round (6)

[1] T Eric Fisher (2013) [4] WR Sammy Watkins (2014) [5] S Eric Berry (2010) [10] QB Patrick Mahomes (2017) [19] OL Cam Erving (2015-CLE) [23] LB Dee Ford (2014)

2nd Round (8)

[37] Mitchell Schwartz (2012 - CLE) [37] DL Chris Jones (2016) [41] DL Jarvis Jenkins (2011-WAS) [41] LB Reggie Ragland (2016-BUF) [46] LB Breeland Speaks (2018) [49] C Mitch Morse (2015) [57] QB Chad Henne (2008-MIA) [59] Tanoh Kpassagnon (2017)

3rd Round (10)

[63] TE Travis Kelce (2013) [70] LB Justin Houston (2011) [75] DT Derrick Nnadi (2018) [76] WR Chris Conley (2015) [84] CB Kendall Fuller (2016-WAS) [86] Allen Bailey (2011) [86] Kareem Hunt (2017) [98] CB Steven Nelson (2015) [99] P Dustin Colquitt (2005) [100] LB Dorian O'Daniel (2018)

4th Round (5)

[106] DB Eric Murray (2016) [119] LB Anthony Hitchens (2014-DAL) [124] WR De'Anthony Thomas (2014) [124] S Armani Watts (2018) [126] WR Demarcus Robinson (2016)

5th Round (3)

[136] FB Anthony Sherman (2011-ARI) [143] CB Orlando Scandrick (2008-DAL) [165] WR Tyreek Hill (2016)

6th Round (5)

[194] RB Spencer Ware (2013-SEA) [196] CB Tremon Smith (2018) [198] G Kahlil McKenzie (2018) [200] G Laurent Duvernay-Tardif (2014) [204] S Jordan Lucas (2016-MIA)

7th Round (2)

[222] OL Austin Reiter (2015-CLE) [233] K Harrison Butker (2017-CAR)

Undrafted (15)

TE Demetrius Harris (2013), OL Jordan Devey (2013 - BAL), LS James Winchester (2013 - PHI), RB Damien Williams (2014-MIA), DT Justin Hamilton (2015 BUF), DT Xavier Williams (2015-ARI), TE Alex Ellis (2016 - TEN), LB Terrance Smith (2016), WR Marcus Kemp (2017), T Andrew Wylie (2017 - IND), LB Ben Niemann (2018), CB Charvarius Ward (2018 - DAL), RB Darrel Williams (2018), G Ike Boettger (2018-BUF), S Ron Parker (2011-SEA)


KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 2018 TRANSACTIONS (as of 9/11/18) Date Jan. 3 Jan. 3 Jan. 3 Jan. 3 Jan. 4 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 9 Jan. 9 Jan. 12 Jan. 15 Jan. 29 Jan. 29 Jan. 29 Jan. 29 Jan. 29 Jan. 29 Jan. 29 Jan. 29 Feb. 8 Feb. 16 Mar. 12 Mar. 12 Mar. 13 Mar. 14 Mar. 14 Mar. 14 Mar. 14 Mar. 14 Mar. 15 Mar. 15 Mar. 15 Mar. 15 Mar. 15 Mar. 16 Mar. 16 Mar. 20 Mar. 21 Mar. 22 Mar. 30 Mar. 30 April 3 April 4 April 7 April 9 April 16 April 27 April 27 April 27 April 28 April 28 April 28 April 30 April 30 April 30 May 2 May 2 May 3 May 3 May 4 May 4 May 4 May 4 May 4

Player ..................................................................... Transaction AUGUSTA, Josh, NT .............................. Reserve/Future Signing DORLEANT, Makinton, CB ..................... Reserve/Future Signing PRICE, Sheldon, CB............................... Reserve/Future Signing SHIPPEN, Brandon, WR......................... Reserve/Future Signing IWORAH, Prince Charles, CB ................. Reserve/Future Signing ATKINSON, George, RB......................... Reserve/Future Signing BRAVERMAN, Daniel, WR ..................... Reserve/Future Signing DIETER, Gehrig, WR .............................. Reserve/Future Signing FIRKSER, Anthony, TE .......................... Reserve/Future Signing GORDON, Dillon, OL .............................. Reserve/Future Signing HOLMES, Tyrone, LB ............................. Reserve/Future Signing JOHNSON, Kaleb, OL ............................ Reserve/Future Signing PURCELL, Mike, NT ............................... Reserve/Future Signing REDMOND, Will, CB .............................. Reserve/Future Signing WYLIE, Andrew, OL................................ Reserve/Future Signing AMARO, Jace, TE .................................. Reserve/Future Signing BIENIEMY, Eric ............................ Named Offensive Coordinator MCCULLOUGH, Deland ............... Named Running Backs Coach MCGILL, T.Y., DL ................................... Reserve/Future Signing KAFKA, Mike ...........................................Promoted to QB Coach DELEONE, Mark .................................... Promoted to ILB Coach SMITH, Mike..........................................Promoted to OLB Coach MATTHAEI, Corey .. Promoted to Assistant Offensive Line Coach BLEYMAIER, Joe ...... Promoted to Pass Game Analyst/Asst. QB BRADDEN, Terry........... Promoted to Def. Quality Control Coach VALAI, Jay............................. Named Def. Quality Control Coach GIRARDI, David ....................Named. Off. Quality Control Coach REVIS, Darrelle, CB ..................................................... Released AMERSON, David, CB ..................................................... Signed PARKER, Ron, S .......................................................... Released HALI, Tamba, LB .......................................................... Released WHITTINGHAM, Andrew .................. Named Defensive Assistant FULLER, Kendall, CB .......... Acquired via trade from Washington SMITH, Alex, QB .............................................................. Traded PETERS, Marcus, CB....................................................... Traded SMITH, Terrance, LB ........................................................ Signed THOMAS, De’Anthony, WR .............................................. Signed HITCHENS, Anthony, LB .................................................. Signed JENKINS, Jarvis, DE ........................................................ Signed SHERMAN, Anthony, FB .................................................. Signed WATKINS, Sammy, WR ................................................... Signed COLQUITT, Dustin, P ....................................................... Signed DEVEY, Jordan, G ............................................................ Signed HENNE, Chad, QB ........................................................... Signed CHARLES, Stefan, DT...................................................... Signed WILLIAMS, Xavier, DT ...................................................... Signed WILLIAMS, Damien, RB ................................................... Signed MCGLOIN, Matt, QB ......................................................... Signed SPRUCE, Nelson, WR...................................................... Signed GOLDEN, Robert, S ......................................................... Signed ATKINSON, George, RB.................................................. Waived TOUB, Dave ................................. Named Assistant Head Coach WRIGHT, Tim, TE ............................................................ Signed WILLIAMS, Kerywnn, RB .................................................. Signed SPEAKS, Breeland, LB ................................. Drafted in 2nd round NNADI, Derrick, DT ....................................... Drafted in 3rd round O’DANIEL, Dorian, LB ................................... Drafted in 3rd round WATTS, Armani, S ........................................ Drafted in 4th round SMITH, Tremon, CB ...................................... Drafted in 6th round MCKENZIE, Kahlil, G..................................... Drafted in 6th round FIRKSER, Anthony, TE ................................................... Waived PURCELL, Mike, NT ........................................................ Waived PRICE, Sheldon, DB..................................................... Released NICOLAS, Dadi, LB .......................................................... Traded TELFER, Randall, TE ............. Acquired via trade from Cleveland AUGUSTA, Josh, NT ....................................................... Waived CHARLES, Orson, TE .................................................. Released TEFLER, Randall, TE ........................................... Trade Nullified NICOLAS, Dadi, LB ......................................................... Waived DAVISON, Raymond, LB .................................................. Signed HUNTER, Ryan, T ............................................................ Signed LINER, Dee, T .................................................................. Signed

May 4 May 4 May 4 May 4 May 4 May 4 May 4 May 4 May 4 May 4 May 4 May 7 May 8 May 8 May 8 May 8 May 8 May 8 May 8 May 8 May 8 May 8 May 8 May 8 May 10 May 10 May 14 May 14 May 16 May 16 May 24 May 29 May 29 May 30 June 14 June 14 June 14 June 14 June 14 June 14 June 14 June 20 July 25 July 27 July 31 July 31 Aug. 5 Aug. 7 Aug. 10 Aug. 10 Aug. 10 Aug. 13 Aug. 13 Aug. 15 Aug. 19 Aug. 22 Aug. 31 Aug. 31 Aug. 31 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1

LITTON, Chase, QB ......................................................... Signed MACK, Blake, TE.............................................................. Signed MARKS, Elijah, WR .......................................................... Signed MOORE, John David, RB ................................................. Signed MURRAY, James, C ......................................................... Signed NIEMANN, Ben, LB .......................................................... Signed PRINGLE, Byron, WR....................................................... Signed SEYMOUR, Devondre, T .................................................. Signed SPRINGS, Arrion, DB ....................................................... Signed WADE, D’Montre, DB ....................................................... Signed WILLIAMS, Darrel, RB ...................................................... Signed SMITH, Tremon, CB ......................................................... Signed IWORAH, Prince Charles, DB .......................................... Waived SEYMOUR, DeVondre, T ................................................ Waived SHIPPEN, Brandon, WR ................................................. Waived SPRUCE, Nelson, WR..................................................... Waived HUNT, Akeem, RB ................. Waived (Reverts to Reserve/PUP) DURHAM, Step, DB.......................................................... Signed KOROMA, Tejan, C .......................................................... Signed MCCRAY, Robert, OLB .................................................... Signed REAVES, Malik, DB .......................................................... Signed SMALLWOOD, Jordan, WR.............................................. Signed CHARLES, Stefan, DT.................................................. Released ELLIS, Alex, TE ............................................ Claimed off waivers NUNEZ-ROCHES, Rakeem, DE ...................................... Waived CHARLES, Stefan, DT...................................................... Signed WATTS, Armani. S ........................................................... Signed MCKENZIE, Kahlil, G........................................................ Signed SMALLWOOD, Jordan, WR.......................................... Released GRAYSON, Davon, WR ................................................... Signed SPEAKS, Breeland, LB..................................................... Signed O’DANIEL, Dorian, LB ...................................................... Signed GRAYSON, Davon, WR .................................................. Waived SMALLWOOD, Jordan, WR.............................................. Signed JOHNSON, Kaleb, G ....................................................... Waived REAVES, Malik, DB ......................................................... Waived MOORE, J.D., RB................................................. Waived/injured BROWN, Algernon, RB..................................................... Signed CROCKETT, Josh, WR .................................................... Signed SPAIN, Bentley, T............................................................. Signed NNADI, Derrick, NT .......................................................... Signed HUNT, Akeem, RB ........................ Waived with injury settlement MARKS, Elijah, WR ......................................................... Waived PURCELL, Mike, DT ......................................................... Signed LAMPKIN, Ashton, CB ............ Waived (Reverts to Reserve/PUP) PETERS, Otha, LB ........................................................... Signed KOROMA, Tejan, OL ........................................... Waived/Injured COOPER, Ethan, G ........................................................ Claimed LAMPKIN, Ashton, CB .......................................Injury Settlement GORDON, Dillon, T ................................................Waived/Injury OFFICER, Alex, G ............................................................ Signed OFFICER, Alex, G ........................................................... Waived LAWRY, Ray, RB ............................................................. Signed GOLDEN, Robert, S ..................................................... Released SCANDRICK, Orlando, CB ............................................... Signed WEST, Charcandrick, RB ............................................. Released EHINGER, Parker, G ........................................................ Traded WARD, Charvarius, CB .................Acquired via trade with Dallas LUCAS, Jordan, S ......................... Acquired via trade with Miami AMARO, Jace, TE ........................................................... Waived BRAVERMAN, Daniel, WR .............................................. Waived BROWN, Algernon, RB.................................................... Waived CHESSON, Jehu, WR ..................................................... Waived COOPER, Ethan, G ......................................................... Waived CROCKETT, Josh, WR ................................................... Waived DAVISON, Raymond, LB ................................................. Waived DIETER, Gehrig, WR ....................................................... Waived Dorleant, Makinton, DB.................................................... Waived ELIGWE, Ukeme, LB ....................................................... Waived HOLMES, Tyrone, LB ...................................................... Waived HUNTER, Ryan, T ........................................................... Waived LAWRY, Ray, RB ............................................................ Waived LINER, Dee, DT............................................................... Waived


Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Sept. 3 Sept. 3 Sept. 4 Sept. 4 Sept. 4

LITTON, Chase, QB ........................................................ Waived MACK, Blake, WR ........................................................... Waived MCCRAY, Rob, LB .......................................................... Waived MCGILL, T.Y., NT ............................................................ Waived MCQUAY, Leon, DB ........................................................ Waived MURRAY, Jimmy, C ........................................................ Waived PETERS, Otha, LB .......................................................... Waived PURCELL, Mike, NT ........................................................ Waived REDMOND, Will, DB ....................................................... Waived SMALLWOOD, Jordan, WR............................................. Waived SPAIN, Bentley, T ............................................................ Waived SPRINGS, Arrion, DB ...................................................... Waived STERNS, Jordan, S ......................................................... Waived WADE, D’Montre, DB ...................................................... Waived AMERSON, David, CB ................................................. Released CHARLES, Stefan, DT.................................................. Released WILLIAMS, Kerwynn, RB .............................................. Released WRIGHT, Tim, TE ........................................................ Released ZOMBO, Frank, LB ....................................................... Released DURHAM, Step, DB............................................. Waived/Injured REASER, Keith, DB ............................................. Waived/Injured PRINGLE, Byron, WR.............................................. Placed on IR BOETTGER, Ike, G ...................................... Claimed off waivers MCGLOIN, Matt, QB ..................................................... Released CROCKETT, Josh, WR ........................ Signed to practice squad DIETER, Gehrig, WR ............................ Signed to practice squad HUNTER, Ryan, T ................................ Signed to practice squad LINER, Dee, DT.................................... Signed to practice squad LITTON, Chase, QB ............................. Signed to practice squad MCCRAY, Robert, LB ........................... Signed to practice squad MCQUAY, Leon, S ............................... Signed to practice squad MURRAY, James, C ............................. Signed to practice squad SPRINGS, Arrion, DB ........................... Signed to practice squad WADE, D’Montre, DB ........................... Signed to practice squad SORENSEN, Daniel, S ............................................ Placed on IR PARKER, Ron, S .............................................................. Signed WITZMANN, Bryan, G .................................................. Released REITER, Austin, OL ...................................... Claimed off waivers ERVING, Cam, OL...........................Signed to contract extension LINER, Dee, DT............................ Released from practice squad IVIE, Joey, DT ...................................... Signed to practice squad


CHIEFS ADDITIONAL STATISTICS


2018 REGULAR SEASON CHIEFS GAME-BY-GAME OFFENSE 09/09 09/16 09/23 10/01 10/07 10/14 10/21 10/28 11/04 11/11 11/19 12/02 12/09 12/13 12/23 12/30

@ LAC

FIRST DOWNS Total 19 7 Rushing Passing 10 Penalty 2 THIRD DOWNS Attempts 10 Converted 4 Percentage 40.0% TOT. OFFENSE Net Yards 362 Plays 55 Avg./Play 6.6 RUSHING Net Yards 106 Rush. Att. 27 Avg./Att. 3.9 PASSING Net Yards 256 Attempts 27 Completions 15 Intercepted 0 Gross Yards 256 Sacked 1.0 Yards Lost 0 ADVANCES Rushes 27 Completions 15 Totals 42 PENALTIES Number 6 Yards 50 FUMBLES Number 0 Lost 0 SCORING 38 Points TD Rushing 0 TD Passing 4 TD KO Returns 0 TD Punt Returns 1 TD Sp. Teams 0 TD Def. Returns 0 FG Attempts 1 FG Made 1 Safety 0

140

@ PIT

@ SF DEN JAX

@ NE

@ @ @ @ CIN DEN CLE ARI LAR OAK BAL LAC SEA OAK

@CHIEFS


2018 REGULAR SEASON CHIEFS GAME-BY-GAME DEFENSE 09/09 09/16 09/23 10/01 10/07 10/14 10/21 10/28 11/04 11/11 11/19 12/02 12/09 12/13 12/23 12/30

@ LAC

FIRST DOWNS Total 33 7 Rushing Passing 23 Penalty 3 THIRD DOWNS Attempts 11 Converted 3 Percentage 27.3% TOT. OFFENSE Net Yards 541 Plays 74 Avg./Play 7.3 RUSHING Net Yards 123 Rush. Att. 22 Avg./Att. 5.6 PASSING Net Yards 418 Attempts 51 Completions 34 Intercepted 1 Gross Yards 424 Sacked 1.0 Yards Lost 6 ADVANCES Rushes 22 Completions 34 Totals 56 PENALTIES Number 7 Yards 45 FUMBLES Number 2 Lost 1 SCORING 28 Points TD Rushing 0 TD Passing 3 TD KO Returns 0 TD Punt Returns 0 TD Sp. Teams 0 TD Def. Returns 0 FG Attempts 3 FG Made 2 Safety 0

141

@ PIT

@ SF DEN JAX

@ NE

@ @ @ @ CIN DEN CLE ARI LAR OAK BAL LAC SEA OAK

@CHIEFS


2018 REGULAR SEASON CHIEFS INDIVIDUAL SINGLE-GAME HIGHS Passes Attempted 27 Patrick Mahomes at Chargers Passes Completed 15 Patrick Mahomes at Chargers Passing Yards 256 Patrick Mahomes at Chargers Touchdown Passes 4 Patrick Mahomes at Chargers Pass Receptions 7 Tyreek Hill at Chargers Receiving Yards 169 Tyreek Hill at Chargers Touchdown Receptions 2 Tyreek Hill at Chargers Rushing Yards 49 Kareem Hunt at Chargers Rushing Attempts 16 Kareem Hunt at Chargers Yards From Scrimmage 173 Tyreek Hill at Chargers Combined Net Yards 268 Tyreek Hill at Chargers Interceptions Made 1 Ron Parker at Chargers Sacks 1.0 Dee Ford at Chargers Punts 5 Dustin Colquitt at Chargers Punting Average 51.2 Dustin Colquitt at Chargers Punt Returns 2 Tyreek Hill at Chargers Punt Return Yards 95 Tyreek Hill at Chargers Kickoff Returns 2 De'Anthony Thomas at Chargers Kickoff Return Yards 33 De'Anthony Thomas at Chargers Field Goals Attempted 1 Harrison Butker at Chargers Field Goals Made 1 Harrison Butker at Chargers 2018 REGULAR SEASON KANSAS CITY CHIEFS LONGEST PLAYS Run From Scrimmage 27 Spencer Ware at Chargers Pass Reception 58 Tyreek Hill at Chargers Touchdown Reception 58 Tyreek Hill at Chargers Punt Return 91 Tyreek Hill at Chargers Kickoff Return 26 De'Anthony Thomas at Chargers Punt 67 Dustin Colquitt at Chargers Field Goal 46 Harrison Butker at Chargers

142

9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9

@CHIEFS


2018 REGULAR SEASON OPPONENTS INDIVIDUAL SINGLE-GAME HIGHS Passes Attempted 51 Philip Rivers at Chargers Passes Completed 34 Philip Rivers at Chargers Passing Yards 424 Philip Rivers at Chargers Touchdown Passes 3 Philip Rivers at Chargers Pass Receptions 9 Melvin Gordon III at Chargers Receiving Yards 108 Keenan Allen at Chargers Touchdown Receptions 1 Keenan Allen at Chargers Austin Ekeler at Chargers Tyrell Williams at Chargers Rushing Yards 64 Melvin Gordon III at Chargers Rushing Attempts 15 Melvin Gordon III at Chargers Yards From Scrimmage 166 Melvin Gordon III at Chargers Combined Net Yards 166 Melvin Gordon III at Chargers Sacks 1.0 Derwin James at Chargers Punts 2 Drew Kaser at Chargers Punting Average 60.0 Drew Kaser at Chargers Punt Returns 1 Travis Benjamin at Chargers J.J. Jones at Chargers Kickoff Returns 2 J.J. Jones at Chargers Kickoff Return Yards 36 J.J. Jones at Chargers Field Goals Attempted 3 Caleb Sturgis at Chargers Field Goals Made 2 Caleb Sturgis at Chargers 2018 REGULAR SEASON OPPONENTS LONGEST PLAYS Run From Scrimmage 19 Travis Benjamin at Chargers Pass Reception 30 Austin Ekeler at Chargers Touchdown Reception 20 Keenan Allen at Chargers Kickoff Return 23 J.J. Jones at Chargers Punt 63 Drew Kaser at Chargers Field Goal 45 Caleb Sturgis at Chargers

143

9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9 9/9

@CHIEFS


DATE OPPONENT 9/9 at Chargers

DATE OPPONENT 9/9 at Chargers 9/9 at Chargers DATE OPPONENT 9/9 at Chargers

144

2018 REGULAR SEASON BIG YARDAGE GAMES 100-YARD PASS RECEIVERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. AVG. Tyreek Hill 7 169 24.1 2018 OPPONENTS BIG YARDAGE GAMES 100-YARD PASS RECEIVERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. AVG. Keenan Allen 8 108 13.5 Melvin Gordon III 9 102 11.3 300-YARD PASSERS PLAYER ATT. YDS. COMP. Philip Rivers 51 424 34

LG 58t

TD 2

LG 23 25

TD 1 0

LG 30

TD 3

@CHIEFS


2018 REGULAR SEASON 100.0+ PASSER RATING PASSING GAMES DATE OPPONENT PLAYER ATT. CMP. YDS. CMP.% YDS/ATT. YDS/CMP. TD TD% INT INT% LONG SACK/LOST RATING 9/9 at Chargers Patrick Mahomes 27 15 256 55.6% 9.48 17.07 4 14.8% 0 0.0% 58t 1/0 127.5

DATE OPPONENT PLAYER 9/9 at Chargers Philip Rivers

145

2018 OPPONENTS 100.0+ PASSER RATING PASSING GAMES ATT. CMP. YDS. CMP.% YDS/ATT. YDS/CMP. TD TD% INT INT% LONG SACK/LOST RATING 51 34 424 66.7% 8.31 12.47 3 5.9% 1 2.0% 30 1/6 103.7 *NEED MINIMUM OF 20 ATTEMPTS TO QUALIFY

@CHIEFS


DATE OPPONENT 9/9 @ L.A. Chargers

*Points per game

146

TOTAL 13

2018 REGULAR SEASON OFFENSE *POINTS RUSH PASS SCORED 20 11 5

DEFENSE TOTAL 32

RUSH 22

PASS 31

*POINTS SCORED 25

@CHIEFS


PASSING: DATE OPP.

09/09 at L.A. Chargers

2018 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS ATT

CMP

YDS

COMP%

Y/A

CHAD HENNE Y/C TD TD%

INT

INT%

LG

SK/YD

RATE

0

0%

--

0/0.0

0.0

INT

INT% 0.0%

58t

LG

SK/YD

RATE

0

0.0%

58t

1/0.0

127.5

DID NOT PLAY

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS PASSING: DATE OPP.

09/09 at L.A. Chargers

0.00

0.00

ATT

CMP

YDS

COMP% 55.6%

9.48

17.07

4

14.8%

27

15

256

55.6%

9.48

17.07

4

14.8%

15

256

Y/A

0

0%

0

27

0

0.0%

0

PATRICK MAHOMES Y/C TD TD%

0

1/0.0

127.5

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

147

@CHIEFS


RUSHING: DATE OPP.

09/09 at L.A. Chargers

2018 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS

NO. 2

TYREEK HILL YDS AVG LG 4

2.0

7

4

2.0

7

TD

NO.

0

16

TD

NO.

0

1

0

16

KAREEM HUNT YDS AVG LG 49

3.1

13

49

3.1

13

TD

NO.

0

5

0

5

PATRICK MAHOMES YDS AVG LG 21

4.2

8

21

4.2

8

TD 0

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS RUSHING: DATE OPP.

09/09 at L.A. Chargers

2

NO. 3

SPENCER WARE YDS AVG LG 32

10.7

27

32

10.7

27

0

1

DAMIEN WILLIAMS YDS AVG LG 0

0.0

--

TD

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

148

3

@CHIEFS


RECEIVING: DATE OPP.

09/09 at L.A. Chargers

2018 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS

NO. 1

CHRIS CONLEY YDS AVG LG 15

15.0

15

15

15.0

15

TD

NO.

0

7

TD

NO.

1

1

0

7

TYREEK HILL YDS AVG LG 169

24.1

58t

169

24.1

58t

TD

NO.

2

1

TD

NO.

1

1

2

1

TRAVIS KELCE YDS AVG LG 6

6.0

6

6

6.0

6

TD 0

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS RECEIVING: DATE OPP.

09/09 at L.A. Chargers

1

NO. 1

ANTHONY SHERMAN YDS AVG LG 36

36.0

36t

36

36.0

36t

1

1

DE'ANTHONY THOMAS YDS AVG LG 1

1.0

1t

1

1.0

1t

1

1

SPENCER WARE YDS AVG LG 8

8.0

8

8

8.0

8

0

TD 0

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS RECEIVING: DATE OPP.

09/09 at L.A. Chargers

1

NO. 3

SAMMY WATKINS YDS AVG LG 21

7.0

16

21

7.0

16

0

TD 0

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

149

3

0

@CHIEFS


PUNTING: DATE OPP. 09/09

at L.A. Chargers

09/16

at Pittsburgh

09/23

San Francisco

10/01

at Denver

10/07

Jacksonville

10/14

at New England

10/21

Cincinnati

10/28

Denver

11/04

at Cleveland

11/11

Arizona

11/19

at L.A. Rams

12/02

at Oakland

12/09

Baltimore

12/13

L.A. Chargers

12/23

at Seattle

12/30

Oakland

TOTALS

150

2018 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS NO.

YDS

AVG

5

256

51.2

5

256

51.2

DUSTIN COLQUITT TB IN 20 0

3

0

3

LG 67

52.2

NET

BLK

67

52.2

0

0

@CHIEFS


FIELD GOALS: DATE OPP.

09/09 at L.A. Chargers

2018 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS 0-19

20-29

30-39

40-49

0-0

0-0

0-0

1-1

0-0

0-0

0-0

1-1

HARRISON BUTKER 50+ TOTAL 0-0

1-1

0-0

1-1

FGM

FGA 1

100.0

PCT

LG

1

1

100.0

46

1

46

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

151

@CHIEFS


2018 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL DEFENSIVE GAME-BY-GAME STATS

DATE OPP.

DEE FORD KENDALL FULLER ALLEN BAILEY S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD

09/09 at L.A. Chargers 0 0 0

0

0.0

0

0

0

1

0

4 0 4

1

1.0

0

0

0

4

0

3 3 6

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0.0

0

0

0

1

0

4 0 4

1

1.0

0

0

0

4

0

3 3 6

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

0 0 0

DATE OPP.

JUSTIN HOUSTON CHRIS JONES ANTHONY HITCHENS S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD

09/09 at L.A. Chargers 7 8 15

2

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

0 1 1

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

3 0 3

1

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

2

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

0 1 1

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

3 0 3

1

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

7 8 15

DATE OPP.

ERIC MURRAY STEVEN NELSON TANOH KPASSAGNON S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD

09/09 at L.A. Chargers 1 1 2

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

4 5 9

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

4 4 8

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

4 5 9

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

4 4 8

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

1

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

152

1 1 2

@CHIEFS


DATE OPP.

REGGIE RAGLAND ORLANDO SCANDRICK RON PARKER S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD

09/09 at L.A. Chargers 6 2 8

0

0.0

1

0

0

0

2

2 5 7

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

1 0 1

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0.0

1

0

0

0

2

2 5 7

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

1 0 1

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

1

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

6 2 8

DATE OPP.

XAVIER WILLIAMS TERRANCE SMITH S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD S A TK TFL SK INT FR FF PR PD

09/09 at L.A. Chargers 2 3 5

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

13 4

0

0.0

0

0

0

0

0

0 0.0

0

0 0

0

0

13 4

0 0.0

0

0 0

0

0

0

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

153

23 5

@CHIEFS


2018 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL SPECIAL TEAMS GAME-BY-GAME STATS DATE OPP.

09/09 at L.A. Chargers

TKL 1

MARCUS KEMP

TREMON SMITH

DE'ANTHONY THOMAS

ARMANI WATTS

AST

TOT

TKL

AST

TOT

TKL

AST

TOT

TKL

AST

TOT

1

2

1

0

1

1

0

1

0

1

1

1

2

1

0

1

1

0

1

0

1

1

09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

154

1

@CHIEFS


PUNT RETURNS: DATE OPP. 09/09

at L.A. Chargers

09/16

at Pittsburgh

09/23

San Francisco

10/01

at Denver

10/07

Jacksonville

10/14

at New England

10/21

Cincinnati

10/28

Denver

11/04

at Cleveland

11/11

Arizona

11/19

at L.A. Rams

12/02

at Oakland

12/09

Baltimore

12/13

L.A. Chargers

12/23

at Seattle

12/30

Oakland

TOTALS

155

2018 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS NO.

YDS

2

95

2

95

TYREEK HILL AVG LG 47.5

91t

47.5

91t

FC

TD

NO.

0

1

0

0

1

0

DE'ANTHONY THOMAS YDS AVG LG FC 0

0

--

0

0

0

--

0

TD 0

0

@CHIEFS


KICKOFF RETURNS: DATE OPP. 09/09

at L.A. Chargers

09/16

at Pittsburgh

09/23

San Francisco

10/01

at Denver

10/07

Jacksonville

10/14

at New England

10/21

Cincinnati

10/28

Denver

11/04

at Cleveland

11/11

Arizona

11/19

at L.A. Rams

12/02

at Oakland

12/09

Baltimore

12/13

L.A. Chargers

12/23

at Seattle

12/30

Oakland

TOTALS

156

2018 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME STATS NO.

YDS

2

33

2

33

DE'ANTHONY THOMAS AVG LG 16.5

26

16.5

26

FC

TD

0

0

0

0

@CHIEFS


2018 Regular Season Kansas City Chiefs Player Participation @ LAC @ PIT SF @ DEN JAX @ NE CIN DEN @ CLE ARI @ LAR @ OAK BAL LAC @ SEA OAK P/S DNP/* PLAYERS 9/9 9/16 9/23 10/1 10/7 10/14 10/21 10/28 11/4 11/11 11/19 12/2 12/9 12/13 12/23 12/30 P/S DNP/* Bailey, Allen LDE 1/1 0/0 Berry, Eric * 0/0 0/1 Boettger, Ike * 0/0 0/1 Butker, Harrison P 1/0 0/0 Colquitt, Dustin P 1/0 0/0 Conley, Chris WR 1/1 0/0 Crockett, Josh PS 0/0 0/0 Devey, Jordan P 1/0 0/0 Dieter, Gehrig PS 0/0 0/0 Durham, Step IR 0/0 0/0 Duvernay-Tardif, RG 1/1 0/0 Laurent Ellis, Alex P 1/0 0/0 Erving, Cam LT 1/1 0/0 Fisher, Eric LT 1/1 0/0 Ford, Dee ROLB 1/1 0/0 Fuller, Kendall RCB 1/1 0/0 Gordon, Dillon IR 0/0 0/0 Hamilton, Justin * 0/0 0/1 Harris, R/SUS 0/0 0/0 Demetrius Henne, Chad DNP 0/0 1/0 Hill, Tyreek PR 1/1 0/0 Hitchens, LILB 1/1 0/0 Anthony Houston, Justin LOLB 1/1 0/0 Hunt, Kareem RB 1/1 0/0 Hunter, Ryan PS 0/0 0/0 Ivie, Joey PS 0/0 0/0 Jenkins, Jarvis P 1/0 0/0 Jones, Chris LDE 1/1 0/0 Kelce, Travis TE 1/1 0/0 Kemp, Marcus P 1/0 0/0 Kieras, NOT 0/0 0/0 Tautvydas Koroma, Tejan IR 0/0 0/0 Kpassagnon, P 1/0 0/0 Tanoh Litton, Chase PS 0/0 0/0 Lucas, Jordan P 1/0 0/0 Mahomes, QB 1/1 0/0 Patrick McCray, Rob PS 0/0 0/0 McKenzie, Kahlil * 0/0 0/1 McQuay, Leon PS 0/0 0/0 Moore, J.D. IR 0/0 0/0 Morse, Mitch C 1/1 0/0 Murray, Eric S 1/1 0/0 Nelson, Steven LCB 1/1 0/0 Niemann, Ben P 1/0 0/0 Nnadi, Derrick P 1/0 0/0 O'Daniel, Dorian P 1/0 0/0 Parker, Ron S 1/1 0/0 Pringle, Byron IR 0/0 0/0 Ragland, Reggie RILB 1/1 0/0 Reaser, Keith IR 0/0 0/0 Reiter, Austin * 0/0 0/1 Robinson, P 1/0 0/0 Demarcus Scandrick, P 1/0 0/0 Orlando Schwartz, RT 1/1 0/0 Mitchell Sherman, P 1/0 0/0 Anthony Smith, Terrance P 1/0 0/0 Smith, Tremon P 1/0 0/0 Sorensen, IR 0/0 0/0 Daniel Speaks, P 1/0 0/0 Breeland Springs, Arrion PS 0/0 0/0 Thomas, P 1/0 0/0 De'Anthony Wade, D'Montre PS 0/0 0/0 Ward, * 0/0 0/1 Charvarius Ware, Spencer P 1/0 0/0 Watkins, Sammy WR 1/1 0/0 Watts, Armani P 1/0 0/0 Williams, P 1/0 0/0 Damien Williams, Darrel * 0/0 0/1 Williams, Xavier NT 1/1 0/0 Winchester, P 1/0 0/0 James Wylie, Andrew P 1/0 0/0

LEGEND: Starters indicated by position, P=Played, *=Inactive, DNP=Did Not Play, IR=Reserve/Injured, IRD=Injured Reserve – Designated For Return, NF=Non-Football Injury (NF), NFI=Non-Football Illness (NFI), PS=Practice Squad, PSI=Practice Squad Injured, PSIR=Practice Squad/Injured Reserve, PUP=Active/PUP, INJ=Injured, I=Inactive, I/SUS=Inactive/League Susp., N/NFIN=Inactive/NFIN, R/SUS=Reserve/League Susp., R/PUP=Reserve/Physically-Unable-To-Perform, R/NFIN=Reserve/Non-Football Injury, R/NFIL=Reserve/NFIL, R/Team SUS.=Team Suspension, UNS=Unsigned, NOT=Not on Roster, #=Roster Exemption, IPP=International Player Pathway/PS Exemption, ^=With Other Team

157

@CHIEFS


2018 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS GAME-BY-GAME STARTERS OFFENSE Date 9/9

Opponent

WR

@ LA Chargers Conley

9/16

@ Pittsburgh

9/23

San Francisco

10/1

@ Denver

10/7

Jacksonville

10/14

@ New England

10/21

Cincinnati

10/28

Denver

11/4

@ Cleveland

11/11

Arizona

11/19

@ LA Rams

12/3

@ Oakland

12/9

Baltimore

12/13

LA Chargers

12/23

@ Seattle

12/30

Oakland

LT Fisher

LG

C

Erving Morse

RG

RT

DuvernayTardif

Schwartz

TE

WR

Kelce Watkins

WR

QB

RB

Hill

Mahomes

Hunt

RCB

S

S

Parker

Murray

DEFENSE

Date

Opponent

9/9

@ LA Chargers

9/16

@ Pittsburgh

9/23

San Francisco

10/1

@ Denver

10/7

Jacksonville

10/14

@ New England

10/21

Cincinnati

10/28

Denver

11/4

@ Cleveland

11/11

Arizona

11/19

@ LA Rams

12/3

@ Oakland

12/9

Baltimore

12/13

LA Chargers

12/23

@ Seattle

12/30

Oakland

158

LE

NT

RE

LOLB

LILB

Bailey Williams Jones Houston Hitchens

RILB

ROLB

Ragland

Ford

LCB

Fuller Nelson

@CHIEFS


2018 - CAPTAINS DATE OPPONENT OFFENSE DEFENSE 09/09 at L.A. Chargers Patrick Mahomes Justin Houston 09/16 at Pittsburgh --09/23 San Francisco --10/01 at Denver --10/07 Jacksonville --10/14 at New England --10/21 Cincinnati --10/28 Denver --11/04 at Cleveland --11/11 Arizona --11/19 at L.A. Rams --12/02 at Oakland --12/09 Baltimore --12/13 L.A. Chargers --12/23 at Seattle --12/30 Oakland ---

159

SPECIAL TEAMS Dustin Colquitt ----------------

@CHIEFS


09/09

09/16 09/23 10/01 10/07 10/14 10/21 10/28 11/04 11/11 11/19 12/02 12/09 12/13 12/23 12/30

160

DATE

2018 REGULAR SEASON INACTIVES OPPONENT at L.A. Chargers Eric Berry Ike Boettger Justin Hamilton Kahlil McKenzie at Pittsburgh -San Francisco -at Denver -Jacksonville -at New England -Cincinnati -Denver -at Cleveland -Arizona -at L.A. Rams -at Oakland -Baltimore -L.A. Chargers -at Seattle -Oakland --

PLAYERS Austin Reiter Charvarius Ward Darrel Williams ----------------

@CHIEFS


Turnover Chart 2018 REGULAR SEASON - DEFENSIVE TAKEAWAYS DATE OPPONENT TAKEAWAY 9/9 at L.A. R. Parker INT (P. Rivers) Chargers 09/16 at Pittsburgh -09/23 San -Francisco 10/01 at Denver -10/07 Jacksonville -10/14 at New -England 10/21 Cincinnati -10/28 Denver -11/04 at Cleveland -11/11 Arizona -11/19 at L.A. Rams -12/02 at Oakland -12/09 Baltimore -12/13 L.A. -Chargers 12/23 at Seattle -12/30 Oakland --

DATE OPPONENT 9/9 at L.A. none Chargers 09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland

161

2018 REGULAR SEASON - OFFENSIVE GIVEAWAYS GIVEAWAY

QTR. YD-LINE RESULT 3 KC-14 TD ---

---

---

----

----

----

---------

---------

---------

---

---

---

QTR. YD-LINE RESULT

---

---

---

---

----

----

----

----

---------

---------

---------

---------

---

---

---

---

@CHIEFS


2018 REGULAR SEASON - SPECIAL TEAMS/MISC TAKEAWAYS DATE OPPONENT TAKEAWAY 9/9 at L.A. J. Winchester FR (D. Thomas FF) Chargers

Offense:

0 0 Defense: 1 7 Special Teams: 0 0 1 7

162

Giveaways Points (0 TD, Takeaways Points (1 TD, Giveaways Points (0 TD, Takeaways Points (1 TD,

2018 REGULAR SEASON - TURNOVERS 0 FG) 0 FG) 0 FG)

QTR. YD-LINE RESULT 4 LAC-2 TD

Ratio +2 (2 takes, 0 gives)

Points Off Turnovers Ratio +14 (14 scored, 0 allowed)

0 FG)

@CHIEFS


2018 REGULAR SEASON - INSIDE THE 20 DATE OPPONENT OFFENSE 09/09 at L.A. Chargers TD - Pass TD - Pass 09/16 at Pittsburgh -09/23 San Francisco -10/01 at Denver -10/07 Jacksonville -10/14 at New England -10/21 Cincinnati -10/28 Denver -11/04 at Cleveland -11/11 Arizona -11/19 at L.A. Rams -12/02 at Oakland -12/09 Baltimore -12/13 L.A. Chargers -12/23 at Seattle -12/30 Oakland -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

163

DEFENSE TD - Pass TD - Pass ----------------

OFFENSE DEFENSE 2 2 2 2 2 2 0 0 14 14 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1

@CHIEFS


DATE 09/09 09/16 09/23 10/01 10/07 10/14 10/21 10/28 11/04 11/11 11/19 12/02 12/09 12/13 12/23 12/30

2018 REGULAR SEASON - GOAL TO GO SITUATIONS OPPONENT OFFENSE DEFENSE at L.A. Chargers TD - Pass TD - Pass TD - Pass at Pittsburgh --San Francisco --at Denver --Jacksonville --at New England --Cincinnati --Denver --at Cleveland --Arizona --at L.A. Rams --at Oakland --Baltimore --L.A. Chargers --at Seattle --Oakland --Goal-To-Go Situations Scores Touchdowns Field Goals Total Points Fumbles Interceptions Missed Field Goals Lost on Downs End of Half/Game

164

OFFENSE DEFENSE 2 1 2 1 2 1 0 0 14 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

@CHIEFS


2018 REGULAR SEASON - BIG RUN PLAYS (10+ YARDS) DATE OPPONENT CHIEFS PLAYER YDS. OPP. PLAYER 09/09 at L.A. Chargers Kareem Hunt 13 Travis Benjamin Spencer Ware 27 Melvin Gordon III Melvin Gordon III Austin Ekeler 09/16 at Pittsburgh ---09/23 San Francisco ---10/01 at Denver ---10/07 Jacksonville ---10/14 at New England ---10/21 Cincinnati ---10/28 Denver ---11/04 at Cleveland ---11/11 Arizona ---11/19 at L.A. Rams ---12/02 at Oakland ---12/09 Baltimore ---12/13 L.A. Chargers ---12/23 at Seattle ---12/30 Oakland ---TOTALS 2 - 40 (20.0), 0 TDS 4 - 58 (14.5), 0 TDS

165

YDS. 19 18 11 10 ----------------

@CHIEFS


2018 REGULAR SEASON - BIG PASS DATE OPPONENT CHIEFS PLAYER 09/09 at L.A. Chargers Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Tyreek Hill Patrick Mahomes -> Anthony Sherman 09/16 at Pittsburgh 09/23 San Francisco 10/01 at Denver 10/07 Jacksonville 10/14 at New England 10/21 Cincinnati 10/28 Denver 11/04 at Cleveland 11/11 Arizona 11/19 at L.A. Rams 12/02 at Oakland 12/09 Baltimore 12/13 L.A. Chargers 12/23 at Seattle 12/30 Oakland TOTALS

166

---------------6 - 199 (33.2), 2 TDS

PLAYS (20+ YARDS) YDS. OPP. PLAYER 58T Philip Rivers -> Austin Ekeler 30 Philip Rivers -> Melvin Gordon III 20 Philip Rivers -> Melvin Gordon III 21 Philip Rivers -> Keenan Allen 34 Philip Rivers -> Mike Williams 36T Philip Rivers -> Keenan Allen Philip Rivers -> Mike Williams Philip Rivers -> Keenan Allen ------------------------------8 - 186 (23.3), 1 TDS

YDS. 30 25 20 20 25 20T 23 23 ----------------

@CHIEFS


DATE 09/09 09/16 09/23 10/01 10/07 10/14 10/21 10/28 11/04 11/11 11/19 12/02 12/09 12/13 12/23 12/30 TOTALS

2018 REGULAR SEASON CHIEFS ADVANCES OPPONENT RUSHES COMPLETIONS ADVANCES at L.A. Chargers 27 15 42 at Pittsburgh ---San Francisco ---at Denver ---Jacksonville ---at New England ---Cincinnati ---Denver ---at Cleveland ---Arizona ---at L.A. Rams ---at Oakland ---Baltimore ---L.A. Chargers ---at Seattle ---Oakland ---27 15 42

OUTCOME W 38-28 ----------------

DATE 09/09 09/16 09/23 10/01 10/07 10/14 10/21 10/28 11/04 11/11 11/19 12/02 12/09 12/13 12/23 12/30 TOTALS

2018 REGULAR SEASON OPPONENT ADVANCES OPPONENT RUSHES COMPLETIONS ADVANCES at L.A. Chargers 22 34 56 at Pittsburgh ---San Francisco ---at Denver ---Jacksonville ---at New England ---Cincinnati ---Denver ---at Cleveland ---Arizona ---at L.A. Rams ---at Oakland ---Baltimore ---L.A. Chargers ---at Seattle ---Oakland ---22 34 56

OUTCOME W 38-28 ----------------

Having Having Having Having

45 or more advances 50 or more advances less than 45 advances less than 50 advances

Allowing Allowing Allowing Allowing

45 or more advances 50 or more advances less than 45 advances less than 50 advances

CHIEFS RECORD WHEN: 0-0 0-0 1-0 1-0

NOTE: Advances equal to all rushing attempts plus completions.

167

1 1 0 0

-

0 0 0 0

@CHIEFS


CHIEFS 2018 REGULAR SEASON SCORING DRIVES DRIVE FIRST DATE OPPONENT ACQUIRED START PLAYS YARDS Q|TIME DOWNS SCORING PLAY T. Hill: 58-yard pass from P. Mahomes 09/09 at L.A. Chargers Kickoff KC 25 5 75 Q1|2:41 2 3 H. Butker: 46-yard FG Kickoff KC 25 11 47 Q2|5:47 75 Q3|5:35 7 D. Thomas: 1-yard pass from P. Mahomes Kickoff KC 25 11 6 86 Q3|3:28 3 A. Sherman: 36-yard pass from P. Mahomes Interception KC 14 Fumble LAC 2 3 2 Q4|0:40 1 T. Hill: 1-yard pass from P. Mahomes 09/16 at Pittsburgh -------09/23 San Francisco -------10/01 at Denver -------10/07 Jacksonville -------10/14 at New England -------10/21 Cincinnati -------10/28 Denver -------11/04 at Cleveland -------11/11 Arizona -------11/19 at L.A. Rams -------12/02 at Oakland -------12/09 Baltimore -------12/13 L.A. Chargers -------12/23 at Seattle -------12/30 Oakland -------AVG 7.20 57.0 3:38 3.20 TOTALS 36 285 18:11 16

168

@CHIEFS


CHIEFS OPPONENTS 2018 REGULAR SEASON SCORING DRIVES DRIVE FIRST DATE OPPONENT ACQUIRED START PLAYS YARDS Q|TIME DOWNS SCORING PLAY 09/09 at L.A. Chargers Kickoff LAC 25 8 48 Q1|3:43 3 C. Sturgis: 45-yard FG 2 C. Sturgis: 39-yard FG Punt LAC 40 6 39 Q1|3:41 96 Q2|6:11 7 A. Ekeler: 13-yard pass from P. Rivers Punt LAC 4 12 LAC 9 9 91 Q3|3:44 4 K. Allen: 20-yard pass from P. Rivers Kickoff Kickoff LAC 25 10 75 Q4|4:41 5 T. Williams: 4-yard pass from P. Rivers 09/16 at Pittsburgh -------09/23 San Francisco -------10/01 at Denver -------10/07 Jacksonville -------10/14 at New England -------10/21 Cincinnati -------10/28 Denver -------11/04 at Cleveland -------11/11 Arizona -------11/19 at L.A. Rams -------12/02 at Oakland -------12/09 Baltimore -------12/13 L.A. Chargers -------12/23 at Seattle -------12/30 Oakland -------AVG 9.00 69.8 4:24 4.20 TOTALS 45 349 22:00 21

169

@CHIEFS


2018 Regular Season (As of September 11, 2018)

PASSING

KC 12/24/2017 vs. Miami Opp 12/3/2017 @ N.Y. Jets

301 yards 331 yards

KC 11/1/1964 vs. Denver

6 tds

500 YARDS PASSING Elvis Grbac Warren Moon 400 YARDS PASSING Matt Cassel Philip Rivers 300 YARDS PASSING Alex Smith Josh McCown 400 NET PASSING YARDS Matt Cassel Philip Rivers 300 NET PASSING YARDS Alex Smith Josh McCown SIX TOUCHDOWN PASSES Len Dawson

KC 12/15/2013 @ Oakland

5 tds

* Never Has Happened * FIVE TOUCHDOWN PASSES Alex Smith:

Opp 10/8/2017 @ Houston

5 tds

KC 11/5/2000 @ Oakland 504 yards Opp 12/6/1990 @ Houston Oilers 527 yards KC 11/14/2010 @ Denver 469 yards Opp 9/9/2018 @ L.A. Chargers 424 yards KC 12/24/2017 vs. Miami Opp 12/3/2017 @ N.Y. Jets

304 yards 331 yards

KC 11/14/2010 @ Denver 433 yards Opp 9/9/2018 @ L.A. Chargers 418 yards

Opp

KC 9/9/2018

@ L.A. Chargers 4 tds

Opp 10/8/2017 @ Houston

5 tds

(25, 2, 64, 6, 28, 35)

(6, 71, 39, 49, 16)

Deshaun Watson: (1, 34, 48, 9, 6)

FOUR TOUCHDOWN PASSES Patrick Mahomes: (58, 1, 36, 1)

Deshaun Watson: (1, 34, 48, 9, 6)

KC 9/9/2018

@ L.A. Chargers 4 tds

THREE TOUCHDOWN PASSES Patrick Mahomes:

Opp 9/9/2018

@ L.A. Chargers 3 tds

Philip Rivers:

KC 9/29/1985 vs. Seattle Opp 10/7/2001 @ Denver

4 int 4 int

KC 11/27/2005 vs. New England 3 int Opp 10/1/1989 @ Bengals 3 int KC 12/16/2017 vs. L.A. Chargers 2 int Opp 9/7/2014 vs. Tennessee 2 int

(58, 1, 36, 1) (13, 20, 4)

FOUR OR MORE INTERCEPTION GAME Derron Cherry Deltha O'Neal THREE INTERCEPTION GAME Greg Wesley David Fulcher TWO INTERCEPTION GAME Marcus Peters Jason McCourty

RUSHING

300 YARDS RUSHER KC * Never Has Happened * Opp * Never Has Happened * 200 YARDS RUSHER KC 12/23/2012 vs. Indianapolis 226 yards Jamaal Charles Opp 12/20/2009 vs. Cleveland 286 yards Jerome Harrison 100 YARDS RUSHER KC 12/16/2017 vs. L.A. Chargers 155 yards Kareem Hunt Opp 10/15/2017 vs. Pittsburgh 179 yards Le'Veon Bell TWO 100-YARD RUSHERS KC 12/23/2012 vs. Indianapolis 226 yards Jamaal Charles 101 yards Peyton Hillis Opp 10/19/2008 vs. Tennessee 168 yards Chris Johnson 149 yards LenDale White FIVE TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING KC * Never Has Happened * Opp 12/7/2003 @ Denver 5 tds Clinton Portis: (11, 1, 59, 28, 53)

FOUR TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING

170

@CHIEFS


KC 10/24/2004 vs. Atlanta

4 tds

Priest Holmes:

Opp 12/7/2003 @ Denver

5 tds

Clinton Portis:

KC 9/28/2015 @ Green Bay

3 tds

THREE TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING Jamaal Charles:

Opp 9/7/2017

3 tds

Mike Gillislee:

KC 9/17/2017 vs. Philadelphia

2 tds

TWO TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING Kareem Hunt:

Opp 12/3/2017 @ N.Y. Jets

2 tds

Josh McCown:

KC 10/24/2004 vs. Atlanta

TWO PLAYERS WITH TWO TD RUSHING 4 tds Derrick Blaylock:

@ New England

(1, 2, 2, 15)

(11, 1, 59, 28, 53)

(9, 4, 7) (1, 2, 2)

(2, 53) (1, 1)

(1, 7, 3, 2)

Priest Holmes: (1, 2, 2, 15)

Opp

* Never Has Happened *

RECEIVING

TWO 100-YARD RECEIVERS KC 12/3/2006 @ Cleveland 117 yards Eddie Kennison 105 yards Tony Gonzalez Opp 9/9/2018 @ L.A. Chargers 108 yards Keenan Allen 102 yards Melvin Gordon III 200 YARDS RECEIVER KC * Never Has Happened * Opp 10/19/2017 @ Oakland 210 yards Amari Cooper 100 YARDS RECEIVER KC 9/9/2018 @ L.A. Chargers 169 yards Tyreek Hill Opp 9/9/2018 @ L.A. Chargers 108 yards Keenan Allen FOUR TOUCHDOWNS RECEPTIONS KC 12/15/2013 @ Oakland 4 tds Jamaal Charles: Opp 12/1/2013 vs. Denver

(71, 39, 16, 49)

4 tds

Eric Decker:

KC 12/15/2013 @ Oakland

4 tds

THREE TOUCHDOWNS RECEPTIONS Jamaal Charles:

Opp 10/8/2017 @ Houston

3 tds

KC 9/9/2018

@ L.A. Chargers 2 tds

(41, 37, 15, 1)

(71, 39, 16, 49)

DeAndre Hopkins: (1, 34, 6)

TWO TOUCHDOWNS RECEPTIONS Tyreek Hill: (58, 1)

Opp 11/5/2017 @ Dallas

2 tds

Cole Beasley:

KC 12/3/2017 @ N.Y. Jets

TWO PLAYERS WITH TWO TD RECEPTIONS 2 tds Tyreek Hill:

(7, 6)

(40, 79)

Travis Kelce: Opp 10/8/2017 @ Houston

2 tds

(36, 22)

DeAndre Hopkins: (1, 34, 6)

Will Fuller V: (48, 9)

COMBINED YARDS AND TOUCHDOWNS

100-YARD RUSHER AND 300-YARD PASSER 107 yards Kareem Hunt 324 yards Alex Smith Opp 10/2/2016 @ Pittsburgh 144 yards Le'Veon Bell 300 yards Ben Roethlisberger 100-YARD RECEIVER AND 300-YARD PASSER KC 12/24/2017 vs. Miami 109 yards Tyreek Hill 304 yards Alex Smith Opp 9/9/2018 @ L.A. Chargers 108 yards Keenan Allen 424 yards Philip Rivers 100 YARDS RUSHING AND RECEIVING KC 10/8/2017 @ Houston

171

@CHIEFS


KC 10/2/2017 vs. Washington

101 yards Kareem Hunt 111 yards Travis Kelce Opp 10/15/2017 vs. Pittsburgh 179 yards Le'Veon Bell 155 yards Antonio Brown 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

DEFENSE

KC 12/4/2016 @ Atlanta Opp 1/1/2017

@ San Diego

INTERCEPTED PASS RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN (:48) (Shotgun) 2-M.Ryan pass short right 37 yards Eric Berry intended for 18-T.Gabriel INTERCEPTED by 90 yards

Jahleel Addae

29-E.Berry at ATL 37. 29-E.Berry for 37 yards, TOUCHDOWN. (10:43) (Shotgun) 11-A.Smith pass short right intended for 34-K.Davis INTERCEPTED by 37-J.Addae (54-M.Ingram) at SD 10. 37-J.Addae for 90 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

KC 12/31/2017 @ Denver

FUMBLE RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN 11 yards Ramik Wilson

Opp 12/31/2017 @ Denver

38 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. (7:53) 11-A.Smith Aborted. 73-Z.Fulton FUMBLES at KC 9, ball out of bounds in End Zone, SAFETY.

Opp 10/15/2017 vs. Pittsburgh

Zaire Anderson SAFETY SCORED

KC 10/23/2011 @ Oakland Opp 12/16/2012 @ Oakland

Kansas City 28, Oakland 0

KC 12/28/2014 vs. San Diego Opp 11/9/2003 vs. Cleveland

4.0 sacks 4.0 sacks

SHUTOUT

Oakland 15, Kansas City 0

KC 9/17/2017 vs. Philadelphia 3.0 sacks Opp 9/24/2017 @ L.A. Chargers 3.0 sacks

FOUR SACK GAME Justin Houston Andra Davis THREE SACK GAME Chris Jones Melvin Ingram III TWO SACK GAME Tanoh Kpassagnon Bruce Irvin

KC 12/31/2017 @ Denver Opp 12/10/2017 vs. Oakland

2.0 sacks 2.0 sacks

KC 11/27/2016 @ Denver

KICKOFF RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN 86 yards Tyreek Hill

Opp 11/7/2010 @ Oakland

94 yards

KC 9/9/2018

SPECIAL TEAMS

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 KC 9/13/2009 @ Baltimore Opp 11/28/2010 @ Seattle

93 yards

Travis Benjamin

(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

(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.

56 yards

Stephen Hauschka BLOCKED FIELD GOAL

172

9-R.Dixon kicks 66 yards from DEN 20 to KC 14. 10-T.Hill for 86 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.

BLOCKED FIELD GOAL RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN 28 yards Kevin Ross * Never Has Happened * BLOCKED PUNT RETURNED FOR A TOUCHDOWN

MADE FIELD GOAL OF 50 YARDS OR LONGER KC 12/16/2017 vs. L.A. Chargers 51 yards Harrison Butker Opp 11/26/2017 vs. Buffalo

(3:17) 12-P.Lynch sacked at DEN 21 for -8 yards (95-C.Jones). FUMBLES (95-C.Jones) [95-C.Jones], touched at DEN 19, RECOVERED by KC-53-R.Wilson at DEN 11. 53-R.Wilson for 11 yards, TOUCHDOWN. (7:02) (Shotgun) 9-T.Bray FUMBLES (Aborted) at KC 42, RECOVERED by DEN-50-Z.Anderson at KC 38. 50Z.Anderson for 38 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

(11:04) 7-H.Butker 51 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-41-J.Winchester, Holder-2D.Colquitt. (:09) 4-S.Hauschka 56 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-69-R.Ferguson, Holder-6C.Schmidt.

@CHIEFS


(8:49) 5-C.Santos 27 yard field goal is BLOCKED (92-P.McPhee), Center-41J.Winchester, Holder-2-D.Colquitt, recovered by KC-42-A.Sherman at CHI 15. 42-A.Sherman to CHI 15 for no gain (90J.Ratliff). (4:56) 2-G.Tavecchio 53 yard field goal is BLOCKED (21-E.Murray), Center-59J.Condo, Holder-7-M.King.

KC 10/11/2015 vs. Chicago

27 yards

Cairo Santos

Opp 10/19/2017 @ Oakland

53 yards

Giorgio Tavecchio

KC 9/8/2013 Opp 1/3/2016

(12:32) 2-D.Colquitt punt is BLOCKED by 52-J.Thomas, Center-43-T.Gafford, ball out of bounds in End Zone, SAFETY.

@ Jacksonville vs. Oakland

KC 12/25/2016 vs. Denver Opp 12/16/2017 vs. L.A. Chargers KC Opp 12/4/2016 @ Atlanta

BLOCKED PUNT

(9:05) 7-M.King punt is BLOCKED by 57-D.Alexander, Center-47-T.Gafford, ball out of bounds in End Zone, SAFETY.

MISSED POINT AFTER TOUCHDOWN ATTEMPT

5-C.Santos extra point is No Good, Wide Left, Center-41-J.Winchester, Holder-2-D.Colquitt. 5-T.Coons extra point is No Good, Wide Left, Center-47-M.Windt, Holder-10-K.Clemens.

POINT AFTER TOUCHDOWN ATTEMPT BLOCKED * Never Has Happened *

5-C.Santos extra point is Blocked (77-R.Hageman), Center-41-J.Winchester, Holder-2-D.Colquitt.

SUCCESSFUL ONSIDE KICK

KC 10/15/2017 vs. Pittsburgh Opp 12/10/2017 vs. Oakland

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

FIVE FIELD GOALS Harrison Butker:

Opp 11/30/2014 vs. Denver

5 fg

Connor Barth:

KC 12/24/2017 vs. Miami

5 fg

FOUR FIELD GOALS Harrison Butker:

Opp 11/20/2016 vs. Tampa Bay

4 fg

Roberto Aguayo:

2-G.Tavecchio kicks onside 22 yards from OAK 35 to KC 43, impetus ends at OAK 49, out of bounds. Oakland challenged the runner was out of bounds ruling, and the play was REVERSED. 2-G.Tavecchio kicks onside 22 yards from OAK 35 to KC 43, impetus ends at OAK 49. RECOVERED by OAK-41-E.Harris.

KC 12/24/2017 vs. Miami

5 fg

Opp 12/3/2017 @ N.Y. Jets

3 fg

173

(49, 29, 21, 32, 31) (24, 22, 30, 33, 37)

(49, 29, 21, 32, 31) (41, 22, 36, 31)

THREE FIELD GOALS Harrison Butker: (49, 29, 21, 32, 31)

Chandler Catanzaro: (38, 47, 27)

@CHIEFS


CHIEFS LAST GAME & OPPONENT GAMEBOOKS


National Football League Game Summary NFL Copyright © 2018 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: 9/10/2018

Kansas City Chiefs at Los Angeles Chargers

Date: Sunday, 9/9/2018

Start Time: 1:05 PM PT

at StubHub Center, Carson, CA Game Day Weather Game Weather: Sunny Played on Turf: Grass

Temp: 84° F (28.9° C) Humidity: 52%, Wind: SW 8 mph

Officials Referee: Blakeman, Clete (34) Line Judge: Coleman IV, Walt (87) Back Judge: Quirk, Jim (5)

Umpire: George, Ramon (128) Field Judge: Larrew, Joe (73) Replay Official: Weidner, Paul (0)

Down Judge: McKenzie, Dana (8) Side Judge: Prioleau, Dyrol (109)

Lineups Kansas City Chiefs Offense WR

10 T.Hill

LT LG C RG RT TE WR WR QB RB

72 75 61 76 71 87 14 17 15 27

Los Angeles Chargers Offense

Defense RDE

E.Fisher C.Erving M.Morse L.Duvernay-Tardif M.Schwartz T.Kelce S.Watkins C.Conley P.Mahomes K.Hunt

NT LDE LOLB LILB RILB ROLB RCB S S LCB

95 C.Jones

WR

13 K.Allen

98 97 50 53 59 55 20 21 38 23

TE LT LG C RG RT TE WR QB RB

80 76 66 53 75 72 88 16 17 28

X.Williams A.Bailey J.Houston A.Hitchens R.Ragland D.Ford S.Nelson E.Murray R.Parker K.Fuller

DE

S.Culkin R.Okung D.Feeney M.Pouncey M.Schofield J.Barksdale V.Green Ty.Williams P.Rivers M.Gordon

Substitutions

DT NT DE OLB ILB CB LCB S S RCB

Defense 98 I.Rochell 93 92 54 44 52 20 24 37 33 26

D.Philon B.Mebane M.Ingram K.White D.Perryman D.King T.Williams J.Addae D.James C.Hayward

Substitutions

P 2 D.Colquitt, K 7 H.Butker, WR 11 D.Robinson, WR 13 D.Thomas, WR 19 M.Kemp, CB 22 O.Scandrick, DB 24 J.Lucas, DB 25 A.Watts, RB 26 Dam. Williams, RB 32 S.Ware, DB 39 Tr. Smith, LS 41 J.Winchester, FB 42 A.Sherman, LB 44 D.O'Daniel, LB 48 Te.Smith, LB 56 B.Niemann, LB 57 B.Speaks, T 65 J.Devey, T 77 A.Wylie, TE 82 A.Ellis, DL 91 D.Nnadi, DE 92 T.Kpassagnon, DE 94 J.Jenkins

K 6 C.Sturgis, P 8 D.Kaser, WR/PR 12 T.Benjamin, S 23 R.Jenkins, CB 29 C.Mager, RB 30 A.Ekeler, S 31 A.Phillips, FB 34 D.Watt, RB 38 D.Newsome, LB 42 U.Nwosu, CB 43 M.Davis, DE 46 C.Landrum, LS 47 M.Windt, LB 48 N.Dzubnar, LB 51 K.Emanuel, LB 57 J.Brown, C/G 64 C.Toner, T 69 S.Tevi, NT 71 D.Square, WR 81 M.Williams, TE 85 A.Gates, WR 89 J.Jones, DL 91 Ju.Jones

Did Not Play

Did Not Play

QB 4 C.Henne

QB 3 G.Smith Not Active

Not Active

SS 29 E.Berry, RB 31 Dar.Williams, DB 35 C.Ward, C 62 A.Reiter, G 66 R.McKenzie, G 69 I.Boettger, DT 74 J.Hamilton

WR 11 G.Davis, CB 36 B.Facyson, LB 56 E.Ellerbee, C/G 61 S.Quessenberry, G 77 F.Lamp, DT 90 T.McGill, DE 99 J.Bosa

Field Goals (made ( ) & missed) H.Butker

(46)

C.Sturgis 1 14 6

Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles Chargers

VISITOR: HOME:

(45) (39) 48WL 2 3 6

3 14 0

4 7 16

OT 0 0

Total 38 28

Scoring Plays Team

Qtr

Time Play Description (Extra Point) (Drive Info)

Chiefs Chargers

1 1

13:03 T.Hill 91 yd. punt return (H.Butker kick) 9:20 C.Sturgis 45 yd. Field Goal (8-48, 3:43)

Chiefs Chargers Chargers Chiefs Chiefs Chiefs Chargers

1 1 2 2 3 3 4

6:39 0:21 7:47 2:00 9:25 0:48 12:04

T.Hill 58 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (5-75, 2:41) C.Sturgis 39 yd. Field Goal (6-39, 3:41) A.Ekeler 13 yd. pass from P.Rivers (pass failed) (12-96, 6:11) H.Butker 46 yd. Field Goal (11-47, 5:47) D.Thomas 1 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (11-75, 5:35) A.Sherman 36 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (6-86, 3:28) K.Allen 20 yd. pass from P.Rivers (P.Rivers-A.Gates pass) (9-91, 3:44)

Visitor

Home

7 7

0 3

14 14 14 17 24 31 31

3 6 12 12 12 12 20


National Football League Game Summary NFL Copyright Š 2018 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: 9/10/2018 Chiefs Chargers

4 4

Paid Attendance: 25,351

9:42 T.Hill 1 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (3-2, 0:40) 5:01 Ty.Williams 4 yd. pass from P.Rivers (M.Gordon run) (10-75, 4:41)

38 38

20 28

Time: 3:08


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers 9/9/2018 at StubHub Center

Final Individual Statistics Kansas City Chiefs RUSHING

Los Angeles Chargers

ATT

YDS

K.Hunt

16

49

S.Ware

3

32

P.Mahomes

5

21

T.Hill

2

Dam. Williams Total

AVG

LG

TD

RUSHING

ATT

YDS

AVG

3.1

13

0

M.Gordon

10.7

27

0

A.Ekeler

4.2

8

0

4

2.0

7

0

1

0

0.0

0

0

27

106

3.9

27

0

15

64

5

39

T.Benjamin

1

D.Watt Total

TD

4.3

18

0

7.8

10

0

19

19.0

19

0

1

1

1.0

1

0

22

123

5.6

19

0

ATT

CMP

ATT

CMP

P.Mahomes

27

15

256

1/0

4

58

0 127.5

P.Rivers

51

34

424

1/6

3

30

1

103.7

Total

27

15

256

1/0

4

58

0 127.5

Total

51

34

424

1/6

3

30

1

103.7

PASSING

PASS RECEIVING

YDS SK/YD TD

LG IN

PASSING

LG

RT

LG IN

RT

TAR

REC

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

TAR

REC

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

T.Hill

8

7

169

24.1

58

2

M.Gordon

13

9

102

11.3

25

0

S.Watkins

5

3

21

7.0

16

0

K.Allen

11

8

108

13.5

23

1

A.Sherman

1

1

36

36.0

36

1

A.Ekeler

5

5

87

17.4

30

1

C.Conley

1

1

15

15.0

15

0

M.Williams

6

5

81

16.2

25

0

S.Ware

1

1

8

8.0

8

0

V.Green

2

2

21

10.5

15

0

T.Kelce

6

1

6

6.0

6

0

A.Gates

3

2

16

8.0

9

0

D.Thomas

2

1

1

1.0

1

1

Ty.Williams

5

2

8

4.0

4

1

K.Hunt

1

0

0

0.0

0

0

T.Benjamin

5

1

1

1.0

1

0

25

15

256

17.1

58

4

Total

50

34

424

12.5

30

3

NO

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

0

0

0

0

0

Total INTERCEPTIONS

NO

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

R.Parker

1

0

0.0

0

0

Total

1

0

0.0

0

0

PUNTING D.Colquitt Total

PASS RECEIVING

YDS SK/YD TD

INTERCEPTIONS Total

NO

YDS

AVG

NET

TB

IN20

LG

PUNTING

NO

YDS

AVG

NET

TB

IN20

LG

5

256

51.2

52.2

0

3

67

D.Kaser

2

120

60.0

12.5

0

0

63

C.Sturgis

1

24

24.0

24.0

0

1

24

3

144

48.0

16.3

0

1

63

NO

YDS

AVG

FC

LG

TD

5

256

51.2

52.2

0

3

67

Total

NO

YDS

AVG

FC

LG

TD

PUNT RETURNS

T.Hill

2

95

47.5

0

91

1

T.Benjamin

1

-1

-1.0

0

-1

0

[DOWNED]

1

0

0.0

0

0

0

J.Jones

1

-4

-4.0

1

-4

0

[DOWNED]

2

0

0.0

0

0

0

Total

2

-5

-2.5

1

0

0

NO

YDS

AVG

FC

LG

TD

PUNT RETURNS

Total

2

95

47.5

0

91

1

NO

YDS

AVG

FC

LG

TD

D.Thomas

2

33

16.5

0

26

0

J.Jones

2

36

18.0

0

23

0

[TOUCHBACK]

4

0

0.0

0

0

0

[TOUCHBACK]

5

0

0.0

0

0

0

Total

2

33

16.5

0

26

0

Total

2

36

18.0

0

23

0

KICKOFF RETURNS

Kansas City Chiefs FUMBLES D.Thomas J.Winchester Total Los Angeles Chargers FUMBLES J.Jones Total

FUM

LOST

0 0 0

0 0 0

FUM

LOST

2 2

1 1

KICKOFF RETURNS

OWN-REC YDS

TD

FORCED

OPP-REC

YDS

TD

OUT-BDS

0 0 0

0 0 0

1 0 1

0 1 1

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

OWN-REC YDS

TD

FORCED

OPP-REC

YDS

TD

OUT-BDS

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0 0

1 1

0 0


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers 9/9/2018 at StubHub Center

Final Team Statistics Visitor Chiefs

Home Chargers

TOTAL FIRST DOWNS

19

33

By Rushing

7

7

By Passing

10

23

By Penalty THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY FOURTH DOWN EFFICIENCY TOTAL NET YARDS

2

3

4-10-40%

3-11-27%

0-0-0%

1-1-100%

362

541

Total Offensive Plays (inc. times thrown passing)

55

74

Average gain per offensive play

6.6

7.3

106

123

NET YARDS RUSHING Total Rushing Plays

27

22

Average gain per rushing play

3.9

5.6

Tackles for a loss-number and yards NET YARDS PASSING

4-10

1-2

256

418

Times thrown - yards lost attempting to pass

1-0

1-6

Gross yards passing

256

424

27-15-0

51-34-1

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)

9.1

8.0

7-7-5

6-5-4

5-51.2

3-48.0

0

0

0-0

0-0

52.2

16.3

95

-5

No. and Yards Punt Returns

2-95

2--5

No. and Yards Kickoff Returns

2-33

2-36

No. and Yards Interception Returns PENALTIES Number and Yards FUMBLES Number and Lost TOUCHDOWNS

1-0

0-0

6-50

7-45

0-0

2-1

5

3

Rushing

0

0

Passing

4

3

Punt Returns

1

0

EXTRA POINTS Made-Attempts

5-5

2-3

Kicking Made-Attempts

5-5

0-0

Passing Made-Attempts

0-0

1-2

Rushing Made-Attempts

0-0

1-1

1-1

2-3

RED ZONE EFFICIENCY

2-2-100%

2-2-100%

GOAL TO GO EFFICIENCY

2-2-100%

1-1-100%

0

0

FIELD GOALS Made-Attempts

SAFETIES FINAL SCORE TIME OF POSSESSION

38

28

25:34

34:26


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers 9/9/2018 at StubHub Center

Ball Possession And Drive Chart Kansas City Chiefs # Play

Yds Gain

Yds Pen

Net Yds

1st Down

Last Scrm

How Given Up

KC 25

5

75

0

75

2

KC 42

Touchdown

1:01 Punt

KC 12

3

4

0

4

0

KC 16

Punt

13:58

1:23 Kickoff

KC 25

4

30

0

30

1

LAC 45

Punt

2:00

5:47 Kickoff

KC 25

11

47

0

47

3

LAC 28

Field Goal

0:51

0:00

0:51 Punt

KC 10

4

47

-5

42

2

LAC 48

End of Half

6

15:00

9:25

5:35 Kickoff

KC 25

11

69

6

75

7

7

4:16

0:48

3:28 Interception

KC 14

6

86

0

86

3

8

12:04

10:22

1:42 Kickoff

KC 23

3

4

0

4

9

10:22

9:42

0:40 Fumble

LAC 2

3

2

0

2

10

5:01

3:05

1:56 Kickoff

KC 25

3

0

0

11

1:06

0:36

0:30 Missed FG

KC 38

3

-2

Drive Began

# Play

#

Time Recd

Time Lost

Time How Ball Poss Obtained

1

9:20

6:39

2:41 Kickoff

2

5:03

4:02

3

0:21

4

7:47

5

Drive Began

* LAC 1

Touchdown

LAC 36

Touchdown

0

KC 27

Punt

1

* LAC 1

0

0

KC 25

Punt

0

-2

0

KC 36

Punt

Yds Gain

Yds Pen

Net Yds

1st Down

Last Scrm

How Given Up

Touchdown

(320) Average KC 29 Los Angeles Chargers #

Time Recd

Time Lost

Time How Ball Poss Obtained

1

15:00

13:03

1:57 Kickoff

LAC 25

3

9

0

9

0

LAC 34

Punt

2

13:03

9:20

3:43 Kickoff

LAC 25

8

43

5

48

3

KC 27

Field Goal

3

6:39

5:03

1:36 Kickoff

LAC 25

4

24

15

39

2

KC 36

Punt

4

4:02

0:21

3:41 Punt

LAC 40

6

39

0

39

2

KC 21

Field Goal

5

13:58

7:47

6:11 Punt

LAC 4

12

91

5

96

7

* KC 13

6

2:00

0:51

1:09 Kickoff

LAC 25

4

6

-10

-4

0

LAC 21

Punt

7

9:25

4:16

5:09 Kickoff

LAC 9

8

60

5

65

4

KC 26

Interception

8

0:48

12:04

3:44 Kickoff

LAC 9

9

91

0

91

4

KC 20

Touchdown

9

9:42

5:01

4:41 Kickoff

LAC 25

10

90

-15

75

5

10

3:05

1:06

1:59 Punt

LAC 14

9

56

0

56

4

KC 30

Missed FG

11

0:36

0:00

0:36 Punt

LAC 20

4

32

0

32

2

LAC 34

End of Game

Touchdown

* KC 4

Touchdown

(221) Average LAC 20 * inside opponent's 20 Time of Possession by Quarter Visitor

Kansas City Chiefs

Home

Los Angeles Chargers

Kickoff Drive No.-Start Average

1st

2nd

3rd

4:03

7:40

9:03

4:48

25:34

10:57

7:20

5:57

10:12

34:26

Chiefs: 6 - KC 25

4th

OT

Chargers: 7 - LAC 20

Total


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers 9/9/2018 at StubHub Center

Final Defensive Statistics Kansas City Chiefs A.Hitchens

Regular Defensive Plays TKL 7

AST COMB 8 15

Special Teams

SK / YDS TFL Q IN PD FF 0 0 2 0 0 0 0

Misc

FR 0

TKL 0

AST 0

FF 0

FR 0

BL 0

TKL AST FF 0 0 0

FR 0

E.Murray

4

5

9

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

R.Parker

6

2

8

0

0

0

0

1

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

S.Nelson

4

4

8

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

R.Ragland

2

5

7

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

K.Fuller

3

3

6

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Te.Smith

2

3

5

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

D.Ford

4

0

4

1

6

1

4

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

X.Williams

1

3

4

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

C.Jones

3

0

3

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

T.Kpassagnon

1

1

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

O.Scandrick

1

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

J.Houston

0

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

A.Bailey

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

M.Kemp

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

D.Thomas

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

Tr. Smith

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

A.Watts

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

J.Winchester Total

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

38

35

73

1

6

4

5

1

4

0

0

3

2

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

TKL = Tackle AST = Assist COMB = Combined QH=QB Hit IN = Interception PD = Pass Defense FF = Forced Fumble FR = Fumble Recovery Los Angeles Chargers

Regular Defensive Plays TKL

AST

SK

D.King

5

0

5

0

0

1

0

K.Emanuel

4

1

5

0

0

1

K.White

3

2

5

0

0

J.Addae

3

2

5

0

C.Hayward

4

0

4

D.Perryman

2

2

I.Rochell

2

2

D.James

2

Ju.Jones

Special Teams PD

FF

FR

TKL

/ YDS TFL QH IN 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

4

0

0

0

1

4

0

0

0

0

1

3

1

0

0

1

2

3

0

0

T.Williams

2

0

2

0

C.Landrum

0

2

2

D.Square

1

0

M.Ingram

0

1

A.Phillips

0

J.Brown

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

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

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

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

1

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

3

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

1

0

0

0

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

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

D.Philon

0

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

B.Mebane

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

J.Jones

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

Ty.Williams

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

29

18

47

1

0

2

6

0

5

0

0

1

2

0

1

0

1

0

0

0

Total

COMB

AST


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers 9/9/2018 at StubHub Center

First Half Summary PERIOD SCORES 14 3 = 17 6 6 = 12

Chiefs Chargers Team Chiefs Chargers Chiefs Chargers Chargers Chiefs

Qtr 1 1 1 1 2 2

TIME OF POSSESSION 11:43 18:17

Chiefs Chargers

Scoring Plays Time Play Description (Extra Point) (Drive Info) 13:03 9:20 6:39 0:21 7:47 2:00

Visitor

Home

7 7 14 14 14 17

0 3 3 6 12 12

T.Hill 91 yd. punt return (H.Butker kick) C.Sturgis 45 yd. Field Goal (8-48, 3:43) T.Hill 58 yd. pass from P.Mahomes (H.Butker kick) (5-75, 2:41) C.Sturgis 39 yd. Field Goal (6-39, 3:41) A.Ekeler 13 yd. pass from P.Rivers (pass failed) (12-96, 6:11) H.Butker 46 yd. Field Goal (11-47, 5:47) Kansas City Chiefs 8

TOTAL FIRST DOWNS First Downs Rushing-Passing-by Penalty THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY

Los Angeles Chargers 14

5-3-0

6-6-2

2-5-40%

1-6-17%

203

212

26

35

TOTAL NET YARDS Total Offensive Plays NET YARDS RUSHING

72

94

NET YARDS PASSING

131

118

Gross Yards Passing

131

124

Times thrown-yards lost attempting to pass

1-0

1-6

14 - 7 - 0

18 - 11 - 0

2 - 42.5

3 - 48

5 - 45

2 - 15

Pass Attempts-Completions-Had Intercepted Punts-Number and Average Penalties-Number and Yards Fumbles-Number and Lost

0-0

0-0

Red Zone Efficiency

0-0-0%

1-1-100%

Average Drive Start

KC 19

LAC 24

Kansas City Chiefs RUSHING

Los Angeles Chargers

ATT

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

S.Ware

3

32

10.7

27

0

M.Gordon

K.Hunt

5

29

5.8

13

0

A.Ekeler

P.Mahomes

2

11

5.5

8

0

Dam. Williams

1

0

0.0

0

11

72

6.5

27

Total PASSING

LG IN

ATT

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

11

52

4.7

18

0

3

22

7.3

9

0

T.Benjamin

1

19

19.0

19

0

0

D.Watt

1

1

1.0

1

0

0

Total

16

94

5.9

19

0

RT

PASSING

ATT

CMP

YDS SK/YD TD

LG IN

RT

ATT

CMP

P.Mahomes

14

7

131

1/0

1

58

0 106.5

P.Rivers

18

11

124

1/6

1

30

0

100.2

Total

14

7

131

1/0

1

58

0 106.5

Total

18

11

124

1/6

1

30

0

100.2

PASS RECEIVING

YDS SK/YD TD

RUSHING

TAR

REC

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

TAR

REC

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

T.Hill

5

4

113

28.3

58

1

A.Ekeler

3

3

52

17.3

30

1

S.Ware

1

1

8

8.0

8

0

M.Gordon

4

3

36

12.0

25

0

T.Kelce

4

1

6

6.0

6

0

K.Allen

3

2

16

8.0

8

0

S.Watkins

3

1

4

4.0

4

0

V.Green

1

1

15

15.0

15

0

D.Thomas

1

0

0

0.0

0

0

Ty.Williams

3

1

4

4.0

4

0

T.Benjamin

3

1

1

1.0

1

0

17

11

124

11.3

30

1

Total

14

7

131

Kansas City Chiefs

18.7

58

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

R.Parker

4

2

6

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

A.Hitchens

2

4

6

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

R.Ragland

1

4

5

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

S.Nelson

2

2

4

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

9

12

21

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Total

AST COMB

Special Teams

AST


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers 9/9/2018 at StubHub Center

First Half Summary Los Angeles Chargers

Regular Defensive Plays TKL

AST

J.Addae

3

1

4

0

0

0

0

K.White

3

0

3

0

0

0

I.Rochell

1

2

3

0

0

K.Emanuel

2

0

2

0

9

3

12

0

Total

COMB

SK

Special Teams

/ YDS TFL QH IN

PD

FF

FR

TKL

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

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


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers at StubHub Center

First Quarter

Play By Play

9/9/2018

KC wins the coin toss and elects to defer. LAC elects to Receive, and KC elects to defend the north goal. H.Butker kicks 65 yards from KC 35 to end zone, Touchback. Los Angeles Chargers at 15:00 1-10-LAC 25

(15:00) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short middle to K.Allen to LAC 33 for 8 yards (E.Murray).

2-2-LAC 33

(14:25) (Shotgun) M.Gordon up the middle to LAC 34 for 1 yard (D.Ford, K.Fuller).

3-1-LAC 34

(14:03) (Shotgun) M.Gordon up the middle to LAC 34 for no gain (R.Ragland; R.Parker).

4-1-LAC 34

(13:24) D.Kaser punts 57 yards to KC 9, Center-M.Windt. T.Hill for 91 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

Kansas City Chiefs at 13:03 H.Butker extra point is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt. KC 7 LAC 0, 0 plays, 91 yards, 0:00 drive , 1:57 elapsed H.Butker kicks 65 yards from KC 35 to end zone, Touchback. Los Angeles Chargers at 13:03 1-10-LAC 25

(13:03) A.Ekeler left end to LAC 32 for 7 yards (E.Murray; R.Ragland).

2-3-LAC 32

(12:25) P.Rivers pass incomplete short left to K.Allen. PENALTY on KC-K.Fuller, Defensive Holding, 5 yards, enforced at LAC 32 - No Play.

X1

1-10-LAC 37

(12:21) M.Gordon up the middle to LAC 40 for 3 yards (X.Williams; R.Ragland).

2-7-LAC 40

(11:44) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short right to K.Allen ran ob at LAC 48 for 8 yards.

P2

1-10-LAC 48

(11:10) T.Benjamin left end ran ob at KC 33 for 19 yards (K.Fuller).

R3

Penalty on KC-C.Jones, Defensive Offside, declined. 1-10-KC 33

(10:48) (Shotgun) M.Gordon up the middle to KC 31 for 2 yards (R.Parker; A.Hitchens).

2-8-KC 31

(10:09) P.Rivers pass incomplete deep left to Ty.Williams.

3-8-KC 31

(10:03) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short middle to Ty.Williams to KC 27 for 4 yards (O.Scandrick).

4-4-KC 27

(9:24) C.Sturgis 45 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-M.Windt, Holder-D.Kaser. KC 7 LAC 3, 8 plays, 48 yards, 1 penalty, 3:43 drive, 5:40 elapsed

C.Sturgis kicks 65 yards from LAC 35 to end zone, Touchback. Kansas City Chiefs at 9:20 1-10-KC 25

(9:20) (Shotgun) K.Hunt up the middle to KC 29 for 4 yards (J.Addae; I.Rochell).

2-6-KC 29

(8:47) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short right to S.Watkins to KC 33 for 4 yards (C.Hayward).

3-2-KC 33

(8:07) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes scrambles up the middle to KC 36 for 3 yards (J.Addae).

1-10-KC 36

(7:25) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to T.Kelce to KC 42 for 6 yards (K.Emanuel).

2-4-KC 42

(6:50) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Hill for 58 yards, TOUCHDOWN [B.Mebane].

R1

P2

H.Butker extra point is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt. KC 14 LAC 3, 5 plays, 75 yards, 2:41 drive, 8:21 elapsed H.Butker kicks 65 yards from KC 35 to end zone, Touchback. Los Angeles Chargers at 6:39 1-10-LAC 25

(6:39) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass deep left to A.Ekeler to KC 45 for 30 yards (R.Parker).

P4

PENALTY on KC-R.Parker, Lowering the Head to Initiate Contact, 15 yards, enforced at KC 45.

X5

1-10-KC 30

(6:16) (Shotgun) M.Gordon up the middle to KC 30 for no gain (J.Houston; A.Hitchens).

2-10-KC 30

(5:35) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete short left to K.Allen.

3-10-KC 30

(5:31) (Shotgun) P.Rivers sacked at KC 36 for -6 yards (D.Ford). LAC-J.Barksdale was injured during the play.

4-16-KC 36

(5:12) (Field Goal formation) C.Sturgis punts 24 yards to KC 12, Center-M.Windt, downed by LAC-M.Windt.

Kansas City Chiefs at 5:03 1-10-KC 12

(5:03) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short left to S.Watkins.

2-10-KC 12

(4:58) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete deep right to T.Kelce [M.Ingram].

3-10-KC 12

(4:53) (Shotgun) S.Ware up the middle to KC 16 for 4 yards (J.Brown; C.Landrum).

4-6-KC 16

(4:11) D.Colquitt punts 44 yards to LAC 40, Center-J.Winchester, fair catch by J.Jones.

Los Angeles Chargers at 4:02 1-10-LAC 40

(4:02) M.Gordon right tackle to KC 42 for 18 yards (S.Nelson).

R6

1-10-KC 42

(3:18) P.Rivers pass short right to M.Gordon pushed ob at KC 29 for 13 yards (R.Parker).

P7

1-10-KC 29

(2:41) M.Gordon up the middle to KC 28 for 1 yard (E.Murray; R.Ragland).


2-9-KC 28

Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers at StubHub Center (2:00) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short right to M.Gordon to KC 30 for -2 yards (A.Hitchens).

3-11-KC 30

(1:14) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short middle to A.Ekeler to KC 21 for 9 yards (A.Hitchens; S.Nelson). Timeout #1 by LAC at 00:25.

4-2-KC 21

(:25) C.Sturgis 39 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-M.Windt, Holder-D.Kaser. KC 14 LAC 6, 6 plays, 39 yards, 3:41 drive, 14:39 elapsed

C.Sturgis kicks 65 yards from LAC 35 to end zone, Touchback. Kansas City Chiefs at 0:21 1-10-KC 25

(:21) P.Mahomes pass deep left to T.Hill to LAC 45 for 30 yards (K.White) [M.Ingram].

END OF QUARTER Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles Chargers

Score 14 6

Time Poss 4:03

R 1

10:57

2

First Downs P X 2 0 3

2

T 3 7

Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 1/2 0/0 0/4

0/0

P3


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers at StubHub Center

Second Quarter

Play By Play

9/9/2018

Kansas City Chiefs continued. 1-10-LAC 45

(15:00) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete deep middle to D.Thomas (D.James).

2-10-LAC 45

(14:53) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short left to T.Kelce.

3-10-LAC 45

(14:49) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes sacked at LAC 45 for 0 yards (D.James).

4-10-LAC 45

(14:07) D.Colquitt punts 41 yards to LAC 4, Center-J.Winchester, downed by KC-Tr. Smith.

Los Angeles Chargers at 13:58 1-10-LAC 4

(13:58) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete short left to K.Allen (S.Nelson) [C.Jones]. PENALTY on KC, Defensive Too Many Men on Field, 5 yards, enforced at LAC 4 - No Play.

1-5-LAC 9

(13:54) (Shotgun) M.Gordon left end to LAC 15 for 6 yards (S.Nelson; A.Hitchens).

R8

1-10-LAC 15

(13:17) M.Gordon left end to LAC 20 for 5 yards (X.Williams).

2-5-LAC 20

(12:37) (Shotgun) A.Ekeler up the middle to LAC 26 for 6 yards (K.Fuller, X.Williams).

1-10-LAC 26

(11:57) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete deep right to T.Benjamin.

2-10-LAC 26

(11:51) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left to V.Green to LAC 41 for 15 yards (A.Hitchens).

P10

1-10-LAC 41

(11:07) P.Rivers pass short right to M.Gordon pushed ob at KC 34 for 25 yards (S.Nelson).

P11

1-10-KC 34

(10:27) P.Rivers pass incomplete short right.

1-10-KC 34

Penalty on KC-C.Jones, Defensive Offside, offsetting, enforced at KC 34 - No Play. Penalty on LAC-R.Okung, Offensive Holding, offsetting. (10:21) P.Rivers pass incomplete deep middle to Ty.Williams.

2-10-KC 34

(10:14) A.Ekeler up the middle to KC 25 for 9 yards (R.Parker, E.Murray).

3-1-KC 25

(9:28) D.Watt up the middle to KC 24 for 1 yard (R.Ragland).

R12

1-10-KC 24

(8:46) M.Gordon up the middle to KC 13 for 11 yards (R.Parker).

R13

1-10-KC 13

(7:58) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete short left to M.Gordon [D.Ford].

R9

Timeout #2 by LAC at 07:54. 2-10-KC 13

(7:54) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left to A.Ekeler for 13 yards, TOUCHDOWN [D.Ford].

P14

TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. P.Rivers pass to M.Williams is incomplete. ATTEMPT FAILS. KC 14 LAC 12, 12 plays, 96 yards, 1 penalty, 6:11 drive, 7:13 elapsed C.Sturgis kicks 65 yards from LAC 35 to end zone, Touchback. Kansas City Chiefs at 7:47 1-10-KC 25

(7:47) K.Hunt left guard to KC 28 for 3 yards (K.Emanuel).

2-7-KC 28

(7:08) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes right end to KC 36 for 8 yards (I.Rochell).

1-10-KC 36

(6:31) (Shotgun) K.Hunt up the middle to KC 39 for 3 yards (J.Addae, I.Rochell).

2-7-KC 39

(5:53) (Shotgun) K.Hunt left end to KC 45 for 6 yards (K.White).

R4

Timeout #1 by KC at 05:10. 3-1-KC 45

(5:10) (Shotgun) Direct snap to S.Ware. S.Ware up the middle to KC 46 for 1 yard (K.White).

1-10-KC 46

(4:29) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Hill to LAC 49 for 5 yards (D.King). LAC-D.Perryman was injured during the play.

2-5-LAC 49

(3:53) (Shotgun) K.Hunt right end pushed ob at LAC 36 for 13 yards (D.James).

1-10-LAC 36

(3:19) Dam. Williams right end to LAC 36 for no gain (Ju.Jones, M.Ingram).

2-10-LAC 36

(2:45) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short left to S.Watkins (D.Square).

3-10-LAC 36

(2:42) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to S.Ware ran ob at LAC 28 for 8 yards.

4-2-LAC 28

(2:04) H.Butker 46 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt.

Two-Minute Warning KC 17 LAC 12, 11 plays, 47 yards, 5:47 drive, 13:00 elapsed H.Butker kicks 65 yards from KC 35 to end zone, Touchback. Los Angeles Chargers at 2:00 1-10-LAC 25

(2:00) (Shotgun) M.Gordon up the middle to LAC 30 for 5 yards (C.Jones).

2-5-LAC 30

(1:27) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left to T.Benjamin to LAC 44 for 14 yards (Te.Smith). PENALTY on LAC-Ty.Williams, Illegal Block Above the Waist, 10 yards, enforced at LAC 31.

2-14-LAC 21

(1:15) P.Rivers pass incomplete deep middle to T.Benjamin [A.Bailey].

3-14-LAC 21

(1:09) P.Rivers pass incomplete short right [D.Ford].

4-14-LAC 21

(1:06) D.Kaser punts 63 yards to KC 16, Center-M.Windt. T.Hill ran ob at KC 20 for 4 yards. PENALTY on KC-M.Kemp, Illegal Block Above the Waist, 10 yards, enforced at KC 20.

R5

R6


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers at StubHub Center Kansas City Chiefs at 0:51 1-10-KC 10

(:51) (Shotgun) S.Ware right tackle to KC 37 for 27 yards (D.King, A.Phillips).

R7

Timeout #2 by KC at 00:38. 1-10-KC 37

(:38) (Shotgun) PENALTY on LAC-C.Landrum, Neutral Zone Infraction, 5 yards, enforced at KC 37 - No Play.

1-5-KC 42

(:38) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep left to T.Hill to LAC 38 for 20 yards (J.Addae).

1-10-LAC 38

(:13) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to Dam. Williams to LAC 38 for no gain (J.Addae) [M.Ingram]. PENALTY on KC-C.Erving, Offensive Holding, 10 yards, enforced at LAC 38 - No Play.

1-20-LAC 48

(:13) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete deep right to T.Hill (D.James).

2-20-LAC 48

(:02) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete deep middle to T.Kelce (D.King).

END OF QUARTER Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles Chargers

Score 17 12

Time Poss 7:40

R 4

7:20

4

First Downs P X 1 0 3

0

T 5 7

Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 1/3 0/0 1/2

0/0

P8


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers at StubHub Center

Third Quarter

Play By Play

9/9/2018

KC elects to Receive, and LAC elects to defend the South goal. C.Sturgis kicks 65 yards from LAC 35 to end zone, Touchback. Kansas City Chiefs at 15:00 1-10-KC 25

(15:00) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Hill ran ob at KC 46 for 21 yards.

1-10-KC 46

(14:26) (Shotgun) K.Hunt right end to LAC 47 for 7 yards (D.Perryman, D.James).

2-3-LAC 47

(13:46) (Shotgun) K.Hunt up the middle to LAC 42 for 5 yards (J.Addae; K.White).

1-10-LAC 42

(13:04) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short right to T.Kelce [M.Ingram].

2-10-LAC 42

(12:59) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes up the middle to LAC 35 for 7 yards (C.Hayward).

3-3-LAC 35

(12:16) (Shotgun) PENALTY on LAC-M.Ingram, Defensive Offside, 5 yards, enforced at LAC 35 - No Play.

1-10-LAC 30

(11:57) (Shotgun) K.Hunt up the middle to LAC 27 for 3 yards (D.Perryman; Ju.Jones).

2-7-LAC 27

(11:21) (Shotgun) T.Hill left end ran ob at LAC 20 for 7 yards.

1-10-LAC 20

(10:42) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short left to T.Kelce (T.Williams).

2-10-LAC 20

(10:38) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep middle to S.Watkins to LAC 4 for 16 yards (T.Williams).

1-4-LAC 4

(9:55) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes up the middle to LAC 2 for 2 yards (Ju.Jones; K.White).

1-1-LAC 1

P9

R10

X11

R12

P13

PENALTY on LAC-Ju.Jones, Face Mask (15 Yards), 1 yard, enforced at LAC 2.

X14

(9:29) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to D.Thomas for 1 yard, TOUCHDOWN.

P15

H.Butker extra point is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt. KC 24 LAC 12, 11 plays, 75 yards, 2 penalties, 5:35 drive, 5:35 elapsed H.Butker kicks 69 yards from KC 35 to LAC -4. J.Jones to LAC 9 for 13 yards (M.Kemp; A.Watts). Los Angeles Chargers at 9:25, (1st play from scrimmage 9:18) 1-10-LAC 9

(9:18) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left to M.Gordon to LAC 20 for 11 yards (A.Hitchens; E.Murray).

P15

1-10-LAC 20

(8:38) P.Rivers pass short left to M.Gordon to LAC 40 for 20 yards (R.Parker).

P16

1-10-LAC 40

(7:53) A.Ekeler left tackle to LAC 47 for 7 yards (S.Nelson; X.Williams).

2-3-LAC 47

(7:13) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short right to K.Allen to KC 37 for 16 yards (S.Nelson).

1-10-KC 37

(6:34) M.Gordon left tackle to KC 37 for no gain (D.Ford).

2-10-KC 37

(5:49) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete short left to V.Green. PENALTY on KC-E.Murray, Defensive Holding, 5 yards, enforced at KC 37 - No Play.

1-10-KC 32

(5:44) M.Gordon up the middle to KC 34 for -2 yards (C.Jones).

2-12-KC 34

(5:04) M.Gordon right end to KC 26 for 8 yards (R.Parker).

P17

X18

3-4-KC 26

(4:21) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left intended for Ty.Williams INTERCEPTED by R.Parker at KC 14. R.Parker to LAC 43 for 43 yards (R.Okung). The Replay Official reviewed the runner was not down by contact ruling, and the play was REVERSED. (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left intended for Ty.Williams INTERCEPTED by R.Parker at KC 14. R.Parker to KC 14 for no gain (Ty.Williams). Kansas City Chiefs at 4:16 1-10-KC 14

(4:16) K.Hunt right guard to KC 14 for no gain (D.Perryman).

2-10-KC 14

(3:39) T.Hill left end to KC 11 for -3 yards (D.King).

3-13-KC 11

(2:54) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep right to T.Hill to KC 45 for 34 yards (D.King).

1-10-KC 45

(2:10) (Shotgun) K.Hunt right end to KC 49 for 4 yards (D.Square).

2-6-KC 49

(1:30) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to C.Conley pushed ob at LAC 36 for 15 yards (T.Williams).

P17

1-10-LAC 36

(:55) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep left to A.Sherman for 36 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

P18

P16

H.Butker extra point is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt. KC 31 LAC 12, 6 plays, 86 yards, 3:28 drive, 14:12 elapsed H.Butker kicks 70 yards from KC 35 to LAC -5. J.Jones to LAC 21 for 26 yards (Tr. Smith). PENALTY on LAC-K.Emanuel, Offensive Holding, 9 yards, enforced at LAC 18. Los Angeles Chargers at 0:48, (1st play from scrimmage 0:42) 1-10-LAC 9

(:42) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left to K.Allen to LAC 29 for 20 yards (E.Murray; S.Nelson).

1-10-LAC 29

(:15) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left to K.Allen to LAC 34 for 5 yards (S.Nelson).

END OF QUARTER Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles Chargers

Score 31 12

Time Poss 9:03

R 2

5:57

0

First Downs P X 6 2 4

1

T 10 5

Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 1/1 0/0 0/1

0/0

P19


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers at StubHub Center

Fourth Quarter

Play By Play

9/9/2018

Los Angeles Chargers continued. 2-5-LAC 34

(15:00) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete short left to M.Gordon.

3-5-LAC 34

(14:57) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass deep middle to M.Williams to KC 41 for 25 yards (E.Murray, A.Hitchens).

1-10-KC 41

(14:18) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left to V.Green to KC 35 for 6 yards (A.Hitchens; R.Ragland).

2-4-KC 35

(13:34) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short right to M.Williams to KC 28 for 7 yards (R.Ragland, K.Fuller).

1-10-KC 28

(13:01) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete deep right to K.Allen.

2-10-KC 28

(12:53) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short right to M.Gordon pushed ob at KC 20 for 8 yards (D.Ford).

3-2-KC 20

(12:09) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass deep right to K.Allen for 20 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

P20

P21

P22

TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. P.Rivers pass to A.Gates is complete. ATTEMPT SUCCEEDS. KC 31 LAC 20, 9 plays, 91 yards, 3:44 drive, 2:56 elapsed C.Sturgis kicks 68 yards from LAC 35 to KC -3. D.Thomas to KC 23 for 26 yards (A.Phillips). Kansas City Chiefs at 12:04, (1st play from scrimmage 11:58) 1-10-KC 23

(11:58) K.Hunt up the middle to KC 27 for 4 yards (C.Hayward).

2-6-KC 27

(11:20) K.Hunt left guard to KC 27 for no gain (I.Rochell).

3-6-KC 27

(10:41) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short right.

4-6-KC 27

(10:35) D.Colquitt punts 59 yards to LAC 14, Center-J.Winchester. J.Jones MUFFS catch, and recovers at LAC 6. J.Jones to LAC 6 for no gain (D.Thomas). FUMBLES (D.Thomas), RECOVERED by KC-J.Winchester at LAC 2. Kansas City Chiefs at 10:22 1-2-LAC 2

(10:22) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes right end to LAC 1 for 1 yard (C.Hayward).

2-1-LAC 1

(9:52) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short right to K.Hunt [D.Perryman].

3-1-LAC 1

(9:47) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Hill for 1 yard, TOUCHDOWN.

P19

H.Butker extra point is GOOD, Center-J.Winchester, Holder-D.Colquitt. KC 38 LAC 20, 3 plays, 2 yards, 0:40 drive, 5:18 elapsed H.Butker kicks 65 yards from KC 35 to end zone, Touchback. Los Angeles Chargers at 9:42 1-10-LAC 25

(9:42) (Shotgun) PENALTY on LAC-S.Tevi, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at LAC 25 - No Play.

1-15-LAC 20

(9:42) (Shotgun) P.Rivers scrambles up the middle to LAC 21 for 1 yard (C.Jones). PENALTY on LAC-M.Pouncey, Offensive Holding, 10 yards, enforced at LAC 20 - No Play.

1-25-LAC 10

(9:11) (Shotgun) M.Gordon up the middle to LAC 16 for 6 yards (C.Jones, Te.Smith).

2-19-LAC 16

(8:36) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass deep left to M.Williams to LAC 39 for 23 yards (E.Murray).

1-10-LAC 39

(8:07) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short middle to A.Gates to LAC 48 for 9 yards (E.Murray).

2-1-LAC 48

(7:42) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short middle to A.Gates to KC 45 for 7 yards (A.Hitchens).

P24

1-10-KC 45

(7:13) (Shotgun) A.Ekeler up the middle to KC 35 for 10 yards (A.Hitchens, T.Kpassagnon).

R25

1-10-KC 35

(6:36) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete short middle to M.Gordon.

2-10-KC 35

(6:32) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left to K.Allen to KC 27 for 8 yards (T.Kpassagnon).

3-2-KC 27

(5:56) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete short left to M.Gordon.

4-2-KC 27

(5:52) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short right to K.Allen pushed ob at KC 4 for 23 yards (K.Fuller).

P26

1-4-KC 4

(5:08) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short right to Ty.Williams for 4 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

P27

P23

TWO-POINT CONVERSION ATTEMPT. M.Gordon rushes left end. ATTEMPT SUCCEEDS. KC 38 LAC 28, 10 plays, 75 yards, 4:41 drive, 9:59 elapsed C.Sturgis kicks 47 yards from LAC 35 to KC 18. D.Thomas to KC 25 for 7 yards (J.Brown; K.White). Kansas City Chiefs at 5:01, (1st play from scrimmage 4:54) 1-10-KC 25

(4:54) (Shotgun) K.Hunt right end to KC 24 for -1 yards (D.Perryman; D.Philon).

2-11-KC 24

(4:09) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to S.Watkins to KC 25 for 1 yard (D.King).

3-10-KC 25

(3:25) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass incomplete short right.

4-10-KC 25

(3:18) D.Colquitt punts 60 yards to LAC 15, Center-J.Winchester. T.Benjamin to LAC 14 for -1 yards (M.Kemp).

Los Angeles Chargers at 3:05 1-10-LAC 14

(3:05) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete deep right to T.Benjamin (R.Parker).

2-10-LAC 14

(2:56) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short middle to M.Gordon to LAC 30 for 16 yards (A.Hitchens).

P28

1-10-LAC 30

(2:29) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short middle to M.Gordon to LAC 43 for 13 yards (Te.Smith; K.Fuller).

P29

1-10-LAC 43

(2:03) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short middle to A.Ekeler to KC 40 for 17 yards (A.Hitchens).

P30


Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers at StubHub Center Two-Minute Warning 1-10-KC 40

(1:57) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left to M.Williams ran ob at KC 28 for 12 yards.

1-10-KC 28

(1:51) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete deep middle to T.Benjamin.

P31

2-10-KC 28

(1:45) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete deep right to K.Allen (O.Scandrick).

3-10-KC 28

(1:40) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short right to M.Gordon to KC 30 for -2 yards (A.Hitchens).

4-12-KC 30

(1:11) C.Sturgis 48 yard field goal is No Good, Wide Left, Center-M.Windt, Holder-D.Kaser.

Kansas City Chiefs at 1:06 1-10-KC 38

(1:06) J.Devey reported in as eligible. K.Hunt up the middle to KC 42 for 4 yards (K.Emanuel). Timeout #1 by LAC at 01:00.

2-6-KC 42

(1:00) K.Hunt right end to KC 40 for -2 yards (K.Emanuel; C.Landrum). Timeout #2 by LAC at 00:53.

3-8-KC 40

(:53) K.Hunt up the middle to KC 36 for -4 yards (K.Emanuel). Timeout #3 by LAC at 00:50.

4-12-KC 36

(:50) D.Colquitt punts 44 yards to LAC 20, Center-J.Winchester, downed by KC.

Los Angeles Chargers at 0:36 1-10-LAC 20

(:36) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete deep left to M.Williams (S.Nelson).

2-10-LAC 20

(:31) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short middle to M.Williams to LAC 34 for 14 yards (Te.Smith).

1-10-LAC 34

(:10) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass incomplete deep right to A.Gates. KC-C.Jones was injured during the play.

2-10-LAC 34

(:07) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short middle to A.Ekeler to KC 48 for 18 yards (Te.Smith; A.Hitchens).

END OF QUARTER Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles Chargers

Score 38 28

Time Poss 4:48

R 0

10:12

1

First Downs P X 1 0 13

0

T 1 14

Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 1/4 0/0 2/4

1/1

P32

P33


Miscellaneous Statistics Report Kansas City Chiefs vs Los Angeles Chargers 9/9/2018 at StubHub Center Ten Longest Plays for Kansas City Chiefs Yards 58 36 34 30 27 21 20

Qtr 1 3 3 1 2 3 2

Play Start 2-4-KC 42 1-10-LAC 36 3-13-KC 11 1-10-KC 25 1-10-KC 10 1-10-KC 25 1-5-KC 42

Play Description (6:50) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Hill for 58 yards, TOUCHDOWN [B.Mebane]. (:55) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep left to A.Sherman for 36 yards, TOUCHDOWN. (2:54) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep right to T.Hill to KC 45 for 34 yards (D.King). (:21) P.Mahomes pass deep left to T.Hill to LAC 45 for 30 yards (K.White) [M.Ingram]. (:51) (Shotgun) S.Ware right tackle to KC 37 for 27 yards (D.King, A.Phillips). (15:00) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short middle to T.Hill ran ob at KC 46 for 21 yards. (:38) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep left to T.Hill to LAC 38 for 20 yards (J.Addae).

16 15

3 3

2-10-LAC 20 2-6-KC 49

(10:38) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass deep middle to S.Watkins to LAC 4 for 16 yards (T.Williams). (1:30) (Shotgun) P.Mahomes pass short left to C.Conley pushed ob at LAC 36 for 15 yards (T.Williams).

13

2

2-5-LAC 49

(3:53) (Shotgun) K.Hunt right end pushed ob at LAC 36 for 13 yards (D.James).

Ten Longest Plays for Los Angeles Chargers Yards

Qtr

Play Start

Play Description

45 25 25

1 2 4

1-10-LAC 25 1-10-LAC 41 3-5-LAC 34

(6:39) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass deep left to A.Ekeler to KC 45 for 30 yards (R.Parker). PENALTYP.Rivers on KC-R.Parker, the Head to Initiate enforced at KC 45. (11:07) pass shortLowering right to M.Gordon pushed obContact, at KC 3415 foryards, 25 yards (S.Nelson). (14:57) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass deep middle to M.Williams to KC 41 for 25 yards (E.Murray, A.Hitchens).

23

4

2-19-LAC 16

(8:36) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass deep left to M.Williams to LAC 39 for 23 yards (E.Murray).

23 20 20

4 3 3

4-2-KC 27 1-10-LAC 20 1-10-LAC 9

(5:52) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short right to K.Allen pushed ob at KC 4 for 23 yards (K.Fuller). (8:38) P.Rivers pass short left to M.Gordon to LAC 40 for 20 yards (R.Parker). (:42) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass short left to K.Allen to LAC 29 for 20 yards (E.Murray; S.Nelson).

20 19 18

4 1 1

3-2-KC 20 1-10-LAC 48 1-10-LAC 40

(12:09) (Shotgun) P.Rivers pass deep right to K.Allen for 20 yards, TOUCHDOWN. (11:10) T.Benjamin left end ran ob at KC 33 for 19 yards (K.Fuller). PenaltyM.Gordon on KC-C.Jones, Defensive declined. (4:02) right tackle to KCOffside, 42 for 18 yards (S.Nelson).

Touchdown Scoring Information

Offense

Defense

Special Teams

VISITOR

Kansas City Chiefs

4

0

1

HOME

Los Angeles Chargers

3

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

KC

T.Hill

0

0

2

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

18

KC

H.Butker

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

5

0

0

0

8

KC

A.Sherman

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

6

KC

D.Thomas

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

6

LAC

K.Allen

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

6

LAC

A.Ekeler

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

6

LAC

Ty.Williams

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

6

LAC

C.Sturgis

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

2

0

0

0

0

6

LAC

M.Gordon

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

2

LAC

A.Gates

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

2

Possession Detail Largest Lead Drives Leading Time of Possession Leading

First Half

Second Half

Game

Visitor

Home

Visitor

Home

Visitor

Home

11 5

0 0

19 6

0 0

19 11

0 0

11:43

0:00

13:51

0:00

25:34

0:00

Largest Deficit

0

-11

0

-19

0

-19

Drives Trailing

0

5

0

5

0

10

0:00

16:20

0:00

16:09

0:00

32:29

Time of Possession Trailing Times Score Tied Up

0

0

0

Lead Changes

1

0

1


Playtime Percentage Percent of playtime per player on offense, defense and special teams Kansas City Chiefs Offense

Los Angeles Chargers

Defense

Special Teams

Offense

Defense

Special Teams

C Erving

T

56 100%

6

20% R Okung

T

82 100%

4

13%

M Morse

C

56 100%

6

20% M Schofield

G

82 100%

4

13%

M Schwartz

T

56 100%

6

20% D Feeney

G

82 100%

3

10%

E Fisher

T

56 100%

6

20% M Pouncey

C

82 100%

L Duvernay-Tardif

G

56 100%

6

20% P Rivers

QB

82 100%

T Kelce

TE

56 100%

K Allen

WR

72

88%

P Mahomes

QB

56 100%

S Tevi

T

67

82%

4

13%

S Watkins

WR

51 91%

M Gordon

RB

62

76%

T Hill

WR

40 71%

K Hunt

RB

40 71%

C Conley

WR

A Sherman

2

7% T Williams

WR

62

76%

47

57%

2

7%

9

TE

44

54%

4

13%

FB

17 30%

24

T Benjamin 30% V Green 80% M Williams

WR

35 62%

WR

44

54%

A Ellis

TE

10 18%

6

TE

33

40%

S Ware

FB

9 16%

4

RB

22

27%

20

67%

D Thomas

WR

7 12%

17

TE

17

21%

D Williams

RB

5

9%

6

T

15

18%

1

3%

D Robinson

WR

5

9%

5

J Devey

G

3

5%

FB

7

9%

24

80%

E Murray

FS

82 100%

6

K Fuller

CB

82 100%

4

S Nelson

CB

82 100%

20% A Gates 13% A Ekeler 57% S Culkin 20% J Barksdale 17% D Watt 20% T Williams 20% J Addae 13% D James

R Parker

FS

82 100%

A Hitchens

LB

78 95%

D Ford

LB

73 89%

O Scandrick

CB

68 83%

J Houston

LB

63 77%

C Jones

DE

A Bailey

6

4

13%

10

33%

60 73%

4

13%

DE

55 67%

4

13%

R Ragland

LB

42 51%

T Smith

LB

37 45%

18

60%

X Williams

DT

30 37%

4

13%

B Speaks

LB

19 23%

5

17%

D Nnadi

NT

18 22%

J Jenkins

DE

18 22%

T Kpassagnon

LB

10 12%

A Watts

DB

3

4%

CB

56 100%

7

23%

SS

56 100%

6

20%

DB

56 100%

4

13%

C Hayward

CB

56 100%

M Ingram

DE

53 95%

I Rochell

DE

51 91%

10

33%

K White

LB

44 79%

13

43%

D King

CB

43 77%

10

33%

D Perryman

LB

41 73%

D Philon

DT

35 62%

6

20%

D Square

NT

24 43%

6

20%

J Jones

DT

24 43%

6

20%

B Mebane

NT

23 41%

J Brown

LB

15 27%

13

43%

K Emanuel

LB

13 23%

15

50%

C Landrum

DE

12 21%

4

13%

A Phillips

SS

11 20%

21

70%

U Nwosu

17

57%

15

50%

LB

2

4%

26

87%

80% N Dzubnar 67% R Jenkins

LB

1

2%

20

67%

SS

26

87%

67% M Davis 63% C Sturgis

CB

18

60%

K

10

33%

WR

10

33%

J Lucas

CB

24

D O'Daniel

LB

20

M Kemp

WR

20

B Niemann

LB

19

H Butker

K

13

D Colquitt

P

11

43% J Jones 37% D Newsome

RB

10

33%

LS

6

20%

J Winchester

LS

11

37% M Windt

A Wylie

T

6

20% D Kaser

P

6

20%

T Smith

DB

6

20% C Mager

CB

6

20%


National Football League Game Summary NFL Copyright © 2018 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: 9/10/2018 Date: Sunday, 9/9/2018

Pittsburgh Steelers at Cleveland Browns

Start Time: 1:02 PM EDT

at FirstEnergy Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio Game Day Weather Game Weather: Rain Played Outdoor on Turf: Grass

Temp: 58° F (14.4° C) Humidity: 84%, Wind: East 11 mph Outdoor Weather: Rain, Wind Chill: 56 Officials

Referee: Smith, Shawn (14) Line Judge: Longson, Bart (2) Back Judge: Paganelli,Dino(105)

Umpire: Neale, Bryan (92) Field Judge: Rogers, Bradley (126) Replay Official: Wimmer, Mike (0)

Down Judge: Hittner, Mark (28) Side Judge: Coleman,James(95)

Lineups Pittsburgh Steelers

Cleveland Browns

Offense WR

84 A.Brown

LT LG C RG RT OL TE RB QB TE

78 73 53 66 77 76 81 30 7 85

Defense DT

A.Villanueva R.Foster M.Pouncey D.DeCastro M.Gilbert C.Okorafor J.James J.Conner B.Roethlisberger X.Grimble

NT DE LOLB LILB RILB ROLB LCB FS SS RCB

Offense

97 C.Heyward

WR

12 J.Gordon

79 91 90 51 98 48 23 21 34 25

LT LG C RG RT TE TE QB RB TE

69 75 64 70 74 85 87 5 34 88

J.Hargrave S.Tuitt T.Watt J.Bostic V.Williams B.Dupree J.Haden S.Davis T.Edmunds A.Burns

Defense DE

D.Harrison J.Bitonio J.Tretter K.Zeitler C.Hubbard D.Njoku S.DeValve T.Taylor C.Hyde D.Fells

DT DT DE WILL MIKE SAM CB CB S S

95 M.Garrett 65 93 90 58 53 51 21 39 23 22

L.Ogunjobi T.Coley E.Ogbah C.Kirksey J.Schobert J.Collins D.Ward T.Mitchell D.Randall J.Peppers

Substitutions

Substitutions

P 4 J.Berry, K 9 C.Boswell, WR 10 R.Switzer, WR 11 J.Hunter, WR 13 J.Washington, WR 19 J.Smith-Schuster, CB 20 C.Sutton, RB 22 S.Ridley, CB 28 M.Hilton, S 31 N.Berhe, S 37 J.Dangerfield, RB 38 J.Samuels, S 42 M.Burnett, LB 44 T.Matakevich, FB 45 R.Nix, LB 46 M.Thomas, LB 54 L.Fort, LB 56 A.Chickillo, LS 57 K.Canaday, C/G 67 B.Finney, WR 88 D.Heyward-Bey, DT 93 D.McCullers, DE 94 T.Alualu

K 2 Z.Gonzalez, P 4 B.Colquitt, WR 11 A.Callaway, DB 20 B.Boddy-Calhoun, RB 24 N.Chubb, DB 26 D.Kindred, DB 27 T.Thomas, RB 29 D.Johnson, DB 37 D.Rice, DB 38 T.Carrie, LS 47 C.Hughlett, DL 50 C.Smith, LB 54 T.Vallejo, LB 55 G.Avery, OL 71 E.Watford, T 78 G.Robinson, WR 80 J.Landry, WR 81 R.Higgins, TE 82 O.Charles, WR 84 D.Willies, DT 99 D.Lawrence

Did Not Play

Did Not Play

QB 5 J.Dobbs

QB 6 B.Mayfield, DE 92 C.Thomas, NT 94 C.Davis Not Active

Not Active

QB 2 M.Rudolph, CB 24 C.Sensabaugh, S 27 M.Allen, OT 71 M.Feiler, OT 72 Z.Banner, TE 89 V.McDonald, DE 96 L.Walton

QB 9 D.Stanton, WR 18 D.Ratley, DB 28 E.Gaines, OLB 52 J.Burgess, T 63 A.Corbett, DE 91 I.Odenigbo, DT 97 A.Zettel

Field Goals (made ( ) & missed) C.Boswell

42WL

Z.Gonzalez 1 0 0

Pittsburgh Steelers Cleveland Browns

VISITOR: HOME:

43B 2 7 0

3 14 7

4 0 14

OT 0 0

Total 21 21

Scoring Plays Team

Qtr

Steelers Browns

2 3

Steelers Steelers Browns Browns

3 3 4 4

Paid Attendance: 67,431

Time Play Description (Extra Point) (Drive Info) 11:16 J.Conner 4 yd. run (C.Boswell kick) (10-88, 5:39) 10:05 T.Taylor 20 yd. run (Z.Gonzalez kick) (10-86, 4:55) 8:24 5:23 7:32 1:58

A.Brown 22 yd. pass from B.Roethlisberger (C.Boswell kick) (3-74, 1:41) J.Conner 22 yd. run (C.Boswell kick) (2-39, 0:45) C.Hyde 1 yd. run (Z.Gonzalez kick) (1-1, 0:04) J.Gordon 17 yd. pass from T.Taylor (Z.Gonzalez kick) (2-55, 0:12)

Visitor

Home

7 7

0 7

14 21 21 21

7 7 14 21

Time: 3:54


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns 9/9/2018 at FirstEnergy Stadium

Final Individual Statistics Pittsburgh Steelers RUSHING J.Conner

Cleveland Browns

ATT

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

RUSHING

ATT

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

31

135

4.4

22

2

T.Taylor

8

77

9.6

24

1

B.Roethlisberger

3

16

5.3

15

0

C.Hyde

22

62

2.8

12

1

R.Switzer

1

8

8.0

8

0

N.Chubb

3

21

7.0

17

0

D.Johnson

5

17

3.4

13

0

38

177

4.7

24

2

Total

35

159

4.5

22

2

Total

ATT

CMP

ATT

CMP

B.Roethlisberger

41

23

335

4/22

1

67

3

60.5

T.Taylor

40

15

197

7/47

1

39

1

51.8

Total

41

23

335

4/22

1

67

3

60.5

Total

40

15

197

7/47

1

39

1

51.8

TAR

REC

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

TAR

REC

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

16

9

93

10.3

22

1

J.Landry

15

7

106

15.1

39

0

J.Smith-Schuster

8

5

119

23.8

67

0

D.Njoku

7

3

13

4.3

8

0

J.Conner

6

5

57

11.4

19

0

R.Higgins

4

1

38

38.0

38

0

J.James

5

3

60

20.0

37

0

J.Gordon

3

1

17

17.0

17

1

J.Hunter

5

1

6

6.0

6

0

D.Fells

1

1

12

12.0

12

0

R.Switzer

1

0

0

0.0

0

0

D.Johnson

6

1

8

8.0

8

0

C.Hyde

2

1

3

3.0

3

0

A.Callaway

1

0

0

0.0

0

0

39

15

197

13.1

39

1

PASSING

PASS RECEIVING A.Brown

Total

41

INTERCEPTIONS C.Sutton Total PUNTING

YDS SK/YD TD

LG IN

PASSING

RT

23

335

14.6

67

1

NO

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

1

0

0.0

0

0

1

0

0.0

0

0

PASS RECEIVING

Total INTERCEPTIONS

YDS SK/YD TD

LG IN

RT

NO

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

D.Ward

2

26

13.0

26

0

D.Randall

1

0

0.0

0

0

Total

3

26

8.7

26

0

NO

YDS

AVG

NET

TB

IN20

LG

PUNTING

NO

YDS

AVG

NET

TB

IN20

LG

J.Berry

7

275

39.3

37.1

0

3

53

B.Colquitt

12

522

43.5

37.2

1

6

57

Total

7

275

39.3

37.1

0

3

53

Total

12

522

43.5

37.2

1

6

57

NO

YDS

AVG

FC

LG

TD

PUNT RETURNS

NO

YDS

AVG

FC

LG

TD

R.Switzer

5

56

11.2

2

22

0

J.Peppers

1

15

15.0

3

15

0

[DOWNED]

1

0

0.0

0

0

0

[DOWNED]

2

0

0.0

0

0

0

[OUT OF BOUNDS]

3

0

0.0

0

0

0

[OUT OF BOUNDS]

1

0

0.0

0

0

0

[TOUCHBACK]

1

0

0.0

0

0

0

Total

5

56

11.2

2

22

0

Total

1

15

15.0

3

15

0

NO

YDS

AVG

FC

LG

TD

NO

YDS

AVG

FC

LG

TD

R.Switzer

3

69

23.0

0

28

0

J.Peppers

1

24

24.0

0

24

0

[TOUCHBACK]

1

0

0.0

0

0

0

T.Carrie

1

14

14.0

0

14

0

A.Callaway

1

8

8.0

0

8

0

[TOUCHBACK]

2

0

0.0

0

0

0

Total

3

46

15.3

0

24

0

PUNT RETURNS

KICKOFF RETURNS

Total

3 Pittsburgh Steelers FUMBLES B.Roethlisberger J.Conner B.Dupree Total Cleveland Browns FUMBLES

69

23.0

0

28

FUM

LOST

2 1 0 3

2 1 0 3

KICKOFF RETURNS

0

OWN-REC YDS

TD

FORCED

OPP-REC

YDS

TD

OUT-BDS

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

OWN-REC YDS

0 0 0 0

FUM

LOST

TD

FORCED

OPP-REC

YDS

TD

OUT-BDS

T.Taylor J.Bitonio M.Garrett

1 0 0

0 0 0

0 1 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 2

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

G.Avery J.Schobert

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0

1 0

0 2

0 26

0 0

0 0


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns 9/9/2018 at FirstEnergy Stadium

Final Individual Statistics J.Peppers Total

0 1

0 0

0 1

0 0

0 0

0 3

1 3

16 42

0 0

0 0


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns 9/9/2018 at FirstEnergy Stadium

Final Team Statistics Visitor Steelers

Home Browns

TOTAL FIRST DOWNS

25

22

By Rushing

7

10

By Passing

17

6

By Penalty THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY FOURTH DOWN EFFICIENCY TOTAL NET YARDS

1

6

7-15-47%

5-18-28%

0-0-0%

0-1-0%

472

327

Total Offensive Plays (inc. times thrown passing)

80

85

Average gain per offensive play

5.9

3.8

159

177

NET YARDS RUSHING Total Rushing Plays

35

38

Average gain per rushing play

4.5

4.7

Tackles for a loss-number and yards NET YARDS PASSING Times thrown - yards lost attempting to pass Gross 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

2-3

6-14

313

150

4-22

7-47

335

197

41-23-3

40-15-1

7.0

3.2

5-3-2

4-2-1

7-39.3

12-43.5

0

0

0-0

1-0

37.1

37.2

56

41

No. and Yards Punt Returns

5-56

1-15

No. and Yards Kickoff Returns

3-69

3-46

FGs - PATs Had Blocked Net Punting Average TOTAL RETURN YARDAGE (Not Including Kickoffs)

No. and Yards Interception Returns PENALTIES Number and Yards FUMBLES Number and Lost TOUCHDOWNS Rushing Passing

1-0

3-26

12-116

11-87

3-3

1-0

3

3

2

2

1

1

EXTRA POINTS Made-Attempts

3-3

3-3

Kicking Made-Attempts

3-3

3-3

FIELD GOALS Made-Attempts RED ZONE EFFICIENCY GOAL TO GO EFFICIENCY SAFETIES FINAL SCORE TIME OF POSSESSION

0-1

0-1

2-3-67%

2-3-67%

2-2-100%

1-1-100%

0

0

21

21

35:12

34:48


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns 9/9/2018 at FirstEnergy Stadium

Ball Possession And Drive Chart Pittsburgh Steelers Drive Began

# Play

Yds Gain

Yds Pen

Net Yds

1st Down

1:31 Kickoff

PIT 25

3

8

0

8

0

7:39

2:29 Punt

PIT 20

5

23

0

23

5:22

1:02 Punt

50

4

27

5

32

1:55

11:16

5:39 Punt

PIT 12

10

84

4

7:30

7:19

0:11 Punt

PIT 12

1

0

0

6

2:33

0:42

1:51 Punt

PIT 9

7

54

7

10:05

8:24

1:41 Kickoff

PIT 26

3

8

6:08

5:23

0:45 Punt

CLV 39

2

#

Time Recd

Time Lost

1

15:00

13:29

2

10:08

3

6:24

4 5

Time How Ball Poss Obtained

Last Scrm

How Given Up

PIT 33

Punt

2

PIT 43

Punt

1

* CLV 18

Interception

88

5

* CLV 4

Touchdown

0

0

PIT 12

Interception

0

54

4

CLV 37

Interception

94

-20

74

2

* CLV 22

Touchdown

39

0

39

2

CLV 22

Touchdown

9

3:27

12:11

6:16 Punt

PIT 14

12

52

0

52

3

CLV 34

Punt

10

10:50

8:42

2:08 Punt

PIT 14

4

5

-8

-3

0

PIT 11

Punt

11

7:44

7:36

0:08 Downs

PIT 18

1

-1

0

-1

0

PIT 18

Fumble

12

7:32

6:41

0:51 Kickoff

PIT 28

2

9

0

9

1

PIT 45

Fumble

13

5:14

2:10

3:04 Punt

PIT 5

6

14

0

14

1

PIT 19

Punt

14

1:58

1:29

0:29 Kickoff

PIT 31

3

1

0

1

0

PIT 32

Punt

15

0:16

0:00

0:16 Interception

PIT 8

1

-1

0

-1

0

PIT 8

End of Half

16

8:43

5:29

3:14 Punt

PIT 17

5

21

-10

11

1

PIT 28

Punt

17

4:31

1:44

2:47 Punt

PIT 45

8

31

0

31

2

CLV 24

Missed FG

18

1:17

0:36

0:41 Punt

PIT 26

3

12

0

12

1

PIT 38

Fumble

19

0:09

0:00

0:09 Missed FG

PIT 33

1

0

0

0

0

PIT 33

End of Game

Drive Began

# Play

Yds Gain

Yds Pen

Net Yds

1st Down

Last Scrm

How Given Up

(454) Average PIT 24 Cleveland Browns #

Time Recd

Time Lost

Time How Ball Poss Obtained

1

13:29

10:08

3:21 Punt

CLV 36

6

26

-10

16

1

PIT 48

Punt

2

7:39

6:24

1:15 Punt

CLV 14

4

-4

15

11

1

CLV 25

Punt

3

5:22

1:55

3:27 Interception

CLV 10

6

21

-5

16

1

CLV 26

Punt

4

11:16

7:30

3:46 Kickoff

CLV 25

7

38

-10

28

2

PIT 47

Punt

5

7:19

2:33

4:46 Interception

CLV 28

7

31

-5

26

2

PIT 46

Punt

6

0:42

0:00

0:42 Interception

PIT 45

2

-14

0

-14

0

CLV 49

End of Half

7

15:00

10:05

4:55 Kickoff

CLV 14

10

66

20

86

6

PIT 20

Touchdown

8

8:24

6:08

2:16 Kickoff

CLV 8

5

6

0

6

1

CLV 14

Punt

9

5:23

3:27

1:56 Kickoff

CLV 11

6

42

0

42

1

PIT 47

Punt

10

12:11

10:50

1:21 Punt

CLV 12

3

-1

18

17

1

CLV 29

Punt

11

8:42

7:44

0:58 Punt

PIT 47

7

24

5

29

1

* PIT 18

Downs

12

7:36

7:32

0:04 Fumble

PIT 1

1

1

0

1

1

* PIT 1

Touchdown

13

6:41

5:14

1:27 Fumble

PIT 37

3

-2

0

-2

0

PIT 39

14

2:10

1:58

0:12 Punt

CLV 45

2

55

0

55

2

* PIT 17

Touchdown

15

1:29

0:16

1:13 Punt

CLV 29

5

23

5

28

2

PIT 43

Interception

16

10:00

8:43

1:17 Kickoff

CLV 25

3

9

0

9

0

CLV 34

Punt

17

5:29

4:31

0:58 Punt

CLV 19

3

7

0

7

0

CLV 26

Punt

18

1:44

1:17

0:27 Missed FG

CLV 32

3

0

0

0

0

CLV 32

Punt

19

0:36

0:09

0:27 Fumble

PIT 24

3

-1

0

-1

0

PIT 25

Missed FG

(654) Average CLV 34 * inside opponent's 20

Punt


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns 9/9/2018 at FirstEnergy Stadium

Ball Possession And Drive Chart * inside opponent's 20 Time of Possession by Quarter

1st

2nd

3rd

4th

OT

Total

Visitor

Pittsburgh Steelers

6:57

5:46

5:53

9:45

6:51

35:12

Home

Cleveland Browns

8:03

9:14

9:07

5:15

3:09

34:48

Kickoff Drive No.-Start Average

Steelers: 4 - PIT 28

Browns: 5 - CLV 17


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns 9/9/2018 at FirstEnergy Stadium

Final Defensive Statistics Pittsburgh Steelers V.Williams

Regular Defensive Plays TKL 4

AST COMB 8 12

Special Teams

SK / YDS TFL Q IN PD FF 0 0 1 0 0 0 0

Misc

FR 0

TKL 0

AST 0

FF 0

FR 0

BL 0

TKL AST FF 0 0 0

FR 0

T.Watt

8

3

11

4

21

4

3

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

J.Bostic

4

5

9

1

7

2

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

C.Heyward

5

2

7

1

11

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

B.Dupree

4

1

5

1

8

1

2

0

2

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

S.Davis

4

1

5

0

0

0

0

0

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

S.Tuitt

4

0

4

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

M.Hilton

3

0

3

0

0

0

0

0

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

J.Haden

2

1

3

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

J.Hargrave

2

1

3

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

C.Sutton

2

0

2

0

0

0

1

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

M.Burnett

1

1

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

A.Burns

0

2

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

T.Alualu

0

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

T.Edmunds

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

T.Matakevich

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

3

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

J.Dangerfield

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

J.James

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

2

0

0

0

A.Brown

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

B.Roethlisberger

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

D.DeCastro

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

M.Pouncey

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

43

26

69

7

47

9 10

1

9

1

0

4

0

0

0

1

6

0

0

0

Total

TKL = Tackle AST = Assist COMB = Combined QH=QB Hit IN = Interception PD = Pass Defense FF = Forced Fumble FR = Fumble Recovery Cleveland Browns

Regular Defensive Plays TKL

AST

SK

J.Schobert

2

6

8

0

0

0

0

L.Ogunjobi

3

4

7

1

10

1

T.Mitchell

6

0

6

0

0

0

M.Garrett

5

1

6

2

12

J.Collins

4

2

6

0

J.Peppers

3

3

6

D.Ward

2

4

C.Kirksey

3

G.Avery

3

D.Randall

Special Teams PD

FF

FR

TKL

/ YDS TFL QH IN 0

1

0

2

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

1

2

0

1

2

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

6

0

0

0

0

2

5

0

0

0

1

4

1

0

0

3

1

4

0

0

B.Boddy-Calhoun

3

1

4

0

D.Kindred

1

2

3

T.Coley

1

2

C.Smith

1

2

E.Ogbah

0

D.Rice

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

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

2

3

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

2

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

2

0

0

1

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

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

3

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

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

2

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

O.Charles

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

N.Chubb

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

J.Gordon

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

J.Bitonio

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

40

32

72

4

22

2

5

3

10

3

3

7

2

0

0

0

1

0

0

1

Total

COMB

AST


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns 9/9/2018 at FirstEnergy Stadium

First Half Summary PERIOD SCORES 0 7=7 0 0=0

Steelers Browns Team

Qtr

Steelers

2

TIME OF POSSESSION 12:43 17:17

Steelers Browns

Scoring Plays Time Play Description (Extra Point) (Drive Info)

Visitor

Home

7

0

11:16 J.Conner 4 yd. run (C.Boswell kick) (10-88, 5:39) Pittsburgh Steelers 12

TOTAL FIRST DOWNS First Downs Rushing-Passing-by Penalty

Cleveland Browns 7

4-7-1

3-2-2

3-5-60%

2-7-29%

196

98

30

32

NET YARDS RUSHING

69

68

NET YARDS PASSING

127

30

THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY TOTAL NET YARDS Total Offensive Plays

Gross Yards Passing

131

50

Times thrown-yards lost attempting to pass

1-4

3-20

19 - 10 - 3

11 - 5 - 0

Punts-Number and Average

Pass Attempts-Completions-Had Intercepted

2 - 37

5 - 44.6

Penalties-Number and Yards

3 - 30

7 - 44

Fumbles-Number and Lost

0-0

1-0

Red Zone Efficiency

1-2-50%

0-0-0%

Average Drive Start

PIT 21

CLV 28

Pittsburgh Steelers RUSHING

Cleveland Browns

ATT

YDS

J.Conner

8

B.Roethlisberger

1

R.Switzer

1

Total PASSING

10

AVG

LG

TD

46

5.8

12

1

15

15.0

15

0

8

8.0

8

0

69

6.9

1

LG IN

RT

ATT

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

T.Taylor

6

33

5.5

15

0

C.Hyde

8

22

2.8

9

0

D.Johnson

3

14

4.7

13

0

N.Chubb

1

-1

-1.0

-1

0

18

68

3.8

15

0

Total PASSING

ATT

CMP

YDS SK/YD TD

LG IN

RT

ATT

CMP

B.Roethlisberger

19

10

131

1/4

0

37

3

35.1

T.Taylor

11

5

50

3/20

0

33

0

58.9

Total

19

10

131

1/4

0

37

3

35.1

Total

11

5

50

3/20

0

33

0

58.9

PASS RECEIVING

YDS SK/YD TD

15

RUSHING

TAR

REC

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

TAR

REC

YDS

AVG

LG

TD

J.Smith-Schuster

3

3

35

11.7

27

0

J.Landry

4

2

34

17.0

33

0

J.Conner

4

3

32

10.7

15

0

D.Fells

1

1

12

12.0

12

0

J.James

3

2

50

25.0

37

0

C.Hyde

2

1

3

3.0

3

0

A.Brown

6

2

14

7.0

11

0

D.Njoku

2

1

1

1.0

1

0

J.Hunter

2

0

0

0.0

0

0

R.Higgins

1

0

0

0.0

0

0

R.Switzer

1

0

0

0.0

0

0

D.Johnson

1

0

0

0.0

0

0

19

10

131

13.1

37

0

Total

11

5

50

10.0

33

0

Total Pittsburgh Steelers V.Williams

PASS RECEIVING

Regular Defensive Plays TKL 3

AST COMB 4 7

Special Teams

SK / YDS TFL Q IN PD FF 0 0 1 0 0 0 0

Misc

FR 0

TKL 0

AST 0

FF 0

FR 0

BL 0

TKL AST FF 0 0 0

FR 0

J.Bostic

3

3

6

1

7

2

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

B.Dupree

3

1

4

1

8

1

1

0

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

T.Watt

2

2

4

1

5

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

11

10

21

3

20

4

3

0

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Total


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns 9/9/2018 at FirstEnergy Stadium

First Half Summary Cleveland Browns

Regular Defensive Plays TKL

AST

J.Peppers

2

2

4

0

0

0

0

J.Collins

2

1

3

0

0

0

C.Kirksey

1

2

3

0

0

B.Boddy-Calhoun

2

0

2

0

7

5

12

0

Total

COMB

SK

Special Teams

/ YDS TFL QH IN

PD

FF

FR

TKL

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

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

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium

First Quarter

Play By Play

9/9/2018

CLV wins the coin toss and elects to defer. PIT elects to Receive, and CLV elects to defend the west goal. Z.Gonzalez kicks 65 yards from CLV 35 to end zone, Touchback. Pittsburgh Steelers at 15:00 1-10-PIT 25

(15:00) J.Conner right guard to PIT 28 for 3 yards (T.Coley; D.Ward).

2-7-PIT 28

(14:24) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to J.Conner to PIT 33 for 5 yards (C.Kirksey).

3-2-PIT 33

(13:37) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short middle to A.Brown.

4-2-PIT 33

(13:35) (Punt formation) J.Berry punts 31 yards to CLV 36, Center-K.Canaday, out of bounds.

Cleveland Browns at 13:29 1-10-CLV 36

(13:29) T.Taylor scrambles right end to CLV 42 for 6 yards (J.Haden; J.Bostic).

2-4-CLV 42

(12:52) T.Taylor pass short left to D.Njoku to CLV 43 for 1 yard (J.Bostic; A.Burns).

3-3-CLV 43

(12:24) (Shotgun) PENALTY on CLV-J.Bitonio, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at CLV 43 - No Play.

3-8-CLV 38

(12:08) (Shotgun) PENALTY on CLV-D.Harrison, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at CLV 38 - No Play.

3-13-CLV 33

(11:43) (Shotgun) T.Taylor scrambles up the middle to CLV 48 for 15 yards (B.Dupree).

1-10-CLV 48

(10:56) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete deep right to D.Njoku (S.Davis).

2-10-CLV 48

(10:51) C.Hyde right guard to PIT 48 for 4 yards (T.Watt).

3-6-PIT 48

(10:18) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short left to J.Landry (M.Hilton).

4-6-PIT 48

(10:11) (Punt formation) B.Colquitt punts 48 yards to end zone, Center-C.Hughlett, Touchback.

R1

Pittsburgh Steelers at 10:08 1-10-PIT 20

(10:08) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to J.Conner to PIT 32 for 12 yards (C.Kirksey; J.Collins).

P1

1-10-PIT 32

(9:29) J.Conner right guard to PIT 42 for 10 yards (D.Ward; J.Peppers).

R2

1-10-PIT 42

(8:48) J.Conner left guard to PIT 43 for 1 yard (T.Mitchell).

2-9-PIT 43

(8:10) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short left to R.Switzer (C.Kirksey).

3-9-PIT 43

(8:05) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to J.Smith-Schuster to PIT 43 for no gain (G.Avery). Penalty on PIT-J.Hunter, Illegal Block Above the Waist, declined.

4-9-PIT 43

(7:51) J.Berry punts 43 yards to CLV 14, Center-K.Canaday, downed by PIT-C.Sutton.

Cleveland Browns at 7:39 1-10-CLV 14

(7:39) T.Taylor sacked at CLV 9 for -5 yards (T.Watt). PENALTY on PIT-T.Watt, Unnecessary Roughness, 15 yards, enforced at CLV 9.

1-10-CLV 24

(7:21) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short right to C.Hyde.

2-10-CLV 24

(7:16) (No Huddle, Shotgun) T.Taylor scrambles right tackle to CLV 25 for 1 yard (V.Williams).

3-9-CLV 25

(6:41) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short right to D.Johnson.

4-9-CLV 25

(6:34) (Punt formation) B.Colquitt punts 47 yards to PIT 28, Center-C.Hughlett. R.Switzer to 50 for 22 yards (B.Boddy-Calhoun).

X2

Pittsburgh Steelers at 6:24 1-10-50

(6:24) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete deep right to J.Hunter.

2-10-50

(6:19) (No Huddle, Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short right to J.Hunter.

3-10-50

(6:15) (Shotgun) PENALTY on CLV-M.Garrett, Neutral Zone Infraction, 5 yards, enforced at 50 - No Play.

3-5-CLV 45

(6:15) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass deep right to J.Smith-Schuster to CLV 18 for 27 yards (J.Peppers) [G.Avery].

P3

1-10-CLV 18

(5:32) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right intended for A.Brown INTERCEPTED by D.Ward at CLV 10. D.Ward to CLV 10 for no gain (J.James). Cleveland Browns at 5:22 1-10-CLV 10

(5:22) C.Hyde right guard to CLV 13 for 3 yards (T.Watt; J.Hargrave).

2-7-CLV 13

(4:52) C.Hyde right guard to CLV 13 for no gain (V.Williams).

3-7-CLV 13

(4:18) (Shotgun) D.Johnson left tackle to CLV 26 for 13 yards (S.Davis).

1-10-CLV 26

(3:43) C.Hyde right guard to CLV 28 for 2 yards (C.Heyward). 71 Watford Eligible

2-8-CLV 28

(3:08) (Shotgun) PENALTY on CLV-D.Harrison, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at CLV 28 - No Play.

2-13-CLV 23

(2:48) T.Taylor pass short left to C.Hyde to CLV 26 for 3 yards (M.Burnett).

3-10-CLV 26

(2:11) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short left to J.Landry (B.Dupree).

4-10-CLV 26

(2:07) (Punt formation) B.Colquitt punts 52 yards to PIT 22, Center-C.Hughlett. R.Switzer to CLV 44 for 34 yards (N.Chubb).

PENALTY on PIT-D.Heyward-Bey, Offensive Holding, 10 yards, enforced at PIT 22. Penalty on PIT-R.Nix, Offensive Holding, declined. Pittsburgh Steelers at 1:55 1-10-PIT 12

(1:55) J.Conner right guard to PIT 16 for 4 yards (L.Ogunjobi).

R3


2-6-PIT 16

Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium (1:16) J.Conner right guard to PIT 20 for 4 yards (E.Ogbah; C.Kirksey).

3-2-PIT 20

(:32) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass deep right to J.James to CLV 43 for 37 yards (D.Randall). CLV-E.Ogbah was injured during the play. His return is Probable. END OF QUARTER Time First Downs Efficiencies Poss Score R P X T 3 Down 4 Down Pittsburgh Steelers 0 6:57 1 3 0 4 2/4 0/0 Cleveland Browns

0

8:03

2

0

1

3

2/5

0/0

P4


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium

Second Quarter

Play By Play

9/9/2018

Pittsburgh Steelers continued. 1-10-CLV 43

(15:00) B.Roethlisberger sacked at CLV 47 for -4 yards (M.Garrett).

2-14-CLV 47

(14:17) (Shotgun) R.Switzer right guard to CLV 39 for 8 yards (J.Collins).

3-6-CLV 39

(13:35) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger right tackle to CLV 24 for 15 yards (B.Boddy-Calhoun).

R5

1-10-CLV 24

(12:57) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to J.James to CLV 11 for 13 yards (D.Kindred).

P6

1-10-CLV 11

(12:13) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to A.Brown to CLV 8 for 3 yards. Timeout #1 by PIT at 11:31.

2-7-CLV 8

(11:31) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short right to J.Conner.

3-7-CLV 8

(11:28) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short left to J.Hunter [M.Garrett].

1-4-CLV 4

PENALTY on CLV-M.Garrett, Roughing the Passer, 4 yards, enforced at CLV 8 - No Play.

X7

(11:19) (Shotgun) J.Conner right guard for 4 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

R8

C.Boswell extra point is GOOD, Center-K.Canaday, Holder-J.Berry. PIT 7 CLV 0, 10 plays, 88 yards, 1 penalty, 5:39 drive, 3:44 elapsed C.Boswell kicks 65 yards from PIT 35 to end zone, Touchback. Cleveland Browns at 11:16 1-10-CLV 25

(11:16) (Shotgun) C.Hyde right tackle to CLV 24 for -1 yards (M.Burnett; V.Williams).

2-11-CLV 24

(10:42) T.Taylor pass deep right to J.Landry to PIT 43 for 33 yards (J.Haden).

1-10-PIT 43

(10:03) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short right to R.Higgins [S.Tuitt].

2-10-PIT 43

(9:57) T.Taylor scrambles right guard to PIT 42 for 1 yard (C.Heyward).

3-9-PIT 42

(9:15) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass deep right intended for J.Landry INTERCEPTED by S.Davis at PIT 26. S.Davis to PIT 38 for 12 yards (D.Johnson). PENALTY on PIT-T.Edmunds, Defensive Holding, 5 yards, enforced at PIT 42 - No Play.

1-10-PIT 37

(9:07) C.Hyde right guard to PIT 32 for 5 yards (V.Williams; C.Heyward).

2-5-PIT 32

(8:27) N.Chubb right guard to PIT 33 for -1 yards (J.Bostic).

3-6-PIT 33

(7:46) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass short middle to J.Landry to PIT 32 for 1 yard (V.Williams; T.Watt).

P4

X5

PENALTY on CLV-J.Gordon, Unnecessary Roughness, 15 yards, enforced at PIT 32. 4-20-PIT 47

(7:39) B.Colquitt punts 39 yards to PIT 8, Center-C.Hughlett. R.Switzer to PIT 12 for 4 yards (D.Rice).

Pittsburgh Steelers at 7:30 1-10-PIT 12

(7:30) B.Roethlisberger pass deep middle intended for A.Brown INTERCEPTED by D.Randall at CLV 28. D.Randall to CLV 28 for no gain (A.Brown). Cleveland Browns at 7:19 1-10-CLV 28

(7:19) T.Taylor scrambles left guard to CLV 31 for 3 yards (J.Hargrave).

2-7-CLV 31

(6:44) T.Taylor pass short right to D.Fells to CLV 43 for 12 yards (J.Bostic).

1-10-CLV 43

(5:50) (Shotgun) C.Hyde right guard to PIT 48 for 9 yards (S.Davis).

2-1-PIT 48

(5:26) (No Huddle) PENALTY on CLV-D.Njoku, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at PIT 48 - No Play.

2-6-CLV 47

(5:06) (Shotgun) T.Taylor left guard to PIT 46 for 7 yards (S.Davis; A.Burns).

1-10-PIT 46

(4:24) (Shotgun) C.Hyde right tackle to PIT 46 for no gain (T.Alualu; J.Bostic).

2-10-PIT 46

(3:50) T.Taylor sacked at CLV 47 for -7 yards (J.Bostic).

3-17-CLV 47

(3:14) (Shotgun) D.Johnson right guard to PIT 46 for 7 yards (V.Williams; B.Dupree).

4-10-PIT 46

(2:43) B.Colquitt punts 37 yards to PIT 9, Center-C.Hughlett, downed by CLV-T.Carrie.

P6

R7

Pittsburgh Steelers at 2:33 1-10-PIT 9

(2:33) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to A.Brown to PIT 20 for 11 yards (T.Mitchell).

1-10-PIT 20

(2:06) (No Huddle, Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to J.Conner to PIT 35 for 15 yards (J.Schobert; J.Peppers).

P10

P9

1-10-PIT 35

(1:58) (Shotgun) J.Conner right guard to PIT 47 for 12 yards (J.Peppers).

R11

1-10-PIT 47

(1:25) (No Huddle, Shotgun) J.Conner left guard to CLV 45 for 8 yards (B.Boddy-Calhoun).

2-2-CLV 45

(1:01) (No Huddle, Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to J.Smith-Schuster to CLV 37 for 8 yards (J.Collins).

Two-Minute Warning

Timeout #2 by PIT at 00:55. 1-10-CLV 37 2-10-CLV 37

(:55) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete deep left to A.Brown.

(:51) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right intended for J.James INTERCEPTED by D.Ward at CLV 29. D.Ward to PIT 45 for 26 yards (J.James). Cleveland Browns at 0:42

P12


1-10-PIT 45

Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium (:42) (Shotgun) D.Johnson left end to CLV 49 for -6 yards (B.Dupree). Timeout #1 by CLV at 00:37.

2-16-CLV 49

(:37) (Shotgun) T.Taylor sacked at CLV 41 for -8 yards (B.Dupree). FUMBLES (B.Dupree) [B.Dupree], recovered by CLV-J.Bitonio at CLV 41. J.Bitonio to CLV 41 for no gain (V.Williams). END OF QUARTER Time First Downs Efficiencies Poss Score R P X T 3 Down 4 Down Pittsburgh Steelers 7 5:46 3 4 1 8 1/1 0/0 Cleveland Browns

0

9:14

1

2

1

4

0/2

0/0


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium

Third Quarter

Play By Play

9/9/2018

CLV elects to Receive, and PIT elects to defend the West goal. C.Boswell kicks 65 yards from PIT 35 to CLV 0. J.Peppers to CLV 24 for 24 yards (T.Matakevich). PENALTY on CLV-D.Rice, Illegal Block Above the Waist, 10 yards, enforced at CLV 24. Cleveland Browns at 15:00, (1st play from scrimmage 14:54) 1-10-CLV 14

(14:54) T.Taylor sacked at CLV 4 for -10 yards (T.Watt).

2-20-CLV 4

(14:16) C.Hyde right tackle to CLV 8 for 4 yards (V.Williams; C.Heyward). PENALTY on PIT-J.Hargrave, Defensive Holding, 5 yards, enforced at CLV 8.

X8

1-10-CLV 13

(13:50) C.Hyde left tackle to CLV 16 for 3 yards (J.Hargrave).

1-10-CLV 31

PENALTY on PIT-A.Burns, Unsportsmanlike Conduct, 15 yards, enforced at CLV 16. Penalty on PIT-A.Burns, Unnecessary Roughness, declined. (13:42) C.Hyde right guard to CLV 40 for 9 yards (J.Haden).

2-1-CLV 40

(12:58) C.Hyde right tackle to PIT 48 for 12 yards (S.Davis).

1-10-PIT 48

(12:28) C.Hyde right guard to PIT 42 for 6 yards (C.Heyward).

2-4-PIT 42

(11:56) N.Chubb right guard to PIT 37 for 5 yards (V.Williams; J.Bostic).

R11

1-10-PIT 37

(11:21) N.Chubb right tackle to PIT 20 for 17 yards (T.Watt).

R12

1-10-PIT 20

(10:52) D.Johnson right guard to PIT 20 for no gain (J.Bostic).

2-10-PIT 20

(10:15) T.Taylor scrambles left guard for 20 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

X9

R10

R13

Z.Gonzalez extra point is GOOD, Center-C.Hughlett, Holder-B.Colquitt. PIT 7 CLV 7, 10 plays, 86 yards, 2 penalties, 4:55 drive, 4:55 elapsed Z.Gonzalez kicks 67 yards from CLV 35 to PIT -2. R.Switzer to PIT 26 for 28 yards (D.Rice). Pittsburgh Steelers at 10:05, (1st play from scrimmage 9:59) 1-10-PIT 26

(9:59) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to J.Smith-Schuster pushed ob at CLV 7 for 67 yards (D.Randall).

1-7-CLV 7

(9:21) (Shotgun) J.Conner right tackle to CLV 2 for 5 yards (L.Ogunjobi).

2-2-CLV 2

(8:39) (Shotgun) J.Conner right guard for 2 yards, TOUCHDOWN NULLIFIED by Penalty.

P13

PENALTY on PIT-M.Pouncey, Offensive Holding, 10 yards, enforced at CLV 2 - No Play. 2-12-CLV 12

(8:35) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to J.Hunter for 12 yards, TOUCHDOWN NULLIFIED by Penalty. PENALTY on PIT-M.Gilbert, Illegal Use of Hands, 10 yards, enforced at CLV 12 - No Play.

2-22-CLV 22

(8:29) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass deep right to A.Brown for 22 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

P14

C.Boswell extra point is GOOD, Center-K.Canaday, Holder-J.Berry. PIT 14 CLV 7, 3 plays, 74 yards, 1:41 drive, 6:36 elapsed C.Boswell kicks 63 yards from PIT 35 to CLV 2. T.Carrie to CLV 16 for 14 yards (T.Matakevich). PENALTY on CLV-O.Charles, Illegal Block Above the Waist, 8 yards, enforced at CLV 16. Cleveland Browns at 8:24, (1st play from scrimmage 8:19) 1-10-CLV 8

(8:19) T.Taylor pass short right to D.Njoku to CLV 16 for 8 yards (T.Watt). CLV-D.Njoku was injured during the play. His return is Probable.

2-2-CLV 16

(8:04) C.Hyde left guard to CLV 21 for 5 yards (S.Tuitt).

1-10-CLV 21

(7:36) T.Taylor pass incomplete deep right to J.Landry.

2-10-CLV 21

(7:31) (Shotgun) C.Hyde right tackle to CLV 19 for -2 yards (V.Williams; T.Watt).

3-12-CLV 19

(6:53) (Shotgun) T.Taylor sacked at CLV 14 for -5 yards (T.Watt).

4-17-CLV 14

(6:18) (Punt formation) B.Colquitt punts 45 yards to PIT 41, Center-C.Hughlett. R.Switzer to CLV 39 for 20 yards (D.Kindred).

R14

Pittsburgh Steelers at 6:08 1-10-CLV 39 1-10-CLV 22

(6:08) J.Conner left guard to CLV 22 for 17 yards (D.Ward; J.Peppers). CLV-J.Peppers was injured during the play. His return is Probable. 76 Okorafor Eligible (5:29) J.Conner left guard for 22 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

R15 R16

C.Boswell extra point is GOOD, Center-K.Canaday, Holder-J.Berry. PENALTY on CLV, Leverage, 15 yards, enforced between downs. PIT 21 CLV 7, 2 plays, 39 yards, 0:45 drive, 9:37 elapsed C.Boswell kicks 47 yards from 50 to CLV 3. A.Callaway to CLV 11 for 8 yards (T.Matakevich). Cleveland Browns at 5:23, (1st play from scrimmage 5:19) 1-10-CLV 11

(5:19) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short left to D.Johnson.

2-10-CLV 11

(5:16) C.Hyde left guard to CLV 14 for 3 yards (S.Tuitt).

3-7-CLV 14

(4:41) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass deep left to J.Landry to PIT 47 for 39 yards (M.Hilton). Timeout #1 by CLV at 03:50.

P15


1-10-PIT 47

Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium (3:50) T.Taylor pass incomplete deep middle to J.Gordon (J.Haden).

2-10-PIT 47

(3:42) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short right to D.Njoku.

3-10-PIT 47

(3:40) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete deep right to D.Njoku (T.Edmunds).

4-10-PIT 47

(3:35) (Punt formation) B.Colquitt punts 33 yards to PIT 14, Center-C.Hughlett, fair catch by R.Switzer.

Pittsburgh Steelers at 3:27 1-10-PIT 14

(3:27) J.Conner right guard to PIT 18 for 4 yards (T.Coley). 76 Okorafor Eligible

2-6-PIT 18

(2:49) J.Conner right tackle to PIT 20 for 2 yards (L.Ogunjobi; J.Collins).

3-4-PIT 20

(2:06) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to J.Hunter to PIT 26 for 6 yards (T.Mitchell).

1-10-PIT 26

(1:33) (No Huddle, Shotgun) J.Conner right tackle to PIT 31 for 5 yards (B.Boddy-Calhoun; J.Schobert).

2-5-PIT 31

(:54) (Shotgun) J.Conner right tackle to PIT 32 for 1 yard (G.Avery).

3-4-PIT 32

(:09) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to A.Brown to CLV 49 for 19 yards (T.Mitchell).

END OF QUARTER Pittsburgh Steelers Cleveland Browns

Score 21 7

Time Poss 5:53

First Downs R P X 2 4 0

T 6

9:07

5

8

1

2

Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 2/2 0/0 1/3

0/0

P17

P18


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium

Fourth Quarter

Play By Play

9/9/2018

Pittsburgh Steelers continued. 1-10-CLV 49

(15:00) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short left to J.Smith-Schuster.

2-10-CLV 49

(14:56) (Shotgun) J.Conner right tackle to CLV 40 for 9 yards (J.Schobert; D.Randall).

3-1-CLV 40 1-10-CLV 38

(14:09) B.Roethlisberger right guard to CLV 38 for 2 yards (L.Ogunjobi; J.Schobert). CLV-T.Coley was injured during the play. His return is Probable. 76 Okorafor Eligible (13:38) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short left to J.Smith-Schuster (M.Garrett, J.Collins).

2-10-CLV 38

(13:35) (Shotgun) J.Conner right tackle to CLV 38 for no gain (J.Schobert; D.Ward).

3-10-CLV 38

(12:53) (Shotgun) J.Conner left tackle to CLV 34 for 4 yards (C.Smith).

4-6-CLV 34

(12:15) J.Berry punts 22 yards to CLV 12, Center-K.Canaday, fair catch by J.Peppers.

R19

Cleveland Browns at 12:11 1-10-CLV 12

(12:11) T.Taylor pass incomplete deep right to J.Gordon. PENALTY on PIT-A.Burns, Defensive Pass Interference, 18 yards, enforced at CLV 12 - No Play.

1-10-CLV 30

(12:06) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass short middle to J.Landry to CLV 36 for 6 yards (B.Dupree).

2-4-CLV 36

(11:47) (No Huddle, Shotgun) T.Taylor sacked at CLV 25 for -11 yards (C.Heyward).

X16

Penalty on CLV-K.Zeitler, Offensive Holding, declined. 3-15-CLV 25

(11:30) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass short right to D.Njoku to CLV 29 for 4 yards (M.Hilton).

4-11-CLV 29

(10:58) B.Colquitt punts 57 yards to PIT 14, Center-C.Hughlett, out of bounds.

Pittsburgh Steelers at 10:50 1-10-PIT 14

(10:50) J.Conner left guard to PIT 22 for 8 yards (J.Collins). PENALTY on PIT-M.Gilbert, Offensive Holding, 8 yards, enforced at PIT 16.

1-16-PIT 8

(10:18) J.Conner left guard to PIT 9 for 1 yard (J.Peppers).

2-15-PIT 9

(9:41) (Shotgun) J.Conner left guard to PIT 11 for 2 yards (T.Coley; L.Ogunjobi).

3-13-PIT 11

(8:56) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short left to A.Brown.

4-13-PIT 11

(8:52) J.Berry punts 36 yards to PIT 47, Center-K.Canaday, downed by PIT-S.Davis. Pittsburgh challenged the kick downed ruling, and the play was Upheld. The ruling on the field stands. (Timeout #1 at 08:42.) Cleveland Browns at 8:42 1-10-PIT 47

(8:42) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short left to D.Johnson [B.Dupree]. Penalty on CLV-D.Harrison, Illegal Formation, declined.

2-10-PIT 47

(8:39) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short right to J.Landry (M.Hilton).

3-10-PIT 47

(8:33) (Shotgun) T.Taylor scrambles left end ran ob at PIT 23 for 24 yards.

1-10-PIT 23

(8:09) (No Huddle, Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete deep right to R.Higgins.

2-10-PIT 23

(8:03) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short left to A.Callaway.

3-10-PIT 23

(7:58) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short left to D.Johnson (B.Dupree).

4-10-PIT 23

(7:55) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass short middle to T.Taylor to PIT 28 for -5 yards (T.Alualu).

R17

PENALTY on PIT-B.Dupree, Defensive Offside, 5 yards, enforced at PIT 23 - No Play. Timeout #2 by PIT at 07:49. 4-5-PIT 18

(7:49) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete deep left to J.Landry.

Pittsburgh Steelers at 7:44 1-10-PIT 18

(7:44) J.Conner right guard to PIT 16 for -2 yards (M.Garrett). FUMBLES (M.Garrett), RECOVERED by CLV-J.Peppers at PIT 17. J.Peppers to PIT 1 for 16 yards (B.Roethlisberger). Cleveland Browns at 7:36 1-1-PIT 1

(7:36) C.Hyde right guard for 1 yard, TOUCHDOWN.

R18

Z.Gonzalez extra point is GOOD, Center-C.Hughlett, Holder-B.Colquitt. PIT 21 CLV 14, 1 plays, 1 yards, 0:04 drive, 7:28 elapsed Z.Gonzalez kicks 51 yards from CLV 35 to PIT 14. R.Switzer to PIT 28 for 14 yards (O.Charles). Pittsburgh Steelers at 7:32, (1st play from scrimmage 7:28) 1-10-PIT 28

(7:28) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to J.Smith-Schuster ran ob at PIT 45 for 17 yards.

1-10-PIT 45

(6:48) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger sacked at PIT 37 for -8 yards (M.Garrett). FUMBLES (M.Garrett) [M.Garrett], RECOVERED by CLVJ.Schobert at PIT 37. J.Schobert to PIT 37 for no gain (D.DeCastro). Cleveland Browns at 6:41 1-10-PIT 37

(6:41) (Shotgun) C.Hyde left guard to PIT 36 for 1 yard (S.Tuitt).

2-9-PIT 36

(6:04) C.Hyde right tackle to PIT 39 for -3 yards (T.Watt).

3-12-PIT 39

(5:28) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short left to J.Landry.

P20


4-12-PIT 39

Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium (5:22) B.Colquitt punts 34 yards to PIT 5, Center-C.Hughlett, out of bounds.

Pittsburgh Steelers at 5:14 1-10-PIT 5

(5:14) J.Conner right guard to PIT 12 for 7 yards (C.Kirksey).

2-3-PIT 12

(4:39) J.Conner right guard to PIT 14 for 2 yards (C.Kirksey).

3-1-PIT 14

(3:56) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to A.Brown to PIT 17 for 3 yards (T.Mitchell).

1-10-PIT 17

(3:53) J.Conner right guard to PIT 18 for 1 yard (J.Collins).

2-9-PIT 18

(3:13) J.Conner left guard to PIT 18 for no gain (M.Garrett; L.Ogunjobi).

P21

Timeout #2 by CLV at 03:08. 3-9-PIT 18

(3:08) (Shotgun) J.Conner up the middle to PIT 19 for 1 yard (M.Garrett).

4-8-PIT 19

(2:20) J.Berry punts 51 yards to CLV 30, Center-K.Canaday. J.Peppers to CLV 45 for 15 yards (J.Dangerfield).

Cleveland Browns at 2:10 1-10-CLV 45

(2:10) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass deep right to R.Higgins to PIT 17 for 38 yards (C.Sutton).

P19

1-10-PIT 17

(2:03) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass short right to J.Gordon for 17 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

P20

Z.Gonzalez extra point is GOOD, Center-C.Hughlett, Holder-B.Colquitt. Two-Minute Warning PIT 21 CLV 21, 2 plays, 55 yards, 0:12 drive, 13:02 elapsed Z.Gonzalez kicks 61 yards from CLV 35 to PIT 4. R.Switzer to PIT 31 for 27 yards (D.Randall). Pittsburgh Steelers at 1:58, (1st play from scrimmage 1:52) 1-10-PIT 31

(1:52) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete deep middle to J.James.

2-10-PIT 31

(1:48) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete deep left to J.Hunter.

3-10-PIT 31

(1:44) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to A.Brown to PIT 32 for 1 yard (D.Ward). Timeout #3 by CLV at 01:37.

4-9-PIT 32

(1:37) J.Berry punts 39 yards to CLV 29, Center-K.Canaday, fair catch by J.Peppers.

Cleveland Browns at 1:29 1-10-CLV 29

(1:29) (Shotgun) D.Johnson right guard to CLV 32 for 3 yards (S.Tuitt).

2-7-CLV 32

(1:09) (No Huddle, Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short right to R.Higgins.

3-7-CLV 32

(1:00) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass short right to J.Landry to CLV 43 for 11 yards (S.Davis).

1-10-CLV 43

(:38) (No Huddle, Shotgun) T.Taylor pass short left to J.Landry to PIT 48 for 9 yards (M.Hilton).

2-1-PIT 48

(:24) (No Huddle) T.Taylor spiked the ball to stop the clock. PENALTY on PIT, Defensive Too Many Men on Field, 5 yards, enforced at PIT 48 - No Play.

1-10-PIT 43

(:23) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass deep right intended for J.Gordon INTERCEPTED by C.Sutton at PIT 8. C.Sutton to PIT 8 for no gain (J.Gordon).

Pittsburgh Steelers at 0:16 1-10-PIT 8

(:16) B.Roethlisberger kneels to PIT 7 for -1 yards.

END OF QUARTER Pittsburgh Steelers Cleveland Browns

Score 21 21

Time Poss 9:45

R 1

5:15

2

First Downs P X 2 0 3

2

T 3 7

Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 2/6 0/0 2/5

0/1

P21

X22


Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium

Overtime

Play By Play

9/9/2018

CLV wins toss, elects to Receive, and PIT elects to defend the West goal. C.Boswell kicks 65 yards from PIT 35 to end zone, Touchback. Cleveland Browns at 10:00 1-10-CLV 25

(10:00) (Shotgun) C.Hyde left guard to CLV 27 for 2 yards (C.Heyward).

2-8-CLV 27

(9:23) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass short right to J.Landry ran ob at CLV 34 for 7 yards.

3-1-CLV 34

(8:54) T.Taylor pass incomplete deep right to D.Njoku (S.Davis).

4-1-CLV 34

(8:50) B.Colquitt punts 49 yards to PIT 17, Center-C.Hughlett, fair catch by R.Switzer.

Pittsburgh Steelers at 8:43 1-10-PIT 17

(8:43) (Shotgun) J.Conner left guard to PIT 19 for 2 yards (D.Kindred; J.Schobert).

2-8-PIT 19

(8:08) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to J.Conner to PIT 38 for 19 yards (D.Randall).

1-10-PIT 38

(7:34) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to A.Brown to PIT 42 for 4 yards (D.Ward).

P22

PENALTY on PIT-A.Villanueva, Offensive Holding, 10 yards, enforced at PIT 38 - No Play. 1-20-PIT 28

(7:05) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short left to A.Brown (T.Mitchell).

2-20-PIT 28

(7:00) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger sacked at PIT 18 for -10 yards (L.Ogunjobi).

3-30-PIT 18

(6:14) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to A.Brown to PIT 28 for 10 yards (T.Mitchell). CLV-D.Randall was injured during the play. His return is Probable. (5:37) J.Berry punts 53 yards to CLV 19, Center-K.Canaday, fair catch by J.Peppers.

4-20-PIT 28

Cleveland Browns at 5:29 1-10-CLV 19

(5:29) (Shotgun) C.Hyde right tackle to CLV 19 for no gain (V.Williams).

2-10-CLV 19

(4:57) T.Taylor sacked ob at CLV 18 for -1 yards (T.Watt).

3-11-CLV 18

(4:50) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass short right to D.Johnson to CLV 26 for 8 yards (C.Sutton) [T.Edmunds]. Timeout #1 by PIT at 04:36.

4-3-CLV 26

(4:35) B.Colquitt punts 29 yards to PIT 45, Center-C.Hughlett, out of bounds.

Pittsburgh Steelers at 4:31 1-10-PIT 45

(4:31) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short right to A.Brown (D.Ward).

2-10-PIT 45

(4:27) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short middle to A.Brown to CLV 43 for 12 yards (B.Boddy-Calhoun).

1-10-CLV 43

(3:50) (Shotgun) J.Conner right guard to CLV 41 for 2 yards (G.Avery; C.Smith).

2-8-CLV 41

(3:11) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to J.James to CLV 31 for 10 yards (J.Schobert).

1-10-CLV 31

(2:27) J.Conner left guard to CLV 28 for 3 yards (M.Garrett).

P23

P24

Two-Minute Warning 2-7-CLV 28

(2:00) J.Conner right guard to CLV 30 for -2 yards (C.Smith; D.Kindred). Timeout #1 by CLV at 01:54.

3-9-CLV 30

(1:54) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to J.Conner to CLV 24 for 6 yards (J.Schobert). Timeout #2 by CLV at 01:48.

4-3-CLV 24

(1:47) C.Boswell 42 yard field goal is No Good, Wide Left, Center-K.Canaday, Holder-J.Berry.

Cleveland Browns at 1:44 1-10-CLV 32

(1:44) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short middle to J.Landry. Penalty on CLV-J.Landry, Illegal Motion, declined.

2-10-CLV 32

(1:39) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete short right to D.Johnson [C.Sutton].

3-10-CLV 32

(1:36) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass incomplete deep left to J.Landry.

4-10-CLV 32

(1:28) B.Colquitt punts 52 yards to PIT 16, Center-C.Hughlett. R.Switzer to PIT 26 for 10 yards (O.Charles; D.Rice).

Pittsburgh Steelers at 1:17 1-10-PIT 26

(1:17) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short middle to A.Brown to PIT 38 for 12 yards (D.Ward).

1-10-PIT 38

(:52) (No Huddle, Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short left to J.Smith-Schuster (D.Randall). CLV-D.Randall was injured during the play. His return is Doubtful. (:48) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger sacked at PIT 33 for -5 yards (G.Avery). FUMBLES (G.Avery) [G.Avery], RECOVERED by CLV-J.Schobert at PIT 40. J.Schobert pushed ob at PIT 12 for 28 yards (M.Pouncey). PENALTY on CLV-M.Garrett, Illegal Block Above the Waist, 10 yards, enforced at PIT 14.

2-10-PIT 38

Timeout #2 by PIT at 00:36. Cleveland Browns at 0:36 1-10-PIT 24

(:36) C.Hyde left guard to PIT 25 for -1 yards (V.Williams; J.Bostic).

2-11-PIT 25

(:14) (No Huddle) T.Taylor spiked the ball to stop the clock.

P25


3-11-PIT 25

Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium (:13) Z.Gonzalez 43 yard field goal is BLOCKED (T.Watt), Center-C.Hughlett, Holder-B.Colquitt.

Pittsburgh Steelers at 0:09 1-10-PIT 33

(:09) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass incomplete short middle to J.Hunter (J.Schobert).

END OF QUARTER Pittsburgh Steelers Cleveland Browns

Score 21 21

Time Poss 6:51

R 0

3:09

0

First Downs P X 4 0 0

0

T 4 0

Efficiencies 3 Down 4 Down 0/2 0/0 0/3

0/0


Miscellaneous Statistics Report Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cleveland Browns 9/9/2018 at FirstEnergy Stadium Ten Longest Plays for Pittsburgh Steelers Yards 67 37

Qtr 3 1

Play Start 1-10-PIT 26 3-2-PIT 20

27 22 22 19 19 17

1 3 3 3 5 3

3-5-CLV 45 2-22-CLV 22 1-10-CLV 22 3-4-PIT 32 2-8-PIT 19 1-10-CLV 39

17 15

4 2

1-10-PIT 28 3-6-CLV 39

Play Description (9:59) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to J.Smith-Schuster pushed ob at CLV 7 for 67 yards (D.Randall). (:32) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass deep right to J.James to CLV 43 for 37 yards (D.Randall). CLV-E.Ogbah was injured during the play. His return is Probable. (6:15) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass deep right to J.Smith-Schuster to CLV 18 for 27 yards (J.Peppers) [G.Avery]. (8:29) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass deep right to A.Brown for 22 yards, TOUCHDOWN. (5:29) J.Conner left guard for 22 yards, TOUCHDOWN. (:09) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to A.Brown to CLV 49 for 19 yards (T.Mitchell). (8:08) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short right to J.Conner to PIT 38 for 19 yards (D.Randall). (6:08) J.Conner left guard to CLV 22 for 17 yards (D.Ward; J.Peppers). CLV-J.Peppers was injured during the play. His return is Probable. 76 Okorafor Eligible (7:28) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger pass short left to J.Smith-Schuster ran ob at PIT 45 for 17 yards. (13:35) (Shotgun) B.Roethlisberger right tackle to CLV 24 for 15 yards (B.Boddy-Calhoun).

Ten Longest Plays for Cleveland Browns Yards

Qtr

Play Start

Play Description

39

3

3-7-CLV 14

(4:41) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass deep left to J.Landry to PIT 47 for 39 yards (M.Hilton).

38 33 24 20 18 17 17

4 2 4 3 3 3 4

1-10-CLV 45 2-11-CLV 24 3-10-PIT 47 2-10-PIT 20 1-10-CLV 13 1-10-PIT 37 1-10-PIT 17

(2:10) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass deep right to R.Higgins to PIT 17 for 38 yards (C.Sutton). (10:42) T.Taylor pass deep right to J.Landry to PIT 43 for 33 yards (J.Haden). (8:33) (Shotgun) T.Taylor scrambles left end ran ob at PIT 23 for 24 yards. (10:15) T.Taylor scrambles left guard for 20 yards, TOUCHDOWN. (13:50) C.Hyde left tackle to CLV 16 for 3 yards (J.Hargrave). PENALTYN.Chubb on PIT-A.Burns, Unsportsmanlike Conduct, 15 yards, enforced at CLV 16. (11:21) right tackle to PIT 20 for 17 yards (T.Watt). Penalty on PIT-A.Burns, Unnecessary Roughness, declined. (2:03) (Shotgun) T.Taylor pass short right to J.Gordon for 17 yards, TOUCHDOWN.

15 13

1 1

3-13-CLV 33 3-7-CLV 13

(11:43) (Shotgun) T.Taylor scrambles up the middle to CLV 48 for 15 yards (B.Dupree). (4:18) (Shotgun) D.Johnson left tackle to CLV 26 for 13 yards (S.Davis).

Offense

Defense

VISITOR

Touchdown Scoring Information Pittsburgh Steelers

3

0

Special Teams 0

HOME

Cleveland Browns

3

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

PIT

J.Conner

0

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

12

PIT

A.Brown

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

6

PIT

C.Boswell

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

3

0

0

0

3

CLV

C.Hyde

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

6

CLV

T.Taylor

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

6

CLV

J.Gordon

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

6

CLV

Z.Gonzalez

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

3

0

0

0

3

Possession Detail Largest Lead Drives Leading Time of Possession Leading

First Half

Second Half

Game

Visitor

Home

Visitor

Home

Visitor

Home

7 2

0 0

14 6

0 0

14 8

0 0

2:02

0:00

13:12

0:00

15:14

0:00

Largest Deficit

0

-7

0

-14

0

-14

Drives Trailing

0

3

0

8

0

11

0:00

9:14

0:00

13:09

0:00

22:23

Time of Possession Trailing Times Score Tied Up

0

2

2

Lead Changes

1

1

2


Playtime Percentage Percent of playtime per player on offense, defense and special teams Pittsburgh Steelers Offense

Defense

Cleveland Browns Special Teams

Offense

Defense

Special Teams

R Foster

G

84 100%

4

11% K Zeitler

G

89 100%

4

11%

A Villanueva

T

84 100%

4

11% C Hubbard

T

89 100%

4

11%

M Gilbert

T

84 100%

4

11% J Bitonio

G

89 100%

4

11%

B Roethlisberger

QB

84 100%

D Harrison

T

89 100%

4

11%

M Pouncey

C

84 100%

J Tretter

C

89 100%

A Brown

WR

83 99%

T Taylor

QB

89 100%

D DeCastro

G

82 98%

11% J Landry

WR

81

91%

J Conner

RB

77 92%

TE

78

88%

J James

TE

69 82%

11% J Gordon

WR

69

78%

J Smith-Schuster

WR

63 75%

R Higgins

WR

54

61%

1

3%

J Hunter

WR

51 61%

C Hyde

RB

47

53%

X Grimble

TE

22 26%

4

RB

41

46%

R Nix

FB

19 23%

28

C Okorafor

T

17 20%

J Washington

WR

11 13%

R Switzer

WR

7

B Finney

C

D Heyward-Bey

WR

S Davis

SS

A Burns

4

D Njoku 4

11% D Johnson 78% D Fells

TE

38

43%

28

78%

A Callaway

WR

15

17%

4

11%

O Charles

TE

8

9%

31

86%

S DeValve

TE

6

7%

17

47%

N Chubb

RB

4

4%

28

78%

E Watford

G

3

3%

4

11%

D Willies

WR

1

1%

16

44%

J Schobert

LB

84 100%

4

11%

M Garrett

DE

84 100%

4

11%

D Ward

DB

84 100%

D Randall

CB

83 99%

14

39%

L Ogunjobi

DT

79 94%

4

11%

T Mitchell

CB

67 80%

11

31%

D Kindred

SS

62 74%

32

89%

B Boddy-Calhoun

CB

62 74%

22

61%

C Kirksey

LB

61 73%

4

11%

C Smith

DE

57 68%

1

3%

J Collins

LB

51 61%

4

11%

G Avery

LB

43 51%

T Coley

DT

42 50%

4

11%

J Peppers

FS

35 42%

24

67%

E Ogbah

DE

27 32%

4

11%

D Lawrence

20

56%

5

14%

8%

16

44%

2

2%

4

11%

1

1%

24

67%

89 100%

11

31%

CB

88 99%

15

42%

V Williams

LB

88 99%

4

11%

T Watt

LB

85 96%

3

8%

B Dupree

LB

83 93%

4

11%

C Heyward

DT

76 85%

6

17%

T Edmunds

DB

74 83%

28

78%

S Tuitt

DE

73 82%

8

22%

M Hilton

CB

60 67%

5

14%

J Bostic

LB

59 66%

8

22%

J Haden

CB

58 65%

8

22%

M Burnett

SS

40 45%

C Sutton

DB

33 37%

24

67%

T Alualu

DE

29 33%

2

6%

J Hargrave

NT

24 27%

A Chickillo

LB

10 11%

29

81%

D McCullers

DT

10 11%

4

11%

J Dangerfield

SS

28

78%

DT

2

2%

78% T Carrie 78% T Vallejo

CB

1

1%

LB

28

78%

31% D Rice 31% C Hughlett

CB

22

61%

LS

16

44%

P

16

44%

T Matakevich

LB

28

L Fort

LB

28

K Canaday

LS

11

J Berry

P

11

C Boswell

K

9

N Berhe

SS

9

25% B Colquitt 25% Z Gonzalez

K

8

22%

DB

5

14%

T

4

11%

M Thomas

LB

7

19% T Thomas

S Ridley

RB

4

11% G Robinson


CHIEFS INDIVIDUAL PLAYER STATISTICS


DUSTIN COLQUITT - NFL REGULAR SEASON PUNTING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2005 Chiefs 2006 Chiefs 2007 Chiefs 2008 Chiefs 2009 Chiefs 2010 Chiefs 2011 Chiefs 2012 Chiefs 2013 Chiefs 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 16 16 16 14 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 1 207

NO. 65 71 95 70 96 88 89 83 87 71 75 76 65 5 1,036

YDS. 2,564 3,145 4,322 3,110 4,361 3,908 4,084 3,887 4,005 3,164 3,333 3,427 2,936 256 46,502

OPP. RET. 23 32 50 28 40 42 36 27 38 29 26 30 24 2 427

AVG. 39.4 44.3 45.5 44.4 45.4 44.4 45.9 46.8 46.0 44.6 44.4 45.1 45.2 51.2 44.9

YDS. 179 254 387 209 285 361 411 362 246 190 170 157 164 -5 3,370

NET. YDS. 2,285 2,791 3,755 2,741 3,956 3,347 3,573 3,385 3,539 2,874 3,063 3,090 2,672 261 41,332

AVG. 35.2 39.3 39.1 39.2 40.8 37.6 40.1 40.8 40.2 40.5 40.8 40.7 41.1 52.2 39.7

TB 5 5 9 8 6 10 5 7 11 5 5 9 5 0 90

IN20 27 23 27 27 41 33 27 45 35 31 37 38 29 3 423

LG 62 72 81 73 70 72 68 71 65 69 62 64 77 67 81

BK 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4

LG 66 54 47 56 54 54 66

BK 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

DUSTIN COLQUITT - NFL POSTSEASON PUNTING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2006 Chiefs 2010 Chiefs 2013 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1 1 2 1 1 7

NO. 6 3 2 7 4 5 27

YDS. 314 153 78 288 183 250 1,266

AVG. 52.3 51.0 39.0 41.1 45.8 50.0 46.9

OPP. RET. 3 0 0 1 2 3 9

YDS. 28 0 0 22 9 18 77

NET. YDS. 286 113 78 266 174 212 1,129

AVG. 47.7 37.7 39.0 38.0 43.5 42.4 41.8

TB 0 2 0 0 0 1 3

IN20 1 1 1 5 1 0 9

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1

1

NO. 5 5

YDS. 256 256

AVG. 51.2 51.2

OPP. RET. 2 2

YDS. -5 -5

NET. YDS. 261 261

AVG 52.2 52.2

TB 0 0

IN20 3 3

LG 67 67

BK W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

@CHIEFS


CHAD HENNE - 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 TOTALS

GP 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 4

GS 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3

ATT. 12 451 490 112 308 503 78 0 0 2 0 1,956

CMP. 7 274 301 64 166 305 42 0 0 0 0 1,159

PCT. 58.3 60.8 61.4 57.1 53.9 60.6 53.8 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 59.3

YDS 67 2,878 3,301 868 2,084 3,241 492 0 0 0 0 12,931

AVG. 5.6 6.4 6.7 7.8 6.8 6.4 6.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 6.6

TD 0 12 15 4 11 13 3 0 0 0 0 58

INT. 0 14 19 4 11 14 1 0 0 0 0 63

LG 19 67 57t 41 81t 62t 63t 0 0 0 0 81t

SK 0 26 30 11 28 38 16 0 0 0 0 149

LST 0 176 178 67 169 243 105 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 0.0 75.5

LST 0 0 0

RATE 0.0 0.0 0.0

CHAD HENNE - NFL POSTSEASON PASSING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2008 Dolphins 2017 Jaguars TOTALS

GP 0 0 0

GS 0 0 0

ATT. 0 0 0

CMP. 0 0 0

PCT. 0.0 0.0 0.0

YDS 0 0 0

AVG. 0.0 0.0 0.0

TD 0 0 0

INT. 0 0 0

LG 0 0 0

SK 0 0 0

CHAD HENNE - 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 TOTALS

2

NO. 0 16 35 15 19 27 4 0 1 5 0 122

YDS. 0 32 52 112 64 77 25 0 -2 -5 0 355

AVG. 0.0 2.0 1.5 7.5 3.4 2.9 6.3 0.0 -2.0 -1.0 0.0 2.9

LG 0 12 10 20 15 14 12 0 0 0 0 20

TD 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

@CHIEFS


CHAD HENNE - NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2008 Dolphins 2017 Jaguars TOTALS

NO. 0 0 0

YDS. 0 0 0

AVG. 0.0 0.0 0.0

LG 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

PASSING RUSHING DATE OPPONENT P/S ATT CMP YDS PCT Y/A Y/C TD INT LG SK/YD RATE ATT YDS LG TD W/L SCORE DID NOT PLAY 09/09 at Chargers W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 0-0 0/0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

HARRISON BUTKER - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Panthers

GP 0

FGM 0

2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

13 1 14

38 1 39

FGA PCT. LG XP 0.0 0 0 0 Went from Panthers to Chiefs. 42 90.5 53 28 1 100.0 46 5 43 90.7 53 33

XPA 0

PCT. 0.0

BLK 0

PTS 0

28 5 33

100.0 100.0 100.0

0 0 0

142 8 150

BLK 0 0

PTS 3 3

HARRISON BUTKER - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1

FGA 1 1

PCT. 0.0 0.0

LG 0 0

XP 3 3

XPA 3 3

PCT. 100.0 100.0

REGULAR SEASON FIELD-GOAL ACCURACY

DATE TEAM 2017 Panthers 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

FGM 0 0

1-19 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-19 0-0 0-0

PCT. 0.0 0.0 0.0

20-29 0-0 0-0 0-0

PCT. 0.0 0.0 0.0

30-39 0-0 0-0 0-0

PCT. 0.0 0.0 0.0

40-49 0-0 1-1 1-1

PCT. 0.0 100.0 100.0

50+ 0-0 0-0 0-0

PCT. 0.0 0.0 0.0

PCT. 0.0 0.0

40-49 0-1 0-1

PCT. 0.0 0.0

50+ 0-0 0-0

PCT. 0.0 0.0

POSTSEASON FIELD-GOAL ACCURACY PCT. 0.0 0.0

20-29 0-0 0-0

PCT. 0.0 0.0

30-39 0-0 0-0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1

3

FGM 1 1

FIELD GOALS FGA PCT 1 100.0 1 100.0

LG 46 46

XP 5 5

EXTRA POINTS XPA PCT 5 100.0 5 100.0

BLK 0 0

PTS W/L SCORE 8 W 38-28 8 1-0

@CHIEFS


TYREEK HILL - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1 1 3

GS 0 0 1 1

RECEIVING YDS AVG 593 9.7 1,183 15.8 169 24.1 1,945 13.6

NO. 61 75 7 143

LG 49 79t 58t 79t

TD 6 7 2 15

NO. 24 17 2 43

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 267 11.1 59 3.5 4 2.0 330 7.7

LG 70t 16 7 70t

TD 3 0 0 3

LG 8 14 14

TD 0 0 0

LG 95t 82t 91t 95t

TD 2 1 1 4

LG 0 8 8

TD 0 0 0

TYREEK HILL - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1 2

GS 0 1 1

NO. 4 7 11

RECEIVING YDS AVG 27 6.8 87 12.4 114 10.4

LG 9 45 45

TD 0 0 0

NO. 3 1 4

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 18 6.0 14 14.0 32 8.0

TYREEK HILL - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 14 0 0 14

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 384 27.4 0.0 0 0.0 0 384 27.4

LG 86t 0 0 86t

TD 1 0 0 1

NO. 39 25 2 66

PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 592 15.2 204 8.2 95 47.5 891 13.5

FC 8 9 0 17

TYREEK HILL - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 4 1 5

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 72 18.0 17 17.0 89 17.8

LG 21 17 21

TD 0 0 0

NO. 0 2 2

FC 0 0 0

PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 8 4.0 8 4.0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers S 2018 TOTALS 1-1

4

NO 7 7

RECEIVING YDS LG 169 58t 169 58t

TD 2 2

ATT 2 2

RUSHING YDS 4 4

LG 7 7

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

@CHIEFS


DEMARCUS ROBINSON - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1 1 3

GS 0 0 0 0

NO. 0 21 0 21

RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 212 10.1 0.0 0 212 10.1

LG 0 33 0 33

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

LG 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0

DEMARCUS ROBINSON - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1 2

GS 0 1 1

NO. 0 4 4

RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 57 14.3 57 14.3

LG 0 15 15

TD 0 1 1

NO. 0 0 0

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0

DEMARCUS ROBINSON - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 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 1 0 1

FC 0 1 0 1

PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 -4 -4.0 0.0 0 -4 -4.0

LG 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0

DEMARCUS ROBINSON - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 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

LG 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1-0

5

NO 0 0

RECEIVING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

ATT 0 0

RUSHING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

@CHIEFS


DE'ANTHONY THOMAS - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 0 1 0 1 1 3

GS 0 0 0 0 0 0

NO. 23 17 7 14 1 62

RECEIVING YDS AVG 156 6.8 140 8.2 35 5.0 143 10.2 1 1.0 475 7.7

LG 30 36 15 57t 1t 57t

TD 0 1 0 2 1 4

NO. 14 9 4 1 0 28

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 113 8.1 34 3.8 29 7.3 4 4.0 0.0 0 180 6.4

LG 26 13 23 4 0 26

TD 1 1 0 0 0 2

LG 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0

DE'ANTHONY THOMAS - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 0 1 0 1

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

NO. 0 0 0 0

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0

DE'ANTHONY THOMAS - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 14 6 15 13 2 50

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 428 30.6 138 23.0 338 22.5 305 23.5 33 16.5 1,242 24.8

LG 78 30 41 39 26 78

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0

NO. 34 29 0 8 0 71

FC 0 2 0 0 0 2

PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 405 11.9 227 7.8 0.0 0 20 2.5 0.0 0 652 9.2

LG 81t 37 0 8 0 81t

TD 1 0 0 0 0 1

DE'ANTHONY THOMAS - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

6

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

@CHIEFS


2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1-0

NO 1 1

RECEIVING YDS 1 1

LG 1t 1t

TD 1 1

ATT 0 0

RUSHING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

SAMMY WATKINS - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2014 Bills 2015 Bills 2016 Bills 2017 Rams 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1 1 1 1 5

GS 1 1 1 1 1 5

NO. 65 60 28 39 3 195

RECEIVING YDS AVG 982 15.1 1,047 17.5 430 15.4 593 15.2 21 7.0 3,073 15.8

LG 84 63 62 67t 16 84

TD 6 9 2 8 0 25

NO. 2 1 0 0 0 3

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 8 4.0 1 1.0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 9 3.0

LG 5 1 0 0 0 5

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

SAMMY WATKINS - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Rams NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1

GS 1 1

NO. 1 1

RECEIVING YDS AVG 23 23.0 23 23.0

LG 23 23

TD 0 0

NO. 0 0

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0

SAMMY WATKINS - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2014 Bills 2015 Bills 2016 Bills 2017 Rams 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

7

RET. 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

LG 0 0 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0

NO. 0 0 0 0 0 0

FC 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

LG 0 0 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0

@CHIEFS


SAMMY WATKINS - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Rams 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

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers S 2018 TOTALS 1-1

NO 3 3

RECEIVING YDS LG 21 16 21 16

TD 0 0

RUSHING YDS 0 0

ATT 0 0

LG 0 0

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

PATRICK MAHOMES - NFL REGULAR SEASON PASSING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs TOTALS

GP 0 1 1

GS 0 1 1

ATT. 35 27 62

CMP. 22 15 37

PCT. 62.9 55.6 59.7

YDS 284 256 540

AVG. 8.1 9.5 8.7

TD 0 4 4

INT. 1 0 1

LG 51 58t 58t

SK 2 1 3

LST 15 0 15

RATE 76.4 127.5 102.9

PATRICK MAHOMES - NFL POSTSEASON PASSING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs TOTALS

GP 0 0

GS 0 0

ATT. 0 0

CMP. 0 0

PCT. 0.0 0.0

YDS 0 0

AVG. 0.0 0.0

TD 0 0

INT. 0 0

LG 0 0

SK 0 0

LST 0 0

RATE 0.0 0.0

PATRICK MAHOMES - NFL REGULAR SEASON RUSHING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs TOTALS

NO. 7 5 12

YDS. 10 21 31

AVG. 1.4 4.2 2.6

LG 5 8 8

TD 0 0 0

PATRICK MAHOMES - NFL POSTSEASON RUSHING STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs TOTALS

8

NO. 0 0

YDS. 0 0

AVG. 0.0 0.0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

@CHIEFS


2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

PASSING RUSHING DATE OPPONENT P/S ATT CMP YDS PCT Y/A Y/C TD INT LG SK/YD RATE ATT YDS LG TD W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 27 15 256 55.6 9.5 17.1 4 1/0 127.5 5 21 8 0 58t 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 27 15 256 55.6 9.5 17.1 4 1/0 127.5 5 21 8 0 58t 0 1-0

CHRIS CONLEY - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1 1 1 4

GS 0 1 1 1 3

NO. 17 44 11 1 73

RECEIVING YDS AVG 199 11.7 530 12.0 175 15.9 15 15.0 919 12.6

LG 44 39 35 15 44

TD 1 0 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

LG 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0

CHRIS CONLEY - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 2 1 0 3

GS 0 1 0 1

NO. 6 2 0 8

RECEIVING YDS AVG 42 7.0 19 9.5 0.0 0 61 7.6

LG 16 12 0 16

TD 1 0 0 1

NO. 0 0 0 0

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0

CHRIS CONLEY - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

9

RET. 1 0 1 0 2

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 14 14.0 0.0 0 8 8.0 0.0 0 22 11.0

LG 14 0 8 0 14

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

LG 0 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0 0

@CHIEFS


CHRIS CONLEY - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 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

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers S 2018 TOTALS 1-1

NO 1 1

RECEIVING YDS LG 15 15 15 15

TD 0 0

ATT 0 0

RUSHING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

MARCUS KEMP - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 0 1 1

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

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

MARCUS KEMP - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1

GS 0 0

NO. 0 0

RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

NO. 0 0

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0

MARCUS KEMP - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

10

RET. 0 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 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

LG 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0

@CHIEFS


MARCUS KEMP - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 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

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1-0

NO 0 0

RECEIVING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

ATT 0 0

RUSHING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

STEVEN NELSON - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2015 Chiefs 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 7 0 0 0 0 0 2016 Chiefs 1 1 64 58 6 4 5 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 16 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2017 Chiefs 0 0 41 33 8 2 2 0.0 0.0 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2018 Chiefs 1 1 8 4 4 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL 2 2 114 96 18 6 7 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 21 1 2 0 8 8 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

STEVEN NELSON - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2015 Chiefs 2 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 2016 Chiefs 1 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 2017 Chiefs 1 1 3 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL 4 2 8 6 2 2 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 8 4 4 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 8 4 4 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

11

@CHIEFS


ERIC MURRAY - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK S 2016 Chiefs 1 0 3 3 2017 Chiefs 1 0 30 26 2018 Chiefs 1 1 9 4 NFL 3 1 42 33 TOTALS

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 1 0 6 6 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 13 1.0 9.0 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 5 1 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 9 2 13 1.0 9.0 1 0 0 0 0 5 0 1 0 12 11 1 0 0 0 0

ERIC MURRAY - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2016 Chiefs 1 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 2017 Chiefs 1 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 NFL 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 9 4 5 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 9 4 5 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

@CHIEFS


ORLANDO SCANDRICK - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK 2008 Cowboys 1 0 27 26 1 1 0 1.0 2009 Cowboys 1 0 46 43 3 1 0 1.0 2010 Cowboys 1 0 45 40 5 7 0 2.5 2011 Cowboys 1 1 49 42 7 4 0 2.0 2012 Cowboys 1 0 21 16 5 2 0 0.0 2013 Cowboys 1 0 64 59 5 4 14 2.0 2014 Cowboys 0 0 55 50 5 2 7 1.0 2015 Cowboys 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 2016 Cowboys 1 1 46 39 7 2 3 2.0 2017 Cowboys 1 1 38 32 6 4 28 0.0 2018 Chiefs 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0.0 NFL TOTALS 9 3 392 348 44 27 52 11.5

INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 9.0 1 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 9 9 0 0 0 0 0 10.0 1 1 0 0 0 9 2 1 15 5 5 0 0 0 0 0 22.0 3 1 40 40t 1 9 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 14.0 4 1 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12.0 2 2 0 0 0 12 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 1 2 2 2 0 9 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 2.0 2 1 0 0 0 8 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 3 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 69.0 15 8 42 40t 1 64 8 1 15 15 15 0 0 0 0 0

ORLANDO SCANDRICK - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK S 2009 Cowboys 2 1 4 4 2014 Cowboys 2 2 8 6 2016 Cowboys 1 1 3 3 NFL TOTALS 5 4 15 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 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 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 9 1.0 9.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 9 1.0 9.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 1 1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-0 1 1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

KENDALL FULLER - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2016 Redskins 0 0 40 32 8 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 2017 Redskins 1 0 54 42 12 2 5 0.0 0.0 4 4 3 0 10 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2018 Chiefs 1 1 6 3 3 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL TOTALS 2 1 100 77 23 2 5 0.0 0.0 1 4 4 3 0 12 1 0 0 3 1 2 0 0 0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 6 3 3 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 6 3 3 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

13

@CHIEFS


JORDAN LUCAS - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2016 Dolphins 1 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 2017 Dolphins 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 2 0 0 0 0 2018 Chiefs 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 NFL TOTALS 2 0 2 2 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 2 4 0 0 0 0

JORDAN LUCAS - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2016 Dolphins 1 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 NFL TOTALS 1 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

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 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 1-0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 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 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-0 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 1-0

14

@CHIEFS


DAMIEN WILLIAMS - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2014 Dolphins 2015 Dolphins 2016 Dolphins 2017 Dolphins 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1 1 1 1 5

GS 0 0 0 1 0 1

NO. 36 16 35 46 1 134

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 122 3.4 59 3.7 115 3.3 181 3.9 0.0 0 477 3.6

LG 19 19 23 69 0 69

TD 0 0 3 0 0 3

NO. 21 21 23 20 0 85

RECEIVING YDS AVG 187 8.9 142 6.8 249 10.8 155 7.8 0.0 0 733 8.6

LG 32 23 58 24 0 58

TD 1 1 3 1 0 6

LG 4t 4t

TD 1 1

DAMIEN WILLIAMS - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Dolphins NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1

GS 0 0

NO. 3 3

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 14 4.7 14 4.7

LG 15 15

TD 0 0

NO. 1 1

RECEIVING YDS AVG 4 4.0 4 4.0

DAMIEN WILLIAMS - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2014 Dolphins 2015 Dolphins 2016 Dolphins 2017 Dolphins 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 5 21 2 0 0 28

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 102 20.4 457 21.8 32 16.0 0.0 0 0.0 0 591 21.1

LG 26 37 17 0 0 37

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0

NO. 0 0 0 0 0 0

FC 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

LG 0 0 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0

DAMIEN WILLIAMS - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Dolphins NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 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

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1-0

15

ATT 1 1

RUSHING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

NO 0 0

RECEIVING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

@CHIEFS


KAREEM HUNT - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1 2

GS 1 1 2

NO. 272 16 288

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 1,327 4.9 49 3.1 1,376 4.8

LG 69t 13 69t

TD 8 0 8

NO. 53 0 53

RECEIVING YDS AVG 455 8.6 0.0 0 455 8.6

LG 78t 0 78t

TD 3 0 3

LG 7 7

TD 0 0

KAREEM HUNT - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1

GS 1 1

NO. 11 11

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 42 3.8 42 3.8

LG 16 16

TD 1 1

NO. 3 3

RECEIVING YDS AVG 5 1.7 5 1.7

KAREEM HUNT - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 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

LG 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

KAREEM HUNT - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

NO. 0 0

FC 0 0

PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers S 2018 TOTALS 1-1

16

ATT 16 16

RUSHING YDS 49 49

LG 13 13

TD 0 0

NO 0 0

RECEIVING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

@CHIEFS


ERIC BERRY - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK S 2010 Chiefs 1 1 94 73 2011 Chiefs 1 1 0 0 2012 Chiefs 1 1 86 73 2013 Chiefs 1 1 74 66 2014 Chiefs 1 1 37 32 2015 Chiefs 1 0 61 55 2016 Chiefs 1 1 77 62 2017 Chiefs 1 1 7 4 2018 Chiefs 0 0 0 0 NFL 8 7 436 365 TOTALS

TACKLES A TFL YDS SK 21 5 0 2.0 0 0 0 0.0 13 10 0 0.0 8 11 41 3.5 5 0 0 0.0 6 0 0 0.0 15 2 2 0.0 3 1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 71 29 43 5.5

INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 11.0 6 4 102 54t 1 9 1 0 0 5 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 1 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26.5 7 3 134 49 2 11 1 2 24 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 2 40 25 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 4 98 42t 2 9 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 37.5 14 14 374 54t 5 51 3 2 24 5 5 0 0 0 0 0

ERIC BERRY - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK S 2010 Chiefs 1 1 10 9 2013 Chiefs 1 1 9 7 2015 Chiefs 2 2 10 8 2016 Chiefs 1 1 7 4 2017 Chiefs 0 0 0 0 NFL 5 5 36 28 TOTALS

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 0 0 0 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 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 2 0.0 0.0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 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 8 2 3 0.0 0.0 2 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT 09/09 at Chargers 2018 TOTALS

17

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE INACTIVE W 38-28 0 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

@CHIEFS


DARREL WILLIAMS - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 0 0

GS 0 0

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0

NO. 0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0

NO. 0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

DARREL WILLIAMS - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 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

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers 2018 TOTALS 0-0

ATT

RUSHING YDS

LG

0

0

0

TD INACTIVE 0

NO

RECEIVING YDS

LG

0

0

0

TD W/L SCORE W 38-28 0 1-0

SPENCER WARE - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2013 Seahawks 2014 Seahawks 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 0 1 0 1 3

GS 0 0 1 0 0 1

NO. 3 0 214 0 3 220

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 10 3.3 0.0 0 921 4.3 0.0 0 32 10.7 963 4.4

LG 5 0 46 0 27 46

TD 0 0 3 0 0 3

NO. 0 0 33 0 1 34

RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0 447 13.5 0.0 0 8 8.0 455 13.4

LG 0 0 46t 0 8 46t

TD 0 0 2 0 0 2

LG 0 4 0 4

TD 0 0 0 0

SPENCER WARE - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

18

GP 2 1 0 3

GS 0 1 0 1

NO. 16 8 0 24

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 67 4.2 35 4.4 0.0 0 102 4.3

LG 23 11 0 23

TD 1 1 0 2

NO. 0 2 0 2

RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 1 0.5 0.0 0 1 0.5

@CHIEFS


SPENCER WARE - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2013 Seahawks 2014 Seahawks 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 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

LG 0 0 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0

NO. 0 0 0 0 0 0

FC 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

LG 0 0 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0

LG 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0

SPENCER WARE - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 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

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1-0

ATT 3 3

RUSHING YDS 32 32

LG 27 27

TD 0 0

NO 1 1

RECEIVING YDS 8 8

LG 8 8

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

CHARVARIUS WARD - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2018 Chiefs 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT 09/09 at Chargers 2018 TOTALS

19

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE INACTIVE W 38-28 0 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

@CHIEFS


RON PARKER - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK 2011 Seahawks 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 2012 Panthers 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 2013 Chiefs 1 0 7 7 0 0 0 1.0 2014 Chiefs 1 1 94 84 10 2 18 1.0 2015 Chiefs 1 1 78 67 11 6 17 5.0 2016 Chiefs 1 1 61 52 9 1 1 0.0 2017 Chiefs 1 1 67 58 9 0 0 0.0 2018 Chiefs 1 1 8 6 2 0 0 0.0 NFL TOTALS 6 5 315 274 41 9 36 7.0

INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC 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 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3.0 2 29 15 0 3 1 2 20 10 10 0 0 1 0 0 0 14.0 1 1 10 10 0 12 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16.0 5 3 5 5 0 12 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 1 1 1 0 12 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 2 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 2 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 33.0 6 10 45 15 0 45 5 4 27 11 11 0 0 1 0 0

RON PARKER - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK S 2013 Chiefs 1 0 0 0 2015 Chiefs 2 2 10 6 2016 Chiefs 1 1 5 4 2017 Chiefs 1 1 5 5 NFL 5 4 20 15 TOTALS

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 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 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 5 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 8 6 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 8 6 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

20

@CHIEFS


2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 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 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-0 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 1-0

JAMES WINCHESTER - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP 2015 Chiefs 1 2016 Chiefs 1 2017 Chiefs 1 2018 Chiefs 1 NFL 4 TOTALS

JAMES WINCHESTER - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP 2015 Chiefs 2 2016 Chiefs 1 2017 Chiefs 1 NFL 4 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

21

@CHIEFS


ANTHONY SHERMAN - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2011 Cardinals 2012 Cardinals 2013 Chiefs 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 8

GS 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 3

NO. 1 0 2 2 1 0 14 0 20

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 3 3.0 0.0 0 3 1.5 8 4.0 0.0 0 0.0 0 40 2.9 0.0 0 54 2.7

LG 3 0 2 4 0 0 9 0 9

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1

NO. 8 5 18 10 4 4 6 1 56

RECEIVING YDS AVG 72 9.0 39 7.8 155 8.6 71 7.1 34 8.5 11 2.8 47 7.8 36 36.0 465 8.3

LG 19 19 26 24 18 6 11 36t 36t

TD 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 3

LG 5t 3 3 0 5t

TD 1 0 0 0 1

ANTHONY SHERMAN - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 1 2 1 1 5

GS 1 0 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

NO. 2 2 1 0 5

RECEIVING YDS AVG 1 0.5 4 2.0 3 3.0 0.0 0 8 1.6

ANTHONY SHERMAN - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2011 Cardinals 2012 Cardinals 2013 Chiefs 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 4

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 0.0 0 40 10.0

LG 0 0 0 13 11 0 7 0 13

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

NO. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

FC 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

LG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

ANTHONY SHERMAN - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 0 0 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS 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

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

LG 0 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1-0

22

ATT 0 0

RUSHING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

NO 1 1

RECEIVING YDS LG 36 36t 36 36t

TD W/L SCORE 1 W 38-28 1 1-0

@CHIEFS


2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 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 1-0

TERRANCE SMITH - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK 2016 Chiefs 0 0 2 2017 Chiefs 1 0 6 2018 Chiefs 1 0 5 NFL 2 0 13 TOTALS

S 2 5 2 9

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 1 1 7 7 2 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 5 5 0 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 4 1 7 7 0 2 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 6 5 1 0 0 0 0

TERRANCE SMITH - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2016 Chiefs 1 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 2017 Chiefs 1 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 NFL 2 0 2 1 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 5 2 3 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-0 5 2 3 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

23

@CHIEFS


JUSTIN HOUSTON - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2011 Chiefs 1 1 51 43 8 10 9 0 5.5 27.5 0 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 5 3 2 0 0 0 0 2012 Chiefs 1 1 66 53 13 13 10 10.0 69.0 18 1 32 32 0 6 1 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2013 Chiefs 1 1 44 41 3 11 63 11.0 75.0 15 0 0 0 0 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2014 Chiefs 1 1 69 60 9 23 112 22.0 99.0 25 0 0 0 0 5 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2015 Chiefs 1 1 30 25 5 9 50 7.5 54.0 13 2 16 17t 1 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2016 Chiefs 0 0 21 20 1 6 21 4.0 17.0 6 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2017 Chiefs 1 1 59 46 13 16 74 9.5 54.0 20 0 0 0 0 5 0 1 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2018 Chiefs 1 1 1 0.0 0 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL 7 7 341 288 53 88 330 69.5 395.5 106 3 48 32 1 31 9 5 17 5 3 2 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

JUSTIN HOUSTON - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK S 2013 Chiefs 1 1 4 3 2015 Chiefs 2 1 3 2 2016 Chiefs 1 1 6 5 2017 Chiefs 1 1 2 2 NFL 5 4 15 12 TOTALS

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 1 7 1.0 7.0 3 1 0 1 7 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 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 1.0 1.0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 8 2.0 8.0 6 2 0 1 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 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 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 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 1-0

24

@CHIEFS


ANTHONY HITCHENS - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK 2014 Cowboys 1 0 73 57 16 3 5 0.0 2015 Cowboys 1 1 66 39 27 5 20 2.0 2016 Cowboys 1 1 78 39 39 4 21 1.5 2017 Cowboys 0 0 84 55 29 9 13 0.0 2018 Chiefs 1 1 15 7 8 2 4 0.0 NFL TOTALS 4 3 316 197 119 23 63 3.5

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 1 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 2 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 0 0 0 0 0 0 26.0 14 1 8 8 0 8 2 0 0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0

ANTHONY HITCHENS - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK S 2014 Cowboys 2 0 9 7 2016 Cowboys 1 1 7 4 NFL TOTALS 3 1 16 11

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 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 2 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 15 7 8 0.0 0.0 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 15 7 8 0.0 0.0 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

DEE FORD - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2014 Chiefs 1 0 8 4 4 5 0 0 1.5 10.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2015 Chiefs 1 0 23 21 2 6 28 4.0 25.0 10 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2016 Chiefs 1 1 38 25 13 12 54 10.0 52.5 17 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2017 Chiefs 1 1 13 11 2 4 20 2.0 16.0 7 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2018 Chiefs 1 1 4 4 0 1 6 1.0 6.0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL 5 3 86 65 21 23 108 18.5 109.5 43 0 0 0 0 6 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

25

@CHIEFS


DEE FORD - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2015 Chiefs 2 1 6 6 0 2 8 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2016 Chiefs 1 1 3 1 2 1 0 0 0.5 3.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2017 Chiefs 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL 3 2 9 7 2 2 8 0.5 3.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 4 4 0 1.0 6.0 1 6 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 4 4 0 1.0 6.0 1 6 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

BEN NIEMANN - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2018 Chiefs 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 NFL 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 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 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 1-0

26

@CHIEFS


2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 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 1-0

REGGIE RAGLAND - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2016 Bills 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2017 Chiefs 0 0 44 31 13 4 7 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2018 Chiefs 1 1 7 2 5 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL 1 1 51 33 18 4 7 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

REGGIE RAGLAND - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2017 Chiefs 1 1 9 5 4 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL 1 1 9 5 4 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 7 2 5 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 7 2 5 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

27

@CHIEFS


MITCH MORSE - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2015 Chiefs 1 1 2016 Chiefs 1 1 2017 Chiefs 1 1 2018 Chiefs 1 1 NFL 4 4 TOTALS

MITCH MORSE - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2015 Chiefs 0 0 2016 Chiefs 1 1 2017 Chiefs 0 0 NFL 1 1 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers S 2018 TOTALS 1-1

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

AUSTIN REITER - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2015 Redskins 0 0 2016 Redskins 0 0 2017 Browns 1 0 2018 Chiefs 0 0 NFL TOTALS 1 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers 2018 TOTALS 0-0

28

INACTIVE

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

@CHIEFS


JORDAN DEVEY - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2013 Patriots 0 0 2014 Patriots 1 1 2015 49ers 1 1 2016 Chiefs 0 0 2017 Chiefs 1 0 2018 Chiefs 1 0 NFL TOTALS 4 2

JORDAN DEVEY - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2013 Patriots 0 0 2014 Patriots 0 0 2016 Chiefs 0 0 2017 Chiefs 1 0 NFL TOTALS 1 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1-0

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

KAHLIL MCKENZIE - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2018 Chiefs 0 0 NFL 0 0 TOTALS

29

@CHIEFS


2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers 2018 TOTALS 0-0

INACTIVE

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

IKE BOETTGER - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2018 Chiefs 0 0 NFL 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers 2018 TOTALS 0-0

INACTIVE

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

MITCHELL SCHWARTZ - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2012 Browns 1 1 2013 Browns 1 1 2014 Browns 1 1 2015 Browns 1 1 2016 Chiefs 1 1 2017 Chiefs 1 1 2018 Chiefs 1 1 NFL TOTALS 7 7

30

@CHIEFS


MITCHELL SCHWARTZ - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2016 Chiefs 1 1 2017 Chiefs 1 1 NFL 2 2 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers S 2018 TOTALS 1-1

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

ERIC FISHER - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2013 Chiefs 1 1 2014 Chiefs 1 1 2015 Chiefs 1 0 2016 Chiefs 1 1 2017 Chiefs 1 1 2018 Chiefs 1 1 NFL 6 5 TOTALS

ERIC FISHER - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2013 Chiefs 0 0 2015 Chiefs 2 2 2016 Chiefs 1 1 2017 Chiefs 1 1 4 4 NFL TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers S 2018 TOTALS 1-1

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

31

@CHIEFS


JUSTIN HAMILTON - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2015 Packers 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2016 Seahawks 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2017 Eagles 1 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0.5 3.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2018 Chiefs 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL TOTALS 1 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0.5 3.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

JUSTIN HAMILTON - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2015 Seahawks 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2016 Seahawks 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2017 Chiefs 1 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 NFL TOTALS 1 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

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT 09/09 at Chargers 2018 TOTALS

32

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE INACTIVE W 38-28 0 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

@CHIEFS


CAM ERVING - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2015 Browns 1 0 2016 Browns 1 1 2017 Chiefs 0 0 2018 Chiefs 1 1 NFL TOTALS 3 2

CAM ERVING - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2017 Chiefs 0 0 NFL 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers S 2018 TOTALS 1-1

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

LAURENT DUVERNAY-TARDIF - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2014 Chiefs 0 0 2015 Chiefs 1 1 2016 Chiefs 1 1 2017 Chiefs 1 1 2018 Chiefs 1 1 NFL 4 4 TOTALS

LAURENT DUVERNAY-TARDIF - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2015 Chiefs 1 1 2016 Chiefs 1 1 2017 Chiefs 1 1 NFL 3 3 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers S 2018 TOTALS 1-1

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

33

@CHIEFS


ANDREW WYLIE - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2017 Colts 0 0 2018 Chiefs 1 0 NFL 1 0 TOTALS

ANDREW WYLIE - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS 2017 Chiefs 0 0 NFL 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1-0

W/L SCORE W 38-28 1-0

ALEX ELLIS - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Jaguars 2017 Jaguars 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

34

GP 0 0 1 1

GS 0 0 0 0

NO. 3 0 0 3

RECEIVING YDS AVG 11 3.7 0.0 0 0.0 0 11 3.7

LG 6 0 0 6

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


ALEX ELLIS - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Saints NFL TOTALS

GP 0 0

GS 0 0

NO. 0 0

RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

NO. 0 0

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

ALEX ELLIS - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2016 Jaguars 2017 Jaguars 2018 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

TD 0 0

ALEX ELLIS - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2017 Saints NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

NO. 0 0

FC 0 0

PUNT RETURNS YDS AVG 0.0 0 0.0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers P 2018 TOTALS 1-0

NO 0 0

RECEIVING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD 0 0

ATT 0 0

RUSHING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

DEMETRIUS HARRIS - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

35

GP 0 1 1 1 1 0 4

GS 0 0 0 0 1 0 1

NO. 0 3 7 17 18 0 45

RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 20 6.7 74 10.6 123 7.2 224 12.4 0.0 0 441 9.8

LG 0 10 25 13 51 0 51

TD 0 0 1 1 1 0 3

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

@CHIEFS


DEMETRIUS HARRIS - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 2 1 1 4

GS 1 0 0 1

NO. 1 0 2 3

RECEIVING YDS AVG 10 10.0 0.0 0 22 11.0 32 10.7

LG 10 0 13 13

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

DEMETRIUS HARRIS - NFL REGULAR SEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 0 0 1 0 0 1

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 19 19.0 0.0 0 0.0 0 19 19.0

LG 0 0 0 19 0 0 19

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

LG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

DEMETRIUS HARRIS - NFL POSTSEASON RETURN STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

RET. 0 1 0 1

KICKOFF RETURNS YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 25 25.0 0.0 0 25 25.0

LG 0 25 0 25

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

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers 2018 TOTALS 0-0

36

NO 0

RECEIVING YDS 0

LG TD ATT RESERVE/LEAGUE SUSP. 0 0 0

RUSHING YDS

LG

0

0

TD W/L SCORE W 38-28 0 1-0

@CHIEFS


TRAVIS KELCE - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2014 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs 2018 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 0 1 1 1 1 1 5

GS 0 0 1 1 1 1 4

NO. 0 67 72 85 83 1 308

RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 862 12.9 875 12.2 1,125 13.2 1,038 12.5 6 6.0 3,906 12.7

LG 0 34 42t 80t 44 6 80t

TD 0 5 5 4 8 0 22

NO. 0 0 0 1 2 0 3

RUSHING YDS. AVG. 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 -5 -5.0 7 3.5 0.0 0 2 0.7

LG 0 0 0 -5 4 0 4

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

LG 0 0 0 0 0

TD 0 0 0 0 0

TRAVIS KELCE - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM 2013 Chiefs 2015 Chiefs 2016 Chiefs 2017 Chiefs NFL TOTALS

GP 0 2 1 1 4

GS 0 2 1 1 4

NO. 0 14 5 4 23

RECEIVING YDS AVG 0.0 0 151 10.8 77 15.4 66 16.5 294 12.8

LG 0 48 24 27 48

TD 0 0 0 1 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

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS) DATE OPPONENT P/S 09/09 at Chargers S 2018 TOTALS 1-1

NO 1 1

RECEIVING YDS 6 6

LG 6 6

TD 0 0

ATT 0 0

RUSHING YDS 0 0

LG 0 0

TD W/L SCORE 0 W 38-28 0 1-0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 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 1-0

37

@CHIEFS


TANOH KPASSAGNON - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2017 Chiefs 1 0 13 7 6 3 20 2.0 17.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2018 Chiefs 1 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 NFL 2 0 15 8 7 3 20 2.0 17.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

TANOH KPASSAGNON - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2017 Chiefs 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 NFL 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 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 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 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-0 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 1-0

JARVIS JENKINS - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK 2012 Redskins 1 0 25 2013 Redskins 0 0 22 2014 Redskins 1 0 29 2015 Bears 1 1 32 2016 Jets 1 0 9 2017 Chiefs 9 0 0 2018 Chiefs 1 0 0 NFL TOTALS 5 1 126

S 11 12 19 22 7 7 0 78

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 14 2 3 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 1 3 2.0 8.0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 3 4 0.0 0.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 3 17 4.0 22.5 11 0 0 0 0 1 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 2 1 1 1.0 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 48 10 25 7.0 30.5 22 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

JARVIS JENKINS - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2012 Redskins 1 1 5 0 5 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2016 Chiefs 1 0 3 2 1 1 0 0 0.5 3.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2017 Chiefs 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 NFL TOTALS 3 1 8 2 6 1 0 0 0.5 3.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

38

@CHIEFS


2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers P 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 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 1-0

CHRIS JONES - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS TACKLES DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK 2016 Chiefs 1 0 28 17 11 5 26 2.0 2017 Chiefs 1 1 32 22 10 5 24 6.5 2018 Chiefs 1 1 3 3 0 1 2 0.0 NFL 3 2 63 42 21 11 52 8.5 TOTALS

INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 19.0 10 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 42.0 13 1 -3 0 0 7 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 61.0 23 1 -3 0 0 11 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

CHRIS JONES - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2016 Chiefs 1 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 2017 Chiefs 1 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 NFL 2 2 4 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 3 3 0 0.0 0.0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 3 3 0 0.0 0.0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

39

@CHIEFS


ALLEN BAILEY - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK S 2011 Chiefs 1 0 10 8 2012 Chiefs 0 0 5 3 2013 Chiefs 0 0 30 25 2014 Chiefs 1 1 41 27 2015 Chiefs 1 1 38 26 2016 Chiefs 1 1 7 5 2017 Chiefs 1 1 38 21 2018 Chiefs 1 1 0 0 NFL 6 5 169 115 TOTALS

TACKLES A TFL YDS SK 2 4 0 1.0 2 0 0 0.0 5 1 8 1.0 14 10 38 5.0 12 7 21 4.5 2 1 2 0.0 17 6 18 2.0 0 0 0 0.0 54 29 87 13.5

INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 9.0 3 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 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 8.0 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 32.0 8 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 22.0 8 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 0 0 0 0 0 8.0 2 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 79.0 24 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 2 3

ALLEN BAILEY - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2013 Chiefs 1 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 2015 Chiefs 2 2 4 3 1 0 0 2.0 17.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2016 Chiefs 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2017 Chiefs 1 1 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 NFL 4 3 5 3 2 1 2 0 0 0 2.0 17.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 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 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 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 0 0 1-0

XAVIER WILLIAMS - NFL REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS DATE TEAM GP GS TK S 2015 Cardinals 0 0 2 2 2016 Cardinals 0 0 6 4 2017 Cardinals 1 0 20 16 2018 Chiefs 1 1 4 1 NFL TOTALS 2 1 32 23

40

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 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 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 4 0.5 5.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 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 9 2 7 0.5 5.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

@CHIEFS


XAVIER WILLIAMS - NFL POSTSEASON STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE TEAM GP GS TK S A TFL YDS SK YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A 2015 Cardinals 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NFL TOTALS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2018 GAME-BY-GAME REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS (CHIEFS)

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS O. FUMB ST MISC DATE OPPONENT TK S A SK YDS TFL YDS QBH NO YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS TK S A FF FR S A W/L SCORE 09/09 at Chargers S 4 1 3 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 38-28 2018 TOTALS 1-1 4 1 3 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-0

41

@CHIEFS


CHIEFS ALL-TIME RECORDS


Service Most Seasons, Active Players 15 Jerrel Wilson 14 Len Dawson 14 Ed Budde 14 Nick Lowery 14 Will Shields 14 Dustin Colquitt 13 Jim Tyrer 13 Buck Buchanan 13 Emmitt Thomas 13 Jan Stenerud 13 Jack Rudnay 13 John Alt 13 Derrick Johnson 12 Johnny Robinson 12 Dave Hill 12 Bobby Bell 12 Mike Livingston 12 Henry Marshall 12 Tony Gonzalez 12 Tamba Hali

1963-77 1962-75 1963-76 1980-93 1993-06 2005-18 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+) 224 Will Shields 1993-06 212 Nick Lowery 1980-93 207 Dustin Colquitt 2005-18 203 Jerrel Wilson 1963-77 190 Tony Gonzalez 1997-08 186 Jan Stenerud 1967-79 183 Len Dawson 1962-75 183 Buck Buchanan 1963-75 182 Derrick Johnson 2005-17 181 Emmitt Thomas 1966-78 180 Jim Tyrer 1961-73 179 John Alt 1984-96 178 Jack Rudnay 1970-82 177 Ed Budde 1963-76 177 Tamba Hali 2006-17 Most Games Started, Career (Since 1968) 223 Will Shields 1993-06 174 Tony Gonzalez 1997-08 171 Jack Rudnay 1970-82 169 Derrick Johnson 2005-17 164 Tim Grunhard 1990-00 *158 Len Dawson (*Since 1962) 1962-75 157 Derrick Thomas 1989-99 157 Tamba Hali 2006-17 Most Starts, Rookie, Season 16 Sylvester Hicks 16 Art Still 16 Dave Lutz 16 Kevin Ross 16 Dino Hackett 16 Derrick Thomas 16 Greg Wesley 16 Derrick Johnson 16 Tamba Hali 16 Brandon Carr 16 Glenn Dorsey 16 Eric Berry

1

1978 1978 1983 1984 1986 1989 2000 2005 2006 2008 2008 2010

16 Dontari Poe 16 Marcus Peters 16 Kareem Hunt

2012 2015 2017

Most Consecutive Games Played, Career 224 Will Shields Sept. 5, 1993 - Dec. 31, 2006 186 Jan Stenerud Sept. 9, 1967 - Dec. 16, 1979 180 Jim Tyrer Sept. 10, 1961 - Dec. 2, 1973 168 Bobby Bell Sept. 7, 1963 - Dec. 14, 1974 166 Buck Buchanan Sept. 7, 1963 - Dec. 1, 1974 Most Consecutive Games Started (Since 1968) 223 Will Shields Sept. 12, 1993 - Dec. 31, 2006 144 Emmitt Thomas Sept. 28, 1968 - Oct. 15, 1978 134 Jim Lynch Sept. 9, 1968 - Nov. 6, 1977 120 Tim Grunhard Sept. 5, 1993 - Oct. 29, 2000 120 Tony Gonzalez Sept. 19, 1999 - Nov. 12, 2006 Most Consecutive Games Started To Begin Career 101 Gary Barbaro 1976-82 64 Brandon Carr 2008-11 51 Art Still 1978-81 41 Tamba Hali 2006-08 37 Greg Wesley 2000-02 Most Games Started, Quarterback, Career 158 Len Dawson 1962-75 88 Trent Green 2001-06 77 Bill Kenney 1979-88 76 Alex Smith 2013-17 75 Mike Livingston 1968-79 52 Steve DeBerg 1988-91 Most Consecutive Games Started, Quarterback 81 Trent Green Sept. 9, 2001 - Sept. 10, 2006 44 Len Dawson Oct. 31, 1965 - Nov. 3, 1968 35 Steve DeBerg Nov. 26, 1989 - Dec. 8, 1991 28 Steve Bono Sept. 3, 1995 - Nov. 24, 1996 28 Elvis Grbac Dec. 26, 1998 - Nov. 19, 2000 28 Len Dawson Sept. 8, 1962 - Nov. 8, 1963 Most Consecutive Seasons Starting Every Game, QB 5 Trent Green 2001-05 2 Len Dawson 1966-67

Scoring Most Points, Career (All 400+) 1,466 Nick Lowery 1,231 Jan Stenerud 517 Ryan Succop 500 Priest Holmes 462 Tony Gonzalez 442 Pete Stoyanovich

1980-93 1967-79 2009-13 2001-07 1997-08 1996-00

Most Seasons, 100 or More Points 11 Nick Lowery 1981, ’83-86, ’88-93 5 Jan Stenerud 1967-71 4 Ryan Succop 2009-10, '12-13 3 Pete Stoyanovich 1997-99 3 Lawrence Tynes 2004-06 3 Cairo Santos 2014-16 2 Lin Elliott 1994-95 2 Morten Andersen 2002-03 2 Priest Holmes 2002-03

@CHIEFS


2 1 1 1 1

Larry Johnson Jack Spikes Abner Haynes Todd Peterson Harrison Butker

2005-06 1960 1962 2001 2017

Most Points, Season (All 125+) 162 Priest Holmes 144 Priest Holmes 142 Harrison Butker 139 Nick Lowery 129 Jan Stenerud 129 Cairo Santos 129 Cairo Santos 126 Larry Johnson 125 Lawrence Tynes

8 Johnny Robinson (4 rush, 4 rec.) 8 Mike Garrett (6 rush, 1 rec., 1 PR) Most Touchdowns, Game 5 Abner Haynes vs. Oakland 5 Jamaal Charles at Oakland 4 Frank Jackson vs. Denver 4 Abner Haynes vs. Boston 4 Frank Jackson at San Diego 4 Bert Coan at Denver 4 Priest Holmes at Cleveland 4 Priest Holmes vs. Atlanta 4 Derrick Blaylock vs. Atlanta 4 Larry Johnson vs. Seattle 3 38 times; Last, Tyreek Hill at L.A. Chargers

2003 2002 2017 1990 1968 2015 2016 2005 2005

Most Points, Non-Kickers, Rookie, Season 72 Abner Haynes 1960 72 Tyreek Hill 2016 66 Billy Jackson 1981 66 Kareem Hunt 2017 48 Johnny Robinson 1960 48 Mike Garrett 1966

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 Priest Holmes (76 rush, 7 rec.) 76 Tony Gonzalez (0 rush, 76 rec.) 64 Jamaal Charles (43 rush, 20 rec., 1 KR) 61 Larry Johnson (55 rush, 6 rec.) 60 Otis Taylor (3 rush, 57 rec.) 58 Abner Haynes(39 rush, 17 rec., 1 KR, 1 fum.) Most Touchdowns, Season 27 Priest Holmes (27 rush, 0 rec.) 24 Priest Holmes (21 rush, 3 rec.) 21 Larry Johnson (20 rush, 1 rec) 19 Abner Haynes (13 rush, 6 rec.) 19 Larry Johnson (17 rush, 2 rec.) 19 Jamaal Charles (12 rush, 7 rec.) Most Touchdowns, Rookie, Season 12 Abner Haynes (9 rush, 3 rec.) 12 Tyreek Hill (3 rush, 6 rec., 2 PR, 1 KR) 11 Billy Jackson (10 rush, 1 rec.) 11 Kareem Hunt (8 rush, 3 rec.)

2

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 Sept. 9, 2018

Most Consecutive Games Scoring Touchdowns 11 Priest Holmes 2002 9 Larry Johnson 2006 8 Priest Holmes 2003-04 8 Larry Johnson 2004-05 7 Marcus Allen 1993 7 Priest Holmes 2004-05 7 Larry Johnson 2005 7 Dwayne Bowe 2010 7 Jamaal Charles 2013

Most Points, Kickers, Rookie, Season 142 Harrison Butker 2017 113 Cairo Santos 2014 108 Jan Stenerud 1967 104 Jack Spikes 1960 104 Ryan Succop 2009 Most Points, Game 30 Abner Haynes vs. Oakland 30 Jamaal Charles at Oakland 24 Frank Jackson vs. Denver 24 Abner Haynes vs. Boston 24 Frank Jackson at San Diego 24 Bert Coan at Denver 24 Priest Holmes at Cleveland 24 Priest Holmes vs. Atlanta 24 Derrick Blaylock vs. Atlanta 24 Larry Johnson vs. Seattle

1960 1966

2001-07 1997-08 2008-16 2003-09 1965-75 1960-64

2003 2002 2005 1962 2006 2013 1960 2016 1981 2017

Most Points After TD Attempted, Career 483 Nick Lowery 1980-93 409 Jan Stenerud 1967-79 164 Pete Stoyanovich 1996-00 160 Ryan Succop 2009-13 149 Tommy Brooker 1962-66 Most Points After TD Attempted, Season 60 Lawrence Tynes 2004 59 Morten Andersen 2003 52 Ryan Succop 2013 51 Morten Andersen 2002 46 Tommy Brooker 1964 Most Points After TD Attempted, 8 Tommy Brooker at Denver 8 Mike Mercer at Denver 8 Lawrence Tynes vs. Atlanta 8 Ryan Succop at Oakland

Game Sept. 7, 1963 Oct. 23, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 15, 2013

Most Points After TD Made, Career 479 Nick Lowery 1980-93 394 Jan Stenerud 1967-79 163 Pete Stoyanovich 1996-00 160 Ryan Succop 2009-13 149 Tommy Brooker 1962-66 Most Points After TD Made, Season 58 Morten Andersen 2003 58 Lawrence Tynes 2004 52 Ryan Succop 2013 51 Morten Andersen 2002 46 Tommy Brooker 1964 Most Points After TD Made, Game 8 Tommy Brooker at Denver Sept. 7, 1963 8 Mike Mercer at Denver Oct. 23, 1966

@CHIEFS


8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7

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

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 Nick Lowery 1983-89 160 Ryan Succop 2009-13 155 Jan Stenerud 1968-73 149 Tommy Brooker 1962-66 Highest Point After Percentage, Career (100 PATs) 100.00 Ryan Succop (160-160) 2009-13 100.00 Tommy Brooker (149-149) 1962-66 99.39 Pete Stoyanovich (163-164) 1996-00 99.17 Nick Lowery (479-483) 1980-93 99.09 Morten Andersen (109-110) 2002-03 97.16 Lawrence Tynes (137-141) 2004-06 Most Field Goals Attempted, Career 436 Jan Stenerud 1967-79 410 Nick Lowery 1980-93 147 Ryan Succop 2009-13 115 Pete Stoyanovich 1996-00 105 Cairo Santos 2014-17 Most Field Goals Attempted, Season 44 Jan Stenerud 1971 42 Jan Stenerud 1970 42 Harrison Butker 2017 40 Jan Stenerud 1968 Most Field Goals Attempted, Game 7 Cairo Santos at Cincinnati October 4, 2015 7 Jan Stenerud vs. Buffalo Dec. 19, 1971 6 Tommy Brooker vs. San Diego Dec. 16, 1962 6 Jan Stenerud 6 times Last; at Washington Oct. 10, 1976 6 Todd Peterson vs. Denver Dec. 16, 2001 6 Ryan Succop at New Orleans Sept. 23, 2012 6 Harrison Butker vs. Miami Dec. 24, 2017 Most Seasons Leading League, Field Goals Made 3 Jan Stenerud 1967, ’70, ’75 Most Field Goals Made, Career 329 Nick Lowery 279 Jan Stenerud 119 Ryan Succop 93 Pete Stoyanovich 89 Cairo Santos

1980-93 1967-79 2009-13 1996-00 2014-17

Most Field Goals Made, Season 38 Harrison Butker 2017 34 Nick Lowery 1990 31 Cairo Santos 2016 30 Jan Stenerud 1968, ’70 30 Cairo Santos 2015 28 Ryan Succop 2012 Most Field Goals Made, Rookie, Season

3

38 25 25 21 13 12

Harrison Butker Ryan Succop Cairo Santos Jan Stenerud Jack Spikes Tommy Brooker

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 4 Nick Lowery 4 Pete Stoyanovich 4 Todd Peterson vs. Denver 4 Lawrence Tynes Last; vs. Denver 4 Nick Novak vs. Denver 4 Ryan Succop Last; at Tennessee 4 Cairo Santos Last; at Carolina 4 Harrison Butker vs. Oakland

2017 2009 2014 1967 1960 1962 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 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 Dec. 10, 2017

Most Consecutive Games Scoring Field Goals 15 Lawrence Tynes 2004-05 14 Jan Stenerud 1970 14 Harrison Butker 2017-18 12 Pete Stoyanovich 1997-98 11 Jan Stenerud 1968-69 11 Jan Stenerud 1971-72 11 Nick Lowery 1985-86 11 Morten Andersen 2002 Most Consecutive Games Scoring Field Goals, Single Season 14 Jan Stenerud 1970 13 Harrison Butker 2017 12 Lawrence Tynes 2005 11 Morten Andersen 2002 Most Consecutive Field Goals Made 23 Harrison Butker 2017 22 Pete Stoyanovich 1997-98 22 Ryan Succop 2011 21 Nick Lowery 1990 21 Nick Lowery 1991 16 Jan Stenerud 1969 Longest Field Goal 58 Nick Lowery at Washington 58 Nick Lowery vs. L.A. Raiders 57 Nick Lowery vs. Seattle 55 Jan Stenerud at Denver 54 Jan Stenerud at Houston

Sept. 18, 1983 Sept. 12, 1985 Sept. 14, 1980 Oct. 4, 1970 Sept. 9, 1967

@CHIEFS


54 54 54 54 54 54 54

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

Oct. 5, 1969 Dec. 6, 1971 Nov. 6, 1983 Nov. 26, 1987 Nov. 16, 1997 Oct. 2, 2011 Sept. 18, 2016

Highest Field Goal Percentage, Career (100 Attempts) 84.8 Cairo Santos (89-105) 2014-17 81.0 Ryan Succop (119-147) 2009-13 80.9 Pete Stoyanovich (93-115) 1996-00 80.2 Nick Lowery (329-410) 1980-93 64.0 Jan Stenerud (279-436) 1967-79 Highest Field Goal Percentage, Season 96.3 Pete Stoyanovich (26-27) 1997 91.9 Nick Lowery (34-37) 1990 91.6 Nick Lowery (22-24) 1992 90.5 Harrison Butker (38-42) 2017 88.9 Nick Lowery (24-27) 1985 Highest Field Goal Percentage, Career At Arrowhead 88.5 Harrison Butker (23-26) 2017 88.1 Pete Stoyanovich (52-59) 1996-00 85.6 Nick Lowery (179-209) 1980-93 82.4 Ryan Succop (61-74) 2009-13 79.2 Cairo Santos (38-48) 2014-17 Attempts Less Than 40 Yards, Season (15 Attempts) 23-26 Cairo Santos 2016 24-25 Harrison Butker 2017 21-21 Nick Lowery 1991 20-20 Pete Stoyanovich 1998 16-20 Ryan Succop 2012 17-18 Cairo Santos 2014 17-18 Cairo Santos 2015 17-17 Ryan Succop 2009 16-16 Morten Andersen 2002 15-16 Ryan Succop 2013 14-15 Ryan Succop 2011 Most Field Goals, No Misses, Game 7 Cairo Santos at Cincinnati Oct. 4, 2015 6 Ryan Succop at New Orleans Sept. 23, 2012 5 Jan Stenerud at Buffalo Nov. 2, 1969 5 Jan Stenerud vs. Buffalo Dec. 7, 1969 5 Nick Lowery vs. L.A. Raiders Sept. 12, 1985 5 Nick Lowery at Chicago Dec. 29, 1990 5 Nick Lowery vs. Denver Sept. 20, 1993 5 Ryan Succop vs. Minnesota Oct. 2, 2011 5 Harrison Butker at Houston Oct. 8, 2017 5 Harrison Butker vs. Denver Oct. 30, 2017 Most Field Goals, 50 or More Yards, Career 20 Nick Lowery 1980-93 12 Jan Stenerud 1967-79 9 Ryan Succop 2009-13 7 Cairo Santos 2014-16 6 Lawrence Tynes 2004-06 5 Pete Stoyanovich 1996-99 Most Field Goals, 50 or More Yards, Season 4 Nick Lowery 1980

4

4 4 3 3 2 2 2 2

Cairo Santos Harrison Butker Nick Lowery Ryan Succop Pete Stoyanovich Lawrence Tynes Ryan Succop Cairo Santos

2015 2017 1985, 2011 1997, 2004, 2009, 2016

’88 ’98 2005, 2006 '12

Most Field Goals, 50 or More Yards, Game 2 Nick Lowery vs. Seattle Sept. 14, 1980 2 Nick Lowery at New Orleans Sept. 8, 1985 2 Nick Lowery at Detroit Nov. 26, 1987 2 Lawrence Tynes at Miami Oct. 21, 2005 2 Ryan Succop vs. Minnesota Oct. 2, 2011 2 Cairo Santos at Cincinnati Oct. 4, 2015 Most Defensive Touchdowns, Career 8 Bobby Bell (6 INTs, 2 FRs) 1963-74 5 Emmitt Thomas (5 INTs) 1966-78 5 Jim Kearney (5 INTs) 1967-75 5 Eric Berry (5 INTs) 2010-16 4 Lloyd Burruss (4 INTs) 1981-91 4 Derrick Thomas (4 FRs) 1989-99 4 James Hasty (3 INTs, 1 FR) 1995-99 4 Derrick Johnson (4 INTs) 2005-16 Most Defensive Touchdowns, Season 4 Jim Kearney (4 INTs) 3 David Webster (2 INTs, 1 FR) 3 Lloyd Burruss (3 INTs) 3 Charles Mincy (2 INTs, 1 FR) 3 Mark McMillian (3 INTs)

1972 1960 1986 1992 1997

Most Defensive Touchdowns, Game 2 Jim Kearney at Denver Oct. 1, 1972 2 Lloyd Burruss vs. San Diego Oct. 19, 1986 2 Cris Dishman at Oakland Nov. 28, 1999 2 Derrick Johnson at Denver Jan. 3, 2010 Most Special Teams Touchdowns, Career 11 Dante Hall (5 PRs, 6 KORs) 2000-06 8 Tamarick Vanover (4 PRs, 4 KORs) 1995-99 5 Tyreek Hill (4 PRs, 1 KOR) 2016-18 4 J.T. Smith (4 PRs) 1978-84 3 Dexter McCluster (3 PRs) 2010-13 2 Five players tied Most Special Teams Touchdowns, Season 4 Dante Hall (2 PRs, 2 KRs) 2003 3 Tamarick Vanover (2 KRs, 1 PR) 1995 3 Dante Hall (2 PRs, 1 KR) 2002 3 Tyreek Hill (2 PRs, 1 KR) 2016 2 J.T. Smith (2 PRs) 1979 2 J.T. Smith (2 PRs) 1980 2 Paul Palmer (2 KRs) 1987 2 Dale Carter (2 PRs) 1992 2 Dante Hall (2 KRs) 2004 2 Dexter McCluster (2 PRs) 2013 Most Safeties, Career 3 Derrick Thomas 2 Bill Maas 2 Dan Saleaumua 2 Joe Phillips

1989-98 1984-92 1989-96 1992-97

@CHIEFS


1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Buck Buchanan Willie Lanier John Lohmeyer Ed Beckman Dino Hackett Albert Lewis Rob McGovern Bernard Pollard Tamba Hali Justin Houston D.J. Alexander

Most Safeties, Season 1 Buck Buchanan 1 Willie Lanier 1 John Lohmeyer 1 Ed Beckman 1 Dino Hackett 1 Albert Lewis 1 Bill Maas 1 Rob McGovern 1 Dan Saleaumua 1 Derrick Thomas 1 Joe Phillips 1 Bernard Pollard 1 Tamba Hali 1 Justin Houston 1 D.J. Alexander

1963-75 1967-77 1973, ’75-77 1977-84 1986-92 1983-93 1989-90 2006-08 2006-16 2011-16 2015-16 1968 1974 1976 1978 1988 1988 1988, ’90 1989 1991, ’96 1994, ’97, ’98 1997 2007 2009 2012 2015

Most Two-Point Conversions, Career 3 Tony Gonzalez 1997-08 3 Travis Kelce 2013-18 2 Bo Dickinson 1960-61 2 Curtis McClinton 1962-69 2 Jerrel Wilson 1963-77 2 Reg Carolan 1964-68 2 Trent Green 2001-06 2 Eddie Kennison 2001-07 Most Two-Point Conversions, Season 2 Bo Dickinson 1961 2 Travis Kelce 2015 Most Two-Point Conversion Passes, Career 8 Len Dawson 1962-75 4 Trent Green 2001-06 4 Alex Smith 2013-17 2 Randy Duncan 1961 2 Elvis Grbac 1997-00

Rushing Most Seasons Leading League in Rushing 1 Abner Haynes 1960 1 Christian Okoye 1989 1 Priest Holmes 2001 1 Kareem Hunt 2017 Most Rushing Attempts, Career 1,375 Larry Johnson 1,332 Jamaal Charles 1,321 Priest Holmes 1,246 Christian Okoye 1,157 Ed Podolak

5

2003-09 2008-16 2001-07 1987-92 1969-77

Most Rushing Attempts, Season *416 Larry Johnson 370 Christian Okoye 336 Larry Johnson 327 Priest Holmes 320 Priest Holmes *NFL RECORD

2006 1989 2005 2001 2003

Most Rushing Attempts, Consecutive 752 Larry Johnson (336, 416) 640 Priest Holmes (327, 313) 633 Priest Holmes (313, 320) 615 Christian Okoye (370, 245) 574 Larry Johnson (416, 158)

Seasons 2005-06 2001-02 2002-03 1989-90 2006-07

Most Rushing Attempts, Rookie, Season 272 Kareem Hunt 2017 234 Joe Delaney 1981 174 Robert Holmes 1968 157 Christian Okoye 1987 156 Abner Haynes 1960 Most Rushing Attempts, Game 39 Larry Johnson vs. Seattle 38 Christian Okoye at Green Bay 37 Christian Okoye vs. Seattle 36 Larry Johnson at Houston 35 Barry Word vs. L.A. Raiders Most Rushing Yards, Career 7,260 Jamaal Charles 6,070 Priest Holmes 6,015 Larry Johnson 4,897 Christian Okoye 4,451 Ed Podolak

Oct. 29, 2006 Dec. 10, 1989 Nov. 5, 1989 Nov. 20, 2005 Dec. 22, 1991 2008-16 2001-07 2003-09 1987-92 1969-77

Most Rushing Yards, Season (All 1,000+) 1,789 Larry Johnson 2006 1,750 Larry Johnson 2005 1,615 Priest Holmes 2002 1,555 Priest Holmes 2001 1,509 Jamaal Charles 2012 1,480 Christian Okoye 1989 1,467 Jamaal Charles 2010 1,420 Priest Holmes 2003 1,327 Kareem Hunt 2017 1,287 Jamaal Charles 2013 1,121 Joe Delaney 1981 1,120 Jamaal Charles 2009 1,087 Mike Garrett 1967 1,053 Tony Reed 1978 1,049 Abner Haynes 1962 1,033 Jamaal Charles 2014 1,031 Christian Okoye 1991 1,015 Barry Word 1990 Most Rushing Yards, Consecutive Seasons 3,539 Larry Johnson (1,750, 1,789) 2005-06 3,170 Priest Holmes (1,555, 1,615) 2001-02 3,035 Priest Holmes (1,615, 1,420) 2002-03 2,796 Jamaal Charles (1,509, 1,287) 2012-13 2,348 Larry Johnson (1,789, 559) 2006-07 Most Rushing Yards, Rookie, Season 1,327 Kareem Hunt 2017

@CHIEFS


1,121 875 866 801

Joe Delaney Abner Haynes Robert Holmes Mike Garrett

2 Abner Haynes 2 Woody Green

1981 1960 1968 1966

Most Rushing Yards, Game (All 200+) 259 Jamaal Charles at Denver Jan. 3, 2010 233 Jamaal Charles at New Orleans Sept. 23, 2012 226 Jamaal Charles vs. Indianapolis Dec. 23, 2012 211 Larry Johnson at Houston Nov. 20, 2005 201 Larry Johnson vs. Cincinnati Jan. 1, 2006 200 Barry Word at Detroit Oct. 14, 1990 Most Rushing Yards, Rookie, Game (All 193 Joe Delaney vs. Houston 172 Kareem Hunt at Los Angeles Chargers 161 Mike Garrett at San Diego 158 Robert Holmes at Cincinnati 157 Abner Haynes at N.Y. Titans 155 Kareem Hunt vs. Los Angeles Chargers 150 Kolby Smith vs. Oakland

150+) 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 (102, 259) J. Charles Dec. 27, 2009 - Jan. 3, 2010 343 (132, 211) Larry Johnson Nov. 13-20, 2005 332 (131, 201) L. Johnson Dec. 24, 2005 - Jan. 1, 2006 330 (211, 119) Larry Johnson Nov. 20-27, 2005 327 (155, 172) Larry Johnson Oct. 29 - Nov. 5, 2006 321 (233, 88) Jamaal Charles Sept. 23-30, 2012 319 (121, 198) Larry Johnson Sept. 21-28, 2008 311 (154, 157) Larry Johnson Nov. 19-23, 2006 310 (197, 113) Priest Holmes Nov. 24 - Dec. 1, 2002 310 (143, 167) Larry Johnson Dec. 11-17, 2005 301 (104, 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 24 Priest Holmes 2001-07 23 Jamaal Charles 2008-16 14 Christian Okoye 1987-92 13 Abner Haynes 1960-65 Most Games, 100 or More Rushing Yards, Season 11 Larry Johnson 2006 10 Larry Johnson 2005 9 Priest Holmes 2002 8 Christian Okoye 1989 7 Priest Holmes 2001 7 Jamaal Charles 2012 Most Games, 100 or More Rushing Yards, Rookie, Season 6 Kareem Hunt 2017 5 Joe Delaney 1981 3 Curtis McClinton 1962 2 Mike Garrett 1966 2 Robert Holmes 1968

6

1960 1974

Most Consecutive Games, 100 or More Rushing Yards 9 Larry Johnson Nov. 6, 2005 - Jan. 1, 2006 5 Priest Holmes Nov. 17 - Dec. 15, 2002 4 Larry Johnson Nov. 19 - Dec. 10, 2006 4 Jamaal Charles Dec. 13, 2009 - Jan. 3 2010 3 Joe Delaney Oct. 4 - Oct. 18, 1981 3 Christian Okoye Sept. 24 - Oct. 8, 1989 3 Christian Okoye Oct. 22 - Nov. 5, 1989 3 Larry Johnson Dec. 5 - Dec. 19, 2004 3 Larry Johnson Oct. 22 - Nov. 5, 2006 3 Jamaal Charles Nov. 25 - Dec. 9, 2012 3 Kareem Hunt Sept.24 - Oct. 8, 2017 Longest Run From Scrimmage 91 (TD) Jamaal Charles 86 (TD) Jamaal Charles 84 (TD) Ted McKnight at Seattle 82 (TD) Joe Delaney vs. Denver 82 (TD) Derrick Alexander vs. Pittsburgh 80 (TD) Abner Haynes at N.Y. Jets 80 (TD) Warren McVea vs. Cincinnati 80 Jamaal Charles at St. Louis 80 (TD) Jamaal Charles at Cleveland

Sept. 23, 2012 Dec. 23, 2012 Sept. 30, 1979 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 Alex Smith 2013-17 1,253 Len Dawson 1962-75 712 Steve Fuller 1979-82 692 Trent Green 2001-06 682 Mike Livingston 1968-79 Most Rushing Yards, QB, Season 498 Alex Smith 2015 431 Alex Smith 2013 386 Tyler Thigpen 2008 355 Alex Smith 2017 274 Steve Fuller 1980 Most 10+ Yard Rushes, Career 196 Jamaal Charles 190 Priest Holmes 137 Larry Johnson 71 Marcus Allen 63 Kimble Anders Most 10+ Yard Rushes, Season 53 Priest Holmes 52 Priest Holmes 49 Larry Johnson 47 Larry Johnson 45 Jamaal Charles Most 10+ Yard Rushes, Game 10 Priest Holmes at Oakland 9 Priest Holmes at Seattle 7 Larry Johnson at N.Y. Giants 7 Jamaal Charles vs. Buffalo

2008-16 2001-07 2003-09 1993-97 1991-00 2002 2001 2006 2005 2010 Dec. 9, 2001 Nov. 24, 2002 Dec. 17, 2005 Oct. 31, 2010

Highest Rushing Average, Career (400 attempts) 5.45 Jamaal Charles (1,332-7,260) 2008-16 4.80 Abner Haynes (794-3,814) 1960-64 4.60 Priest Holmes (1,321-6,070) 2001-07

@CHIEFS


4.57 Kimble Anders (495-2,261) 4.44 Ted McKnight (528-2,344)

1991-00 1977-81

Highest Rushing Average, Season (100 attempts) 6.38 Jamaal Charles (230-1,467) 2010 6.03 Ted McKnight (104-627) 1978 5.89 Jamaal Charles (190-1,120) 2009 5.61 Abner Haynes (156-875) 1960 5.49 Mack Lee Hill (105-576) 1964 Highest Rushing Average, Game (10 attempts) 14.27 A. Haynes at N.Y. Titans (11-157) Nov. 24, 1960 12.25 T. McKnight at Seattle (12-147) Sept. 30, 1979 11.58 E. Podolak vs. Denver (12-139) Dec. 6, 1970 11.45 J. Charles at St. Louis (11-126) Dec. 19, 2010 11.29 A. Haynes vs. Oakland (14-158) Nov. 26, 1961 Most Rushing Touchdowns, Career 76 Priest Holmes 2001-07 55 Larry Johnson 2003-09 44 Marcus Allen 1993-97 43 Jamaal Charles 2008-16 40 Christian Okoye 1987-92 39 Abner Haynes 1960-65 Most Rushing Touchdowns, QB, Career 10 Alex Smith 2013-17 9 Len Dawson 1962-75 7 Mike Livingston 1968-79 6 Pete Beathard 1964-73 Rich Gannon 1995-98 Most Rushing Touchdowns, Season 27 Priest Holmes 2003 21 Priest Holmes 2002 20 Larry Johnson 2005 17 Larry Johnson 2006 14 Priest Holmes 2004 Most Rushing Touchdowns, Consecutive Seasons 48 Priest Holmes (21, 27) 2002-03 41 Priest Holmes (27, 14) 2003-04 37 Larry Johnson (20, 17) 2005-06 29 Priest Holmes (8, 21) 2001-02 29 Larry Johnson (9, 20) 2004-05 Most Rushing Touchdowns, Rookie, Season 10 Billy Jackson 1981 9 Abner Haynes 1960 8 Kareem Hunt 2017 7 Robert Holmes 1968 6 Mike Garrett 1966 Most Rushing Touchdowns, Game 4 Abner Haynes vs. Oakland 4 Priest Holmes at Cleveland 4 Priest Holmes vs. Atlanta 4 Derrick Blaylock vs. Atlanta 3 Jack Spikes vs. Houston 3 Abner Haynes vs. Boston 3 Bert Coan at Denver 3 Ed Podolak at Detroit 3 Ed Podolak vs. Cleveland 3 Billy Jackson at Oakland 3 Marcus Allen at Seattle

7

Nov. 26, 1961 Sept. 8, 2002 Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 24, 2004 Oct. 1, 1961 Sept. 8, 1962 Oct. 23, 1966 Nov. 25, 1971 Dec. 12, 1976 Oct. 25, 1981 Dec. 5, 1993

3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3

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

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 Oct. 24-31, 2004 6 Priest Holmes Dec. 14-20, 2003 5 Priest Holmes 5 times Last; Dec. 20-28, 2003 5 Larry Johnson 3 times Last; Oct. 22-29, 2006 Most Consecutive Games With Rushing Touchdown 11 Priest Holmes Sept. 22 - Dec. 8, 2002 8 Priest Holmes Nov. 23, 2003 - Sept. 19, 2004 8 Larry Johnson Nov. 28, 2004 - Sept. 18, 2005 7 Larry Johnson Nov. 20, 2005 - Jan. 1, 2006 7 Larry Johnson Oct. 15 - Nov. 23, 2006 Most Rushing Touchdowns, QB, Season 5 Steve Bono 1995 Alex Smith 2016 4 Pete Beathard 1965 Steve Fuller 1980 3 Five Players Tied

Passing Most Seasons Leading League in Passing 4 Len Dawson 1962, 1964, 1966, 1968 Highest Passer Rating Career (1,000 attempts) 94.8 Alex Smith 2013-17 87.3 Trent Green 2001-06 83.2 Len Dawson 1962-75 81.8 Steve DeBerg 1988-91 80.6 Elvis Grbac 1997-00 Highest Passer Rating, Season (200 attempts) 104.7 Alex Smith 2017 101.9 Len Dawson 1966 98.8 Len Dawson 1968 98.4 Len Dawson 1962 98.0 Damon Huard 2006 96.3 Steve DeBerg 1990 Highest Passer Rating, Rookie, Season 112.3 Todd Blackledge 1983 76.4 Patrick Mahomes 2017 66.7 Hunter Enis 1960 55.8 Steve Fuller 1979 Highest Passer Rating, Game (20 attempts) 158.3 Trent Green vs. Detroit Dec. 14, 2003

@CHIEFS


158.3 156.6 154.3 148.6 147.6 146.0

Alex Smith at Oakland Steve Bono at Seattle 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. 30, 2001 Sept. 7, 2017 Dec. 16, 1984 Sept. 5, 1993

Most 100.0+ Passer Rating Games, Career 30 Len Dawson 1962-75 29 Alex Smith 2013-17 27 Trent Green 2001-06 19 Steve DeBerg 1988-91 14 Bill Kenney 1980-88 Most 100.0+ Passer Rating Games, Season 10 Steve DeBerg 1990 9 Alex Smith 2017 7 Trent Green 2003 7 Trent Green 2004 6 Alex Smith 2015 6 Matt Cassel 2010 Most Passes Attempted, Career 3,696 Len Dawson 1962-75 2,777 Trent Green 2001-06 2,436 Alex Smith 2013-17 2,430 Bill Kenney 1979-88 1,751 Mike Livingston 1968-79 1,616 Steve DeBerg 1988-91 Most Passes Attempted, Season (All 500+) 603 Bill Kenney 1983 556 Trent Green 2004 547 Elvis Grbac 2000 523 Trent Green 2001 523 Trent Green 2003 520 Steve Bono 1995 508 Alex Smith 2013 507 Trent Green 2005 505 Alex Smith 2017 Most Passes Attempted, Consecutive Seasons 1,079 Trent Green (523, 556) 2003-04 1,063 Trent Green (556, 507) 2004-05 1,046 Elvis Grbac (499, 547) 1999-00 994 Alex Smith (489, 505) 2016-17 993 Trent Green (523, 470) 2001-02 993 Trent Green (470, 523) 2002-03 Most Passes Attempted, Rookie, Season 270 Steve Fuller 1979 54 Hunter Enis 1960 35 Patrick Mahomes 2017 34 Todd Blackledge 1983 Most Passes Attempted, Game (All 50+) 55 Joe Montana at San Diego Oct. 9, 1994 55 Steve Bono at Miami Dec. 12, 1994 54 Joe Montana at Denver Oct. 17, 1994 54 Steve Bono at San Diego Sept. 29, 1996 53 Elvis Grbac at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 53 Trent Green at San Diego Jan. 2, 2005 53 Matt Cassel at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 52 Bill Kenney at Denver Oct. 30, 1983 50 Bill Kenney vs. Buffalo Nov. 30, 1986

8

50 Steve DeBerg at Cleveland 50 Rich Gannon at Jacksonville 50 Alex Smith at Pittsburgh

Nov. 24, 1991 Nov. 9, 1997 Oct. 2, 2016

Most Passes Completed, Career 2,115 Len Dawson 1962-75 1,720 Trent Green 2001-06 1,587 Alex Smith 2013-17 1,330 Bill Kenney 1979-88 934 Steve DeBerg 1988-91 912 Mike Livingston 1968-79 Most Passes Completed, Season (All 300+) 369 Trent Green (556 att.) 2004 346 Bill Kenney (603 att.) 1983 341 Alex Smith (505 att.) 2017 330 Trent Green (523 att.) 2003 328 Alex Smith (461 att.) 2016 326 Elvis Grbac (547 att.) 2000 317 Trent Green (507 att.) 2005 308 Alex Smith (508 att.) 2013 307 Alex Smith (470 att.) 2015 303 Alex Smith (464 att.) 2014 Most Passes Completed, Consecutive Seasons (All 600+) 699 Trent Green (330, 369) 2003-04 686 Trent Green (369, 317) 2004-05 669 Alex Smith (328, 341) 2016-17 635 Alex Smith (307, 328) 2015-16 620 Elvis Grbac (294, 326) 1999-00 617 Trent Green (287, 330) 2002-03 611 Alex Smith (308, 303) 2013-14 610 Alex Smith (303, 307) 2014-15 Most Passes Completed, Rookie, Season 146 Steve Fuller 1979 30 Hunter Enis 1960 22 Patrick Mahomes 2017 20 Todd Blackledge 1983 Most Passes Completed, Game (All 30+) 39 Elvis Grbac at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 37 Joe Montana at San Diego Oct. 9, 1994 34 Joe Montana at Denver Oct. 17, 1994 34 Trent Green at Denver Dec. 7, 2003 34 Alex Smith vs. San Diego Sept. 11, 2016 33 Steve Bono at Miami Dec. 12, 1994 33 Trent Green at San Diego Jan. 2, 2005 33 Matt Cassel at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 32 Trent Green at Tampa Bay Nov. 7, 2004 32 Trent Green vs. Oakland Dec. 25, 2004 31 Bill Kenney at San Diego Dec. 11, 1983 31 Elvis Grbac vs. Carolina Dec. 10, 2000 31 Trent Green at San Diego Oct. 30, 2005 31 Alex Smith at Pittsburgh Dec. 21, 2014 31 Alex Smith at Cincinnati Oct. 4, 2015 30 Steve DeBerg vs. Cleveland Nov. 24, 1991 30 Elvis Grbac vs. Seattle Nov. 21, 1999 30 Alex Smith at Pittsburgh Oct. 2, 2016 Most Consecutive Passes Completed 15 Len Dawson at Houston Sept. 9, 1967 15 Bill Kenney vs. San Diego (13) Sept. 12, 1983 at Washington (2) Sept. 18, 1983

@CHIEFS


15 Alex Smith at Oakland 15 Alex Smith at Atlanta 14 Trent Green vs. Indianapolis

Oct. 16, 2016 Dec. 4, 2016 Oct. 31, 2004

Most Seasons Leading League *8 Len Dawson 1962, ’64-69, ’75 *NFL RECORD Most Consecutive Seasons Leading League *6 Len Dawson 1964-69 *NFL RECORD Highest Completion Percentage, Career (1,000 attempts) 65.15 Alex Smith (2,436-1,587) 2013-17 61.94 Trent Green (1,777-1,720) 2001-06 57.97 Steve DeBerg (1,616-934) 1988-91 57.94 Elvis Grbac (1,548-897) 1997-00 57.35 Matt Cassel (1,489-854) 2009-12 Highest Completion Percentage, Season (100 attempts) 67.52 Alex Smith (505-341) 2017 67.08 Alex Smith (489-328) 2016 66.43 Len Dawson (140-93) 1975 66.37 Trent Green (556-369) 2004 65.32 Alex Smith (470-307) 2015 65.30 Alex Smith (464-303) 2014 63.09 Trent Green (523-330) 2003 62.52 Trent Green (507-317) 2005 62.05 Damon Huard (206-332) 2007 Highest Completion Percentage, Rookie, Season 62.86 Patrick Mahomes (35-22) 2017 58.82 Todd Blackledge (34-20) 1983 55.56 Hunter Enis (54-30) 1960 54.07 Steve Fuller (270-146) 1979 Highest Completion Percentage, Game (20 attempts) 86.36 A. Smith at Oakland (22-19) Oct. 16, 2016 86.21 A. Smith vs. St. Louis (29-25) Oct. 26, 2014 85.00 A. Smith at Oakland (20-17) Dec. 15, 2013 84.00 A. Smith at Baltimore (25-21) Dec. 20, 2015 84.00 A. Smith at Atlanta (25-21) Dec. 4, 2016 Most Passing Yards, Career (All 10,000+) 28,507 Len Dawson 1962-75 21,459 Trent Green 2001-06 17,608 Alex Smith 2013-17 17,277 Bill Kenney 1979-88 11,873 Steve DeBerg 1988-91 11,295 Mike Livingston 1968-79 10,642 Elvis Grbac 1997-00 Most Passing Yards, Season (All 4,000+) 4,591 Trent Green 2004 4,348 Bill Kenney 1983 4,169 Elvis Grbac 2000 4,042 Alex Smith 2017 4,039 Trent Green 2003 4,014 Trent Green 2005 Most Passing Yards, Consecutive Seasons 8,630 Trent Green (4,039, 4,591) 2003-04 8,605 Trent Green (4,591, 4,014) 2004-05 7,729 Trent Green (3,690, 4,039) 2002-03

9

7,558 Elvis Grbac (3,389, 4,169) 7,544 Alex Smith (3,502, 4,042)

1999-00 2016-17

Most Passing Yards, Rookie, Season 1,484 Steve Fuller 1979 357 Hunter Enis 1960 284 Patrick Mahomes 2017 259 Todd Bleckledge 1983 Most Passing Yards, Game (All 400+) 504 Elvis Grbac at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 469 Matt Cassel at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 435 Len Dawson vs. Denver Nov. 1, 1964 411 Bill Kenney at San Diego Dec. 11, 1983 400 Trent Green at Green Bay Oct. 12, 2003 Most Games, 300 Yards Passing, Career 24 Trent Green 2001-06 15 Bill Kenney 1979-88 9 Len Dawson 1962-75 8 Alex Smith 2013-17 7 Elvis Grbac 1997-00 5 Steve DeBerg 1988-91 Most Games, 300 Yards Passing, Season 8 Trent Green 2004 7 Bill Kenney 1983 5 Elvis Grbac 2000 5 Trent Green 2003 5 Alex Smith 2017 Most Consecutive Games, 300 Yards Passing, Season 4 Bill Kenney 1983 4 Trent Green 2004 3 Elvis Grbac 2000 2 Joe Montana 1994 2 Steve Bono 1994 2 Trent Green 2001 2 Trent Green 2002 2 Trent Green 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 2001-06 215 Alex Smith 2013-17 133 Elvis Grbac 1997-00 122 Matt Cassel 2009-12 73 Steve DeBerg 1990-91 68 Joe Montana 1993-94 Most 20+ Yard Passes, Season

@CHIEFS


59 55 54 52 51 51

Trent Green Elvis Grbac Trent Green Alex Smith Trent Green Trent Green

Most 20+ Yard Passes, Game 9 Matt Cassel at Denver 7 Dave Krieg at L.A. Raiders 7 Rich Gannon at San Diego 7 Elvis Grbac at Oakland 7 Trent Green at Arizona 7 Trent Green vs. Indianapolis 7 Alex Smith at New York Jets 6 12 times; Last M. Cassel vs. CLE

2004 2000 2003 2017 2001 2005 Nov. 14, 2010 Dec. 6, 1992 Nov. 22, 1998 Nov. 5, 2000 Oct. 21, 2001 Oct. 31, 2004 Dec. 3, 2017 Dec.20, 2009

Most Seasons Leading League 3 Len Dawson 1962, ’66, ’69 Highest Passing Average, Career (1,000 attempts) 7.73 Trent Green (2,777-21,459) 2001-06 7.71 Len Dawson (3,696-28,507) 1962-75 7.35 Steve DeBerg (1,616-11,873) 1988-91 7.23 Alex Smith (2,436-17,608) 2013-17 7.11 Bill Kenney (2,430-17,277) 1979-88 6.88 Elvis Grbac (1,548-10,643) 1997-00 Highest Passing Average, Season (Qualifiers) 9.42 Len Dawson (224-2,109) 1968 8.90 Len Dawson (310-2,759) 1962 8.90 Len Dawson (284-2,527) 1966 Highest Passing Average, Game (20 attempts) 15.76 S. DeBerg at New England (21-331) Dec. 2, 1990 14.35 A. Smith at Oakland (20-287) Dec. 15, 2013 13.90 T. Green vs. Denver (21-292) Dec. 16, 2001 12.82 L. Dawson vs. Denver (22-282) Dec. 19, 1965 Most Seasons Leading League *4 Len Dawson 1962, ’63, ’65, ’66 *NFL RECORD Most Touchdown Passes, Career 237 Len Dawson 1962-75 118 Trent Green 2001-06 105 Bill Kenney 1979-88 102 Alex Smith 2013-17 67 Steve DeBerg 1988-91 Most Touchdown Passes, Season 30 Len Dawson 1964 29 Len Dawson 1962 28 Elvis Grbac 2000 27 Trent Green 2004 27 Matt Cassel 2010 26 Len Dawson 1963, ’66 26 Trent Green 2002 26 Alex Smith 2017 Most Touchdown Passes, Consecutive Seasons 56 Len Dawson (26, 30) 1963-64 55 Len Dawson (29, 26) 1962-63 51 Len Dawson (30, 21) 1964-65 51 Trent Green (24, 27) 2003-04 50 Elvis Grbac (22, 28) 1999-00

10

50 Len Dawson (26, 24) 50 Trent Green (26, 24)

1966-67 2002-03

Most Touchdown Passes, Rookie, Season 6 Steve Fuller 1979 3 Todd Blackledge 1983 1 Hunter Enis 1960 Most Touchdown Passes, Game 6 Len Dawson vs. Denver 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 vs. L.A. Chargers

Nov. 1, 1964 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 Sept. 9, 2018

Most Consecutive Games, Touchdown Passes 15 Elvis Grbac Nov. 28, 1999 - Nov. 12, 2000 14 Len Dawson Oct. 3, 1965 - Oct. 8, 1966 12 Len Dawson Sept. 8, 1962 - Dec. 2, 1962 12 Trent Green Nov. 28, 2001 - Oct. 20, 2002 Most Consecutive Passes, None Intercepted 312 Alex Smith 2015 297 Alex Smith 2016-17 233 Steve DeBerg 1990 202 Rich Gannon 1997-98 162 Matt Cassel 2010 Most Passes Had Intercepted, Career 178 Len Dawson 1962-75 86 Bill Kenney 1979-88 85 Trent Green 2001-06 83 Mike Livingston 1968-79 50 Steve DeBerg 1988-91 Most Attempts, No Interceptions, 53 Matt Cassel at Denver 47 Trent Green at Denver 45 Alex Smith at Cincinnati 45 Bill Kenney at L.A. Raiders 45 Steve DeBerg at Denver 45 Trent Green at Green Bay 45 Alex Smith at Denver 45 Alex Smith at Pittsburgh 44 Alex Smith at Denver 43 Bill Kenney at Houston 43 Rich Gannon at Denver 43 Trent Green at Denver 43 Trent Green at San Diego 43 Matt Cassel vs. Buffalo 42 Trent Green vs. Cleveland 42 Trent Green at Cincinnati 42 Alex Smith at Denver 41 Todd Blackledge vs. Houston

Game (All 40+) Nov. 14, 2010 Dec. 7, 2003 Oct. 4, 2015 Oct. 9, 1983 Sept. 17, 1990 Oct. 12, 2003 Nov. 17, 2013 Dec. 21, 2014 Nov. 27, 2016 Oct. 23, 1983 Dec. 6, 1998 Dec. 15, 2002 Oct. 30, 2005 Dec. 13, 2009 Nov. 9, 2003 Nov. 16, 2003 Sept. 14, 2014 Nov. 11, 1984

@CHIEFS


41 41 41 40 40 40

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

Oct. 9, 1995 Dec. 13, 1998 Nov. 9, 2008 Oct. 15, 1995 Oct. 16, 1997 Oct. 15, 2000

Most Passes Had Intercepted, Season 24 Trent Green 2001 23 Cotton Davidson 1961 19 Len Dawson 1963 19 Bill Kenney 1983 17 Len Dawson 1962, '67 17 Trent Green 2004 Most Passes Had Intercepted, Rookie, Season 14 Steve Fuller 1979 2 Hunter Enis 1960 2 Brodie Croyle 2006 1 Tyler Thigpen 2007 1 Patrick Mahomes 2017 1983 0 Todd Blackledge Most Interceptions, Game 6 Todd Blackledge vs. L.A. Rams 5 Cotton Davidson at Houston 5 Len Dawson vs. Oakland 5 Mike Livingston vs. Pittsburgh 5 Bill Kenney vs. San Diego 5 Steve DeBerg at San Diego

Oct. 20, 1985 Oct. 16, 1960 Nov. 23, 1969 Oct. 13, 1974 Sept. 20, 1981 Sept. 24, 1989

Lowest Percentage, Passes Had Intercepted, Career (1,000 att) 1.35 Alex Smith (2,436-33) 2013-17 2.96 Matt Cassel (1,489-44) 2009-12 3.04 Elvis Grbac (1,548-47) 1997-00 3.09 Steve DeBerg (1,616-50) 1988-91 3.54 Bill Kenney (2,430-85) 1979-88 Lowest Percentage, Passes Had Intercepted, Season (300 att) 0.90 Steve DeBerg (444-4) 1990 0.99 Alex Smith (505-5) 2017 1.29 Alex Smith (464-6) 2014 1.38 Alex Smith (508-7) 2013 1.49 Alex Smith (470-7) 2015 1.56 Matt Cassel (450-7) 2010 1.64 Alex Smith (489-8) 2016 1.69 Rich Gannon (354-6) 1998 1.83 Joe Montana (493-9) 1994 Times Sacked 195.0 Bill Kenney 192.0 Alex Smith 173.0 Trent Green 133.0 Mike Livingston 120.0 Steve Fuller 109.0 Matt Cassel 90.0 Len Dawson Times Sacked, Season 49.0 Steve Fuller 48.0 Dave Krieg 45.0 Alex Smith 45.0 Alex Smith

11

1979-88 2013-17 2001-06 1968-79 1979-82 2009-12 1962-75 1980 1992 2014 2015

42.0 41.0 39.0 39.0

Matt Cassel Bill Kenney Trent Green Alex Smith

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.) Most Pass Receptions, Career 916 Tony Gonzalez 532 Dwayne Bowe 416 Henry Marshall 410 Otis Taylor 391 Chris Burford

1976 2004 1997-08 2007-14 1976-87 1965-75 1960-67

Most Seasons, 50 or More Pass Receptions 11 Tony Gonzalez 1998-08 6 Dwayne Bowe 2007-08, 2010-13 5 Kimble Anders 1994-98 5 Eddie Kennison 2002-06 4 Chris Burford 1961, ’63-64, ’66 4 Otis Taylor 1966-67, ’71-72 4 Travis Kelce 2014-17 3 Carlos Carson 1983-84, ’87 3 Stephone Paige 1986, ’88, ’90 3 Derrick Alexander 1998-00 3 Priest Holmes 2001-03 Most Pass Receptions, Season (All 80+) 102 Tony Gonzalez 2004 99 Tony Gonzalez 2007 96 Tony Gonzalez 2008 93 Tony Gonzalez 2000 87 Jeremy Maclin 2015 86 Dwayne Bowe 2008 85 Travis Kelce 2016 83 Travis Kelce 2017 81 Dwayne Bowe 2011 80 Carlos Carson 1983 Most Pass Receptions, Consecutive 195 Tony Gonzalez (99, 96) 180 Tony Gonzalez (102, 78) 173 Tony Gonzalez (71, 102) 172 Tony Gonzalez (73, 99) 169 Tony Gonzalez (76, 93)

Seasons 2007-08 2004-05 2003-04 2006-07 1999-00

Most Pass Receptions, Game (All 10+) 14 Tony Gonzalez at San Diego Jan. 2, 2005 13 Dwayne Bowe at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 13 Dwayne Bowe at Seattle Nov. 28, 2010 12 Ed Podolak vs. Denver Oct. 7, 1973 11 Chris Burford at Buffalo Sept. 22, 1963 11 Emile Harry at Cleveland Nov. 24, 1991 11 Kimble Anders vs. N.Y. Giants Sept. 10, 1995 11 Tony Gonzalez at New England Dec. 4, 2000 11 Dante Hall at Denver Dec. 7, 2003 11 Tony Gonzalez vs. Oakland Dec. 25, 2004

@CHIEFS


11 11 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10

Jeremy Maclin at Cincinnati 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

Most Pass Receptions, Half 11 T. Gonzalez (2nd) at San Diego 10 E. Harry (2nd) at Cleveland 9 C. Burford (2nd) vs. Buffalo 9 K. Anders (2nd) vs. N.Y. Giants 9 T. Gonzalez (1st) vs. Oakland

Oct. 4, 2015 Dec. 25, 2016 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 Jan. 2, 2005 Nov. 24, 1991 Oct. 13, 1963 Sept. 10, 1995 Dec. 25, 2004

Most Pass Receptions, Rookie, Season 70 Dwayne Bowe 2007 61 Tyreek Hill 2016 55 Abner Haynes (RB) 1960 53 Kareem Hunt (RB) 2017 48 Sylvester Morris 2000 Most Receiving Yards, Career (All 6,000+) 10,940 Tony Gonzalez 1997-08 7,306 Otis Taylor 1965-75 7,155 Dwayne Bowe 2007-14 6,454 Henry Marshall 1976-87 6,360 Carlos Carson 1980-89 6,341 Stephone Paige 1983-91 Most Seasons, 1,000 or More Receiving Yards 4 Tony Gonzalez 2000, 2004, 2007-08 3 Carlos Carson 1983-84, ’87 3 Dwayne Bowe 2008, 2010-11 2 Otis Taylor 1966, ’71 2 Eddie Kennison 2004-05 2 Travis Kelce 2016-17 1 Stephone Paige 1990 1 Andre Rison 1997 1 Derrick Alexander 2000 1 Jeremy Maclin   2015 1 Tyreek Hill 2017

Most Receptions, Running Back, Season 74 Priest Holmes 2003 70 Priest Holmes 2002 70 Jamaal Charles 2013 67 Kimble Anders 1994 66 MacArthur Lane 1976

Most Receiving Yards, Season (All 1,000+) 1,391 Derrick Alexander 2000 1,351 Carlos Carson 1983 1,297 Otis Taylor 1966 1,258 Tony Gonzalez 2004 1,203 Tony Gonzalez 2000 1,183 Tyreek Hill 2017 1,172 Tony Gonzalez 2007 1,162 Dwayne Bowe 2010 1,159 Dwayne Bowe 2011 1,125 Travis Kelce 2016 1,110 Otis Taylor 1971 1,102 Eddie Kennison 2005 1,092 Andre Rison 1997 1,086 Eddie Kennison 2004 1,078 Carlos Carson 1984 1,058 Tony Gonzalez 2008 1,044 Carlos Carson 1987 1,038 Travis Kelce 2017 1,034 Jeremy Maclin 2015 1,022 Dwayne Bowe 2008 1,021 Stephone Paige 1990

Most Receptions, Tight End, Career 916 Tony Gonzalez 1997-08 308 Travis Kelce 2013-18 198 Fred Arbanas 1962-70 163 Walter White 1975-79 135 Jonathan Hayes 1985-93 111 Keith Cash 1992-96

Most Receiving Yards, Consecutive Seasons 2,429 Carlos Carson (1,351, 1,078) 1983-84 2,321 Dwayne Bowe (1,162, 1,159) 2010-11 2,255 Otis Taylor (1,297, 958) 1966-67 2,230 Tony Gonzalez (1,172, 1,058) 2007-08 2,223 Derrick Alexander (832, 1,391) 1999-00 2,188 Eddie Kennison (1,086, 1,102) 2004-05

Most Pass Receptions, Tight End, Season 102 Tony Gonzalez 2004 99 Tony Gonzalez 2007 96 Tony Gonzalez 2008 93 Tony Gonzalez 2000 85 Travis Kelce 2016

Most Receiving Yards, Game 309 Stephone Paige vs. San Diego (8 Receptions) 213 Curtis McClinton vs. Denver (5 Receptions) 210 Larry Brunson vs. San Diego

Most Consecutive Games, Pass Receptions 131 Tony Gonzalez Dec. 4, 2000 - Dec. 28, 2008 83 Stephone Paige Nov. 17, 1985 - Sept. 29, 1991 64 Travis Kelce Sept. 7, 2014 - Sept. 9, 2018 55 Eddie Kennison Dec. 9, 2001 - Oct. 2, 2005 48 Priest Holmes Sept. 9, 2001 - Sept. 19, 2004 Most Receptions, Running Back, Career 369 Kimble Anders 1991-00 288 Ed Podolak 1969-77 285 Jamaal Charles 2008-16 251 Priest Holmes 2001-07 197 Abner Haynes 1960-64

12

Dec. 22, 1985 Dec. 19, 1965 Nov. 10, 1974

@CHIEFS


(9 Receptions) 206 Stephone Paige at Denver (10 Receptions) 197 Carlos Carson at San Diego (9 Receptions)

Sept. 17, 1990 Oct. 25, 1987

Most Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, Career 26 Tony Gonzalez 1997-08 19 Otis Taylor 1965-75 18 Carlos Carson 1980-88 17 Eddie Kennison 2001-07 15 Dwayne Bowe 2007-14 Most Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, Season 6 Otis Taylor 1966 6 Carlos Carson 1983 6 Derrick Alexander 2000 6 Tony Gonzalez 2000 6 Tony Gonzalez 2004 6 Travis Kelce 2016 5 Eddie Kennison 2004 5 Eddie Kennison 2005 5 Tony Gonzalez 2007 5 Dwayne Bowe 2010 Most Consecutive Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, Season 4 Tony Gonzalez 2000 4 Travis Kelce 2016 3 Frank Jackson 1964 3 Otis Taylor 1966 3 Willie Davis 1992 3 Dwayne Bowe 2010 Longest Pass Receptions (All TDs) *99 Marc Boerigter vs. San Diego (from Trent Green) Dec. 22, 2002 92 Tommy Brooker at Denver (from Len Dawson) Nov. 18, 1962 92 Gloster Richardson at Oakland (from Len Dawson) Nov. 3, 1968 90 Frank Pitts vs. Boston (from Len Dawson) Nov. 17, 1968 90 J.J. Birden vs. San Diego (from Steve DeBerg) Nov. 18, 1990 89 Otis Taylor vs. Miami (from Len Dawson) Nov. 13, 1966 86 Stephone Paige vs. New England (from Steve DeBerg) Dec. 2, 1990 86 Derrick Alexander at Chicago (from Elvis Grbac)  Sept. 12, 1999 *NFL RECORD Most Receiving Yards, Running Back, Career 2,829 Kimble Anders 1991-00 2,739 Abner Haynes 1960-65 2,457 Jamaal Charles 2008-16 2,456 Ed Podolak 1969-77 2,377 Priest Holmes 2001-07 Most Receiving Yards, Running Back, Season 693 Jamaal Charles 2013 690 Priest Holmes 2003 672 Priest Holmes 2002 614 Priest Holmes 2001

13

590 Curtis McClinton

1965

Most Receiving Yards, Running Back, Game 213 Curtis McClinton vs. Denver Dec. 19, 1965 195 Jamaal Charles at Oakland Dec. 15, 2013 149 Abner Haynes vs. San Diego Oct. 20, 1963 130 Johnny Robinson vs. Buffalo Dec. 18, 1960 129 Spencer Ware vs. San Diego Sept. 11, 2016 127 Abner Haynes at N.Y. Titans Dec. 3, 1961 Most Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, RB, Career 5 Abner Haynes 1960-65 5 Priest Holmes 2001-07 3 Johnny Robinson 1960-71 3 Paul Palmer 1987-88 2 Curtis McClinton 1962-69 2 Larry Johnson 2003-09 2 Jamaal Charles 2008-16 Most Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, RB, Season 3 Paul Palmer 1988 2 Johnny Robinson 1960 2 Abner Haynes 1964 2 Priest Holmes 2001 Most Receiving Yards, Tight End, Career (All 1,000+) 10,940 Tony Gonzalez 1997-08 3,906 Travis Kelce 2013-18 3,101 Fred Arbanas 1962-70 2,396 Walter White 1975-79 1,541 Jonathan Hayes 1985-93 1,046 Keith Cash 1992-96 1,009 Tony Moeaki 2010-12 Most Receiving Yards, Tight End, Season 1,258 Tony Gonzalez 2004 1,203 Tony Gonzalez 2000 1,172 Tony Gonzalez 2007 1,125 Travis Kelce 2016 1,058 Tony Gonzalez 2008 Most Receiving Yards, Tight End, Game 160 Travis Kelce vs. Denver Dec. 25, 2016 147 Tony Gonzalez at New England Dec. 4, 2000 144 Tony Gonzalez at San Diego Jan. 2, 2005 140 Tony Gonzalez vs. Miami Sept. 29, 2002 140 Tony Gonzalez vs. San Diego Dec. 2, 2007 140 Travis Kelce at Atlanta Dec. 4, 2016 Most Receiving Yards, Rookie, Season 995 Dwayne Bowe 2007 789 Chris Burford 1960 678 Sylvester Morris 2000 611 Johnny Robinson (RB) 1960 593 Tyreek Hill 2016 576 Abner Haynes (RB) 1960 Highest Receiving Average, Career (200 receptions) 18.12 Carlos Carson (351-6,360) 1980-89 17.82 Otis Taylor (410-7,306) 1965-75 17.30 Derrick Alexander (213-3,685) 1998-01 16.82 Stephone Paige (377-6,341) 1983-91 16.29 Eddie Kennison (321-5,230) 2001-07

@CHIEFS


Highest Receiving Average, Season (24 receptions) 22.36 Otis Taylor (58-1,297) 1966 21.93 Stephone Paige (43-943) 1985 21.83 Frank Pitts (30-655) 1968 Highest Receiving Average, Game (3 receptions) 42.60 C. McClinton vs. Denver (5-213) Dec. 19, 1965 40.00 J. Robinson vs. N.Y. Titans (3-120) Oct. 2, 1960 39.67 Otis Taylor at Denver (3-119) Dec. 14, 1968 Most Receiving Touchdowns, Career 76 Tony Gonzalez 1997-08 57 Otis Taylor 1965-75 55 Chris Burford 1960-67 49 Stephone Paige 1983-91 44 Dwayne Bowe 2007-14 Most Receiving Touchdowns, Season 15 Dwayne Bowe 2010 12 Chris Burford 1962 11 Otis Taylor 1967 11 Stephone Paige 1986 11 Tony Gonzalez 1999 10 Stephone Paige 1985 10 Derrick Alexander 2000 10 Tony Gonzalez 2003 10 Tony Gonzalez 2008 Most Receiving Touchdowns, Consecutive Seasons 21 Chris Burford (12, 9) 1962-63 21 Stephone Paige (10, 11) 1985-86 20 Tony Gonzalez (11, 9) 1999-00 20 Dwayne Bowe (15, 5) 2010-11 19 Otis Taylor (8, 11) 1966-67 19 Dwayne Bowe (4, 15) 2009-10 Most Receiving Touchdowns, Rookie, Season 6 Fred Arbanas 1962 6 Stephone Paige 1983 6 Tyreek Hill 2016 5 Chris Burford 1960 5 Otis Taylor 1965 5 Bill Jones 1990 5 Tim Barnett 1991 5 Dwayne Bowe 2007 Most Receiving Touchdowns, Game 4 Frank Jackson at San Diego Dec. 13, 1964 4 Jamaal Charles at Oakland Dec. 15, 2013 3 Chris Burford at Oakland Sept. 23, 1962 3 Chris Burford at Boston Sept. 25, 1966 3 Otis Taylor at Denver Dec. 17, 1967 3 Otis Taylor at N.Y. Jets Nov. 16, 1969 3 Sylvester Morris vs. San Diego Sept. 17, 2000 3 Tony Gonzalez vs. Miami Sept. 29, 2002 3 Dwayne Bowe at Seattle Nov. 28, 2010 Most Consecutive Games, Touchdown Receptions 7 Dwayne Bowe Oct. 17, 2010 - Nov. 28, 2010 5 Chris Burford Sept. 8, 1962 - Oct. 12, 1962 5 Otis Taylor Oct. 23, 1966 - Nov. 20, 1966 4 Curtis McClinton Sept. 11, 1966 - Oct. 2, 1966 4 Willie Frazier Sept. 17, 1972 - Oct. 8, 1972 4 Otis Taylor Sept. 25, 1972 - Oct. 15, 1972 4 Tony Gonzalez Sept. 24, 2000 - Oct. 22, 2000

14

4 Tony Gonzalez

Dec. 7, 2008 - Dec. 28, 2008

Highest TD Catch Percentage, Season (20 recs.) 40.0 Marc Boerigter (20 recs., 8 TDs) 2002 33.3 Chris Burford (45 recs., 12 TDs) 1962 27.3 Gloster Richardson (22 recs., 6 TDs) 1968 25.0 Fred Arbanas (20 recs., 5 TDs) 1967 23.5 Fred Arbanas (34 recs., 8 TDs) 1964 Most 20+ Yard Receptions, Career 130 Tony Gonzalez 1997-08 101 Dwayne Bowe 2007-14 81 Eddie Kennison 2001-07 64 Derrick Alexander 1998-01 58 Travis Kelce 2013-18 53 Willie Davis 1991-95 Most 20+ Yard Receptions, Season 24 Derrick Alexander 2000 20 Derrick Alexander 1998 19 Tony Gonzalez 2004 19 Dwayne Bowe 2010 19 Dwayne Bowe 2011 19 Travis Kelce 2017 18 Eddie Kennison 2004 Most 20+ Yard Receptions, Game 5 Derrick Alexander at San Diego 5 Tyreek Hill at Los Angeles Chargers 4 Derrick Alexander vs. St. Louis 4 Eddie Kennison vs. Jacksonville 4 Dwayne Bowe at Denver 3 39 times; Last, Travis Kelce and Tyreek Hill at New York Jets

Nov. 22, 1998 Sept. 9, 2018 Oct. 22, 2000 Dec. 31, 2006 Nov. 14, 2010 Dec. 3, 2017

Total Yards From Scrimmage Most Attempts From Scrimmage, Career 1,617 Jamaal Charles (1,332 rush, 285 rec.) 1,572 Priest Holmes (1,321 rush, 251 rec.) 1,526 Larry Johnson (1,375 rush, 151 rec.) 1,445 Ed Podolak (1,157 rush, 288 rec.) 1,288 Christian Okoye (1,246 rush, 42 rec.) 1,073 Marcus Allen (932 rush, 141 rec.)

2008-16 2001-07 2003-09 1969-77 1987-92 1993-97

Most Attempts From Scrimmage, Season 457 Larry Johnson (416 rush, 41 rec.) 394 Priest Holmes (320 rush, 74 rec.) 389 Priest Holmes (327 rush, 62 rec.) 383 Priest Holmes (313 rush, 70 rec.) 372 Christian Okoye (370 rush, 2 rec.) Most Attempts From Scrimmage, Game 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

2006 2003 2001 2002 1989

Oct. 29, 2006 Sept. 23, 2012 Dec. Dec. Nov. Nov.

Most Yards From Scrimmage, Career 10,954 Tony Gonzalez (14 rush, 10,940 rec.) 9,717 Jamaal Charles (7,260 rush, 2,457 rec.) 8,447 Priest Holmes (6,070 rush, 2,377 rec.) 7,467 Otis Taylor (161 rush, 7,306 rec.)

10, 1989 31, 2006 5, 1989 20, 2005 1997-08 2008-16 2001-07 1965-75

@CHIEFS


7,384 Larry Johnson (6,015 rush, 1,369 rec.) Most Yards From Scrimmage, Season 2,287 Priest Holmes (1,615 rush, 672 rec.) 2,199 Larry Johnson (1,789 rush, 410 rec.) 2,169 Priest Holmes (1,555 rush, 614 rec.) 2,110 Priest Holmes (1,420 rush, 690 rec.) 2,093 Larry Johnson (1,750 rush, 343 rec.) Most Yards 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.)

2003-09 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) 6.60 Abner Haynes (993-6,553) 1960-64 6.57 Jamaal Charles (1,668-10,963) 2008-16 5.89 Kimble Anders (864-5,890) 1991-00 5.53 Curtis McClinton (916-5,069) 1962-69 5.48 Tony Reed (651-3,566) 1977-80 Yards Per Touch Average, RB, Season (200 touches) 7.0 Jamaal Charles (275-1,935) 2010 6.9 Abner Haynes (211-1,451) 1960 6.6 Abner Haynes (213-1,399) 1961 6.2 Abner Haynes (260-1,622) 1962 6.2 Jamaal Charles (230-1,417) 2009

Combined Yardage Most Combined Attempts, Career (All 1,000+) 1,668 Jamaal Charles 2008-16 1,572 Priest Holmes 2001-07 1,569 Ed Podolak 1969-77 1,526 Larry Johnson 2003-09 1,289 Christian Okoye 1987-92 1,114 Abner Haynes 1960-65 Most Combined Attempts, Season (All 300+) 457 Larry Johnson 2006 394 Priest Holmes 2003 389 Priest Holmes 2001 383 Priest Holmes 2002 372 Christian Okoye 1989 329 Jamaal Charles 2013 325 Kareem Hunt 2017 320 Jamaal Charles 2012 Most Combined Attempts, Game 41 Larry Johnson vs. Seattle 39 Jamaal Charles at New Orleans 38 Christian Okoye at Green Bay 38 Larry Johnson vs. Jacksonville 37 Christian Okoye vs. Seattle 37 L. Johnson at Houston 36 Abner Haynes at Denver 36 Derrick Blaylock at New Orleans 36 L. Johnson vs. New England 36 L. Johnson vs. San Diego

15

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 Dante Hall 2000-06 10,963 Tony Gonzalez 1997-08 10,963 Jamaal Charles 2008-16 8,447 Abner Haynes 1960-65 8,447 Priest Holmes 2001-07 8,343 Ed Podolak 1969-77 7,677 Carlos Carson 1980-89 Most Combined Yards, Season 2,446 Dante Hall 2,342 Jamaal Charles 2,287 Priest Holmes 2,236 Dante Hall 2,283 Dante Hall Most Combined Yards, Game 309 Stephone Paige vs. San Diego 307 Priest Holmes at Seattle 296 Dante Hall at Denver 290 Noland Smith at San Diego 288 Jamaal Charles at New Orleans

2003 2009 2002 2004 2005 Dec. 22, 1985 Nov. 24, 2002 Dec. 7, 2003 Oct. 15, 1967 Sept. 23, 2012

Punting Most Seasons Leading League *4 Jerrel Wilson 1965, ’68, ’72-73 *NFL RECORD 1 Bob Grupp 1979 1 Jim Arnold 1984 Most Punts, Career 1,036 Dustin Colquitt 1,018 Jerrel Wilson 421 Louie Aguiar 284 Jim Arnold 272 Bryan Barker Most Punts, Season 101 Daniel Pope 99 Lewis Colbert 98 Jim Arnold 96 Dustin Colquitt 95 Dustin Colquitt

2005-18 1963-77 1994-98 1983-85 1990-93 1999 1986 1984 2009 2007

Most Punts, Game 11 Bob Grupp vs. Baltimore 11 Jim Arnold at San Francisco 11 Kelly Goodburn vs. Cleveland 11 Louie Aguiar vs. San Diego 11 Dustin Colquitt at Chicago 10 Jerrel Wilson at N.Y. Jets 10 Jerrel Wilson vs. Denver 10 Kelly Goodburn at N.Y. Jets 10 Todd Sauerbrun at San Diego 10 Dustin Colquitt at N.Y. Jets 10 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 76 Dan Stryzinski vs. Oakland 74 Bob Grupp vs. San Diego 73 Dustin Colquitt vs. Oakland

Dec. 2, 2007 Dec. 31, 2017 Sept. 9, 2001 Nov. 4, 1979 Sept. 14, 2008

@CHIEFS


72 72 72 71 70 70 70 70

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

Most Punting Yards, Career 46,502 Dustin Colquitt 44,218 Jerrel Wilson 17,930 Louie Aguiar 11,934 Jim Arnold 11,267 Bryan Barker Most Punting Yards, Season 4,397 Jim Arnold 4,361 Dustin Colquitt 4,322 Dustin Colquitt 4,218 Daniel Pope 4,084 Dustin Colquitt

Sept. 29, 1963 Dec. 23, 2006 Dec. 19, 2010 Dec. 16, 2012 Oct. 11, 1964 Oct. 18, 1964 Nov. 28, 1968 Nov. 8, 2009 2005-18 1963-77 1994-98 1983-85 1990-93 1984 2009 2007 1999 2011

Highest Punting Average, Career (200 punts) 44.88 Dustin Colquitt (1,036-46,502) 2005-18 43.44 Jerrel Wilson (1,018-44,218) 1963-77 42.59 Louie Aguiar (421-17,930) 1994-98 42.02 Jim Arnold (284-11,934) 1983-85 Highest Punting Average, Season (50 punts) 46.83 Dustin Colquitt (83-3,887) 2012 46.03 Dustin Colquitt (87-4,005) 2013 45.89 Dustin Colquitt (89-4,084) 2011 45.70 Dustin Colquitt (65-2,971) 2015 45.53 Jerrel Wilson (80-3,642) 1973 45.49 Dustin Colquitt (95-4,322) 2007 Highest Punting Average, Game (4 punts) 57.20 Dustin Colquitt vs. San Diego (5-286) Oct. 56.40 Jerrel Wilson vs. Boston (5-282) Oct. 55.60 Louie Aguiar at Arizona (5-278) Oct. 54.75 Jerrel Wilson vs. Boston (4-129) Oct.

31, 2011 11, 1970 1, 1995 3, 1965

Highest Net Punting Average, Season (50 Punts) 41.11 Dustin Colquitt 2017 40.84 Dustin Colquitt 2015 40.78 Dustin Colquitt 2009 40.78 Dustin Colquitt 2012 40.66 Dustin Colquitt 2016 (4 Punts) Sept. 15, 2015 Sept. 9, 2018 Oct. 10, 2010 Dec. 16, 2012 Sept. 30, 2012 Sept. 21, 2014

Most Consecutive Punts, None Blocked

16

Dustin Colquitt Louie Aguiar Jerrel Wilson Jim Arnold

2013-18 1994-98 1968-71 1983-85

Punts Had Blocked, Career 12 Jerrel Wilson 4 Dustin Colquitt 2 Bob Grupp 2 Jim Arnold 2 Bryan Barker 2 Daniel Pope

1963-77 2005-18 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 423 Dustin Colquitt 2005-18 117 Louie Aguiar 1994-98 62 Bryan Barker 1990-93 58 Jim Arnold 1983-85 54 Kelly Goodburn 1987-90 Most Punts Inside the 20, Season 45 Dustin Colquitt 2012 41 Dustin Colquitt 2009 38 Dustin Colquitt 2016 37 Dustin Colquitt 2015 35 Dustin Colquitt 2013

Punt Returns

Highest Net Punting Average, Career (200 Punts) 39.74 Dustin Colquitt 2005-18 35.48 Louie Aguiar 1994-98 35.42 Jerrel Wilson 1963-77 35.13 Bob Grupp 1979-81 34.82 Bryan Barker 1990-93

Highest Net Punting Average, Game 52.50 Dustin Colquitt vs. Denver 52.20 Dustin Colquitt at L.A. Chargers 52.00 Dustin Colquitt at Indianapolis 51.86 Dustin Colquitt at Oakland 51.25 Dustin Colquitt vs. San Diego 48.80 Dustin Colquitt at Miami

378 377 256 233

Most Punt Returns, Career 220 J.T. Smith 188 Dante Hall 181 Tamarick Vanover 105 Javier Arenas 86 Ed Podolak Most Punt Returns, Season 58 J.T. Smith 58 Dexter McCluster 51 Tamarick Vanover 51 Tamarick Vanover 50 J.T. Smith

1979-84 2000-06 1995-99 2010-12 1969-77 1979 2013 1995 1999 1981

Most Punt Returns, Game 8 Ed Podolak vs. San Diego 8 De'Anthony Thomas vs. Oakland 7 J.T. Smith vs. Baltimore 7 J.T. Smith vs. N.Y. Giants 7 Tamarick Vanover vs. Detroit 7 Tamarick Vanover at Denver 7 Eddie Drummond at Oakland 7 Dexter McCluster at Jacksonville 7 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

@CHIEFS


2,322 1,930 1,882 1,029 959

J.T. Smith Tamarick Vanover Dante Hall Javier Arenas Dexter McCluster

1979-84 1995-99 2000-06 2010-12 2010-13

Most Punt Return Yards, Season 686 Dexter McCluster 640 Tamarick Vanover 612 J.T. Smith 592 Tyreek Hill 581 J.T. Smith

2013 1999 1979 2016 1980

Most Punt Return Yards, Game 177 Dexter McCluster at Washington 156 De'Anthony Thomas vs. Oakland 141 J.T. Smith vs. Oakland 130 Tamarick Vanover vs. New Orleans 128 Dante Hall vs. Arizona Longest Punt Return (All TDs) 95 Tyreek Hill at San Diego 94 Dexter McCluster vs. San Diego 93 Dante Hall vs. Denver 91 Tyreek Hill at L.A. Chargers 90 Dante Hall vs. Arizona 89 Dexter McCluster vs. N.Y. Giants Most Seasons Leading League 1 Abner Haynes 1 Noland Smith 1 Ed Podolak 1 J.T. Smith 1 Dante Hall 1 Tyreek Hill

Dec. 8, 2013 Dec. 14, 2014 Sept. 23, 1979 Dec. 21, 1997 Dec. 1, 2002 Jan. 1, 2017 Sept. 13, 2010 Oct. 5, 2003 Sept. 9, 2018 Dec. 1, 2002 Sept. 29, 2013

Highest Punt Return Average, Career (50 returns) 13.50 Tyreek Hill (66-891) 2016-18 12.14 Dexter McCluster (79-959) 2010-13 11.11 Noland Smith (53-589) 1967-69 10.87 Abner Haynes (54-587) 1960-64 10.66 Tamarick Vanover (181-1,930) 1995-99 10.60 J.T. Smith (216-2,289) 1978-84 Highest Punt Return Average, Season (12 returns) 16.28 Dante Hall (29-472) 2003 15.54 Dexter McCluster (13-202) 2010 15.36 Abner Haynes (14-215) 1960 15.18 Tyreek Hill (39-592) 2016 15.00 Noland Smith (18-270) 1968

Most Punt Return Touchdowns, 5 Dante Hall 4 J.T. Smith 4 Tamarick Vanover 4 Tyreek Hill

17

returns) Oct. 5, 2003 Sept. 13, 2010 Sept. 11, 1966 Sept. 15, 1968 Sept. 29, 2013

Career 2000-06 1979-84 1995-99 2016-18

Most Punt Return Touchdowns, Season 2 J.T. Smith 1979

J.T. Smith Dale Carter Tamarick Vanover Dante Hall Dante Hall Dexter McCluster Tyreek Hill

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 Dante Hall 212 Tamarick Vanover 84 Dave Grayson 72 Knile Davis 68 Noland Smith

2000-06 1995-99 1961-64 2013-16 1967-69

Most Kickoff Returns, Season 68 Dante Hall 2004 65 Dante Hall 2005 57 Dante Hall 2002 57 Dante Hall 2003 53 Dante Hall 2006 Most Kickoff Returns, Game 9 Noland Smith vs. Oakland 9 Paul Palmer at Seattle

1960 1968 1970 1980 2003 2016

Highest Punt Return Average, Game (3 35.00 D. Hall vs. Denver (3-105) 33.33 D. McCluster vs. San Diego (3-100) 28.67 M. Garrett at Buffalo (3-86) 28.67 N. Smith vs. N.Y. Jets (3-86) 28.25 D. McCluster vs. N.Y. Giants (4-113)

2 2 2 2 2 2 2

Nov. 23, 1967 Sept. 20, 1987

Most Kickoff Return Yards, Career 8,644 Dante Hall 2000-06 5,099 Tamarick Vanover 1995-99 2,231 Dave Grayson 1961-64 1,942 Knile Davis 2013-16 1,822 Noland Smith 1967-69 1,326 Abner Haynes 1960-64 Most Kickoff Return Yards, Season 1,718 Dante Hall 2004 1,560 Dante Hall 2005 1,478 Dante Hall 2003 1,354 Dante Hall 2002 1,308 Tamarick Vanover 1997 Most Kickoff Return Yards, Game 251 Jon Vaughn at Miami 244 Noland Smith at San Diego 234 Dante Hall vs. Philadelphia 233 Dante Hall vs. San Diego 221 Paul Palmer at Seattle 206 Noland Smith vs. Oakland Longest Kickoff Return (All TDs) 108 Knile Davis vs. Denver 106 Noland Smith at Denver 100 Dante Hall vs. Pittsburgh 99 Dave Grayson at Denver 99 Tamarick Vanover at Seattle 99 Knile Davis vs. St. Louis 97 Boyce Green at Pittsburgh 97 Tamarick Vanover at Denver 97 Dante Hall at Baltimore

(All 200+) Dec. 12, 1994 Oct. 15, 1967 Oct. 2, 2005 Nov. 28, 2004 Sept. 20, 1987 Nov. 23, 1967 Dec. 1, 2013 Dec. 17, 1967 Sept. 14, 2003 Sept. 7, 1963 Sept. 3, 1995 Oct. 26, 2014 Dec. 21, 1986 Oct. 27, 1996 Sept. 28, 2003

@CHIEFS


97 Dante Hall vs. Denver 97 Jamaal Charles vs. Pittsburgh Most Seasons Leading League 1 Dave Grayson

Dec. 19, 2004 Nov. 22, 2009 1961

Highest Kickoff Return Average, Career (50 returns) 26.97 Knile Davis (72-1,942) 2013-16 26.79 Noland Smith (68-1,822) 1967-69 26.56 Dave Grayson (84-2,231) 1961-64 25.17 Abner Haynes (52-1,309) 1960-64 24.43 Jamaal Charles (51-1,246) 2008-16 24.05 Tamarick Vanover (212-5,099) 1995-99 Highest Kickoff Return Average, Season (15 returns) 30.06 Quintin Demps (33-992) 2013 28.31 Dave Grayson (16-453) 1961 28.30 Larry Marshall (23-651) 1972 29.71 Dave Grayson (18-535) 1962 Highest Kickoff Return Average, Game 48.67 Dante Hall vs. Pittsburgh (3-146) 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)

(3 returns) Sept. 14, 2003 Dec. 8, 2002 Dec. 27, 1987 Oct. 15, 1967 Nov. 21, 1976 Sept. 28, 2003

Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Career 6 Dante Hall 2000-06 4 Tamarick Vanover 1995-99 2 Paul Palmer 1987-88 2 Knile Davis 2013-16 Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Season 2 Paul Palmer 1987 2 Tamarick Vanover 1995 2 Dante Hall 2003 2 Dante Hall 2004 Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Game 1 23 times Last; Tyreek Hill at Denver Nov. 27, 2016

Fumbles Most Opponents Fumbles Forced, Career 45 Derrick Thomas 1989-99 33 Tamba Hali 2006-17 29 Neil Smith 1988-96 23 Derrick Johnson 2005-17 13 Kevin Ross 1984-93, ’97 13 Jared Allen 2004-07 Most Opponents Fumbles Forced, Season 8 Derrick Thomas 1992 7 Jared Allen 2005 6 Derrick Thomas 1990 6 Derrick Thomas 1994 6 Tamba Hali 2006 Most Fumbles Forced, Rookie, Season 6 Tamba Hali 2006 4 Kevin Ross 1984 4 Tim Cofield 1986

Interceptions Most Seasons, Leading League 2 Johnny Robinson 1966, ’70 2 Emmitt Thomas 1969, ’74 Most Interceptions By, Career 58 Emmitt Thomas 57 Johnny Robinson 50 Deron Cherry 39 Gary Barbaro 38 Albert Lewis

1966-78 1960-71 1981-91 1976-82 1983-93

Most Interceptions By, Season 12 Emmitt Thomas 10 Johnny Robinson 10 Bobby Hunt 10 Johnny Robinson 10 Gary Barbaro 9 Emmitt Thomas 9 Deron Cherry

1974 1966 1966 1970 1980 1969 1986

Most Interceptions By, Rookie, Season 8 Marcus Peters 2015 8 Bobby Hunt 1962 7 Dale Carter 1992 6 Kevin Ross 1984 4 Bobby Ply 1962 4 Emmitt Thomas 1967 4 Lloyd Burruss 1981 4 Albert Lewis 1983 4 Eric Berry 2010 3 12players Most Interceptions By, Game *4 Bobby Ply vs. San Diego 4 Bobby Hunt vs. Houston 4 Deron Cherry vs. Seattle 3 Bobby Ply vs. Denver 3 Johnny Robinson at Baltimore 3 Albert Lewis vs. Atlanta 3 Lloyd Burruss vs. San Diego 3 Albert Lewis vs. Atlanta 3 Greg Wesley vs. Miami 3 Greg Wesley vs. New England *NFL RECORD

Dec. 16, 1962 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 Emmitt Thomas (58 INTs) 1966-78 771 Gary Barbaro (39 INTs) 1975-82 741 Johnny Robinson (57 INTs) 1960-71 688 Deron Cherry (50 INTs) 1981-91 674 Bobby Hunt (37 INTs) 1962-67 Most Interception Return Yards, Season 280 Marcus Peters (8 INTs) 2015 274 Mark McMillian (8 INTs) 1997 228 Bobby Hunt (6 INTs) 1963 214 Emmitt Thomas (12 INTs) 1974 193 Lloyd Burruss (5 INTs) 1986 175 Derrick Johnson (3 INTs) 2009 Most Interception Return Yards Gained, Game

18

@CHIEFS


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)

Longest Interception Return 102 Gary Barbaro vs. Seattle 100 Tim Collier at Oakland 100 Sean Smith at Buffalo 99 Dave Grayson vs. N.Y. Titans 99 Kevin Ross at San Diego

Oct. 19, 1986 Oct. 26, 2008 Dec. 16, 1962 Jan. 3, 2010 Dec. 11, 1977

Dec. 11, 1977 Dec. 18, 1977 Nov. 3, 2013 Dec. 17, 1961 Sept. 6, 1992

Most Interception Return Touchdowns, Career 6 Bobby Bell 1963-74 5 Emmitt Thomas 1966-78 5 Jim Kearney 1967-75 5 Eric Berry 2010-17 4 Lloyd Burruss 1981-91 4 Derrick Johnson 2005-17 Most Interception Return Touchdowns, Season *4 Jim Kearney 1972 3 Lloyd Burruss 1986 3 Mark McMillian 1997 2 Sherrill Headrick 1961 2 Emmitt Thomas 1974 2 Charles Mincy 1992 2 Jerome Woods 1993 2 Derrick Johnson 2009 2 Eric Berry 2013 2 Marcus Peters 2015 2 Eric Berry 2016 *NFL RECORD Most Interception Return Touchdowns, Game *2 Jim Kearney at Denver Oct. 1, 1972 2 Lloyd Burruss vs. San Diego Oct. 19, 1986 2 Derrick Johnson at Denver Jan. 3, 2010 *NFL RECORD

Sacks Most Sacks, Career (All 50.0+) 126.5 Derrick Thomas 1989-99 89.5 Tamba Hali 2006-17 85.5 Neil Smith 1988-96 73.0 Art Still 1978-87 69.5 Justin Houston 2011-18 51.0 Mike Bell 1979-85, ’87-91 Most Sacks, Season 22.0 Justin Houston 20.0 Derrick Thomas 15.5 Jared Allen 15.0 Neil Smith 14.5 Art Still 14.5 Art Still 14.5 Neil Smith 14.5 Derrick Thomas 14.5 Tamba Hali Most Sacks, Consecutive Seasons 33.5 Derrick Thomas (20.0, 13.5) 33.0 Justin Houston (11.0, 22.0)

19

2014 1990 2007 1993 1980 1984 1992 1992 2010 1990-91 2013-14

30.0 29.5 29.5 28.0 26.5 26.5

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)

1989-90 1992-93 2014-15 1991-92 1993-94 2010-11

Most Sacks, Rookie, Season 10.0 Derrick Thomas 9.0 Jared Allen 8.0 Tamba Hali 6.5 Art Still 5.5 Sylvester Hicks 5.5 Mike Bell 5.5 Justin Houston

1989 2004 2006 1978 1978 1979 2011

Most Sacks, Game *7.0 Derrick Thomas vs. Seattle 6.0 Derrick Thomas vs. Oakland 4.5 Justin Houston at Philadelphia 4.0 Wilbur Young at San Diego 4.0 Art Still at Oakland 4.0 Derrick Thomas vs. Buffalo 4.0 Derrick Thomas vs. San Diego 4.0 Neil Smith vs. L.A. Raiders 4.0 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 Derrick Thomas 591.5 Tamba Hali 506.5 Neil Smith 395.5 Justin Houston 293.0 Eric Hicks

1989-99 2006-17 1988-96 2011-18 1998-06

Most Sack Yards, Season 127.0 Neil Smith 114.5 Neil Smith 113.0 Derrick Thomas 111.0 Jared Allen 109.0 Derrick Thomas

1993 1992 1992 2007 1996

Most Sack Yards, Game 36.0 Derrick Thomas vs. San Diego 36.0 Derrick Thomas vs. Oakland 35.0 Neil Smith vs. Los Angeles 34.0 Vonnie Holliday vs. San Diego 33.0 Darren Mickell vs. Denver

Nov. 8, 1992 Sept. 6, 1998 Oct. 3, 1993 Sept. 7, 2003 Dec. 17, 1995

Tackles Most Tackles, Career 1,262 Derrick Johnson 999 Gary Spani 992 Art Still 927 Deron Cherry 876 Donnie Edwards 827 Kevin Ross Most Tackles, Season 179 Derrick Johnson 162 Mike Maslowski 157 Gary Spani 153 Gary Spani 151 Deron Cherry

2005-17 1978-86 1978-87 1981-91 1996-01, 2007-08 1984-93, ’97 2011 2002 1979 1981 1988

@CHIEFS


151 Donnie Edwards 151 Scott Fujita

1998, 2000 2003

Most Tackles, Rookie, Season 144 Gary Spani 140 Dino Hackett 126 Eric Berry 120 Art Still 101 Greg Wesley

1978 1986 2010 1978 2000

Most Tackles, Consecutive Seasons 326 Derrick Johnson (147, 179) 306 Gary Spani (157, 149) 304 Derrick Johnson (179, 125) 302 Gary Spani (149, 153) 301 Gary Spani (144, 157)

2010-11 1979-80 2011-12 1980-81 1978-79

Special Team Tackles Most Special Teams Tackles, Career 148 Gary Stills 1999-05 147 Greg Manusky 1994-99 97 Danan Hughes 1993-98 96 Tony Richardson 1995-05 94 Louis Cooper 1985-90 Most Special Teams Tackles, Season 34 Gary Stills 2002 29 Gary Stills 2003 29 Rich Scanlon 2005 28 Ken Jolly 1984 27 Albert Lewis 1983 27 Todd McNair 1990 27 Bennie Thompson 1992

20

27 Greg Manusky

1999

Most Special Teams Tackles, Consecutive Seasons 63 Gary Stills 2002-03 54 Gary Stills 2003-04 52 Gary Stills 2001-02 51 Greg Manusky 1996-97 50 Greg Manusky 1998-99 50 Gary Stills 2004-05

Blocked Kicks Most Opponents Punts Blocked, Career 10 Albert Lewis 1983-93 3 Bernard Pollard 2006-08 2 Ed Beckman 1977-84 2 Gary Green 1977-83 2 Sherrill Headrick 1960-67 2 Bernard Pollard 2006 1 D.J. Alexander 2015 Most Opponents Punts Blocked, Season 4 Albert Lewis 1990 3 Albert Lewis 1986 2 Sherrill Headrick 1963 2 Bernard Pollard 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 Dec. 21, 1986 65 (TD) Kevin Ross at Cincinnati Dec. 6, 1987

@CHIEFS


Games Won Most Consecutive Games Won 11 2015-16 9 2003, 2013 7 1968-69, 1969, 1995, 1997-98, 2016-17 6 1968, 1997 5 1961-62, 1966-67, 1971, 1984-85, 2014, 2016, 2017-18 Most Consecutive Games Won, Single Season 10 2015 9 2003, 2013 7 1969, 1995 6 1968, 1997 5 1968, 1971, 2014, 2016, 2017 Most Consecutive Games Won, Start of Season 9 2003, 2013 5 2017 4 1996 3 1962, 1966, 1994, 1995, 2010 Most Consecutive Games Won, End of Season 10 2015 6 1997 5 1968 4 2017 3 1960, 1963, 1966, 1967, 1971, 1972, 1984, 1986 Most Consecutive Home Games Won 13 2002-03 11 1994-96, 1997-98 10 1968-69, 2015-16 9 1970-71 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 2007-08 9 1987, 2008-09 8 1975-76, 2012 7 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 2008-09 8 1974-75 7 1975-76, 2011-12 6 1977-78, 2007-08 Most Consecutive Road Games Lost

21

9 2007-08 8 1978-79, 1985-86 6 1988, 2008-09, 2012

Scoring Most Points, Season (All 400+) 484 2003 483 2004 467 2002 448 1966 430 2013 415 2017 408 1967 405 2015 403 2005 Highest Scoring Average, Season 32.0 (448 in 14 games) 30.3 (484 in 16 games) 30.2 (483 in 16 games) 29.2 (467 in 16 games) 29.1 (408 in 14 games)

1966 2003 2004 2002 1967

Most Points, Consecutive Seasons 967 (484, 483) 2003-04 951 (467, 484) 2002-03 886 (483, 403) 2004-05 856 (448, 408) 1966-67 804 (389, 415) 2016-17 Fewest Points, Season 176 1982 (9 games) 211 2012 212 2011 225 1977 226 2007 Lowest Scoring Average, Season 13.2 (211 in 16 games) 13.3 (212 in 16 games) 14.1 (226 in 16 games) 14.9 (238 in 16 games) 15.2 (243 in 16 games) 15.9 (254 in 16 games)

2012 2011 2007 1979 1978 1988

Largest Scoring Differential, Season 201 (371 - 170) 1968 182 (359 - 177) 1969 176 (448 - 276) 1966 156 (369 - 233) 1962 154 (408 - 254) 1967 Most 40-Point Games, Season 5 2003 4 1966, 2002, 2004 3 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1967 2 1965, 1968, 1983, 2000, 2010, 2013, 2017 Most 30-Point Games, Season 8 1966, 2002, 2004 7 1999, 2003 6 1960, 1967, 2010 5 1962, 1965, 1968, 1983, 1994, 2005, 2006, 2015, 2016, 2017

@CHIEFS


Most Points Scored, Game 59 at Denver 56 at Denver 56 vs. Atlanta 56 at Oakland 54 vs. St. Louis 52 4 times; Last vs. Denver Largest Margin of 52 Kansas City (59) 49 Kansas City (49) 48 Kansas City (48) 46 Kansas City (56) 46 Kansas City (56)

Sept. 7, 1963 Oct. 23, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 15, 2013 Oct. 22, 2000 Oct. 29, 1967

Victory, Game at Denver (7) vs. Arizona (0) vs. N.Y. Jets (0) vs. Denver (10) vs. Atlanta (10)

Sept. 7, 1963 Dec. 1, 2002 Dec. 22, 1963 Oct. 16, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004

Most Consecutive Games Scoring 179 1963-76 139 1994-02 91 1987-92 84 2003-08 83 2012-18 Most Points, Two Consecutive Games 104 (56, 48) Oct. 23, 1966 - Oct. 30, 1966 101 (45, 56) Dec. 8, 2013 - Dec. 15, 2013

Most Points, Both Teams, Game 99 KC (48) at Seattle (51) Nov. 27, 1983 (OT) 88 KC (49) vs. Denver (39) Nov. 1, 1964 88 KC (54) vs. St. Louis (34) Oct. 22, 2000

Most First-Half Points, Game 42 vs. Denver Oct. 29, 1967 38 at Miami Sept. 28, 1968 38 at Washington Dec. 8, 2013 35 vs. Arizona Dec. 1, 2002 35 vs. St. Louis Dec. 8, 2002 35 vs. Atlanta Oct. 24, 2004 35 at Oakland Dec. 15, 2013

Fewest Points, Both Teams, Game 3 KC (0) at Tampa Bay (3) Dec. 16, 1979 9 KC (3) vs. Cleveland (6) Sept. 4, 1988 10 KC (7) at Denver (3) Jan. 1, 2012 12 KC (6) vs. St. Louis (6) Nov. 22, 1970 12 KC (3) at Miami (9) Oct. 20, 1974

Most First-Quarter Points, Season 158 1966 124 2013 113 2004 112 2003 103 1962

Most Points Shutout Victory, Game 49 vs. Arizona Dec. 1, 2002 48 vs. N.Y. Jets Dec. 22, 1963 41 vs. Miami Oct. 8, 1967 41 vs. San Francisco Oct. 1, 2006 34 vs. Boston Dec. 11, 1960 34 vs. Houston Nov. 26, 1989 34 vs. Cleveland Sept. 30, 1990 34 vs. San Diego Oct. 31, 1999

Most First-Quarter Points, Game 24 at Miami Sept. 28, 1968 21 12 times, last vs. Denver Dec. 25, 2016

Fewest Points, Shutout Victory, Game 14 vs. Baltimore Sept. 2, 1979 16 vs. Denver Dec. 6, 1970 17 vs. L.A. Chargers Sept. 25, 1960 Largest Fourth-Quarter Comebacks Opponent Deficit Final 17 at Green Bay 14-31 40-34 (OT) 17 vs. San Diego 10-27 33-27 (OT) 14 at N.Y. Jets 3-17 17-17 (OT) 14 vs. N.Y. Giants 3-17 20-17 (OT) 14 at Oakland 20-34 37-34 14 at Carolina 3-17 20-17

Date Oct. 12, 2003 Sept. 11, 2016 Oct. 2, 1988 Sept. 10, 1995 Nov. 28, 1999 Nov. 13,2016

Largest Second-Half Comebacks Opponent Deficit Final 21 vs. San Diego 3-24 33-27 (OT) 18 at New Orleans 6-24 27-24 17 at Buffalo 10-27 27-27 17 at Oakland 0-17 28-17 17 at Green Bay 14-31 40-34 (OT) 16 at San Diego 0-16 24-23 14 at N.Y. Jets 3-17 17-17 (OT) 14 vs. San Diego 0-14 20-17 (OT) 14 vs. N.Y. Giants 3-17 20-17 (OT) 14 at Oakland 13-27 28-27 14 at Oakland 20-34 37-34 14 at Carolina 3-17 20-17

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

22

Most Second-Quarter Points, Season 153 2003 149 1997 143 1967 137 1989, 2004, 2010 136 2005 Most Second-Quarter Points, Game 28 vs. Denver Oct. 29, 1967 28 vs. Pittsburgh Oct. 18, 1971 28 vs. Denver Dec. 7, 1980 28 vs. San Diego Dec. 22, 1985 28 at Washington Sept. 30, 2001 24 vs. Houston Oct. 30, 1966 24 vs. Indianapolis Oct. 31, 2004 Most Second-Half Points, Game 35 at Denver Oct. 23, 1966 35 at Denver Dec. 1, 1972 35 at Tennessee Dec. 13, 2004 34 at Denver Jan. 3, 2010 31 at Denver Sept. 7, 1963 30 vs. Cleveland Dec. 14, 1975 Most Third-Quarter Points, Season 109 1963 106 1964 105 1998 94 1966 93 1999, 2004 Most Third-Quarter Points, Game 22 vs. New York Jets Nov. 5, 1967 22 vs. Buffalo Oct. 18, 1969 22 vs. Oakland Nov. 26, 1961

@CHIEFS


21 21 21 21

at Buffalo at Denver at Denver vs. Oakland

Nov. 6, 1960 Sept. 7, 1963 Oct. 1, 1972 Oct. 3, 1977

Most Fourth-Quarter Points, Season 168 2002 140 2004 131 2003 129 1962 127 1960 Most Fourth-Quarter Points, Game 23 at Buffalo Nov. 2, 1969 23 at Cleveland Sept. 8, 2002 22 at N.Y. Titans Nov. 24, 1960 21 at New England Sept. 7, 2017 20 at Green Bay Oct. 12, 2003 Most Touchdowns, Season 63 2003 62 2004 57 2002 55 1966 52 2013 Most Touchdowns, Consecutive Seasons 125 (63, 62) 2003-04 120 (57, 63) 2002-03 108 (62, 46) 2004-05 104 (55, 49) 1966-67 96 (50, 46) 1962-63 Fewest Touchdowns, Season 17 1982 (9 games) 18 2012 20 2011 23 1973 24 1988, 2007 Most Touchdowns, Game 8 at Denver 8 at Denver 8 vs. Atlanta 8 at Oakland 7 12 times; Last at Tennessee

Fewest Offensive Touchdowns, Season 13 1982 (9 games) 17 2012 18 2011 21 1973, 1974 23 2007 24 1970, 1977, 1987, 1988 25 1979 Most Return Touchdowns, Season 11 1992, 1999, 2013 8 2016 7 1995, 1997, 2003 Most Defensive Touchdowns, Season 9 1999 8 1992 6 2013, 2015 5 1972, 1974, 1977 4 1960, 1967, 1981, 1986, 1995, 1997, 2016 Fewest Defensive Touchdowns, Season 0 1962, 1976, 1978, 1988, 2006, 2012 1 1961, 1975, 1976, 1989, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2007 Most Defensive Touchdowns, Game 3 vs. Denver Dec. 27, 1992 2 15 times, last at Baltimore Dec. 20, 2015 Most Interception Return TDs, Season 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

Sept. 7, 1963 Oct. 23, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 15, 2013 Dec. 13, 2004

Most Touchdowns, Both Teams, Game 13 Kansas City (7) at Seattle (6) Nov. 27, 1983 (OT) 13 Kansas City (8) at Oakland (5) Dec. 15, 2013 12 Kansas City (7) vs. Denver (5) Nov. 1, 1964 12 Kansas City (7) vs. St. Louis (5) Oct. 22, 2000 12 Kansas City (7) at Tennesse (5) Dec. 13, 2004 Most Consecutive Games Scoring Touchdowns 96 1963-70 64 1997-01 52 1960-63 35 1994-96 33 1976-78 Most Offensive Touchdowns, Season 58 2004 56 2003 53 2002 50 1962, 1966

23

46 1964

Most Special Teams Touchdowns, Season 5 1986, 1987, 2013 4 1995, 2003, 2016 3 1969, 1992, 2002, 2009 Most Special Teams Touchdowns, Game 3 at Pittsburgh Dec. 21, 1986 2 vs. Cleveland Sept. 30, 1990 2 vs. St. Louis Dec. 8, 2002 2 at Washington Dec. 8, 2013 Most Points After Touchdown, Season 58 2003, 2004 54 2002 52 2013 48 1966 47 1962 Fewest Points After Touchdown, Season 17 1982 (9 games), 2012 20 2011 21 1973, 2007 23 1988 Most Points After Touchdown, Game 8 at Denver Sept. 8, 1963

@CHIEFS


8 at Denver 8 vs. Atlanta 8 at Oakland

Oct. 23, 1966 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 15, 2013

Most Two-Point Attempts, Season 6 2001 5 1997 4 1961, 1994, 2008, 2015 3 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 10 times, Last; 2009 Most Two-Point Attempts, Game 2 vs. Buffalo Oct. 18, 1964 2 at Houston Oct. 24, 1965 2 at St. Louis Oct. 26, 1997 2 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 2 at Greeb Bay Sept. 28, 2015 2 at Oakland Nov. 20, 2015 Most Two-Point Conversions, Game 2 at Houston Oct. 24, 1965 2 at St. Louis Oct. 26, 1997 Most Field Goals Attempted, Season 45 2017 44 1971 42 1970 40 1968 Fewest Field Goals Attempted, Season 17 1964 18 1977 20 2003 22 1979, 2008 Most Field Goals Attempted, Game 7 vs. Buffalo Dec. 19, 1971 7 vs. Cincinnati Oct. 4, 2015 6 8 times; Last at New Orleans Sept. 23, 2012 Most Field Goals Attempted, Both Teams, Game 10 Kansas City (7) vs. Buffalo (3) Dec. 19, 1971 10 Kansas City (5) at San Diego (5) Oct. 29, 1972 10 Kansas City (6) vs. Denver (4) Dec. 16, 2001 10 Kansas City (5) vs. Denver (5) Sept. 28, 2008 Most Field Goals Made, Season 41 2017 34 1990 31 2016 30 1968, 1970, 2015 28 2012 27 1969, 1988, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2005 Fewest Field Goals Made, Season 7 1961 8 1963, 1964 12 1979 Most Field Goals Made, Game 7 at Cincinnati Oct. 4, 2015 6 at New Orleans Sept. 23, 2012

24

5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5

at Buffalo vs. Buffalo vs. Buffalo vs. L.A. Raiders vs. Cincinnati at Chicago vs. Denver vs. Minnesota at Houston vs. Denver vs. Miami

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) Sept. 29, 1996 *NFL RECORD 8 Kansas City (5) vs. Buffalo (3) Dec. 19, 1971 8 Kansas City (4) vs. Denver (4) Sept. 28, 2008 7 Kansas City (5) vs. Buffalo (2) Dec. 7, 1969 7 Kansas City (4) vs. Denver (3) Dec. 16, 2001 7 Kansas City (3) at Indianapolis (4) Oct. 10, 2010 7 Kansas City (6) at New Orleans (1) Sept. 23, 2012 7 Kansas City (7) at Cincinnati (0) Oct. 4, 2015 7 Kansas City (5) vs. Denver (2) Oct. 30, 2017 7 Kansas City (5) vs. Miami (2) Dec. 24, 2017 Most Consecutive Games Scoring Field Goals 18 2001-02 16 1970, 2017-18 15 2005 11 1968-69, 1971-72, 1985-86 10 1980-81, 2013 Most Safeties, Season 3 1988, 1997 Most Safeties, Game 1 21 times; Last at Denver

Nov. 27, 2016

First Downs Most First Downs, Season *398 2004 348 2003 347 2005 343 2002 324 2001 *NFL RECORD Fewest First Downs, Season 163 1982 (9 games) 183 1970 208 1973 Most First Downs, Game (All 30+) 36 vs. Atlanta Oct. 24, 2004 33 vs. Indianapolis Oct. 31, 2004 32 at Houston Oct. 24, 1965 32 at Seattle Nov. 24, 2002 32 vs. Oakland Dec. 25, 2004 31 at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 30 vs. Cleveland Nov. 9, 2003 30 at L.A. Raiders Dec. 22, 1991 30 vs. Seattle Oct. 29, 2006 30 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010

@CHIEFS


Fewest First Downs, Game 4 at Tampa Bay 5 at San Diego 7 at Boston 7 at Oakland 7 at Denver 7 at Oakland 8 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 KC (32) at Seattle (32) Nov. 24, 2002 62 KC (31) at Oakland (31) Nov. 5, 2000 59 KC (26) at Seattle (33) Nov. 27, 1983 (OT) 58 KC (24) at Denver (34) Nov. 18, 1974 Fewest First Downs, Both Teams, Games 15 Kansas City (7) vs. Denver (8) Dec. 6, 1970 18 Kansas City (7) at Boston (11) Oct. 23, 1964 Most Rushing First Downs, Season 160 1978, 1981 140 2002 138 2004, 2005 130 1980 129 1969, 1997, 2010 Fewest Rushing First Downs, Season 66 2007 71 1982 (9 games) 79 1985 83 1970, 1983, 1986 84 2000 Most Rushing First Downs, Game 21 vs. Atlanta Oct. 24, 2004 20 vs. Houston Oct. 1, 1961 18 vs. Oakland Oct. 20, 1968 18 vs. Seattle Nov. 22, 1981 18 at Detroit Nov. 28, 1996 16 8 times; Last vs. Buffalo Oct. 7, 1991 Fewest Rushing First Downs, Game *0 at Cincinnati Nov. 24, 1974 Nov. 10, 1985 0 vs. Pittsburgh Dec. 6, 1992 0 at L.A. Raiders Oct. 27, 1996 0 at Denver Oct. 8, 2006 0 at Arizona Oct. 7, 2007 0 vs. Jacksonville Dec. 16, 2012 0 at Oakland 1 12 times; Last vs. Pittsburgh Oct. 15, 2017 *NFL RECORD Most Passing First Downs, Season 228 2004 211 1994 208 1983 207 2000 201 2003 Fewest Passing First Downs, Season 79 1982 (9 games) 86 1970 89 1968 91 1979 93 1973

25

Most Passing First Downs, Game (All 20+) 26 vs. Oakland Dec. 25, 2004 24 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 23 at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 21 at Dallas Nov. 20, 1983 21 at Denver Oct. 17, 1994 21 at Denver Dec. 7, 2003 21 at Houston Oct. 8, 2017 20 vs. Indianapolis Oct. 31, 2004 Fewest Passing First Downs, Game 1 vs. Oakland Oct. 20, 1968 1 vs. Houston Sept. 10, 1978 1 at Tampa Bay Dec. 16, 1979 2 5 times; Last at Denver Dec. 30, 2012 Most Penalty First Downs, Season 34 2013 33 1996, 1998 32 2004, 2015 30 2000 29 1966, 1978, 1984, 1986, 2017 Fewest Penalty First Downs, Season 4 1969 8 1965 9 1973 10 1999 11 1968, 1972 Most Penalty First Downs, Game 9 vs. L.A. Raiders 7 vs. L.A. Raiders 7 vs. Seattle 6 at Tennessee 6 at Oakland 5 9 times; Last vs. Washington

Oct. 3, 1993 Sept. 17, 1989 Oct. 17, 1996 Dec. 13, 2004 Nov. 7, 2010 Oct. 2, 2017

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 6,695 2004 6,192 2005 6,007 2017 6,000 2002 5,910 2003 Most Net Yards, Consecutive Seasons 12,887 (6,695, 6,192) 2004-05 12,605 (5,910, 6,695) 2003-04 11,910 (6,000, 5,910) 2002-03 11,673 (5,673, 6,000) 2001-02 11,495 (5,488, 6,007) 2016-17 Fewest Net Yards, Season 2,498 1982 (9 games) 3,536 1973 3,577 1970 3,828 1974 3,936 1977 Most Net Yards, Game (All 500+) 614 at Denver Oct. 23, 1966

@CHIEFS


590 566 552 551 546 542 540 537 537 537 524 521 520 513 512 510 510 508 507 506 504 504 503 502 500

vs. Indianapolis vs. Detroit at Seattle vs. Buffalo at Washington at Houston vs. Atlanta at San Diego vs. Cincinnati at New England 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 at Buffalo at Oakland

Fewest Net Yards, Game 62 vs. Oakland 67 at San Diego 80 at Tampa Bay 104 at Buffalo 106 at Oakland

Oct. 31, 2004 Oct. 14, 1990 Nov. 24, 2002 Sept. 30, 1962 Sept. 30, 2001 Oct. 24, 1965 Oct. 24, 2004 Dec. 11, 1983 Jan. 1, 2006 Sept. 7, 2017 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 Oct. 3, 1976 Dec. 5, 2004 Nov. 8, 1963 Dec. 12, 2010 Dec. 16, 1979 Oct. 29, 1973 Dec. 8, 1973

Most Net Yards, Both Teams, Game 1,095 KC (590) vs. Indianapolis (505) 1,086 KC (552) at Seattle (534) 1,036 KC (524) at Denver (512) 1,013 KC (537) at San Diego (476) 986 KC (513) at Oakland (473)

Oct. 31, 2004 Nov. 24, 2002 Jan. 3, 2010 Dec. 11, 1983 Nov. 5, 2000

Fewest Net Yards, Both Teams, Game 323 KC (178) at N.Y. Jets (145) Nov. 7, 1971 335 KC (244) vs. Houston (91) Oct. 12, 1969 338 KC (62) vs. Oakland (276) Nov. 8, 1963 Most Games, 400 or More Net Yards, Season 9 2004 7 2005, 2010, 2017 6 1994, 2000, 2002 5 1969, 2001, 2003 4 1960, 1961, 1962, 1976, 1983, 1997, 2016 3 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1974, 1981, 1989,1990, 1991, 2009, 2011, 2012 Most Consecutive Games, 400 or More Net Yards 5 2004 4 1976, 2005 3 1974, 2000, 2010 Most Games, 300 or More Net Yards 15 2004 14 2005 13 2002, 2017 12 1989, 1995, 1999, 2003, 2010, 2013, 2015 11 1966, 1983, 1991, 1996, 2016

26

10 1964, 1968, 1981, 1984, 1993, 1994, 2000, 2001, 2014 Most Consecutive Games, 300 or More Net Yards 16 2004-05 13 2001-02 11 2005 10 1966-67, 1989, 2003 8 2010 7 1981, 1991 Most Plays, Season 1,098 1994 1,089 2004 1,074 1983 1,063 2010 1,059 1995 1,059 2005 Fewest Plays, Season 573 1982 (9 games) 712 2017 775 1970 831 1968 833 1965 836 1971 Most Plays, Game 92 at New Orleans 91 at Cincinnati 86 vs. N.Y. Giants 86 vs. Seattle 85 at Jacksonville 84 vs. Denver 84 at San Diego

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 at Oakland 38 at Tampa Bay 41 at San Diego 41 at San Diego 42 at Oakland 44 at Detroit 44 at New England 44 at Baltimore

Dec. 12, 1970 Dec. 16, 1979 Oct. 7, 1962 Dec. 12, 2010 Dec. 8, 1973 Nov. 25, 1971 Oct. 11, 1998 Sept. 13, 2009

Rushing Most Rushing Attempts, Season 663 1978 610 1981 569 1979 559 1989 556 2010 552 1980 Most Rushing Attempts, Consecutive Seasons 1,232 (663, 569) 1978-79 1,162 (552, 610) 1980-81 1,121 (569, 552) 1979-80 1,089 (456, 663) 1977-78 1,063 (559, 504) 1989-90 Fewest Rushing Attempts, Season 269 1982 (9 games) 379 2008

@CHIEFS


383 2000, 2007 387 1983 400 1963 Most Rushing Attempts, Game 69 at Cincinnati Sept. 3, 1978 60 vs. Oakland Oct. 20, 1968 57 vs. Seattle Nov. 5, 1989 Fewest Rushing Attempts, Game 9 at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 10 vs. Jacksonville Oct. 7, 2007 10 at Oakland Dec. 16, 2012 11 at New England Oct. 11, 1998 11 at New York Jets Dec. 3, 2017 12 at Oakland Dec. 8, 1973 12 at Denver Oct. 27, 1996 13 vs. Buffalo Nov. 23, 2008 14 at San Diego Sept. 29, 1963 14 vs. Pittsburgh Nov. 10, 1985 14 at L.A. Raiders Dec. 6, 1992 14 at Jacksonville Nov. 8, 2009 Most Rushing Attempts, Both Teams, Game 102 KC (52) at San Diego (50) Nov. 12, 1978 (OT) 100 KC (41) vs. Denver (59) Sept. 24, 1978 Fewest Rushing Attempts, Both Teams, Game 37 KC (21) vs. Houston (16) Dec. 16, 1990 40 KC (17) at Buffalo (23) Dec. 12, 1965 Most Games, 40 or More Rushing Attempts, Season 9 1978 8 1973, 1981 7 1968 6 1962, 1969, 1989 5 1976, 1979, 1980, 1997, 2010 Most Games, 30 or More Rushing Attempts, Season 14 1978 13 1981 12 1971, 1975, 1980 11 1969, 1989, 1990, 2005, 2006 10 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 6 1970, 1980, 1989, 1999 Most Rushing Yards, Season 2,986 1978 2,633 1981 2,627 2010 2,407 1962 2,395 2012 Most Rushing Yards, Home, Season 1,488 1981

27

1,468 1,463 1,436 1,390

1962 2010 1978 1961

Most Rushing Yards Per Game, Season 213.3 (2,986 in 16 games) 1978 171.9 (2,407 in 14 games) 1962 164.6 (2,633 in 16 games) 1981 164.2 (2,627 in 16 games) 2010 162.4 (2,274 in 14 games) 1966 Most Rushing Yards Per Game, Home, Season 209.7 (1,468 in 7 games) 1962 198.6 (1,390 in 7 games) 1961 186.0 (1,488 in 8 games) 1981 182.9 (1,463 in 8 games) 2010 179.5 (1,436 in 8 games) 1978 Most Rushing Yards, Consecutive Seasons 5,302 (2,986, 2,316) 1978-79 4,829 (1,843, 2,986) 1977-78 4,671 (2,289, 2,382) 2004-05 4,590 (2,183, 2,407) 1961-62 Fewest Rushing Yards, Season 943 1982 (9 games) 1,248 2007 1,254 1983 1,351 2017 1,465 2000 1,468 1986 Fewest Rushing Yards Per Game, Season 78.0 (1,248 in 16 games) 2007 78.4 (1,254 in 16 games) 1983 91.6 (1,465 in 16 games) 2000 91.8 (1,468 in 16 games) 1986 92.9 (1,486 in 16 games) 1985 Most Rushing Yards, Game (All 300+) 398 vs. Houston Oct. 1, 1961 380 at Denver Oct. 23, 1966 352 vs. Indianapolis Dec. 23, 2012 320 vs. Buffalo Sept. 30, 1962 317 at Denver Jan. 3, 2010 313 vs. Cincinnati Oct. 26, 1969 310 vs. Detroit Oct. 14, 1990 302 at Houston Oct. 24, 1965 Fewest Rushing Yards, Game Dec. 19, 1965 0 vs. Denver 10 vs. Jacksonville Oct. 7, 2007 10 at Oakland Dec. 16, 2012 14 at New England Oct. 11, 1998 16 at Denver Dec. 9, 2007 17 at Boston Nov. 18, 1960 17 at L.A. Raiders Dec. 6, 1992 Most Games, 200 or More Rushing Yards 8 1978 6 2010 5 1962 4 1968, 1979, 1981, 2002 3 1961, 1967, 1991, 2001, 2004, 2012

@CHIEFS


2 1960, 1963, 1965, 1966, 1969, 1970, 1975, 2 1989, 1996, 1997, 2005, 2006 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 Fewest Rushing Yards, Both Teams, Game 75 KC (20) at Houston (55) Sept. 29, 1974 105 KC (27) vs. Boston (78) Nov. 17, 1968 111 Dallas Texans (108) at SD (3) Nov. 19, 1961 111 KC (48) at San Diego (63) Oct. 13, 1985 Most 10+ Yard Rushes, Season (Since 1990) 73 2002 72 2010 67 2005 64 2012 63 2001 Most 10+ Yard Rushes, Game (Since 1990) 11 at Oakland Dec. 9, 2001 (10 Holmes, 1 Cloud) 10 at Seattle Nov. 24, 2002 (9 Holmes, 1 Morton) 10 vs. Buffalo Oct. 31, 2010 (7 Charles, 3 Jones) 9 vs. Detroit Oct. 14, 1990 (5 Word, 3 Okoye, 1 McNair) 9 vs. Denver Dec. 17, 2000 (5 Richardson, 2 Grbac, 1 Alexander, 1 Moreau) 9 vs. Atlanta Oct. 24, 2004 (6 Holmes, 3 Blaylock, 1 Hall) 9 vs. Indianapolis Oct. 31, 2004 (6 Holmes, 2 Morton, 1 Johnson) 9 vs. Indianapolis Dec. 23, 2012 (4 Charles, 4 Hillis, 1 McCluster) Highest Rushing Average, Season 5.18 1966 5.15 2002 5.03 1962 4.97 1961 4.91 2017 4.79 2012

58 57 47 44

(26, (31, (24, (23,

32) 26) 23) 21)

2002-03 2004-05 1960-61 1961-62

*NFL RECORD

Fewest Rushing Touchdowns, Season 3 1982 (9 games) 5 2011 6 1972, 2007 7 1987 8 1988, 2009 Most Rushing Touchdowns, Game *8 vs. Atlanta Oct. 24, 2004 5 at Denver Oct. 23, 1966 4 14 times; Last vs. Detroit Nov. 1, 2015 * NFL RECORD Most Rushing Touchdowns, Both Teams, Game 8 Kansas City (8) vs. Atlanta (0) Oct. 24, 2004 7 Texans (4) vs. Boston (3) Sept. 8, 1962 7 Kansas City (4) at Denver (3) Oct. 10, 1965

Passing Highest Passer Rating, Season 100.8 2017 97.1 1962 96.4 1968 95.4 2015 94.9 1990, 2004 93.5 2002 Lowest Passer Rating, Season 52.7 1961 52.9 1977 54.0 1979 55.2 1974 59.3 1978 Most Passes Attempted, Season 641 1983 615 1994 593 1984 582 2000 563 2007

Lowest Rushing Average, Season 3.24 1983 3.26 2007 3.39 1980 3.40 1986 3.43 1992

Most Passes Attempted, Consecutive Seasons 1,234 (641, 593) 1983-84 1,146 (615, 531) 1994-95 1,110 (582, 528) 2000-01 1,105 (490, 615) 1993-94 1,104 (593, 511) 1984-85 1,104 (563, 541) 2007-08

Most Rushing Touchdowns, Season 32 2003 31 2004 26 2002, 2005 24 1960 23 1961

Fewest Passes Attempted, Season 264 1982 (9 games) 270 1968 289 1970 313 1973 322 1962

Most Rushing Touchdowns, Consecutive Seasons *63 (32, 31) 2003-04

Most Passes Attempted, Game 59 at Dallas Nov. 20, 1983 55 at San Diego Oct. 9, 1994

28

@CHIEFS


55 54 54 54 54

at Miami at Denver at Denver at San Diego vs. San Diego

Dec. 12, 1994 Nov. 16, 1986 Oct. 17, 1994 Sept. 29, 1996 Nov. 24, 1996

Fewest Passes Attempted, Game 3 vs. Oakland Oct. 20, 1968 6 at Oakland Dec. 13, 1969 10 vs. Denver Sept. 24, 1978 Most Passes Attempted, Both Teams, Game 100 KC (46) vs. Tampa Bay (54) Oct. 28, 1964 95 KC (54) at San Diego (41) Sept. 29, 1996 90 KC (59) at Dallas (31) Nov. 20, 1983 90 KC (41) at San Diego (49) Dec. 11, 1983 Fewest Passes Attempted, Both Teams, Game 26 KC (6) at Oakland (20) Dec. 13, 1969 26 KC (13) at Tampa Bay (13) Dec. 16, 1979 27 KC (14) vs. Houston (13) Sept. 10, 1978 Most Passes Completed, Season 370 2004 369 1983 366 1994 365 2016 363 2017 Most Passes Completed, Consecutive Seasons 728 (365, 363) 2016-17 709 (339, 370) 2003-04 687 (370, 317) 2004-05 675 (310, 365) 2015-16 674 (369, 305) 1983-84 Fewest Passes Completed, Season 145 1982 (9 games) 154 1970 156 1968 Most Passes Completed, Game 39 at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 37 at San Diego Oct. 9, 1994 34 at Denver Oct. 17, 1994 34 at Denver Dec. 7, 2003 34 vs. San Diego Sept. 11, 2016 33 at Dallas Nov. 20, 1983 33 at Miami Dec. 12, 1994 33 at San Diego Jan. 2, 2005 33 at Detroit Dec. 23, 2007 33 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 Fewest Passes Completed, Game 2 vs. Oakland Oct. 20, 1968 2 at Oakland Dec. 13, 1969 5 7 times: Last at Seattle Dec. 17, 1978 Most Passes Completed, Both Teams, 62 Kansas City (31) at San Diego (31) 59 Kansas City (34) vs. San Diego (25) 57 Kansas City (31) at San Diego (26) 56 Kansas City (33) at Denver (23) 55 Kansas City (23) vs. San Diego (32) 55 Kansas City (26) vs. Tampa Bay (29)

29

Game 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 Kansas City (10) vs. San Diego (1) Sept. 20, 1998 12 Kansas City (7) at Tampa Bay (5) Dec. 16, 1979 13 Kansas City (2) at Oakland (11) Dec. 13, 1969 13 Kansas City (8) vs. Boston (5) Oct. 11, 1970 Most 20+ Yard Completions, Season (Since 1990) 60 2004 59 2000 55 2003 54 2017 53 2001 Most 20+ Yard Completions, Game (Since 1990) 9 vs. St. Louis Oct. 22, 2000 (6 Grbac, 2 Moon, 1 Morris) 9 at Denver (9 Cassel) Nov. 14, 2010 7 at L.A. Raiders (7 Krieg) Dec. 6, 1992 7 at San Diego (7 Gannon) Nov. 22, 1998 7 at Oakland (7 Grbac) Nov. 5, 2000 7 at Arizona (7 Green) Oct. 21, 2001 7 vs. Indianapolis (7 Green) Oct. 31, 2004 7 at New York Jets (7 Smith) Dec. 3, 2017 Most Net Passing Yards, Season 4,406 2004 4,341 1983 4,149 2000 4,104 2017 3,981 2003 Most Net Passing Yards, Consecutive Seasons 8,387 (3,981, 4,406) 2003-04 8,216 (4,406, 3,810) 2004-05 7,909 (4,341, 3,568) 1983-84 7,844 (3,740, 4,104) 2016-17 7,814 (4,149, 3,665) 2000-01 Fewest Passing Yards, Season 1,555 1982 (9 games) 1,660 1979 1,719 1970 Most Gross Passing Yards, Game (All 400+) 504 at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 469 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 435 vs. Denver Nov. 1, 1964 432 at Dallas Nov. 20, 1983 412 vs. Denver Dec. 19, 1965 411 at San Diego Dec. 11, 1983 400 at Green Bay Oct. 12, 2003 Most Net Passing Yards, Game 474 at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 433 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 406 at San Diego Dec. 11, 1983 400 at Green Bay Oct. 12, 2003 395 at New Orleans Sept. 8, 1985 Fewest Gross Passing Yards, Game 16 vs. Oakland Oct. 20, 1968 39 vs. Houston Nov. 15, 1981 42 at Seattle Sept. 30, 1979 44 at Denver Oct. 8, 1961 46 at Tampa Bay Dec. 16, 1979

@CHIEFS


Fewest Net Passing Yards, Game -22 vs. Oakland Nov. 8, 1963 15 at Seattle Sept. 30, 1979 16 vs. Oakland Oct. 20, 1968 18 at Denver Oct. 4, 1970 19 at San Diego Dec. 12, 2010 Most Net Passing Yards, Both Teams, Game 859 Kansas City (387) vs. Indianapolis (472) Oct. 31, 2004 782 Kansas City (406) at San Diego (376) Dec. 11, 1983 748 Kansas City (331) at Oakland (417) Oct. 19, 2017 732 Kansas City (433) at Denver (299) Nov. 14, 2010 716 Kansas City (474) at Oakland (242) Nov. 5, 2000 698 Kansas City (229) at Oakland (469) Nov. 3, 1968 Fewest Passing Yards, Both Teams, Game 67 Kansas City (22) at Tampa Bay (45) Dec. 16, 1979 81 Kansas City (34) vs. Houston (47) Sept. 10, 1978 Most Individual 100-Yard Receiving Games, Season 14 2000, 2004 11 1964 9 2017 8 1966, 1983 7 1987, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2016 Most Consecutive Individual 100-Yard Receiving Games, Season 7 2000 6 2004 4 1964, 2016 3 1966, 1984, 1992, 1994, 2005, 2007, 2010 2 1961, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1968, 1969, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2017 (3 times) Most Times Sacked, Season 57 1980 55 2007 53 1975

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) Sept. 30, 1984 13 Kansas City (6) vs. Houston (7) 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 66.85 543-363 2017 66.85 546-365 2016

30

2004 2015 2003

Lowest Completion Percentage, Season 44.36 (399-177) 1961 48.05 (435-209) 1960 48.90 (409-200) 1965 49.33 (521-257) 1986 50.38 (395-199) 1965 Most Passing Touchdowns, Season 32 1964 31 1966 30 1963 29 1983, 2000 Fewest Passing Touchdowns, Season 7 1978, 1979 8 2012 10 1973, 1982 (9 games) 11 1974, 1977 13 1981, 2011 Most Passing Touchdowns, Game 6 vs. Denver Nov. 1, 1964 5 7 times; Last at Oakland Dec. 15, 2013 Most Passing Touchdowns, Both Teams, Game 9 Kansas City (4) at Denver (5) Nov. 14, 2010 8 Kansas City (6) vs. Denver (2) Nov. 1, 1964 8 Kansas City (4) at San Diego (4) Dec. 11, 1983 8 Kansas City (3) vs. IND (5) Oct. 31, 2004 Most Passes Had Intercepted, Season 27 1961 26 1977 25 1974 Fewest Passes Had Intercepted, Season 5 1990 6 2014 7 2015 8 1982 (9 games), 2010, 2016, 2017 9 2013 10 1993, 1994, 1997, 2005

Fewest Times Sacked, Season 19 1994 21 1978, 1991, 1995, 2003 22 1990 Most Times Sacked, Game 10 vs. Baltimore 9 vs. San Diego 8 at Pittsburgh 8 vs. L.A. Raiders

65.95 561-370 65.54 473-310 63.25 536-339

Most Passes Had Intercepted, Game 7 vs. Pittsburgh Oct. 13, 1974 6 at Seattle Nov. 4, 1984 6 vs. L.A. Raiders Oct. 20, 1985 Most Passes Had Intercepted, Both Teams, Game 9 Kansas City (3) vs. Miami (6) Nov. 13, 1966 8 8 times Last; Kansas City (2) at Oakland (6) 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

@CHIEFS


Most Punts, Season 104 1999 99 1986 98 1984

7 7 7 7 7 7 7

Fewest Punts, Season 38 1982 (9 games) 54 1962 55 2004 57 1991

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 Punts, Game 11 at N.Y. Jets 11 vs. Baltimore 11 at San Francisco 11 at Cleveland 11 vs. San Diego 11 at Chicago 10 vs. Denver 10 at Oakland 10 at N.Y. Jets 10 at San Diego 10 at N.Y. Jets 10 at Jacksonville Fewest Punts, Game 0 at L.A. Raiders 0 vs. Carolina

vs. Oakland vs. N.Y. Giants vs. Detroit at Denver at Oakland at Jacksonville at Washington

Sept. 18, 1965 Sept. 2, 1979 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 Dec. 22, 1991 Dec. 10, 2000

Highest Punting Average Distance, Season 46.83 (83-3,887) 2012 45.89 (89-4,084) 2011 45.53 (80-3,642) 1973 45.33 (89-4,034) 2013 45.26 (65-2,942) 1968 Lowest Punting Average Distance, Season 36.06 (54-1,947) 1962 37.83 (64-2,422) 2002 38.53 (70-2,697) 1981 Most Punts Had Blocked, Season 2 1974, 1975, 1985, 1999 Most Punts Had Blocked, Game 2 vs. Denver Oct. 27, 1985

Punt Returns Most Seasons Leading League (Average Return) 6 1960, 1968, 1970, 1979-80, 2003 Most Punt Returns, Season (All 50+) 59 2013 58 1979, 1995, 1999 52 2010

Most Punt Return Yards, Season (All 600+) 695 2013 640 1999 612 1979 Fewest Punt Return Yards, Season 126 1972 129 1982 (9 games) 150 1971 Most Punt Return Yards, Game 177 at Washington Dec. 8, 2013 160 vs. San Diego Sept. 13, 2010 141 vs. Oakland Sept. 23, 1979 139 at Denver Dec. 5, 1999 131 vs. Boston Dec. 11, 1960 Highest Punt Return Average, Season 16.42 (33-542) 2003 15.03 (33-496) 1960 14.80 (40-592) 2016 14.53 (40-581) 1980 14.52 (31-450) 1968 Lowest Punt Return Average, Season 4.34 (29-126) 1972 4.69 (32-150) 1971 6.29 (35-220) 2017 6.50 (26-169) 2008 6.53 (32-209) 2009 Most Punt Return Touchdowns, Season 2 1968, 1979, 1980, 1992, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2013, 2016 1 1960, 1965, 1966, 1987, 1995, 1997, 2006, 2010, 2017 Most Punt Return Touchdowns, Game 1 28 times; Last at Houston Oct. 8, 2017 Most Punt Return Touchdowns, Both Teams, Game *2 Kansas City (1) at Buffalo (1) Sept. 11, 1966 *NFL RECORD

Kickoff Returns

Fewest Punt Returns, Season 15 1982 (9 games) 24 2004 26 1961, 1963, 2008

Most Kickoff Returns, Season 80 2008 77 2009 75 2004 70 1987, 2000 68 2005

Most Punt Returns, Game 9 at Oakland 8 vs. San Diego 8 at St. Louis

Fewest Kickoff Returns, Season 31 1973 34 1982 (9 games) 35 2015

31

Nov. 15, 2009 Nov. 10, 1974 Dec. 19, 2010

@CHIEFS


*NFL RECORD

37 1962 38 1968, 1998 39 1992 Most Kickoff Returns, Game 11 vs. Buffalo Nov. 23, 2008 10 vs. Oakland Nov. 2, 1967 10 vs. Seattle Sept. 20, 1987 9 vs. Pittsburgh Nov. 10, 1985 Most Kickoff Return Yards, Season 1,820 2004 1,716 2008 1,666 2009 1,591 2005 1,577 2003

Highest Kickoff Return Average, Season *29.91 (44-1,316) 2013 27.64 (53-1,465) 1961 26.59 (41-1,090) 1969 25.81 (37-955) 1962 *NFL RECORD

Fewest Turnovers, Season 11 2017 12 1982 (9 games) 14 2010 15 2002, 2015 17 2014, 2016 Most Turnovers, Game 9 vs. Buffalo 9 vs. Pittsburgh 8 vs. San Diego

Penalties

Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Season 2 1987, 1995, 2003, 2004, 2013 1 1961, 1963, 1967, 1969, 1986, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2002, 2005, 2009, 2014, 2016 Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Game 1 23 times; Last at Denver Nov. 27, 2016

Fumbles Most Fumbles, Season 42 1980

Fewest Penalties, Season 43 1982 (9 games) 52 1963 56 1964 61 1966 Most Penalties, Season *158 1998 127 1994 126 1999 122 1993, 1996 Fewest Penalties, Game *0 vs. Buffalo 0 vs. Oakland 1 24 times; Last at San Diego

Fewest Fumbles, Season 7 2002 13 1982 (9 games), 2003 14 2017 15 2010 16 2015 Oct. 12, 1969

Oct. 17, 1965 Oct. 13, 1974 Sept. 20, 1981

Most Turnovers, Both Teams, Game 16 Kansas City (7) vs. Houston (9) Oct. 12, 1969

Lowest Kickoff Return Average, Season 16.52 (56-925) 1988 17.04 (46-784) 1990 17.20 (54-929) 1983

Most Fumbles, Both Teams, Game *14 Kansas City (10) vs. Houston (4)

*NFL RECORD

Most Turnovers, Season 47 1977 46 1981 41 1965, 1987, 1989 40 1964

Most Kickoff Return Yards, Game 251 at Miami Dec. 12, 1994 245 at San Diego Oct. 15, 1967 236 vs. Pittsburgh Nov. 10, 1985

32

Fewest Fumbles Lost, Season *2 2002 3 2017 4 1982 (9 games) 6 2003, 2010 8 1967, 1991, 2008, 2015 Most Fumbles Lost, Game 6 vs. Houston Oct. 12, 1969

Fewest Kickoff Return Yards, Season 722 1992 723 1982 (9 games) 725 1973 736 1968 784 1990

Most Fumbles, Game *10 vs. Houston

Most Fumbles Lost, Season 24 1981, 1987 21 1965, 1977

*NFL RECORD

Most Penalties, Game 17 at Seattle 15 vs. San Diego 15 at New England 14 at Atlanta 14 at Denver

*NFL RECORD Oct. 2, 1966 Dec. 8, 1974 Dec. 29, 2013 *NFL RECORD Nov. 8, 1998 Sept. 20, 1998 Sept. 7, 2017 Sept. 18, 1994 Oct. 17, 1994

Oct. 12, 1969

@CHIEFS


Fewest Penalties, Both Teams, Game 1 Kansas City (0) vs. Buffalo (1) Oct. 2, 1966

Most Yards Penalized, Season 1,304 1998

Most Penalties, Both Teams, Game 30 Kansas City (17) at Seattle (13) 27 Kansas City (12) at Oakland (15) 26 Kansas City (7) vs. San Diego (19) 26 Kansas City (11) vs. Oakland (15) 25 Kansas City (11) vs. Denver (14) 24 Kansas City (13) at L.A. Raiders (11) 24 Kansas City (12) vs. L.A. Raiders (12) 24 Kansas City (10) vs. L.A. Raiders (14) 24 Kansas City (14) at Atlanta (10) 24 Kansas City (14) at Denver (10) 24 Kansas City (15) vs. San Diego (9) 24 Kansas City (10) at Oakland (14) 24 Kansas City (9) at Denver (15)

Fewest Yards Penalized, Game 0 vs. Buffalo 0 vs. Oakland 1 vs. San Diego 3 vs. Buffalo 5 11 times; Last at San Diego

Fewest Yards Penalized, Season 371 1982 (9 games) 515 1974 577 2006 602 2001 604 1964

33

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 Oct. 23, 2011 Nov. 27, 2016

Oct. 2, 1966 Dec. 8, 1974 Dec. 22, 2002 Sept. 11, 2011 Dec. 29, 2013

Most Yards Penalized, Game 154 vs. Oakland Nov. 1, 1970 152 at Seattle Nov. 8, 1998 141 at San Diego Oct. 25, 1987 Fewest Yards Penalized, Both Teams, Game 10 Kansas City (10) vs. Boston (0) Nov. 17, 1968 10 Kansas City (0) vs. Oakland (10) Dec. 8, 1974 10 Kansas City (5) at Denver (5) Dec. 7, 2008 Most Yards Penalized, Both Teams, Game 259 KC (141) at San Diego (118) Oct. 25, 1987 258 KC (126) vs. L.A. Raiders (132) Sept. 16, 1984

@CHIEFS


21 21 17 17 17 17 17

Scoring Fewest Points Allowed, Season 170 1968 177 1969 184 1982 (9 games) 192 1973 208 1971 Lowest Scoring Average, Season 12.1 (170 in 14 games) 12.6 (177 in 14 games) 13.7 (192 in 14 games) 14.5 (232 in 16 games) 14.9 (208 in 14 games)

1968 1969 1973 1997 1971

Most Points Allowed, Season 440 2008 435 2004 425 2012 424 2009 Highest Scoring Average, Season 27.5 (440 in 16 games) 27.2 (435 in 16 games) 26.9 (376 in 14 games) 26.6 (425 in 16 games) 26.5 (424 in 16 games)

2008 2004 1976 2012 2009

Most Points Allowed, Game 54 vs. Buffalo Nov. 23, 2008 51 at Seattle Nov. 27, 1983 (OT) 50 at Buffalo Oct. 3, 1976 49 at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 49 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 Most First-Half Points Allowed, Game 35 at San Diego Oct. 25, 1987 35 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 34 vs. Seattle Dec. 11, 1977 31 Seven times, last at Pittsburgh Oct. 15, 2006

at Denver at Denver vs. Oakland at Denver vs. Pittsburgh at Denver vs. San Diego

Nov. 16, 1986 Nov. 14, 2010 Nov. 23, 1967 Oct. 27, 1996 Sept. 14, 2003 Sept. 26, 2005 Sept. 30, 2012

Most Second-Quarter Points Allowed, Season 152 2004 141 2008 135 1985 133 1999 127 1961, 1984 Fewest Second-Quarter Points Allowed, Season 45 1969 55 1979, 1982 (9 games) 57 1968, 1992 59 1995 64 1965 Most Second-Quarter Points Allowed, Game 28 vs. San Diego Nov. 15, 1964 28 vs. Oakland Oct. 16, 1966 28 at Baltimore Dec. 21, 1980 28 at Seattle Nov. 4, 1984 28 at Seattle Sept. 11, 1988 24 at Oakland Nov. 3, 1968 Most Third-Quarter Points Allowed, Season 106 2008, 2012 103 2001 100 2009 98 1975 95 2011 Fewest Third-Quarter Points Allowed, Season 22 1971 29 1995 31 1982 (9 games) 34 1974 35 1973

Fewest First-Half Points Allowed, Season 74 1969 95 1982 (9 games) 97 1965 101 1973 103 1968

Most Third-Quarter Points Allowed, Game 28 at Houston Oct. 24, 1965 22 at Boston Nov. 18, 1960 21 Nine times; Last at Baltimore Sept. 13, 2009

Most First-Quarter Points Allowed, Season 101 1998 95 1976, 2012 93 2009 92 1997 88 1987

Most Fourth-Quarter Points Allowed, Season 139 1961 130 1983, 2002 129 2004 127 1976 121 1985

Fewest First-Quarter Points Allowed, Season 29 1963, 1969 30 1973 32 1970 33 1965, 1966 37 1984

Fewest Fourth-Quarter Points Allowed, Season 27 1968 44 1997 54 2013 56 1973 57 1960, 1962, 1981

Most First-Quarter Points Allowed, Game 31 at Buffalo Sept. 13, 1962 22 at Pittsburgh Oct. 2, 2016

Most Fourth-Quarter Points Allowed, Game 24 at New Orleans Sept. 8, 1985 22 vs. Denver Nov. 1, 1964

34

@CHIEFS


21 13 times; Last at Houston

Oct. 8, 2017

Most Second-Half Points Allowed, Game 38 at Houston Oct. 24, 1965 37* at Seattle Nov. 27, 1983 35 vs. San Diego Oct. 20, 1963 35 vs. Pittsburgh Nov. 7, 1976 31 at Miami Sept. 22, 1985 31 at Miami Dec. 12, 1994 31 vs. San Diego Nov. 24, 2013 *Includes three in OT Fewest Second-Half Points Allowed, Season 67 1968 89 1982 (9 games) 91 1973, 1997 96 1971 101 1972 Fewest Touchdowns Allowed, Season 18 1968 19 1969 21 1971 Most Touchdowns Allowed, Season 53 2004 51 1976 49 2008 48 2009 47 2012 Most Touchdowns Allowed, Game 7 at Buffalo Oct. 3, 1976 7 at Oakland Nov. 5, 2000 7 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 6 16 times; Last at Pittsburgh Oct. 2, 2016 Most Shutouts, Season 3 1960 2 1967, 1969 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 Most Consecutive Games Allowed 10 Points or Less 5 1968 3 1960, 1968, 1995, 1997 Largest Opponent Comeback Victories Opponent Deficit Final Date 21 vs. Tampa Bay 24-3 27-30 (OT) Nov. 2, 2008 18 vs. Philadelphia 24-6 31-37 Oct. 2, 2005 18 vs. San Diego 21-3 21-22 Dec. 14, 2008 17 at Houston 17-0 36-38 Oct. 24, 1965 17 vs. L.A. Raiders 17-0 17-24 Oct. 5, 1986 17 at Chicago 17-0 27-28 Nov. 13, 1977 17 at San Diego 34-17 37-38 Nov. 22, 1998 17 vs. Oakland 17-0 38-41 (OT) Jan. 2, 2000

First Downs 35

Fewest First Downs Allowed, Season 170 1982 (9 games) 181 1969 200 1965 204 1964 Most First Downs Allowed, Season 367 2002 352 2017 344 1987, 2008 342 2016 336 1985 Fewest First Downs Allowed, Game 5 vs. Oakland Dec. 7, 1997 6 at Boston Sept. 21, 1969 6 vs. Boston Oct. 11, 1970 6 at Chicago Dec. 29, 1990 7 10 times; Last at Washington Oct. 18, 2009 Most First Downs Allowed, Game 35 vs. San Diego Oct. 19, 1986 34 at Denver Nov. 18, 1974 34 at Cleveland Oct. 30, 1977 Fewest Rushing First Downs Allowed, Season 52 1968 53 1969 67 1965 Most Rushing First Downs Allowed, Season 169 1977 162 1988 149 1975 Fewest Rushing First Downs Allowed, Game *0 vs. Houston Dec. 4, 1960 Dec. 3, 1967 0 vs. Buffalo Oct. 3, 1971 0 at Denver Dec. 3, 1995 0 at Oakland Dec. 7, 1997 0 vs. Oakland Dec. 8, 2002 0 vs. St. Louis Sept. 11, 2005 0 vs. N.Y. Jets 1 19 times; Last vs. Oakland Dec. 24, 2011 *NFL RECORD Most Rushing First Downs Allowed, Game 21 vs. Pittsburgh Nov. 7, 1976 20 at Oakland Dec. 28, 2002 19 at Cleveland Oct. 30, 1977 Fewest Passing First Downs Allowed, Season 92 1982 (9 games) 95 1973 111 1969, 1970 Most Passing First Downs Allowed, Season 227 2002 209 2016 204 2017 202 2000 195 2008 Fewest Passing First Downs Allowed, Game *0 at Houston Oct. 9, 1988 Sept. 20, 1998 0 vs. San Diego

@CHIEFS


2 8 times; Last at Denver

Jan. 1, 2012 *NFL RECORD

Most Passing First Downs Allowed, Game 25 at Denver Nov. 18, 1974 25 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 23 at Oakland Oct. 19, 2017 23 at L.A. Chargers Sept. 9, 2018 22 at Cincinnati Dec. 6, 1987 22 vs. Philadelphia Oct. 2, 2005 Fewest Penalty First Downs Allowed, Season 9 1982 (9 games) 11 1964 13 1980 Most *56 40 36 34 33

Penalty First Downs Allowed, Season 1998 2004 1993, 2017 2015 1987 *NFL RECORD

Most Penalty First Downs Allowed, Game 7 2 times; Last N.Y. Jets Dec. 11, 2011 6 10 times; Last at Oakland Oct. 19, 2017

Net Yards Allowed Passing and Rushing Fewest Yards Allowed, Season 2,733 1982 (9 games) 3,163 1969 3,575 1973 3,667 1970 3,749 1965 Most Yards Allowed, Season 6,291 2008 6,248 2002 6,211 2009 6,037 2004 5,896 2016 Fewest Yards Allowed, Game 89 vs. Seattle Dec. 24, 1995 91 vs. Houston Oct. 12, 1969 93 vs. Oakland Dec. 7, 1997 100 at Boston Sept. 21, 1969 105 vs. Boston Dec. 14, 1963 105 vs. Boston Oct. 11, 1970 Most Yards Allowed, Game 563 vs. Houston 542 at N.Y. Jets 542 at Tennessee 541 at L.A. Chargers 539 at Oakland 539 vs. Oakland 535 vs. Denver

Dec. 16, 1990 Oct. 2, 1988 (OT) Dec. 13, 2004 Sept. 9, 2018 Nov. 3, 1968 Oct. 3, 1977 Dec. 1, 2013

Fewest Plays Allowed, Season 556 1982 (9 games) 808 1969

36

813 1971 Most Plays Allowed, Season 1,159 1984 1,126 1985 1,102 1981 Fewest Plays Allowed, Game 39 vs. Houston Oct. 22, 1967 39 vs. Oakland Dec. 7, 1997 40 vs. Cincinnati Oct. 13, 1968 40 at Boston Sept. 21, 1969 Most Plays Allowed, Game 97 at N.Y. Jets Oct. 2, 1988 (OT) 95 vs. San Diego Oct. 19, 1986 91 vs. Chicago 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 Fewest Rushing Attempts Allowed, Game 9 at Oakland Dec. 5, 2004 11 at New Orleans Sept. 4, 1994 11 at Oakland Dec. 3, 1995 11 vs. Oakland Dec. 10, 2017 12 at N.Y. Jets Nov. 27, 1966 12 at Seattle Nov. 28, 2010 Most Rushing Attempts Allowed, Game 65 at Buffalo Oct. 29, 1973 62 at Tampa Bay Dec. 16, 1979 61 at Oakland Dec. 8, 1973 61 vs. Chicago Nov. 8, 1981 Fewest Rushing Yards Allowed, Season 980 1960 1,066 1982 (9 games) 1,091 1969 Fewest Rushing Yards Per Game Allowed, Season 70.0 (980 in 14 games) 1960 77.9 (1,091 in 14 games) 1969 82.9 (1,327 in 16 games) 1995 Most Rushing Yards Allowed, Season 2,971 1977 2,861 1976 2,712 1975 Most Rushing Yards Per Game Allowed, Season 211.8 (2,971 in 14 games) 1977 204.4 (2,861 in 14 games) 1976 193.7 (2,712 in 14 games) 1975 Fewest Rushing Yards Allowed, Game -27 vs. Houston Dec. 4, 1960

@CHIEFS


3 at San Diego 8 at Oakland

Nov. 19, 1961 Dec. 3, 1995

Most Rushing Yards Allowed, Game 351 vs. Cleveland Dec. 20, 2009 332 vs. Tennessee Oct. 19, 2008 330 vs. Pittsburgh Nov. 7, 1976 322 at Cleveland Oct. 30, 1977 300 vs. Oakland Sept. 14, 2008 Fewest Individual 100-Yard Games Allowed, Season 0 1960, 1969, 1971, 1981, 1995 Most Individual 100-Yard Games Allowed, Season 9 2003 8 1976, 1977, 2007 Fewest Rushing Touchdowns Allowed, Season 4 1968 5 2016 6 1969, 1971 7 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 Nov. 7, 1976 5 at Denver Dec. 7, 2003 4 6 times; Last vs Tennessee Oct. 19, 2008

Passing Fewest Pass Attempts Allowed, Season 262 1982 (9 games) 324 1973 325 1975 333 1977 Most Pass Attempts Allowed, Season 616 2002 607 2015 598 2016 596 1995 592 2013 Fewest Pass Attempts Allowed, Game 8 vs. Denver Nov. 13, 2011 9 at N.Y. Jets Nov. 7, 1971 9 vs. Oakland Dec. 8, 1974 10 vs. L.A. Raiders Sept. 16, 1973 10 at San Diego Dec. 18, 1988 Most Pass Attempts Allowed, Game 65 vs. San Diego Oct. 19, 1986 61 vs. Seattle Sept. 29, 1985 60 at Oakland Oct. 5, 1980 Fewest Pass Completions Allowed, Season 155 1982 (9 games) 157 1973 175 1977 186 1972, 1975 195 1970

37

Most Pass Completions Allowed, Season 403 2002 350 2016 348 2008 349 2015 334 2013 Fewest Pass Completions Allowed, Game 1 vs. San Diego Sept. 20, 1998 2 vs. Denver Nov. 13,2011 3 vs. Houston Oct. 22, 1967 3 at N.Y. Jets Nov. 7, 1971 3 vs. Oakland Dec. 8, 1974 4 at San Diego Nov. 2, 1986 4 at Houston Oct. 9, 1988 Most Pass Completions Allowed, Game 39 at New England Sept. 22, 2002 37 vs. San Diego Dec. 22, 1985 37 vs. San Diego Oct. 19, 1986 37 vs. New Orleans Oct. 23, 2016 35 vs. Oakland Oct. 27, 2002 34 vs. L.A. Raiders Sept. 12, 1985 34 vs. San Diego Dec. 14, 2008 34 at. L.A. Chargers Sept. 9, 2018 Fewest Net Passing Yards Allowed, Season 1,619 1973 1,667 1982 (9 games) 1,942 1973 2,010 1970 Most Net Passing Yards Allowed, Season 4,203 2004 4,181 2002 3,962 2013 3,958 2016 3,952 2017 Fewest Net Passing Yards Allowed, Game -19 vs. San Diego Sept. 20, 1998 9 vs. N.Y. Jets Nov. 7, 1971 12 vs. Oakland Dec. 8, 1974 Most Net Passing Yards Allowed, Game 505 vs. Houston Dec. 16, 1990 472 vs. Indianapolis Oct. 31, 2004 469 at Oakland Nov. 3, 1968 Fewest Individual 300-Yard Games Allowed, Season 0 1962, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1977, 1978, 1988, 2000 Most Individual 300-Yard Games Allowed, Season 8 2002 Fewest Passing Touchdowns Allowed, Season 10 1969 11 1971, 1973 12 1982 (9 games), 1988 Most Passing Touchdowns Allowed, Season 32 2004 29 2012 27 2002 25 1964, 1976, 1980, 1987, 2000, 2005, 2009, 2013, 2015

@CHIEFS


24 1999 Most Passing Touchdowns Allowed, Game 5 vs. Indianapolis Oct. 31, 2004 5 at Denver Nov. 14, 2010 5 vs. Denver Dec. 1, 2013 5 at Green Bay Sept. 28, 2015 5 at Pittsburgh Oct. 2, 2016 4 16 times; Last at Detroit Sept. 18, 2011

Sacks Most Seasons Leading League 4 1960, 1965, 1969, 1990

Fewest Yards Returning Interceptions, Season 119 2012 124 2006 140 1987

Most Touchdowns Returning Interceptions, Season 6 1992 5 1972, 1974, 1999, 2013 4 1960, 1967, 1986, 1997, 2015, 2016

Fewest Sacks, Season *10.0 2008 15.0 1982 (9 games) 22.0 1976, 2009 23.0 1988

*NFL RECORD Sept. 30, 1984 Sept. 6, 1998 Nov. 2, 1969 Nov. 11, 1990 Oct. 13, 2013

Most Opponents Yards Lost Attempting to Pass, Season 439 1968 Fewest Opponents Yards Lost Attempting to Pass, Season 62 2008 120 1982 (9 games) 137 2009

Interceptions By Most Consecutive Seasons Leading League 5 1966-70 Most Passes Intercepted By, Season 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 Dec. 8, 1968 6 8 times; Last vs. New York Jets Sept. 25, 2016 Most Consecutive Games, One or More Interceptions By 23 1967-69

38

Most Yards Returning Interceptions, Season 596 1969 578 1967 567 1986

Most Yards Returning Interceptions, Game 188 vs. N.Y. Titans Dec. 17, 1961 162 at Oakland Dec. 6, 2015 142 vs. L.A. Raiders Oct. 28, 1991 136 vs. Seattle Dec. 11, 1977

Most Sacks, Season 60.0 1990 54.0 1997 51.0 2000 50.0 1984, 1992

Most Sacks, Game 11.0 vs. Cleveland 10.0 vs. Oakland 9.0 at Buffalo 9.0 vs. Seattle 9.0 vs. Oakland

18 1966-67 16 1982-83

Most Touchdowns Returning Interceptions, Game 2 vs. N.Y. Titans Dec. 17, 1961 2 at Denver Oct. 1, 1972 2 at Denver Dec. 19, 1982 2 vs. San Diego Oct. 19, 1986 2 vs. Denver Dec. 27, 1992 2 at Baltimore Oct. 21, 1999 2 at Denver Jan. 3, 2010 2 at Oakland Oct. 23, 2011 Most Touchdowns Returning Interceptions, Both Teams, Game *4 Kansas City (0) at Seattle (4) Nov. 4, 1984 3 Kansas City (2) vs. San Diego (1) Oct. 19, 1986 *NFL RECORD

Opponents Interceptions 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 Opponents, Season 7 1984 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 1982 (9 games)

@CHIEFS


50 2008 55 1962 Lowest Opponents Average Distance, Season 37.0 1986, 1990 38.6 1982 (9 games) 38.9 1981 Highest Opponents Average Distance, Season 47.6 2011 46.8 2012 46.6 2013 45.7 2005 45.2 2010 Most Opponents Punts Blocked, Season 6 1990 4 1986 3 1963, 1982 2 1966, 1979, 1980, 1989, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2006 Most Opponents Punts Blocked, Game 3 vs. Denver Dec. 8, 1963 2 at Seattle Sept. 30, 1979 2 vs. Cleveland Sept. 30, 1990

Punt Returns Most Opponents Punt Returns, Season 60 1984 55 1974, 1976 54 1983 Most Opponents Punt Returns, Game 9 at Cincinnati Nov. 24, 1974

Fewest Opponents Kickoff Returns, Season 25 2011, 2017 27 2012 35 2016 40 1973 42 1982 (9 games) Most Opponents Kickoff Returns, Season 88 2002 87 2003 85 2004 84 1966 Fewest Kickoff Return Yards Allowed, Season 486 2017 605 2011 690 2012 794 1982 (9 games) 843 2016 958 1977 Most Kickoff Return Yards Allowed, Season 2,053 2005 2,045 1966 2,043 2003 1,908 2004 1,880 2002 Most Kickoff Return Yards Allowed, Game 289 at Denver Sept. 7, 1963 278 vs. Cleveland Dec. 20, 2009 Lowest Kickoff Return Average Allowed, Season 17.17 (81-1,391) 1990 18.00 (71-1,278) 1986 18.57 (23-427) 2017 18.80 (64-1,203) 1992

Fewest Punt Return Yards Allowed, Season 157 2016 164 2017 170 2015 179 2005 190 1991

Highest Kickoff Return Average Allowed, Season 25.78 (40-1,031) 1973 25.56 (27-690) 2012 25.37 (54-1,370) 1974

Most Punt Return Yards Allowed, Season 702 1977 634 1974 572 1986

Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns Allowed, Season 2 1988 2 1989 2 2009

Most Punt Return Yards Allowed, Game 170 at San Diego Sept. 26, 1965 Lowest Punt Return Average Allowed, Season 5.23 (30-157) 2016 6.37 (46-293) 1981 6.43 (49-315) 1979 6.47 (38-246) 2013 Highest Punt Returns Average Allowed, Season 15.36 (22-338) (9 games) 1982 14.93 (29-433) 1965 14.04 (50-702) 1977 Most Punt Returns Touchdowns Allowed, Season 2 1982, 1990, 2004, 2012

Kickoff Returns 39

Blocked Field Goals Most Blocked Field Goals, Season 6 1960 5 1966 4 1962, 1965, 1973 3 1963, 1967, 1996 2 1982 (9 games), 1986, 1992, 1993, 2003 Most Blocked Field Goals, Game 3 at San Diego Oct. 15, 1967 2 vs. Buffalo Dec. 18, 1960 2 at Oakland Nov. 3, 1963 2 at Oakland Sept. 18, 1966 2 at San Diego Oct. 15, 1967 2 at Green Bay Oct. 4, 1973 2 at San Diego Oct. 17, 1993 2 at San Diego Nov. 30, 2003

@CHIEFS


Fumbles Fewest Opponents Fumbles, Season 16 1971 18 1984, 2011 19 2000, 2012, 2015, 2017 Fewest Opponents Fumbles Recovered, Season 6 2011, 2012 7 1971, 2015 8 1966, 2004, 2007 9 2010 10 1982 (9 games), 1996, 2017 Most Opponents Fumbles, Season 42 1981 40 1975 39 1977 Most Opponents Fumbles Recovered, Season 26 1994 25 1990 23 1977

Turnovers Fewest Opponents Turnovers, Season 13 2012

40

21 22 23 26

2004 1982 (9 games), 2007 2010 2001, 2011, 2017

Most Opponents Turnovers, Season 51 1983 49 1962, 1968, 1986 Most Opponents Turnovers, Game 9 vs. Houston Oct. 28, 1962 9 vs. Houston Oct. 12, 1969 9 vs. St. Louis Oct. 2, 1983 Best Turnover Ratio, Season 26 (45 takes/19 gives) 22 (49 takes/27 gives) 21 (45 takes/21 gives) 18 (49 takes/31 gives) 18 (39 takes/21 gives) 18 (36 takes/18 gives)

1990 1968 1999 1962 1992 2013

Worst Turnover Ratio, Season -24 (13 takes/37 gives) -13 (28 takes/41 gives) -11 (22 takes/33 gives) -8 (33 takes/41 gives) -8 (33 takes/41 gives)

2012 1987 2007 1965 1989

@CHIEFS


Single Game Pass Attempts (All 50+) 58 Mark Hermann, San Diego 56 Kyle Orton, Denver 55 Rich Gannon, Oakland 54 Steve DeBerg, Tampa Bay 54 Tom Brady, New England 52 Jim Plunkett, Oakland 52 Derek Carr, Oakland 51 Philip Rivers, L.A. Chargers 50 Brian Griese, Denver

Dec. 22, 1985 Jan. 3, 2010 Oct. 27, 2002 Oct. 28, 1984 Sept. 22, 2002 Oct. 5, 1980 Oct. 19, 2017 Sept. 9, 2018 Oct. 20, 2002

Pass Completions (All 30+) 39 Tom Brady, New England 37 Mark Hermann, San Diego 37 Drew Brees, New Orleans 35 Rich Gannon, Oakland 34 Jim Plunkett, Oakland 34 Philip Rivers, San Diego 34 Philip Rivers, L.A. Chargers 33 Drew Bledsoe, New England 33 Donovan McNabb, Philadelphia 32 Jay Cutler, Denver 32 Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh 32 Kyle Orton, Denver 31 Jim Zorn, Seattle 31 Rich Gannon, Oakland 31 Marc Bulger, St. Louis 31 Jeff Garcia, Tampa Bay 31 Derek Carr, Oakland 30 Dan Fouts, San Diego 30 Tony Romo, Dallas

Sept. 22, 2002 Dec. 22, 1985 Oct. 23, 2016 Oct. 27, 2002 Sept. 12, 1985 Dec. 14, 2008 Sept. 9, 2018 Dec. 4, 2000 Oct. 2, 2005 Dec. 7, 2008 Nov. 22, 2009 Jan. 3, 2010 Sept. 27, 1981 Sept. 9, 2001 Nov. 5, 2006 Nov. 2, 2008 Dec. 6, 2015 Oct. 14, 1984 Sept. 15, 2013

Passing Yards (All 400+) 527 Warren Moon, Houston 472 Peyton Manning, Indianapolis 445 Charley Johnson, Denver 431 Kyle Orton, Denver 426 Billy Volek, Tennessee 424 Philip Rivers, L.A. Chargers 417 Derek Carr, Oakland 413 Pete Beathard, Houston 410 Tom Brady, New England 403 Peyton Manning, Denver 400 John Elway, Denver

Dec. 16, 1990 Oct. 31, 2004 Nov. 18, 1974 Jan. 3, 2010 Dec. 13, 2004 Sept. 9, 2018 Oct. 19, 2017 Sept. 9, 1968 Sept. 22, 2002 Dec. 1, 2013 Dec. 6, 1998

Touchdown Passes 5 George Blanda, Houston 5 Peyton Manning, Indianapolis 5 Peyton Manning, Denver 5 Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay 5 Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh 5 Deshaun Watson, Houston Interceptions Thrown 6 John Hadl, San Diego 6 Ryan Fitzpatrick, N.Y. Jets 5 George Blanda, Houston 5 John Hadl, San Diego 5 Babe Parilli, Boston 5 George Blanda, Houston 5 Pete Beathard, Houston 5 Marty Domres, San Diego

41

Oct. 24, 1965 Oct. 31, 2004 Dec. 1, 2013 Sept. 28, 2015 Oct. 2, 2016 Oct. 8, 2017 Dec. 8, 1968 Sept. 25, 2016 Oct. 28, 1962 Dec. 16, 1962 Dec. 14, 1963 Oct. 4, 1964 Oct. 12, 1969 Nov. 9, 1969

5 5 5 5 5 5

Alan Pastrana, Denver James Harris, San Diego Jim Plunkett, Oakland Jim Zorn, Seattle Dave Krieg, Seattle John Elway, Denver

Dec. 6, 1970 Nov. 26, 1978 Oct. 5, 1980 Nov. 9, 1980 Dec. 9, 1984 Dec. 14, 1985

Long Pass (All 80+) 90 N. Johnson to R. Upchurch, Denver 89 J. Kemp to E. Dubenion, Buffalo 87 S. McNair to M. Clayton, Baltimore 87 M. Hasselbeck to B. Obomanu, SEA 82 J. Lee to A. Denson, Denver 82 D. Lamonica to F. Biletnikoff, Oakland 82 B. Griese to S. Sharpe, Denver 80 J. Lee to B. Groman 80 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 Troy Brown, New England 14 Kellen Winslow, San Diego 14 Jabar Gaffney, Denver 13 Joe Washington, Baltimore 13 Terrance Mathis, Atlanta 13 Tim Brown, Oakland 13 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 Miles Austin, Dallas 245 Haywood Jeffires, Houston 233 Drew Bennett, Tennessee 232 Lance Alworth, San Diego 214 Shannon Sharpe, Denver 213 Jabar Gaffney, Denver 210 Amari Cooper, Oakland 203 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 4 Eric Decker, Denver 3 Bob Chandler, Buffalo 3 Kellen Winslow, San Diego 3 Shannon Sharpe, Denver 3 Drew Bennett, Tennessee 3 Antonio Gates, San Diego 3 Randall Cobb, Green Bay 3 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 Jerome Harrison, Cleveland 220 Tiki Barber, N.Y. Giants 218 Clinton Portis, Denver 217 Gary Anderson, San Diego 214 Greg Pruitt, Cleveland 207 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 3 Pete Banaszak, Oakland

Dec. Nov. Dec. Dec.

7, 2003 18, 1974 14, 1975 21, 1975

@CHIEFS


3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3

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

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

Long Run (All 80+) 87 Paul Lowe, San Diego 85 LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego 80 LenDale White, Tennessee Total Touchdowns 5 Clinton Portis, Denver 4 Clinton Portis, Denver 4 Eric Decker, Denver Interceptions Made 4 Deltha O’Neal, Denver 3 David Fulcher, Cincinnati

Sept. 10, 1961 Dec. 17, 2006 Oct. 19, 2008

Dec. 7, 2003 Dec. 15, 2002 Dec. 1, 2013 Oct. 7, 2001 Oct. 1, 1989

Long Interception Return (All 100+) 102 Marcus Coleman, Houston Sept. 26, 2004 101 Tony Greene, Buffalo Oct. 3, 1976

42

100 Speedy Duncan, San Diego Long Punt Return 95 Johnny Bailey, Chicago Long Kickoff Return (All 100+) 103 Joshua Cribbs, Cleveland 100 Nemiah Wilson, Denver 100 Joshua Cribbs, Cleveland Long Punt (All 80+) 83 Chris Norman, Denver 82 Paul Maguire, San Diego Long Field Goal (All 55+) 59 Matt Bryant, Atlanta 57 Sebastian Janikowski, Oakland 56 Sebastian Janikowski, Oakland 56 Matt Prater, Denver 55 John Kasay, Seattle 55 Kris Brown, Pittsburgh 55 Sebastian Janikowski, Oakland 55 Nate Kaeding, San Diego Times Sacked (All 10.0+) 11 Paul McDonald, Cleveland 10 Jeff George, Oakland

Oct. 15, 1967 Dec. 29, 1990 Dec. 20, 2009 Oct. 8, 1966 Dec. 20, 2009 Sept. 23, 1984 Nov. 5, 1961 Dec. 4, 2016 Dec. 16, 2012 Sept. 14, 2008 Sept. 28, 2008 Jan. 2, 1994 Oct. 14, 2001 Nov. 25, 2007 Nov. 29, 2009 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


Most Points After Touchdown, No Misses, Career 8 Jan Stenerud (5 games)

Service Most Games Played, Career 10 John Alt 10 Tim Grunhard 10 Dave Szott 10 Derrick Thomas 9 Dan Saleaumua 9 Tracy Simien 9 Neil Smith 8 Len Dawson 8 Jonathan Hayes 8 Nick Lowery 8 Johnny Robinson 8 Kevin Ross 8 Jim Tyrer 8 Jerrel Wilson 8 Will Shields

Most Field Goals Attempted, Career 17 Jan Stenerud (5 games - 17 Att.) 12 Nick Lowery (8 games - 12 Att.)

1984-96 1990-00 1990-00 1989-99 1989-96 1991-97 1988-96 1962-75 1985-93 1980-93 1960-71 1984-93, ’97 1961-73 1963-77 1993-06

Most Field Goals Attempted, Game 5 Jan Stenerud vs. N.Y. Jets Dec. 20, 1969 4 Nick Lowery vs. Miami Jan. 5, 1991 4 Jan Stenerud vs. Miami Dec. 25, 1971 Most Field Goals, Career 9 Jan Stenerud (5 games - 17 Att.) 8 Nick Lowery (8 games - 12 Att.) Most Field Goals, Game 3 Jan Stenerud vs. Minnesota 3 Nick Lowery at Miami 3 Ryan Succop at Indianapolis 3 Cairo Santos at Houston

Scoring Most Points, Career 37 Nick Lowery (8 games - 8 FGs, 13 PATs) 35 Jan Stenerud (5 games - 9 FGs, 8 PATs) 24 Cairo Santos (3 games - 6 FGs, 6 PATs) 18 Mike Garrett (6 games - 3 TDs) 18 Marcus Allen (6 games - 3 TDs) 18 Knile Davis (3 games - 3 TDs) Most Points, Game 14 Ryan Succop at Indianapolis 12 Abner Haynes vs. Houston 12 Mike Garrett at Buffalo 12 Ed Podolak vs. Miami 12 Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis 12 Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis 12 Knile Davis at Indianapolis 12 Cairo Santos at Houston 11 Jan Stenerud vs. Minnesota

1980-93 1967-79 2014-16 1966-70 1993-97 2013-15

Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 1, 1967 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 11, 1970

Most Touchdowns, Career 3 Marcus Allen (6 games) 3 Mike Garrett (6 games) 3 Knile Davis (2 games)

1993-97 1966-70 2013-16

Most Touchdowns, Game 2 Abner Haynes vs. Houston 2 Mike Garrett at Buffalo 2 Ed Podolak vs. Miami 2 Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis 2 Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis 2 Knile Davis at Indianapolis

Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 1, 1967 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014

Most Points After Touchdown, Career 13 Nick Lowery (8 games - 14 Att.) 8 Jan Stenerud (5 games - 8 Att.) 6 Ryan Succop (2 games - 6 Att.) 6 Cairo Santos (3 games - 6 Att.) 5 Mike Mercer (2 games - 5 Att.) Most Points After Touchdown, Game 5 Ryan Succop at Indianapolis (5 Att.) 4 Mike Mercer at Buffalo (4 Att.) 4 Nick Lowery at Houston (4 Att.) 4 Morten Andersen vs. IND (4 Att.)

43

1980-93 1967-79 2009-13 2014-16 1966 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

1967-79 1980-93

4, 2014 1, 1967 16, 1994 11, 2004

Longest Field Goal 49 Cairo Santos at Houston 49 Cairo Santos at Houston 48 Jan Stenerud vs. Minnesota 48 Cairo Santos vs. Pittsburgh 43 Ryan Succop at Indianapolis

1967-79 1980-93 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

11, 1970 5, 1991 4, 2014 9, 2016

Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

9, 2016 9, 2016 11, 1970 15, 2017 4, 2014

Rushing Most Rushing Attempts, Career 100 Marcus Allen (6 games) 61 Mike Garrett (6 games) 59 Barry Word (4 games) 51 Wendell Hayes (5 games) 41 Curtis McClinton (3 games) Most Rushing Attempts, Game 33 Barry Word vs. L.A. Raiders 24 Curtis McClinton vs. Houston 24 Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis 22 Wendell Hayes vs. Miami 21 Marcus Allen vs. Pittsburgh 21 Marcus Allen vs. Indianapolis

1993-97 1966-70 1990-92 1968-74 1962-69 Dec. 28, 1991 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) 1993-97 208 Wendell Hayes (5 games) 1968-74 197 Barry Word (4 games) 1990-92 186 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 176 Priest Holmes (1 game) 2001-07 Most Rushing Yards Gained, Game 176 Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis 130 Barry Word vs. L.A. Raiders 100 Wendell Hayes vs. Miami 94 Marcus Allen vs. Indianapolis 85 Ed Podolak vs. Miami

Jan. 11, 2004 Dec. 28, 1991 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 7, 1996 Dec. 25, 1971

Most Games, 100 or More Rushing Yards, Career 1 Wendell Hayes (5 games) 1968-74 1 Barry Word (3 games) 1990-92 1 Priest Holmes (1 game) 2001-07 Longest Run From Scrimmage

@CHIEFS


48 41 33 32 26

Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis Jamaal Charles vs. Baltimore Jack Spikes vs. Houston Ed Podolak vs. Miami Christian Okoye at Miami

Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 9, 2011 Dec. 23, 1962 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 5, 1991

Most Rushing Touchdowns, Career 3 Marcus Allen (6 games) 1993-97 3 Mike Garrett (6 games) 1966-70 Most Rushing Touchdowns, Game 2 Mike Garrett at Buffalo Jan. 1, 1967 2 Priest Holmes vs. Indianpolis Jan. 11, 2004

Passing Most Passes Attempted, Career 188 Len Dawson (8 games) 185 Alex Smith (5 games) 141 Joe Montana (4 games) 64 Dave Krieg (4 games) 54 Trent Green (2 games) 53 Steve DeBerg (3 games) Most Passes Attempted, Game 50 Alex Smith at New England 46 Alex Smith at Indianapolis 43 Joe Montana vs. Pittsburgh 38 Joe Montana at Houston 37 Joe Montana at Miami 37 Elvis Grbac vs. Denver Most Passes Completed, Career 120 Alex Smith (5 games) 107 Len Dawson (8 games) 85 Joe Montana (4 games) 33 Dave Krieg (4 games) 32 Trent Green (2 games) 31 Steve DeBerg (3 games) Most Passes Completed, Game 30 Alex Smith at Indianapolis 29 Alex Smith at New England 28 Joe Montana vs. Pittsburgh 26 Joe Montana at Miami 24 Elvis Grbac vs. Denver 24 Alex Smith vs. Tennessee

1962-75 2013-17 1993-94 1992-93 2001-06 1988-91 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 16, 1994 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 4, 1998 2013-17 1962-75 1993-94 1992-93 2001-06 1988-91 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 2016 Jan. 8, 1994 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 6, 2018

Highest Completion Percentage, Career attempts) 64.9 Alex Smith (5 games: 185-120) 60.3 Joe Montana (4 games: 141-85) 56.9 Len Dawson (8 games: 188-107)

(100 2013-17 1993-94 1962-75

Highest Completion Percentage, Game (15 completions) 77.3 Alex Smith at Houston (22-17) Jan. 9, 2016 72.7 Alex Smith vs. Tennessee (33-24) Jan. 6, 2018 70.3 Joe Montana at Miami (37-26) Dec. 31, 1994 69.2 Len Dawson vs. Miami (26-18) Dec. 25, 1971 Most Passing Yards, Career 1,497 Len Dawson (8 games) 1,250 Alex Smith (5 games) 1,014 Joe Montana (4 games) 454 Dave Krieg (4 games)

44

1962-75 2013-17 1993-94 1992-93

Most Passing Yards, Game 378 Alex Smith at Indianapolis 314 Joe Montana at Miami 299 Joe Montana at Houston 276 Joe Montana vs. Pittsburgh 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) Most Touchdown Passes, Career 9 Alex Smith (5 games) 7 Len Dawson (8 games) 6 Joe Montana (4 games) 2 Steve DeBerg (3 games) 2 Dave Krieg (4 games) 2 Trent Green (2 games) Most Touchdown Passes, Game 4 Alex Smith at Indianapolis 3 Joe Montana at Houston 2 Len Dawson at Buffalo 2 Joe Montana at Miami 2 Alex Smith vs. Tennessee

Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 4, 1994

Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 20, 1969 2013-17 1962-75 1993-94 1988-91 1992-93 2001-06 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 1, 1967 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 6, 2018

Most Passes Had Intercepted, Career 8 Len Dawson (8 games) 1962-75 4 Mark Vlasic (1 game) 1991-92 4 Joe Montana (4 games) 1993-94 Most Passes Had Intercepted, Game 4 Len Dawson at Oakland Dec. 22, 1968 4 Mark Vlasic at Buffalo Jan. 5, 1992

Pass Receiving Most Pass Receptions, Career 27 Otis Taylor (7 games) 27 J.J. Birden (8 games) 23 Travis Kelce (4 games) 21 Keith Cash (6 games) 19 Kimble Anders (7 games)

1965-75 1990-94 2013-17 1992-96 1991-00

Most Pass Receptions, Game 8 Ed Podolak vs. Miami 8 Stephone Paige at Miami 8 Andre Rison vs. Denver 8 Dwayne Bowe at Indianapolis 8 Travis Kelce at Houston 7 Keith Cash vs. Pittsburgh 7 Kimble Anders vs. Indianapolis 7 Dexter McCluster at Indianapolis 7 Knile Davis at Indianapolis 7 Tyreek Hill vs. Tennessee

Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 5, 1991 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 7, 1996 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 6, 2018

Most Receiving Yards, Career 481 Otis Taylor (7 games) 363 J.J. Birden (8 games) 294 Travis Kelce (4 games)

1965-75 1990-94 2013-17

@CHIEFS


266 Keith Cash (6 games) 239 Willie Davis (5 games)

1992-96 1991-95

Most Receiving Yards, Game (All 100+) 150 Dwayne Bowe at Indianapolis Jan. 4, 2014 142 Stephone Paige at Miami Jan. 5, 1991 128 Travis Kelce at Houston Jan. 9, 2016 117 Otis Taylor at Oakland Dec. 22, 1968 110 Ed Podolak vs. Miami Dec. 25, 1971 110 Andre Rison vs. Denver Jan. 4, 1998 104 Elmo Wright vs. Miami Dec. 25, 1971 103 Kimble Anders at Miami Dec. 31, 1994 Most Games, 100 or More Receiving Yards, Career 1 By eightplayers; Last, Travis Kelce at Jan. 9, 2016 Houston Longest Pass Reception 79 Donnie Avery at Indianapolis (from Alex Smith) 63 Elmo Wright vs. Miami (from Len Dawson) 63 Dwayne Bowe at Indianapolis (from Alex Smith) 61 Otis Taylor at N.Y. Jets (from Len Dawson)

Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 20, 1969

Most Receiving Touchdowns, Career 2 Otis Taylor (7 games) 1965-75 2 Fred Jones (3 games) 1990-93 2 J.J. Birden (8 games) 1990-94 2 Tony Gonzalez (3 games) 1997-08 2 Albert Wilson (3 games) 2014-16 Most Receiving Touchdowns, Game 1 Numerous times; Last, Travis Kelce and Demarcus Robinson vs. Tennessee

Jan. 6, 2018

1993-97 1966-70 1968-74

Most Attempts, Game 34 Barry Word vs. L.A. Raiders 30 Ed Podolak vs. Miami 29 Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis

Dec. 28, 1991 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 2004

Most Net Yards, Career 541 Marcus Allen (6 games) 481 Otis Taylor (7 games) 363 J.J. Birden (8 games) 350 Ed Podolak (4 games)

1993-97 1965-75 1990-94 1969-77

Most Net Yards, Game *350 Ed Podolak vs. Miami 227 Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis 208 Priest Holmes vs. Indianapolis 150 Dwayne Bowe at Indianapolis 142 Stephone Paige at Miami

Punting 45

1963-77 1990-93 2005-17 1994-98

Most Punts, Game 8 Jerrel Wilson at Oakland 8 Bryan Barker at San Diego

Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 2, 1993

Longest Punt 66 Dustin Colquitt at Indianapolis 62 Louie Aguiar vs. Denver 61 Jerrel Wilson vs. Green Bay 59 Jerrel Wilson vs. Minnesota 56 Jerrel Wilson at Oakland 56 Dustin Colquitt vs. Houston

Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

6, 2007 4, 1998 15, 1967 11, 1970 4, 1970 9, 2016

Highest Punting Average, Career (20 punts) 46.9 Dustin Colquitt (7 games: 1,266-27) 2005-17 44.6 Jerrel Wilson (8 games: 2,005-45) 1963-77 42.4 Bryan Barker (7 games: 1,613-38) 1990-93 Highest Punting Average, Game (4 punts) 52.3 Dustin Colquitt at IND (314-6) Jan. 6, 2007 50.0 Dustin Colquitt vs. Tennessee (250-5) Jan. 6, 2018 48.5 Jerrel Wilson vs. Minnesota (194-4) Jan. 11, 1970 47.0 Jerrel Wilson at Oakland (302-6) Dec. 22, 1968 46.4 Louie Aguiar vs. Denver (232-5) Jan. 4, 1998

Punt Returns

Combined Net Yards Most Attempts, Career 147 Marcus Allen (6 games) 88 Mike Garrett (6 games) 63 Wendell Hayes (5 games)

Most Punts, Career 43 Jerrel Wilson (8 games) 38 Bryan Barker (7 games) 27 Dustin Colquitt (7 games) 11 Louie Aguiar (3 games)

Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 5, 1991 *NFL RECORD

Most Punt Returns, Career 11 Mike Garrett (6 games) 7 Danan Hughes (6 games)

1966-70 1993-98

Most Punt Returns, Game 4 Mike Garrett vs. Oakland 4 Tamarick Vanover vs. Indianapolis 4 Frankie Hammond Jr. at Houston

Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 7, 1996 Jan. 9, 2016

Most Punt Return Yards, Career 84 Danan Hughes (6 games) 73 Mike Garrett (6 games) 61 Frankie Hammond Jr. (2 games) 44 Tamarick Vanover (2 games)

1993-98 1966-70 2015 1995-99

Most Punt Return Yards, Game 42 Danan Hughes at Houston 37 Mike Garrett at Buffalo 34 Tamarick Vanover vs. Indianapolis 34 Frankie Hammond Jr. at Houston 31 Danan Hughes vs. Pittsburgh Longest Punt Return 35 Danan Hughes at Houston 27 Mike Garrett at Buffalo 15 Danan Hughes vs. Pittsburgh

Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

16, 1994 1, 1967 7, 1996 9, 2016 8, 1994

Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 8, 1994

Highest Punt Return Average, Career (10 returns) 6.6 Mike Garrett (6 games: 11-73) 1966-70 Highest Punt Return Average, Game (3 14.0 Danan Hughes at Houston (3-42) 12.3 Mike Garrett at Buffalo (3-37) 10.3 Danan Hughes vs. Pittsburgh (3-31)

returns) Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 8, 1994

@CHIEFS


Most Touchdowns 0

Most Kickoff Return Touchdowns, Career 1 Dante Hall (2 games) 2000-06 1 Knile Davis (2 games) 2013-15

Kickoff Returns

Interceptions By

Most Kickoff Returns, Career 10 John Stephens (3 games) 10 Dante Hall (2 games) 7 Quintin Demps (1 game) 5 Bert Coan (2 games) 5 Noland Smith (1 game) 5 Tamarick Vanover (2 games) 5 Tyreek Hill (2 games)

1993 2000-06 2013 1963-68 1967-69 1995-99 2016-17

Most Kickoff Returns, Game 7 Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis 7 Quintin Demps at Indianapolis 5 Noland Smith vs. Oakland 5 John Stephens at Buffalo

Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 23, 1994

Most Kickoff Return Yards, Career 266 Dante Hall (2 games) 199 John Stephens (3 games) 196 Knile Davis (3 games) 187 Quintin Demps (1 game) 154 Ed Podolak (1 game)

2000-06 1993 2013-15 2013 1969-77

Most Kickoff Return Yards, Game 208 Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis 187 Quintin Demps at Indianapolis 154 Ed Podolak vs. Miami 106 Knile Davis at Houston 90 Knile Davis at New England

Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 16, 2016

Longest 106 (TD) 92 (TD) 78 46 36 35

Kickoff Return Knile Davis at Houston Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis Ed Podolak vs. Miami Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis Dexter McCluster vs. Baltimore Bert Coan at Buffalo

Jan. 9, 2016 Jan. 11, 2004 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 9, 2011 Jan. 1, 1967

Highest Kickoff Return Average, Career (10 returns) 26.6 Dante Hall (2 games: 10-266) 2000-06 19.9 John Stephens (3 games: 10-199) 1993 Highest Kickoff Return Average, Game (3 returns) 51.3 Ed Podolak vs. Miami (3-154) Dec. 25, 1971 30.0 Knile Davis at New England (3-90) Jan. 16, 2016 29.7 Dante Hall vs. Indianapolis (7-208) Jan. 11, 2004 26.7 Quintin Demps at Indianapolis (7-187) Jan. 4, 2014 24.0 John Stephens vs. Pittsburgh (3-72) Jan. 8, 1994 23.0 Tamarick Vanover vs. Denver (3-69) Jan. 4, 1998

46

Most Interceptions, Career 5 Emmitt Thomas (7 games) 4 Johnny Robinson (8 games) 3 Jim Marsalis (4 games) 3 Deron Cherry (4 games) Most Interceptions, Game 2 Johnny Robinson vs. Houston 2 Jim Marsalis at N.Y. Jets 2 Emmitt Thomas at Oakland 2 Deron Cherry vs. L.A. Raiders 2 Ty Law at Indianapolis 2 Husain Abdullah at Indianapolis

1966-78 1960-71 1969-75 1981-91 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) 1960-71 101 Emmitt Thomas (7 games) 1966-78 65 Jim Marsalis (4 games) 1969-75 Most Interception Return Yards, Game 72 Johnny Robinson at Buffalo Jan. 1, 1967 69 Emmitt Thomas vs. Oakland Jan. 4, 1970 50 Johnny Robinson vs. Houston Dec. 23, 1962 Longest Interception Return 72 Johnny Robinson at Buffalo 62 Emmitt Thomas at Oakland 43 Ty Law at Indianapolis 37 Johnny Robinson vs. Houston

Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 6, 2007 Dec. 23, 1962

Most TDs, Career 0 0

Sacks Most Sacks, Career 6.5 Derrick Thomas (10 games) 6.5 Neil Smith (9 games) 5.0 Aaron Brown (6 games) Most Sacks, Game 3 Aaron Brown at Oakland 2 Eight times; By seven players Last: Allen Bailey at Houston

1989-99 1988-96 1966-72 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 9, 2016

@CHIEFS


Scoring Most Points, Game 44 at Indianapolis 31 at Buffalo 31 vs. Indianapolis 30 at Houston 28 at Houston

Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

Most Touchdowns, Game 5 at Indianapolis 4 at Buffalo 4 at Houston 4 vs. Indianapolis 3 Four times; Last, vs. Tennessee

4, 2014 1, 1967 11, 2004 9, 2016 16, 1994 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

4, 2014 1, 1967 16, 1994 11, 2004 6, 2018

First Downs Most First Downs, Game 30 at Indianapolis 28 vs. Pittsburgh 27 at New England 24 at Miami 24 vs. Indianapolis 23 vs. Miami Fewest First Downs, Game 7 at Indianapolis 8 vs. Baltimore 13 at Oakland 13 at Oakland 14 Threetimes; Last, at Buffalo

Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 16, 2016 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004 Dec. 25, 1971 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 at Indianapolis 451 vs. Miami 414 at Miami 408 vs. Indianapolis 401 vs. Pittsburgh Fewest Net Yards, Game 126 at Indianapolis 161 vs. Baltimore 204 vs. L.A. Raiders 207 at Oakland 213 at Buffalo

Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 25, 1971 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 9, 2011 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 5, 1992

Rushing Most Rushing Attempts, Game 54 vs. Houston Dec. 23, 1962 44 vs. Miami Dec. 25, 1971 41 vs. Minnesota Jan. 11, 1970 Fewest Rushing Attempts, Game 14 vs. Pittsburgh Jan. 15, 2017 16 vs. Tennessee Jan. 6, 2018 17 at Indianapolis Jan. 6, 2007 18 at Houston Jan. 16, 1994 19 vs. Green Bay Jan. 15, 1967 19 at San Diego Jan. 2, 1993 Most Rushing Yards, Game

47

213 199 196 151 150

vs. Miami vs. Houston vs. Indianapolis vs. Minnesota at Indianapolis

Dec. 25, 1971 Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 11, 1970 Jan. 4, 2014

Fewest Rushing Yards, Game 44 at Indianapolis Jan. 6, 2007 52 at Buffalo Jan. 23, 1994 61 at San Diego Jan. 2, 1993 61 vs. Pittsburgh Jan. 15, 2017 67 at N.Y. Jets Dec. 28, 1968 Most Rushing Touchdowns, 2 at Buffalo 2 at Oakland 2 vs. Miami 2 vs. Indianapolis

Game Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 11, 2004

Passing Most Passing Attempts, Game 52 at Buffalo Jan. 23, 1994 50 at New England Jan. 16, 2016 46 at Indianapolis Jan. 4, 2014 44 vs. Pittsburgh Jan. 8, 1994 37 at Miami Dec. 31, 1994 37 vs. Denver Jan. 4, 1998 Fewest Passing Attempts, Game 14 vs. Houston Dec. 23, 1962 14 vs. L.A. Raiders Dec. 28, 1991 17 at Oakland Jan. 4, 1970 17 vs. Minnesota Jan. 11, 1970 Most Completions, Game 30 at Indianapolis 29 vs. Pittsburgh 29 at New England 26 at Miami 25 at Buffalo

Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 16, 2016 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 23, 1994

Fewest Completions, Game 7 at Oakland Jan. 4, 1970 9 vs. Houston Dec. 23, 1962 9 vs. L.A. Raiders Dec. 28, 1991 9 vs. Baltimore Jan. 9, 2011 Most Gross Passing Yards, Game 378 at Indianapolis Jan. 4, 2014 323 at Buffalo Jan. 23, 1994 314 at Miami Dec. 31, 1994 299 at Houston Jan. 16, 1994 299 vs. Pittsburgh Jan. 8, 1994 Fewest Gross Passing Yards, Game 70 vs. Baltimore Jan. 9, 2011 88 vs. Houston Dec. 23, 1962 79 vs. L.A. Raiders Dec. 28, 1991 107 at Indianapolis Jan. 6, 2007 Most Times Sacked, Game 9 at Buffalo 7 at San Diego 6 vs. Houston 6 vs. Green Bay

Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 2, 1993 Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 15, 1967

@CHIEFS


Most Interceptions Thrown, Game 4 at Oakland Dec. 22, 1968 4 at Buffalo Jan. 5, 1992 3 vs. Indianapolis Jan. 7, 1996 3 vs. Baltimore Jan. 9, 2011

Interceptions By Most Interceptions By, Game 5 vs. Houston Dec. 23, 1962 4 at Oakland Jan. 4, 1970 4 vs. L.A. Raiders Dec. 28, 1991 4 at Houston Jan. 9, 2016

Penalties Most Penalties, Game 10 at Buffalo 8 vs. Tennessee 7 Three times; Last vs. Denver Fewest Penalties, Game 1 at N.Y. Jets 2 at Indianapolis 2 at Indianapolis 3 Twice; Last vs. Indianapolis

Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 6, 2018 Jan. 4, 1998 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 7, 1996

Most Yards Penalized, Game 68 vs. Tennessee Jan. 6, 2018 65 vs. Denver Jan. 4, 1998

48

63 at N.Y. Jets 62 at San Diego

Dec. 20, 1969 Jan. 2, 1993

Fewest Yards Penalized, Game 5 at N.Y. Jets Dec. 28, 1986 13 at Indianapolis Jan. 6, 2007 15 at Miami Dec. 31, 1994 15 at Indianapolis Jan. 4, 2014 20 vs. L.A. Raiders Dec. 28, 1991

Fumbles Most Fumbles, Game 5 at Oakland 3 Three times; Last, vs. Miami Most Fumbles Lost, Game 4 at Oakland 2 vs. Miami 2 vs. Baltimore Most Turnovers, Game 5 vs. Baltimore 4 at Oakland 4 at Oakland 4 vs. Miami 4 at Buffalo 4 vs. Indianapolis

Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 31, 1994 Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 9, 2011 Jan. 9, 2011 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 4, 1970 Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 7, 1996

@CHIEFS


Scoring Fewest Points Allowed, Game Jan. 9, 2016 0 at Houston 6 at N.Y. Jets Dec. 20, 1969 6 vs. L.A. Raiders Dec. 28, 1991 Most Points Allowed, Game 45 at Indianapolis 41 at Oakland 38 vs. Indianapolis 37 at Buffalo 35 vs. Green Bay 35 at N.Y. Jets

Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 15, 1967 Dec. 28, 1986

Fewest Touchdowns Allowed, Game Dec. 20, 1969 0 at N.Y. Jets Dec. 28, 1991 0 vs. L.A. Raiders Jan. 9, 2016 0 at Houston Jan. 15, 2017 0 vs. Pittsburgh Most Touchdowns Allowed, Game 6 at Indianapolis Jan. 4, 2014 5 vs. Green Bay Jan. 15, 1967 5 at Oakland Dec. 22, 1968 5 at N.Y. Jets Dec. 28, 1986 5 vs. Indianapolis Jan. 11, 2004

First Downs Fewest First Downs Allowed, Game 9 at Buffalo Jan. 1, 1967 13 vs. Minnesota Jan. 11, 1970 14 at Houston Jan. 9, 2016 16 Three times; Last vs. Denver Jan. 4, 1998 Most First Downs Allowed, Game 30 at Buffalo Jan. 23, 1994 29 at Buffalo Jan. 5, 1992 28 at Indianapolis Jan. 6, 2007 28 at Indianapolis Jan. 4, 2014 27 vs. Indianapolis Jan. 11, 2004

Net Yards Rushing and Passing Fewest Net Yards Allowed, Game 226 at Houston Jan. 9, 2016 233 at Oakland Jan. 4, 1970 235 at N.Y. Jets Dec. 20, 1969 239 vs. Minnesota Jan. 11, 1970 249 vs. Indianapolis Jan. 7, 1996 Most Net Yards Allowed, Game 536 at Indianapolis Jan. 4, 2014 454 at Oakland Dec. 22, 1968 448 at Buffalo Jan. 5, 1992 435 at Indianapolis Jan. 6, 2007 434 vs. Indianapolis Jan. 11, 2004

Rushing Fewest Rushing Attempts, Game 13 at Buffalo Jan. 1, 1967 14 at Houston Jan. 16, 1994 14 at New England Jan. 16, 2016

49

19 vs. Minnesota 19 at Indianapolis

Jan. 11, 1970 Jan. 4, 2014

Most Rushing Attempts, Game 46 at Buffalo Jan. 5, 1992 46 at Buffalo Jan. 23, 1994 43 vs. Miami Dec. 25, 1971 Fewest Rushing Yards Allowed, Game 38 at New England Jan. 16, 2016 39 at Houston Jan. 16, 1994 40 at Buffalo Jan. 1, 1967 67 vs. Minnesota Jan. 11, 1970 Most Rushing Yards Allowed, Game 229 at Buffalo Jan. 23, 1994 202 vs. Tennessee Jan. 6, 2018 192 at San Diego Jan. 2, 1993 188 at Indianapolis Jan. 6, 2007 180 at Buffalo Jan. 5, 1992 Most Rushing Touchdowns Allowed, 3 vs. Green Bay 3 at Buffalo 2 Fourtimes; Last, vs. Indianapolis

Game Jan. 15, 1967 Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004

Passing Fewest Passing Attempts Allowed, Game 19 vs. Denver Jan. 4, 1998 23 at N.Y. Jets Dec. 28, 1986 23 vs. L.A. Raiders Dec. 28, 1991 23 at San Diego Jan. 2, 1993 Most Passing Attempts Allowed, Game 46 vs. Houston Dec. 23, 1962 45 at Oakland Jan. 4, 1970 45 at Indianapolis Jan. 4, 2014 43 at Houston Jan. 16, 1994 42 at New England Jan. 16, 2016 42 vs. Pittsburgh Jan. 16, 1994 Fewest Completions Allowed, Game 10 vs. Denver Jan. 4, 1998 12 at Buffalo Jan. 1, 1967 12 vs. L.A. Raiders Dec. 28, 1991 12 vs. Indianapolis Jan. 7, 1996 Most Completions Allowed, Game 32 at Houston Jan. 16, 1994 31 at Indianapolis Jan. 6, 2007 29 at Indianapolis Jan. 4, 2014 28 at New England Jan. 16, 2016 25 vs. Baltimore Jan. 9, 2011 Fewest Gross Passing Yards Allowed, Game 112 vs. Indianapolis Jan. 7, 1996 136 at Houston Jan. 9, 2016 140 vs. L.A. Raiders Dec. 28, 1991 153 at N.Y. Jets Dec. 28, 1986 160 at Buffalo Jan. 23, 1994 Most Passing Yards Allowed, Game 443 at Indianapolis Jan. 4, 2014 347 at Oakland Dec. 22, 1968 306 at Houston Jan. 16, 1994

@CHIEFS


304 vs. Indianapolis 302 at New England

Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 16, 2016

Most Passing Touchdowns Allowed, 5 at Oakland 4 at Indianapolis 3 Fourtimes; Last, vs. Indianapolis

Game Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 11, 2004

Sacks Most Sacks, Game 9 at Houston 5 at San Diego

50

Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 2, 1993

4 at Oakland 4 at Buffalo 4 vs. Baltimore

Jan. 4, 1970 Jan. 1, 1967 Jan. 9, 2011

Interceptions Most Interceptions By, Game 5 vs. Houston Dec. 23, 1962 4 at Oakland Jan. 4, 1970 4 vs. L.A. Raiders Dec. 28, 1991 4 at Houston Jan. 9, 2016

@CHIEFS


Single Game Total Points 18 Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland 18 Thurman Thomas, Buffalo 18 Chris Boswell, Pittsburgh 15 Scott Norwood, Buffalo 14 Steve Christie. Buffalo Total Touchdowns 3 Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland 3 Thurman Thomas, Buffalo 2 Max McGee, Green Bay 2 Elijah Pitts, Green Bay 2 Warren Wells, Oakland 2 Freeman McNeil, N.Y. Jets 2 Andre Reed, Buffalo 2 Terrell Davis, Denver 2 Edgerrin James, Indianapolis 2 T.Y. Hilton, Indianapolis 2 Donald Brown, Indianapolis 2 Rob Gronkowski, New England Field Goals 6 Chris Boswell, Pittsburgh 3 Scott Norwood, Buffalo 3 Steve Christie, Buffalo 3 Adam Vinatieri, Indianapolis 3 Billy Cundiff, Baltimore 2 George Blanda, Oakland 2 Jim Turner, N.Y. Jets 2 Garo Yepremiam, Miami 2 Jeff Jaeger, L.A. Raiders 2 Al Del Greco, Houston 2 Pete Stoyanovich, Miami 2 Stephen Gostkowski, New England Pass Attempts (All 40+) 46 George Blanda, Houston 45 Andrew Luck, Indianapolis 43 Warren Moon, Houston 42 Neil O’Donnell, Pittsburgh 42 Tom Brady, New England 40 Joe Namath, N.Y. Jets

Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 15, 2017 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 23, 1994 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. 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 Dec. 23, 1962 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 16, 2016 Dec. 20, 1969

Pass Completions 32 Warren Moon, Houston 31 Peyton Manning, Indianapolis 29 Andrew Luck, Indianapolis 28 Tom Brady, New England 25 Joe Flacco, Baltimore

Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

Passing Yards (All 300+) 443 Andrew Luck, Indianapolis 345 Daryle Lamonica, Oakland 306 Warren Moon, Houston 304 Peyton Manning, Indianapolis 302 Tom Brady, New England

Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 16, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 16, 2016

16, 1994 6, 2007 4, 2014 16, 2016 9, 2011

Long Pass 69 Jack Kemp to Elbert Dubenion, Buffalo

Jan. 1, 1967

Touchdown Passes 5 Daryle Lamonica, Oakland

Dec. 22, 1968

51

4 3 3 3 3

Andrew Luck, Indianapolis Pat Ryan, N.Y. Jets Jim Kelly, Buffalo Neil O'Donnell, Pittsburgh Peyton Manning, Indianapolis

Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 11, 2004

Interceptions Thrown 5 George Blanda, Houston 4 Todd Marinovich, L.A. Raiders 4 Brian Hoyer, Houston 3 Joe Namath, N.Y. Jets 3 Daryle Lamonica, Oakland 3 Jim Kelly, Buffalo 3 Peyton Manning, Indianapolis 3 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 Thurman Thomas, Buffalo 31 Freeman McNeil, N.Y. Jets 30 Le'Veon Bell, Pittsburgh 26 Edgerrin James, Indianapolis 25 Leroy Thompson, Pittsburgh 25 Terrell Davis, Denver 25 Joseph Addai, Indianapolis

Jan. 23, 1994 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 15, 2017 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 8,1993 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 6, 2007

Rushing Yards (All 100+) 186 Thurman Thomas, Buffalo 170 Le'Veon Bell, Pittsburgh 156 Derrick Henry, Tennessee 135 Freeman McNeil, N.Y. Jets 125 Edgerrin James, Indianapolis 122 Joseph Addai, Indianapolis 119 Marion Butts, San Diego 107 Nick Bell, L.A. Raiders 101 Terrell Davis, Denver 100 Thurman Thomas, Buffalo

Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 15, 2017 Jan. 6, 2018 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 11, 2004 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 2, 1993 Dec. 28, 1991 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 5, 1992

Rushing Touchdowns 3 Thurman Thomas, Buffalo 2 Elijah Pitts, Green Bay 2 Freeman McNeil, N.Y. Jets 2 Terrell Davis, Denver 2 Edgerrin James, Indianapolis

Jan. 23, 1994 Jan. 15, 1967 Dec. 28, 1986 Jan. 4, 1998 Jan. 11, 2004

Long Run 54 Marion Butts, San Diego

Jan. 2, 1993

Pass Receptions 13 T.Y. Hilton, Indianapolis 10 Todd Heap, Baltimore 10 Julian Edelman, New England 9 Haywood Jeffires, Houston 9 Dallas Clark, Indianapolis 8 Charles Smith, Oakland 7 Max McGee, Green Bay 7 Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland 7 John Henderson, Minnesota 7 Paul Warfield, Miami 7 Jeff Graham, Pittsburgh 7 Joseph Addai, Indianapolis 7 Rob Gronkowski, 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

Receiving Yards (All 100+) 224 T.Y. Hilton, Indianapolis 180 Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland

Jan. 4, 2014 Dec. 22, 1968

@CHIEFS


140 138 127 111 108 108 103 100 100

Paul Warfield, Miami Max McGee, Green Bay Bobby Burnett, Buffalo John Henderson, Minnesota Todd Heap, Baltimore Antonio Brown, Pittsburgh Dallas Clark, Indianapolis Andre Reed, Buffalo Julian Edelman, New England

Touchdown Receptions 3 Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland 2 Max McGee, Green Bay 2 Warren Wells, Oakland 2 Andre Reed, Buffalo 2 T.Y. Hilton, Indianapolis 2 Rob Gronkowski, New England Interceptions Made 2 Kirby Jackson, Buffalo

52

Dec. 25, 1971 Jan. 15, 1967 Jan. 11, 1967 Jan. 11, 1970 Jan. 9, 2011 Jan. 15, 2017 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 16, 2016 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 15, 1967 Dec. 22, 1968 Jan. 5, 1992 Jan. 4, 2014 Jan. 16, 2016

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 Long Field Goal (All 50+) 58 Pete Stoyanovich, Miami 50 Adam Vinatieri, Indianapolis Sacks 3 Gerald Williams, Pittsburgh 3 Whitney Mercilus, Houston

Jan. 5, 1991 Jan. 5, 1991 Jan. 6, 2007 Jan. 8, 1994 Jan. 9, 2016

Jan. 5, 1992

@CHIEFS


CHIEFS FEATURE CLIPPINGS


TEAM 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Tony Gonzalez will never forget how he became a man in Kansas City (Kansas City Star) 2 Chiefs in the NFL Draft: second and third rounds have been good to Reid and Co. (Kansas City Star) 4 The 2026 World Cup is coming to the United States, and Kansas City might be next (Kansas City Star) 6 Behind the Scenes: Chiefs offer rare glimpse of concussion procedures (Kansas City Business Journal) 9 The Chiefs’ Rookies Explore Kansas City’s Past at Negro Leagues Baseball Museum (Chiefs.com) 11 At long last, Chiefs great Johnny Robinson on verge of Hall of Fame (Kansas City Star) 13

EXECUTIVES/Coaches 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

Chiefs promote Eric Bieniemy to offensive coordinator (Kansas City Star) 15 Meet the Chiefs coach who drills down deep with Patrick Mahomes (Kansas City Star) 17 With a new coach in charge of their position, Justin Houston and the Chiefs’ outside linebackers aim to be relentless (The Athletic) 19 Chiefs’ Emmitt Thomas wins lifetime achievement honor from pro football writers (Chiefs Digest) 21 Losing an arm helped make this Chiefs assistant coach who he is (Kansas City Star) 22 Straight talker, deep listener: Eric Bieniemy makes an impression in new role as Chiefs’ offensive coordinator (The Athletic) 27 Chiefs’ facelift is all Veach … with Reid’s blessing (Kansas City Star) 32 Runs in the Family: Kansas City Chiefs running backs coach Deland McCullough went searching for his biological parents. He found them where he never would have expected. (ESPN) 35

PLAYERS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23.

Why Chiefs' Tyreek Hill chucked up the 'deuces' in '17 (Kansas City Star) 44 Eric Berry Talks Exercise, Healthy Eating Habits and Life with Local Middle Schoolers (Chiefs.com) 46 Chiefs are confident in leadership abilities of young Patrick Mahomes (Kansas City Star) 48 Mitchell Schwartz Meets with the Prime Minister of Israel (Chiefs.com) 51 Chiefs have plans for new defensive tackle and KC native Xavier Williams (Kansas City Star) 52 Chiefs see Sammy Watkins as another building block toward offensive juggernaut (Kansas City Star) 54 New Chiefs backup Chad Henne has experience mentoring young QBs (ESPN) 56 Andy Reid Believes the Best is Yet to Come for CB Kendall Fuller (Chiefs.com) 58 De’Anthony Thomas and Steve Nelson Surprise and Encourage a Kid Battling Cancer at Arrowhead (Chiefs.com) 59 Spencer Ware on His Family’s Battle with Sickle Cell Anemia: “I Want My Mom to See Her Son Play” (Chiefs.com) 61 New Chiefs safety Watts: 'real humbling' to play with Eric Berry after NFL Draft (Kansas City Star) 63 Chiefs' Anthony Sherman brings crew of teammates to NASCAR race at Kansas Speedway (Kansas City Star) 64 Is there a doctor in the house? Chiefs have one on the field in remarkable Duvernay-Tardif (Kansas City Star) 66 Chiefs' Tyreek Hill treats some kids to shopping spree (Kansas City Star) 69 Leadership Personified: Reggie Ragland’s Remarkable Journey Has Built Him for This Moment (Chiefs.com) 71 Chiefs’ Spencer Ware says his ‘Yes Lawd’ clothing line inspired him during knee rehab (Kansas City Star) 85 Chiefs’ Chris Conley talks passions and preseason thoughts at charity bowling event (Kansas City Star) 87 Chiefs LT Eric Fisher Finished His Passion Project This Offseason (Chiefs.com) 89 Now more than ever, rookie Derrick Nnadi tapping into wisdom and drive of his true hero, his father (The Athletic) 92 Chiefs safety Eric Berry: ‘I just keep on trucking’ (Kansas City Star) 96 Chiefs broke a trend by drafting Patrick Mahomes, now hope he bucks another (Kansas City Star) 98 Good and lucky: How Patrick Mahomes wound up in Kansas City, quarterbacking the Chiefs (Kansas City Star) 101 ‘He only sees the end zone’: Tyreek Hill makes everyone on the field around him disappear (The Athletic) 109

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(Team) Tony Gonzalez will never forget how he became a man in Kansas City TEREZ A. PAYLOR Kansas City Star February 24, 2018

As the airplane descended into Kansas City, just hours before the 47th annual 101 Awards, Tony Gonzalez allowed himself to reminisce, not only about his 41 years on this earth, but also about the 12 seasons he spent as a Chief. Gonzalez, the 13th overall pick in the 1997 NFL Draft and this year’s inductee in the Chiefs’ Ring of Honor, doesn’t get back here much, so he couldn’t help but marvel at how much he, and the city, has changed. For one, there’s way more to do downtown than there was back then, he said, back when he and his teammates celebrated the opening of chain restaurants like P.F. Chang’s and Cheesecake Factory. But his personal change, in retrospect, is stunning, he admitted. The former star tight end has come a long way since his rookie year, when he dropped 17 passes as a rookie, the most in the NFL, and was ripped by former Kansas City Star columnist Jason Whitlock in his uber-popular year-end grades. “He gave me a D-minus in the paper, and said that it was another bust by the Kansas City Chiefs,” Gonzalez reminisced with a laugh while at the 101 Awards banquet at the Westin Crown Center. But in retrospect, Gonzalez added, it was the best thing that ever happened to him. So was the booing at Arrowhead that year from fans fed up with his focus drops. “Talk about growth,” Gonzalez said. “When you hit the hard times in your life, that’s when you find out what you’re made of. And Iremember I made the decision I was never going to hear that sound (of boos) again, I would never be outworked. “Up until that point, I wasn’t staying after practice, I wasn’t showing up early. I wasn’t catching balls while the defense was going. I was doing what I was told to do, working hard, but nothing extra. And that’s what it takes. That’s what greatness is all about.” Gonzalez learned this by watching former Chiefs greats like Will Shields, Tony Richardson, Marcus Allen and Warren Moon, and after he embraced their ethos, a superstar was born. “It changed everything for me,” Gonzalez said. Gonzalez nearly doubled his receptions and receiving yards as a second-year pro, and officially took off in 1999 when he made the first of 14 Pro Bowls and first of six All-Pro teams during a killer 17-year career that was spurred by his newfound understanding of the essence of manhood once his career got off to a rocky start.

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“I became a man out here in Kansas City,” Gonzalez said. “The tough times, the storms are coming, but it’s what you do when you’re going through that storm, the decisions you make, that can change your life and make it unbelievable. Because the sun’s gonna come out and make it a great time.” Gonzalez’s tenure in Kansas City came to an end after the 2008 season, when Gonzalez — sick of the constant losing and, at 31 years old,entering the tail end of his prime — finally requested a trade. “I didn’t want to leave; I was scared,” Gonzalez said. “I was scared about the reaction from the fans, I was scared about the reaction from my teammates.” Still, he knew he needed to risk his comfort in Kansas City for a better situation. He found it in Atlanta, where he went to the playoffs and played in an NFC Championship game while the Chiefs used the second-round pick they got from the Falcons for Gonzalez on cornerback Javier Arenas, who played for six teams across a seven-year career. “If I would have stayed here … the Todd Haley years did not work out for them here,” Gonzalez said. “It worked out for me.” But Gonzalez still feels the love from Chiefs fans, which is all that matters to him. “I feel just as much as a Chief as if I’d stayed here my whole career,” Gonzalez said. “I still feel loved by the fans here, and I love them, and it’s good to be back here.” Though the club has not moved to retire Gonzalez’s number — the club has an overall shortage of numbers, as the Chiefs have already retired 10 jersey numbers, which is among the most in the NFL — Chiefs chairman Clark Hunt hinted that Gonzalez’s looming first year of eligibility for the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2019 played a role in the franchise’s desire to honor him this year. “Since he’s going to have to get used to hearing Hall of Fame connected to his name over the next couple of years, it’s our honor to be the first,” Hunt said. Gonzalez’s Hall resume is strong. He set franchise records for receptions, receiving yards, receiving touchdowns and 100-yard games, and he also set NFL records for career receptions, receiving yards and 100-yard receiving games for tight ends. Gonzalez is also the first tight end in league history to produce 16 consecutive seasons with 50 or more receptions, and his 1,325 career receptions are the second-most all-time, at any position, only behind the great Jerry Rice. “He was always putting in extra time after practice, catching balls or running routes,” Hunt said. “His relentless drive helped him become the best tight end in the history of the game.” Gonzalez owes it all to that rough start with the Chiefs, a memory he embraces to this day due to all the ways it’s benefited him. “I wouldn’t change it for anything, honestly,” Gonzalez said. “It made the person I am now, and what I’m doing with my life with my wife and my kids. I owe it all to Kansas City, and being that 13th pick overall in 1997. “To be able to go up in that Ring of Honor and be listed with all those guys, whew, it’s amazing. Couldn’t ask for anything more.”

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(Team) Chiefs in the NFL Draft: second and third rounds have been good to Reid and Co. Blair Kerkhoff Kansas City Star April 26, 2018

The second day of the NFL Draft has been good to the Chiefs during the Andy Reid era. Without a pick in the first round this year, and no move made to trade up on Thursday, the Chiefs hope to keep moving in that direction when the second and third rounds unfold on Friday. The Chiefs have a total of three picks in those rounds, one in the second — No. 54 overall — and two in the third, Nos. 78 and 86. The first pick in the third round came from Washington in the Alex Smith trade. The idea in the early rounds is to find players who can start soon if not immediately, and the Chiefs have largely accomplished this over the past five years. Veach has been part of the process, coming with Reid from Philadelphia. Ten players have been chosen by the Chiefs on Friday’s draft day over the past five drafts. Six have started at least half of the team’s games. Tight end Travis Kelce, center Mitch Morse and defensive lineman Chris Jones are mainstays. Last year’s third-round pick, running back Kareem Hunt, became the NFL’s leading rusher. Wide receiver Chris Conley and cornerback Steven Nelson, third round picks in 2015, have started more than half of their games. One who hasn’t, cornerback Phillip Gaines, has battled injuries. Last year’s second-round selection, defensive lineman Tanoh Kpassagnon, appeared in 16 games, started one and falls in the project category. There has been one bust in the group. Two years ago, the Chiefs spent their third-round pick on cornerback KeiVarae Russell. He never picked up the defense and that September became the first player taken in the first four rounds of the 2016 draft to get waived. He has since appeared in 13 games as a member of the Bengals. Knile Davis, a third-round running back in 2013, couldn’t find many offensive snaps but delivered a huge moment for the franchise, his 106-yard kickoff return to open the only playoff victory in the Reid era, at Houston after the 2015 season. But with those Chiefs' draft classes contributing to five winning seasons, four playoff seasons and two AFC West titles, the Chiefs have been mostly correct on personnel matters.

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“The higher you pick certainly the more confident you feel in those guys stepping right in,” Veach said. “You get to (rounds) six and seven you kind of throw some darts on the wall and do a lot of homework on these guys. “Certainly when you’re picking in the top three or four rounds you’re looking for help right away.” Even the pre-Reid Chiefs found success in the third round. Of the 25 players on the roster who were drafted by the Chiefs, seven were taken in the third round, the most of any round. Before the arrival of the Reid regime, the Chiefs selected defensive lineman Allen Bailey, linebacker Justin Houston and punter Dustin Colquitt in the third. Players taken in the early rounds stick around longer, for obvious reasons. They’re perceived as more talented, they’re given more opportunities and teams have more money invested in them. So where will the Chiefs go when they’re on the clock? The defense appears to have more pressing needs than the offense. Many mock drafts have the Chiefs selecting a defensive lineman or defensive back with their first pick. Some players considered the best available Friday are Iowa cornerback Josh Jackson, Boston College defensive end Harold Landry and Penn State tight end Mike Gesicki. A trade to move up might be needed to land one of those players. But if the Chiefs hold their second round position, other possibilities like Georgia edge rusher Lorenzo Carter, Auburn cornerback Carlton Davis or Michigan defensive tackle Maurice Hurst could be available. “Once you get into the 10th, 11th pick of the second round, then it starts to get wild,” Veach said. Five years of drafting in the second and third rounds offer no clues. The Chiefs have split their 10 second- and third-round picks between offense and defense. “We’re going to continue to add to both sides,” Veach said. “The one thing that you have to protect yourself against is being too comfortable at any position.”

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(Team) The 2026 World Cup is coming to the United States, and Kansas City might be next Sam Mcdowell Kansas City Star June 13, 2018

The United States won’t play a match in the 2018 World Cup, but it will play host to a flurry of international games within the next decade. A day before the World Cup commences in Russia — without the U.S. men’s national team, which failed to qualify — a FIFA vote Wednesday awarded the 2026 tournament to a joint bid led by the United States that also includes Canada and Mexico. And Kansas City could be a part of it. Sixty of the 80 games in the 2026 World Cup will take place domestically, including every match from the quarterfinals onward, with Kansas City in the mix to serve as a host for the largest sports tournament in the world, contested every four years. Arrowhead Stadium is on a short list of potential American venues released earlier this year by the United Bid Committee. During a press conference Wednesday among representatives from the Kansas City bid coalition, there was evident optimism about the stadium securing a spot on the final list, which is expected to be announced in 2020. “I feel very confident,” said Kathy Nelson, president and CEO of the Kansas City Sports Commission. “As a team, we feel great about our options.” “When you start to compile all these aspects of Kansas City, I think we feel very bullish about the opportunity,” Sporting Club president Jake Reid said. David Ficklin, the director for the local bid, said Arrowhead Stadiuim could host as many as five World Cup matches, including a potential quarterfinal game. Ficklin called Arrowhead an “ideal venue for a quarterfinal.” It is not in the running to host the championship or semifinal matches. The final is widely expected to be played in the New York area. The North American bid was awarded the 2026 World Cup by a 134-65 vote over Morocco, a surprisingly wide margin. Morocco had thrown itself into the mix on the last day possible last year and then tried to garner support by denouncing the United Bid and, more specifically, President Donald Trump and his immigration policies.

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“On behalf of our United Bid, thank you so, so very much for this incredible honor," U.S. Soccer president Carlos Cordeiro said after the vote in Russia was announced early Wednesday morning. "Thank you for entrusting us with this privilege.” U.S. Soccer has spent the past decade trying to return the World Cup to this country for the first time since 1994. It lost the 2022 bid to Qatar before FIFA bribery scandals became more publicly known. As part of the rehabilitation process, FIFA allowed every nation to vote on the 2026 location, whereas the prior process allowed the input of only the federation’s major players. Early Wednesday morning, after its 15-minute presentation to FIFA members focused on revenue and existing infrastructure, the vote fell to North America, which projected revenues of $11 billion for FIFA. Will the next major development include Kansas City? Arrowhead Stadium is one of 23 sites across the continent included in the joint bid’s official tendering to FIFA, including 17 in the United States. As many as 16 host cities will be selected across the continent. The United Bid Committee will take the onus of those final decisions. It is thought to be looking at MLSestablished cities and sites that can help grow the game. Location will also play a factor. No other potential landing spot is within a seven-hour drive of Kansas City. Absent its selection, a noticeable hole would remain in the center of the North American landscape. “They’re looking to make a legacy impact and to grow the game. I think you need a foundation for those things,” Reid said. “So I think all those things are really, really good for us.” The Kansas City bid is a collaborative effort that includes the Chiefs, Sporting KC, the Kansas City Sports Commission and Foundation and mayors and city managers and officials from both sides of the state line. Collectively, their submission includes a request for more than World Cup matches. It has offered to serve as a hosting site for international friendlies in the days leading up to the World Cup, games that would be played at Children’s Mercy Park. It remains in the mix to house the pool and bracket draws for the qualification and the tournament itself. More recently, the officials have used Pinnacle, Sporting KC's new state-of-the-art training center, as a tool for persuasion. The facility has the capability to host four national teams and perhaps even serve as a longstanding training ground for them. All of the sites have been approved by FIFA, though Arrowhead Stadium would likely need some adjustments to host the 2026 tournament, which will be the first World Cup to expand to 48 teams. Ficklin said Arrowhead Stadium would likely need to be trimmed to a rectangle shape rather than the existing curvature along the corners, requiring the temporary removal of some of the football stadium’s seats. “That’s absolutely in consideration,” Chiefs president Mark Donovan said. “This isn’t about changing the stadium for a match. It’s about changing the stadium and then changing it back. Clearly, in 2026, we’re going to have some preparation discussions with our season-ticket members who are in those seats that

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may be affected by it. There are a lot of discussions about stadium renovations as a whole. So all that will factor into it.” Donovan referred to the potential for Arrowhead Stadium to house a World Cup match a “legacy of Lamar Hunt.” The other American sites still on the short list are Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Cincinnati, Dallas, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, Nashville, New York/New Jersey, Orlando, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington, D.C. In order to join that group, Kansas City Major Sly James said the plans for a new, single-terminal airport were a necessity. During the bid process, James said the local committee encountered the question, “What about your airport?” James later added, “It is exactly for this reason that you needed to do that.” The most significant hurdle remaining figures to be public transportation, though FIFA gave Kansas City a passing grade for its proposal that includes shuttles hauling people from different areas of the city to games. Nelson said the Kansas City alliance expects to receive its next cue from the United Bid Committee in the coming months. It will likely include FIFA officials touring the city and its proposed sites. “We see this as a great day to celebrate,” Donovan said. “But we also see this as a step in the process. And we’re excited about the opportunity to convince the world that Kansas City and Arrowhead Stadium is the right place to host a World Cup in 2026.”

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(Team) Behind the Scenes: Chiefs offer rare glimpse of concussion procedures James Dornbrook Kansas City Business Journal June 15, 2018

With the National Football League coming off its worst season for concussions in recorded history, the Kansas City Chiefs offered a rare, behind-the-scenes glimpse of their medical procedures to address the problem. The NFL started recording concussions in 2012. Last season ended with more than 600 concussion protocol examinations performed and 281 concussions diagnosed. The previous record was 275 in 2015. The NFL now has a fairly complex system in place to address the safety issues related to concussions, and the league continues to work on improving it. Yet the NFL still has a poor reputation on the matter, thanks to a long history of denial. Denial to addressing The league created the Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Committee in 1994 and appointed rheumatologist Elliot Pellman as chairman, even though he had zero experience in brain science. The committee then spent years denying every scientific report linking multiple concussions to dementia and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), and avoiding taking serious action until 2009. Since then, the league has done a lot to address the problem. Today, the concussion identification, evaluation, treatment and recording system in the NFL is state of the art and being copied by other professional sports. Jeff Miller, the NFL’s executive vice president of health and safety policy, conducted a rare tour to show how the system works at Arrowhead Stadium. Previously, the system relied on referees and trainers to make decisions, but today it also includes five people hired by the league who work nine stories above the field. Two are trainers with binoculars, one for each team, watching for any signs of concussion or injury. Two are video technicians who have their own game feeds and study every play, tagging any play that results in injury. The fifth person in the booth is an unaffiliated central neurotrauma consultant who is a medical professional with experience in concussions. The booth can call down to the field and order a player to be evaluated and also has the power to contact the referee through his earpiece and call for a medical timeout to make sure a player is evaluated before returning to play. The booth can send video replays down to the field for trainers to see, allowing them to gain more information for making an evaluation.

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Players initially are evaluated in a little blue tent set up on the sidelines. If a doctor determines the need for further evaluation, the player is sent to the locker room. The Kelce incident Rick Burkholder, vice president of sports medicine and performance for the Chiefs, shared an example of how the system works by citing the concussion suffered by Travis Kelce during a playoff game against the Tennessee Titans in January. “In the Kelce play, when he went down and we ran out onto the field, one of the players whispered in my ear that he wasn’t talking right,” Burkholder said. “Head Coach Andy Reid, who has the best view of the field, said to me, ‘I know he’s done for the day.’ By the time I got there, he was communicating fine. But we already had several red flags. Then I saw the video, and I saw Kelce stagger. After Kelce came off the field, you might remember him skipping and waving his hands at the fans. None of that matters to us. There were four red flags through the system, the spotters, a teammate, the coach and video. So we took him straight into the locker room.” Still, the system has suffered breakdowns. The Seattle Seahawks-Arizona Cardinals game on Nov. 9 offers a prime example. Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson was sent to the sidelines by the referee for concussion evaluation. Wilson entered the blue tent but within seconds jumped out and went back into the game. It was a violation of the policy, and the team was fined $100,000. Burkholder said teams violated the procedure only three times last season. “The whole world knew about the three instances, but no one talked about the hundreds of others that worked properly,” Burkholder said. Once a player goes to the locker room for further evaluation, he is put into a special room with a door that can close to eliminate sound and control light, both of which exacerbate concussion symptoms. The team doctor then follows a checklist of procedures to determine whether the player can return to the game. The league also focuses on prevention, changing kickoff and tackling rules to eliminate the most dangerous plays. The league studies helmets to find the best ones for concussion prevention and started banning those that don’t measure up. “This was based on testing by engineers based on a variety of impact angles and speeds,” Miller said. “The helmets were then ranked by performance. A year ago, of the five highest-rated helmets, four were new entrants to the market. So the manufacturers are upping their game and making changes for the better and helping us out.”

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(Team) The Chiefs’ Rookies Explore Kansas City’s Past at Negro Leagues Baseball Museum Matt McMullen Chiefs.com June 21, 2018

They gathered around the chain-link fence – a baseball diamond visible on just the other side – as their guide began to speak. All 24 of the Kansas City Chiefs’ rookies, typically a resounding bunch, fell silent. “This was all based on one simple principle,” the guide explained. “If you won’t let us play, then we’ll just create a league of our own.” The man speaking was Bob Kendrick, the President of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City’s historic 18th and Vine District, and it was his task on this summer afternoon to indoctrinate the community’s newest athletes with its past. Kendrick articulated the origins of the league – its determined existence in spite of prejudice – and how a Kansas City Monarch named Jackie Robinson helped change the course of history. It’s a story that’s best told right here in Kansas City. “If they’re going to call Kansas City home, they need to learn about the things that make Kansas City special,” Kendrick said following the tour, which lasted over an hour and ended with a dinner on the museum’s famed baseball diamond. “They’ll never experience the kind of adversity that these ballplayers had to face, but I hope they can draw strength from what they witnessed here as they go through challenges and trials during their careers.” From Kendrick’s words to the exhibits themselves, the visit seemed to resonate with each of the players as they made their way through the museum. “Any time you get to learn the history of any sport – the people who started things and how they got things to where they are today – you want to hear that story,” said offensive guard Kahlil McKenzie. “If you look at where sports are now, it’s been a long and crazy road to get here. It’s just awesome to learn about, so being here is special.” The visit was part of the Chiefs’ annual “Rookie Experience Program,” which seeks to equip Kansas City’s newest players with the knowledge they need to succeed as professional athletes – including an understanding of their new home.

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“Being here and coming from our Hall of Fame earlier, it just makes me want to be the best I can be,” said cornerback Tremon Smith. “It makes me want to work as hard as possible.” And away from the field, that understanding allows the players – who are so interwoven into the fabric of this community – to teach their fans a little about themselves. “I think any time that you’re in a new city, you need to learn about the place itself, because the more you learn about it, the more people are going to learn about you,” said Mayor Sly James, who stopped by the museum following the tour. “We’re always trying to create those relationships between our athletes and our city, because both have a lot to give to each other.” If this week’s visit was any indication, that relationship is already well underway. “The city will see that they’re out here and they’ll embrace that. Kansas City loves the people that are on our teams – we will love them as much as they love us,” James said. “This is the beginning of that right here.”

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(Team) At long last, Chiefs great Johnny Robinson on verge of Hall of Fame Vahe Gregorian Kansas City Star August 17, 2018

Former Chiefs great Johnny Robinson is 79 years old, and he should have been in the Pro Football Hall of Fame decades ago. So it was perhaps appropriate that he and his family waited more than five hours by the phone on Friday in their home in Monroe, La., to learn if he was the veterans committee nominee for the Class of 2019. He was getting scared, not knowing if the long wait meant good news or bad, when the call came from Pro Football Hall of Fame president David Baker telling him he was the selection — and thus almost certain to be voted in when the full committee meets in February. “It was a glorious moment,” said his stepson, Bob Thompson, who has long figured it was part of God’s plan that this would happen later in life for Robinson to allow him to fulfill his calling of running a boys home for the last 38 years. Noting his stepfather was the only remaining player not in from a Hall of Fame-produced poster in their den depicting the best players of the 1960s in the AFL and NFL, he added, “He saved the best for last.” Robinson, a safety who was a crucial part of the only two Super Bowls in Chiefs history and played a pivotal role in their Super Bowl IV victory over Minnesota, was overwhelmed by the news. “What can I tell you other than that I’m just thrilled to death,” he said. Some minutes after he learned, he stepped out of the den and went to his wife, Wanda. “Poor Johnny, he came in here and put his arm around me and he just kind of boo-hooed,” she said. “It just built up inside of him.” Robinson still needs the approval of the full voting committee on the eve of the Super Bowl in Atlanta, something Baker reminded him of during the call. “I guess I’m in then, right?” Robinson said. To which Baker in a video smiled and clarified: “Well, here’s what it’s going to take; it’s not quite that easy yet.” But as the sole senior pick this year, precedent speaks to the likelihood: Every year since 1998, at least one of the submitted senior finalists has been received the 80 percent voting support by the entire 48member Selection Committee necessary for being in that year’s class.

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Per the Hall of Fame, the overall process “will consider 18 finalists, including a Senior (Robinson), two Contributors (to be named Thursday, Aug. 23), and 15 Modern-Era Finalists (to be determined from a preliminary list announced on September 13; trimmed to 25 semifinalists in November and to 15 finalists in January). Current bylaws call for a class no smaller than four or larger than eight. The Senior Finalist will be voted on for election independent of the other finalists.” According to Thompson, Baker assured the family he’d make it in and that they need to be in Atlanta when it becomes official. “He’s been the elephant in the room,” Thompson said. Or outside the room, in fact. If elected, Robinson will become the sixth member of the 1960s Chiefs defense to enter the Hall of Fame, joining linebackers Bobby Bell and Willie Lanier, defensive tackles Buck Buchanan and Curley Culp and cornerback Emmitt Thomas. Quarterback Len Dawson, kicker Jan Stenerud, coach Hank Stram and founder Lamar Hunt are the other Chiefs figures from that era who are enshrined. Robinson would likely join tight end Tony Gonzalez in the Class of 2019 as he is expected to be elected in his first year of eligibility. Other Chiefs already in Canton include guard Will Shields and linebacker Derrick Thomas. Starting when the Chiefs were the Dallas Texans, Robinson more or less was the defensive quarterback for three AFL title teams and a Super Bowl champion. He snagged 57 interceptions (only three players in NFL history had as many or more when he retired in 1971) and had a way of making them count (the Dallas Texans/Chiefs were 35-1-1 when he had an interception) and coming through in the most meaningful games. Robinson had two interceptions in the 1962 AFL championship victory over Houston, a pivotal one in the 1966 AFL title game against Buffalo and 11 solo tackles in the ensuing first Super Bowl against Green Bay. And in the 23-7 victory over Minnesota in Super Bowl IV, Robinson had an interception and a fumble recovery while playing with three broken ribs. Robinson was a six-time finalist but was passed over for a combination of reasons, including bias against players who had played most of their careers in the AFL and the notion that the Chiefs’ defense of that era already was well-represented in the Hall of Fame. Johnny Robinson on why he thinks he’s not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Now, he says, he hopes he can “handle myself like a Hall of Fame football player.” He already has. It just took a while for the powers that be to properly recognize it.

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(Eric Bieniemy) Chiefs promote Eric Bieniemy to offensive coordinator Terez A. Paylor Kansas City Star January 09, 2018

When the Chiefs officially named running backs coach Eric Bieniemy their new offensive coordinator on Tuesday, at least one former colleague of his smiled. Bieniemy, 48, has served as the Chiefs’ running backs coach since 2013, when he arrived in Kansas City with coach Andy Reid. He replaces Matt Nagy, who was recently hired as head coach of the Chicago Bears. And Buffalo Bills quarterbacks coach David Culley — who coached with Bieniemy in Kansas City from 2013 to 2016, when Culley served as the Chiefs’ receivers coach — couldn’t be happier. “I have the utmost respect for him as a coach — there’s nobody on the staff more deserving to be next coordinator than Eric Bieniemy,” Culley told The Star, when reached by phone Tuesday evening. Culley specifically cited Bieniemy’s passion — his loud, booming voice is legendary for reverberating throughout the field during practice — as one of his best traits, one he’s consistently used to get the most out of his players since his arrival in Kansas City. “I’ll tell you this about him — I’ve never been around anybody that loves his players and coaches more than he does,” Culley said. “They trust him, they know he believes in them and they know he has their best interest at heart. That’s why you always see his guys play to their maximum ability.” A good example of that came in 2015, when the Chiefs lost star running back Jamaal Charles for the season in the fifth game of the season. Bieniemy prodded and cajoled his replacements, Spencer Ware and Charcandrick West, into legitimate NFL contributors who remain on the team to this day. Others Bieniemy has gotten positive contributions from include Joe McKnight and Knile Davis. “You look at those guys on that roster that have to go in and play due to injuries, and you’d think those guys are starters,” Culley said. This year, Bieniemy helped rookie third-round running back Kareem Hunt become the NFL’s leading rusher following a season-ending knee injury to Ware in the preseason. Bieniemy will have a new challenge this season when it comes to guiding the Chiefs’ offense, though he does have experience calling plays during 2011-12 at Colorado, his alma mater. Before that, he spent five seasons as the Minnesota Vikings’ running backs coach while mentoring star Adrian Peterson, who rushed for 5,782 yards and 52 touchdowns in four seasons under Bieniemy.

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And while Reid will certainly have influence on the offense — he’s consistently run the daily offensive play installation sessions since he got here, even as former coordinators Doug Pederson and Nagy earned more responsibility — Culley said Chiefs fans can expect balance from a Bieniemy-inspired attack. “There’s no question but he understands balance in football, you have to be able to do both,” Culley said. “He understands that, and without a doubt, he gets that. He knows Andy’s system; he’s coached in it and he’s played in it in Philadelphia and that’s a great combination.” Bieniemy, a former running back who played for the Chargers, Bengals and Eagles for nine years, also served as the running backs coach at UCLA from 2003 to 2005. “I’ve known Eric a long time, both as a player and a coach,” Reid said in a statement. “He’s done a phenomenal job with our running backs and been involved in every aspect of our offense over the last five years. He’s a great teacher and has earned this opportunity. I know he will do a good job.”

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(Mike Kafka) Meet the Chiefs coach who drills down deep with Patrick Mahomes Blair Kerkhoff Kansas City Star June 01, 2018

It’s not accurate to call Mike Kafka the personal coach for Patrick Mahomes. After all, Kafka has worked with all of the Chiefs quarterbacks who have been on the roster in his two seasons with the team. But Mahomes is the only current quarterback who has been with the Chiefs both years, and with veteran Alex Smith needing little tutoring last season, Kafka was able to shower Mahomes with additional attention. They were often seen after practice working together. With a few more days of practices and three minicamp workouts later this month before training camp begins in July, Kafka has seen payoff from the extra work. “He’s made consistent improvement every single day and that’s what we’re looking for,” Kafka said of Mahomes. “He’s put in a ton of work. We’re working to fine-tune every single aspect of playing the quarterback position.” Expectations for Mahomes are unlike anything a Chiefs quarterback has encountered since perhaps the days of Joe Montana. The difference is, Montana had established himself as one of the game’s greatest quarterbacks when he arrived in Kansas City. Mahomes has one NFL game under his belt, albeit an impressive triumph in the 2017 regular-season finale against Denver. He passed for 284 yards, went to the bench with the lead and returned to march the Chiefs on a game-winning field-goal drive. “It goes to his competitive nature,” Kafka said. “Honestly, when he came back in we all knew we were going to go back down and win. ... And after something didn’t go right early — he threw an interception — he bounced right back and led the team down and led a field-goal drive. He operated and performed to win the game.” Mahomes also works closely with offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy, just as he and Smith did last season with Matt Nagy, who is now the Chicago Bears' head coach. And Andy Reid is an offensive mastermind. Mahomes regularly deals with them all. “We have open conversation between me, Coach Reid, Eric Bieniemy and Mike Kafka,” Mahomes said. “They see what I like, and if we all like something we try to put it in.” But Kafka drills down with the quarterbacks, as he did last year as a quality control coach and now this year as quarterbacks coach. 17


He was a standout at Northwestern, a second-team All-Big Ten quarterback in 2009 who passed for 532 yards in a bowl game against Auburn. Kafka was selected by Reid’s Eagles in the fourth round of the 2010 NFL draft and wound up spending time with seven NFL teams as a reserve. He got into coaching as a graduate assistant at Northwestern in 2016 and joined the Chiefs last year. Now, Kafka is the coach who closely works with the first quarterback the Chiefs selected in the first round since Todd Blackledge in 1983. He’s found a player willing to put in the work, which has been revealed with Mahomes’ improved footwork. “One big point of emphasis,” Kafka said. “I think that right now, where I’m most happy is where Pat’s at with his footwork.” And it’s not just his own game Mahomes has worked on. “That’s the best part,” Kafka said. “He’s going behind the scenes to work with guys individually. That’s one thing where he’s taken a big step, in that leadership role.”

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(Mike Smith) With a new coach in charge of their position, Justin Houston and the Chiefs’ outside linebackers aim to be relentless Nate Taylor The Athletic June 4, 2018

Smith knew if Houston, the team’s top pass rusher, agreed with his idea, its impact could be felt throughout the new outside linebackers meeting room — and perhaps on the field this season. During his seven-year career, Houston has terrorized opposing quarterbacks as the Chiefs’ left outside linebacker, bull rushing, spinning and bending his body to discard the opponent’s right tackle. But Smith wants Houston to try a new strategy. Still be a dominant presence, Smith told Houston, but do it from everywhere on the field. Doing so would make Houston — and, as a result, the entire Chiefs’ defense — less predictable. Smith desires for Houston to be matched up against the opponent’s worst offensive lineman this season, which he believes will create more opportunities for the defense to create havoc. Houston, eager to help reinvigorate the Chiefs’ beleaguered defense, has agreed to fulfill Smith’s request. “I want to be able to attack the weakest link,” he said last month, repeating Smith’s message to him. “Every team is different. Everybody’s left tackle isn’t All-Pro; everybody’s right tackle isn’t All-Pro. Wherever the weakest link — if it’s the guard, center or even tackle — I want to be on the weakest link.” Typical for many assistants, Smith said Thursday that the position he coaches — which features key players such as Houston, Dee Ford, rookie Breeland Speaks, Tanoh Kpassagnon and rookie Dorian O’Daniel — is the defense’s most important. Smith’s argument, given the circumstances surrounding the Chiefs’ remodeled 3-4 defense, is a convincing one. Smith referenced how defensive coordinator Bob Sutton uses his outside linebackers to do everything: rush the passer, set the edge against the run and provide support to the secondary with occasional zone coverage. Since his linebackers are already asked to do so much, Smith said it’s not unreasonable for players such as Houston and Ford to line up at different positions for different scenarios to give opposing offenses different looks. “That’s how you should be on defense, period,” said Smith, who is entering his third season with Chiefs. “If it’s a (defensive) coordinator, you break it down. But ask me, you just can’t get comfortable on one side. For Dee, it’s the same deal. If there’s a tackle that’s bigger and a little bit slower, Dee’s got one of the best get-offs in the league. Go line up on him. If there’s a tackle a little bit smaller, Justin, go tear him up a little bit. That’s kind of what we’ll do.” 19


Before becoming a coach, Smith was a linebacker for the Baltimore Ravens for four seasons. In 2012, Smith learned under Sutton when both men coached the linebacker positions for the New York Jets. Prior to his promotion, Smith began working more with the outside linebackers during the second half of last season. Coach Andy Reid shifted Smith into his new role, along with assistant Mark DeLeone being responsible for inside linebackers, to give players more individual attention. The goal is for Smith to help provide better film study meetings and in-game adjustments specific to the outside linebackers. “That’s a big position to just have one person doing, so we did split it up and it seems to be working fine,” Reid said Thursday. “The outside position in the 3-4 defense and the inside linebacker position are completely different spots.” Houston praised Reid for elevating Smith, and the Chiefs’ investment in the coach has already produced positive results since Houston’s attitude toward Smith’s coaching has influenced his younger teammates at the position. Beyond assisting Houston, Smith will be responsible for getting Speaks, who played defensive end at Mississippi, acclimated to his new position. “Things come natural to him,” Smith said of Speaks. “The thing with him, like a 4-3 end, they’re not used to dropping (in coverage). For him to pick it up this quick, and at least get a feel for, it’s pretty good. The thing I like about him is he can do it, especially the drop stuff.” Smith and Houston are both impressed with Speaks’ demeanor. Smith said Speaks carries himself in practice like a veteran instead of a rookie. Houston has been encouraged by how quickly Speaks has understood the Chiefs’ playbook and how he fits within Sutton’s scheme from his position. “He’s very smart to be able to play defensive end and then come in and learn outside linebacker,” Houston said of Speaks. “A lot of guys you see in the NFL struggle switching. He’s picking up the defense fine, and he’s looked good in coverage. I think he’s going to help us a lot.” Last year, sacks was a glaring statistic for the Chiefs. They recorded just 24 of them, which ranked 24th in the NFL. Smith knows his linebackers need to be playmakers to ensure Sutton’s defense is more potent. The Chiefs, though, will need more production from outside linebackers not named Houston and Ford. Smith hopes Kpassagnon, a second-year player, can become a reliable contributor after getting more snaps toward the end of last season. “He’s making big strides,” Smith said. “We all know T.K. is a little raw. He’s got long arms. He can scratch his ankles standing up. He’s just got to get better at using his arms and keeping people off of him. I truly believe he’s got a bright future. He’s just got to continue to learn.” As his conversations with Houston and other players continue, Smith said he will likely rely on one word to keep players motivated. Above all, he needs his linebackers, wherever they line up, to be relentless. “A lot of your sacks come off of second and third effort, especially at this level,” he said. “These tackles are big and good. Obviously you’ve got to have good technique but be relentless. I think one of the great things about Tamba (Hali), that’s what he was. Obviously his technique is good, but you just can’t stop.”

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(Emmitt Thomas) Chiefs’ Emmitt Thomas wins lifetime achievement honor from pro football writers Matt Derrick Chiefs Digest June 19, 2018

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Longtime Chiefs defensive backs coach Emmitt Thomas and former Washington offensive line coach Joe Bugel are the recipients of this year’s Paul “Dr. Z” Zimmerman Award, a lifetime achievement honor presented annually by the Professional Football Writers of America (PFWA). Thomas, also a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame as a player for the Chiefs from 1966 to 1978, started his coaching career in 1979 at Central Missouri State. He spent time with Washington, Philadelphia, Green Bay and Atlanta in various roles including assistant coach, wide receivers and defensive backs coach and defensive coordinator. He also served as interim head coach of the Falcons for four games in the 2007 after the resignation of Bobby Petrino. Thomas, 75, returned to Kansas City as defensive backs coach in 2010 under head coach Todd Haley, and remained a part of the staff for both Romeo Crennel and Andy Reid. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2008 Bugel spent five seasons as a head coach during stints with the then Phoenix Cardinals and Oakland Raiders but built his reputation as an assistant, most notably as offensive line coach for Washington from 1981-89. The team’s offensive line — known as the “Hogs” — carried Washington to three NFC titles and two Super Bowl wins. Bugel and Thomas spent four seasons together in Washington, during which time the team won Super Bowl XXII. Each coach holds two Super Bowl rings as an assistant, all coming from their time with Washington. Chiefs assistant head coach and special teams coordinator Dave Toub was also a nominee for this year’s award. Other nominees were the late Bobb McKittrick, a longtime assistant for Bill Walsh, and Jim McNally, former offensive line coach for Cincinnati, Carolina, New York Giants and Buffalo. The Dr. Z Award is presented by the PFWA for lifetime achievement as an assistant coach in the NFL. The award is named for Zimmerman, who covered the NFL for 29 years as Sports Illustrated’s lead pro football writer. Past winners of the Paul “Dr. Z” Zimmerman Award: 2014: Jim Johnson, Howard Mudd, Fritz Shurmur and Ernie Zampese 2015: Dick LeBeau, Tom Moore and Dante Scarnecchia 2016: Monte Kiffin and Wade Phillips 2017: Bud Carson 2018: Joe Bugel and Emmitt Thomas 21


(Porter Ellett) Losing an arm helped make this Chiefs assistant coach who he is Vahe Gregorian Kansas City Star July 30, 2018

ST. JOSEPH As senior assistant to the head coach for the Chiefs, Porter Ellett might as well be Andy Reid’s shadow. Maybe you’ve seen him nearby during practice or games and wondered about the guy Reid is apt to call his “left-hand man.” The joke reflects the nature of their relationship, a little-known aspect of Reid’s own life and what makes Ellett who he is: a man who had his right arm amputated as a teen, believes he’s better off for it and is distinguished most by his intelligence, zeal for life and sense of humor. It’s those personal traits that resonate with an admiring Reid, who calls Ellett “quite a person,” and make Ellett well-suited for his second year orbiting a coach whose brother Reggie has long-contended with an injury of a similar nature. If Ellett doesn’t quite bunk with Reid at training camp, he’s alongside virtually every waking moment to attend to … whatever: from the clerical stuff of building playbooks and call sheets to Reid’s administrative work to miscellaneous projects behind the scenes. “I can be rough on you a little bit in that position; he’s got a tremendous amount of responsibility,” Reid said. “And so when the best of my red hairs get to me, he handles it and smooths it out and just kind of calms the storm.” It’s grinding work but an incredible opportunity to absorb the profession. Previously in the same capacity, Reid employed current Chiefs general manager Brett Veach and Buffalo head coach Sean McDermott; Ellett has playfully jousted with each about who has performed better, and he could follow in either direction. There’s no way to know if his future holds those sorts of high-profile positions, but his presence here is momentous in itself: It’s testament to a special spirit forged when Ellett was 4 years old and might well have died in the accident on the family farm in Loa, Utah. It would have been challenge enough to land this NFL job with enormous growth potential coming from a remote rural town of about 600 and a high school that didn’t have enough kids for a football team. Making it with one arm was something else entirely, something that speaks to intense resolve and how his family navigated the aftermath of the mishap that day: In the back of a Ford F-150 with older kids

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after moving sheep to the summer range, Ellett crawled up on a motorcycle in the bed and was thrown out when the truck hit a bump. His skull was cracked and his head scalped, as he put it. That wasn’t the worst of it. Extreme nerve damage, known as a brachial plexus injury, was inflicted on his right arm, rendering it what he calls dead and ultimately compelling him to have it amputated when he was 16. By then, though, he had long since come to terms with his arm. So a day after the amputation, still bleeding some, he played pickup basketball. “It was kind of like when you get new cleats, or a new ball,” he said. “ ‘Let’s try this out, let’s see what this is like.’ ” That mindset reflected both his innate attitude and how his parents reacted to the trauma of the accident. His mother, Mary, remembers counting her blessings that he was simply alive with no brain damage, and they set about living what happens to be one of Reid’s mantras: roll with it. “They taught me, ‘It’s up to you,’ ” Ellett said. “There was no victim mentality ever. This is a super-bad pun, but it’s the hand life deals you, so you do what you can with it.” Painful as it was for them, that meant letting him struggle to find his way at times. “No one ever expected anything different from him than anyone else his age,” his father, Jan, said. Ellett has always loved sports, even when he was a small child growing up in Utah. Courtesy Ellett family Still bearing stitches in his head from the accident, for instance, Ellett tried in vain to climb a fence with his friends. Seeking help, he turned to his mother. She said, “No: If you want to do it, figure it out.” “And I got over it,” he said, later adding, “I’d say it was real love. I think we have a misconception of what love is today. Love isn’t giving people what they want. It’s giving them what they need. “I didn’t have, like, ‘I’ll lift you over the fence.’ (But) you could say, their love lifted me over.” Thanks to a strong support system, including five sisters who never coddled him, Ellett became a really good athlete. Having one functional arm somehow became an afterthought. At one of his baseball games, his mother remembers thinking, “There’s a boy out there with one arm. … Oh, it’s Porter.” In fact, he mastered the ability to bat with one hand and flip the ball from his glove to throw it. Except, that is, when he pitched. Then he’d leave the glove on the ground before him for throws back from the catcher. But there was no time to use it to field. It seems telling that he relished that challenge. “There’s nothing quite like the rush of pitching with no glove,” he said, smiling. “If you make a mistake and they hit it back at you, that’s on you. So it was always like, be unhittable, right?” 23


Basketball led to the decision to amputate. His atrophied right arm had become increasingly problematic. And not just because it had gotten to the point where he might accidentally slap somebody with it when he was dribbling or getting called for pushoffs. “I’d look at the ref (and say), ‘My arm doesn’t move, so I’m not really pushing off,’ ” he said, laughing. Ellett was an accomplished baseball player into his teens. Even with scant sensation in in it, though, he’d felt the excruciating pain of it being broken several times. Then one night his sophomore year at Wayne High, he was sandwiched between defenders going for a rebound. His shoulder was dislocated, his elbow dislocated and broken. For a while, he had wondered if something could be done to fix his arm. But he realized he knew how to do everything he wanted even without being able to use it. So on the long ride to the nearest hospital, he turned to his mother and said “Ah, let’s cut it off; I’m not doing this anymore.” He tells this story with a laugh, and his mirthful way is infectious and ever-present. Every Halloween, for instance, Ellett and his wife, Carlie, have created costumes themed to the loss of an arm. Once, he played Chubbs to Carlie’s Happy Gilmore. Another time, he played “Soul Surfer” Bethany Hamilton, who lost her arm in a shark attack. So what if his female impersonation left something to be desired? “I made for a mean shark,” Carlie said, “so that probably made up for it.” Last year at the Chiefs’ team Halloween party, they went with a Toy Story 2 theme. Ellett played Woody with his lost arm, Carlie was Jessie and Buzz Lightyear was played by now-14-month-old son Brigham. (The Mormon couple met at Brigham Young University, Reid’s alma mater.) “Might as well have fun with it,” Ellett said. “If people see you smiling and enjoying life, it gives them hope.” Hope is why the modest Ellett consented to have his story told. When he asked Carlie about the idea, she said it would be worth it if even one kid contending with a perceived impediment reads about him. “Porter’s always been kind of this go-to (guy) to show people that just because something bad happens to you, and you don’t physically look like everybody else, it doesn’t mean your life’s over,” Carlie said. “You can overcome whatever faces you.” None of which should be confused with the idea that anything came easy for Ellett, 29. It’s just that he accepted he’d have to work twice as hard to do everything … then he did it. Porter Ellett lost his arm when he was young, and he has some fun with that fact these days. He and his family dressed up as characters from the film Toy Story for a recent Halloween. As much as he was loved in the community, he also had to come to terms with ridicule. “When you’re a kid and you’re really different, it’s hard, life’s pretty rough,” he said. “So I went through a time when I, like, legit hated people. I hated going out, and I hated being stared at and I hated being pointed at and I hated (hearing) comments: ‘He’s got one arm,’ or ‘he’s a freak,’ things like that. …

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“You go to, like, a dark place in life. I think you find out who you really are then.” Faith, friends and family helped. Including even the simplest gesture from Grandmother Shirley, who once gave him a picture frame with the words “Don’t Quit” and DO IT. At first, he kept it prominently displayed on his dresser just so maybe she’d see it and get him a better gift next time around. Over time, though, the words came to mean something to him. Especially during a rough period when he felt to blame for everything going wrong, including his father being fired as the basketball coach. He thought about quitting the team to “make them all happy.” Distraught, he lay on his bed and looked up at those words and had a revelation. He couldn’t worry about what others think, couldn’t keep them from staring. But when they did, he wanted them to see something special. “That was a turning point, I think,” said Ellett, who keeps that picture frame on his dresser to this day. With that mentality grew the capacity for pursuing what might seem a far-fetched opportunity that came in a circuitous way. From working in the BYU football equipment room, he fell in love with the game and decided to do whatever he could to work in it in some capacity. After his mission in Los Angeles teaching Spanish, by chance he became friends with Devin Woodhouse, who taught Spanish at BYU’s Missionary Training Center. Woodhouse is married to Reid’s daughter Drew, and became a strength and conditioning assistant with the Chiefs. Long story short, when Ellett was working on his master’s degree in sports management at Baylor and came to a wedding here in 2016, that connection led to an invite to the Reid home after a game. When Reid arrived, Ellett remembers some initial awkwardness because he was sitting in Reid’s chair. Turns out Reid doesn’t exactly see himself as having his own chair, Reid said, smiling, but “we made (Ellett) feel like I did.” After they got talking, Ellett told Reid, “I’d pay money just to follow you around and see how you coach. I want to learn from the best.” Reid told him to send a resume and a few months later called Ellett, who said he was shaking with nerves as he hoped for a short internship. Instead, Reid told him he had a full-time job available as his senior assistant and “for some reason you just keep coming to mind.” So Porter soon became Reid’s “left-hand man,” and there’s more to the joke and chemistry that they share between them: Reggie Reid years ago lost the use of an arm in a motorcycle accident but didn’t have it amputated. He went on to become accomplished in the martial arts — among other ways of his life that defied the gravity of the accident. That understanding of his brother’s ability to thrive despite the same sort of loss helps account for Reid seeing something in Ellett beyond his smarts and composure and energy.

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“They just make it happen; that’s what Porter does,” he said. “The way he carries himself, you don’t even notice” he’s missing an arm. With Carlie eight months pregnant, Ellett got the job offer on the Friday before the 2017 Super Bowl and started work two days later. Not easy for her. And for the second time, she left a good online marketing job (she soon found another here) to follow his dream. But you could say her feeling about it was encapsulated in this moment: When Porter walked out of the Arrowhead Stadium tunnel with Reid for the preseason opener against San Francisco, she struggled to stay composed because of the joy she felt over his improbable journey. The near-death experience cost him an arm, and you’d never wish that on anyone, yet in some ways it made him something more. He’s a better person for the accident, he has told his father, and his mother knows he considers it a blessing — whatever the “odds” might say. “I think it’s important that kids understand that they should be the oddsmakers,” Ellett said. “Like, you always hear, the odds, the chances, of doing this are one in a million. “Well, why not be the one that does it? Why not set the odds for everybody else?”

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(Eric Bieniemy) Straight talker, deep listener: Eric Bieniemy makes an impression in new role as Chiefs’ offensive coordinator Nate Taylor The Athletic August 6, 2018

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — As an orator, Eric Bieniemy loves his new job. One task Bieniemy enjoys about his new requirements as the Chiefs’ new offensive coordinator is that he gets to move around even more on the practice fields during training camp. Among coach Andy Reid’s staff, few assistants are as skillful as Bieniemy when it comes to spreading a message. During a recent practice, Bieniemy roamed to every position on the offense as players went through drills — the very drills that, at times, can become dull. For Bieniemy, nothing about football is uneventful. He began with the running backs and fullbacks, the positions he previously coached. Bieniemy shouted the same word — “Finish! Finish! Finish!” — as each ball carrier burst through the line of scrimmage, imploring them to complete the drill at full speed. With the receivers, Bieniemy looked at each in the face from a few yards away before they started their route. His persuasive message for Tyreek Hill, the dynamic and speedy third-year player, was simple: “The great ones don’t take days off.” With the offensive linemen, Bieniemy quizzed the group about each protection adjustment they went over the day before in a meeting. When the team began scrimmaging, Bieniemy, with a walkie-talkie in his right hand, voiced the play calls from Reid to quarterback Patrick Mahomes through his helmet. Each play call was followed with Bieniemy quickly giving Mahomes encouragement or motivation. The phrase most used was “be aggressive.” Reid has relished watching Bieniemy in his new role. He appreciates how Bieniemy doesn’t waste words. “He’s an unbelievable communicator, someone who can get his point across clearly and can take the complex and make it simple,” Reid said. “He’s teaching, and that’s the important part. He’s been great for everybody, from the quarterback all the way down through the offensive line.” Throughout an offseason full of changes to the roster — including the biggest, at quarterback — Bieniemy has challenged himself to understand the various personalities on offense. He wants his voice to have an impact, whether in film sessions, in position meetings or just one-on-one conversations during the few free moments available in camp. He enters and leaves each practice asking himself one question: How can I help bring better unity?

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“It’s a great honor to have this opportunity,” Bieniemy said last week. “Now I just want to make sure that we do a great job working together, but doing it the right way.” Perhaps what has mattered most to Bieniemy in his entire football career is his ceaseless pursuit to execute every objective in the correct manner. This is the biggest theme behind every intense lecture Bieniemy shares with the Chiefs. You don’t need to relearn or do something twice if you pay attention to all the details the first time. The fastest way to improve and advance your career, Bieniemy says, is to treat each assignment with the care and respect it deserves and demands. “Every play,” he said, “is by far the most important.” Bieniemy, 48, understands the value of such an approach, which he knows has led him to one of the most coveted jobs in the NFL. *** Entering this season, Bieniemy knew the statistic. Among the league’s 32 teams, he, as an AfricanAmerican, is the lone offensive coordinator who is a minority. Many African-American assistants on offense, in the past decade, haven’t been given the opportunity to become either a coordinator or a quarterbacks coach, the usual top two offense-related positions on a staff under the head coach. Along with data, the perception throughout the league is that minority coaches have a better chance of becoming a coordinator or head coach by being, or switching to, a defensive assistant. From 2007 to 2017, just 13 of the 147 offensive-coordinator openings in the league went to AfricanAmericans, according to The Denver Post. Hue Jackson, the coach of the Browns, accounted for three of the 13 hirings, as he was the coordinator for the Falcons, Raiders and Bengals. Nine teams — the Chargers (George Stewart), Eagles (Duce Staley), Falcons (Raheem Morris), 49ers (Jon Embree), Jets (Mike Caldwell), Packers (Winston Moss), Seahawks (Clint Hurtt), Steelers (John Mitchell) and Texans (Romeo Crennel) — have minorities who are assistant or associate head coaches. Just three of the league’s quarterbacks coaches are minorities: Marcus Brady with the Colts, David Culley with the Bills and Byron Leftwich, a former 10-year NFL quarterback, with the Cardinals. “If you’re not the quarterback coach or if you’re not the coordinator calling plays, how do you get elevated to become a head coach?” Jackson said on ESPN radio in January 2016. “In order for you to have that opportunity, you have to be put in that position to have a chance to ascend.” In the same interview, Jackson said he felt some minority assistants are fearful when pursuing a coordinator position because of where their careers may go if they fail with such responsibilities. A second opportunity, Jackson said, may never be given. With knowledge of the league’s hiring record, Bieniemy wants to be a success, not only for the Chiefs but for other minority assistants who have the potential and knowledge to be high-quality coordinators and head coaches. “I’m making sure I’m making the very most of it — studying, looking at tape, viewing (play) scripts,” said Bieniemy, the second minority offensive coordinator in the Chiefs’ history. “I’m asking questions to Coach (Reid). I’m trying to get as much information as I can milk out of him.” 28


Bieniemy also knows his career path to becoming a coordinator was not conventional. For nine NFL seasons, Bieniemy was a ferocious running back who lengthened his career by being smart and versatile out of the backfield. He began his coaching career in 2000 as an assistant at Thomas Jefferson High in Denver. He coached running backs in college for six years before joining the Vikings in 2006. With Adrian Peterson as the Vikings’ star running back, Bieniemy helped him gain 5,782 rushing yards and score 52 touchdowns in four seasons. In 2011, Bieniemy was hired by Jon Embree to be Colorado’s offensive coordinator. Both men returned to their alma mater to help rebuild the school’s program. In Bieniemy’s first season, Colorado’s offense ranked 92nd in the nation. The team went 4-20 in two years, which prompted the school to fire Embree and his staff. Reid, when first building his staff after arriving in Kansas City, hired Bieniemy in 2013. Since then, the fiery Bieniemy has helped improve every featured running back for the Chiefs. Jamaal Charles led the league in touchdowns (19) in 2013 and averaged a franchise-best 5.5 yards per carry. Spencer Ware became a reliable player under Bieniemy in 2016, and Kareem Hunt, as a rookie, led the league in rushing last season. “He pays attention to everything,” Ware said of Bieniemy. “The biggest thing Coach Bieniemy will bring to our offense is his intensity. Take a look at his résumé or the players he’s coached and the way they play football. Having the entire offense with that same mentality is pretty exciting.” For a man who loves talking, Bieniemy tried to be a better listener this summer after his promotion. He called Embree. He spoke with Rip Scherer, the Chargers’ tight-ends coach who was Colorado’s quarterbacks coach from 2011-12. He chatted with Darrell Bevell, the former Seahawks offensive coordinator, and Tom Cable, the Raiders’ offensive-line coach. Each man congratulated Bieniemy and offered advice. “They’ve given me a lot,” Bieniemy said, smiling. “Most of them said, ‘Hey E.B., you can’t work yourself to death. You’ve got to step back and take a couple deep breaths. Enjoy the process.’” Embree made sure to tell Bieniemy that he was more than capable of succeeding. “A lot of times, people think you have to be a quarterback to be an offensive coordinator, and that’s not the case,” Embree told The Kansas City Star in January. “I’m glad he’s getting a chance to show that that doesn’t necessarily have to be the case.” Eric Bieniemy says it’s a privilege to work for and learn from Andy Reid, above. “A football genius,” Bieniemy says. (Photo by Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports) Every assistant, at some point, needs a mentor, someone who will give them guidance and significant support. One of first men who became a coaching mentor for Bieniemy was Reid. In 1999, Bieniemy played the final season of his career with the Eagles, who were led by Reid, then a first-year coach. The more the men worked together, the more Bieniemy was amazed by what he learned from the complexities of Reid’s West Coast offense.

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Reid felt Bieniemy could be a productive coach after his playing career, and both men were thrilled to be reunited in 2013 after building their relationship through the years. In January, when the Bears hired Matt Nagy, the Chiefs’ former offensive coordinator, Reid promoted Bieniemy the next day. “A football genius,” Bieniemy said of Reid. “We just sit there and we talk about ball and all the different things that can present itself throughout the course of a week or a game. I couldn’t ask for a better situation to be in.” Several people during camp — owner Clark Hunt, team president Mark Donovan and plenty of players — have noted that Reid has been energized by the newness of his team after so much roster change. Reid acknowledged his excitement and said Bieniemy was a large reason for it. “He’s my right-hand man,” Reid said of Bieniemy. “He has a tremendous work ethic. You appreciate his energy every day. He’s positive. I’ve got full confidence that he can take the offense and roll with it if I can’t make it to something. He can take it and go.” For the past five years, Bieniemy observed how Reid treated his players, designed innovative plays and handled conflict in the locker room. Bieniemy’s latest experience, especially during camp, has been bringing his knowledge and perspective to the quarterback room. In the regular season, Reid, Bieniemy, Mahomes and Mike Kafka (the quarterbacks coach) will study and develop the weekly game plan. As a first-time starter, Mahomes has spent most of his time on the practice field standing next to Bieniemy when not taking his snaps. “If I screw it up, my job is to have Patrick fix it,” Bieniemy said. “When Patrick screws it up, it’s my job is to help Patrick fix it. We’re working in cahoots together.” Through mistakes and effective plays, Bieniemy has pushed Mahomes to complete all of his presnap reads and adjustments before using his aggressiveness and strong arm to push the ball down the field. “It’s been awesome,” Mahomes said of learning from Bieniemy. “He’s someone who is good with the protections, good with pretty much every nuance of the offense, of the little details, which is something I need to work on every single day. Having him and being able to ask him questions is something I’ve really tried to utilize as this camp has gone on.” In his 19 years as a head coach, Reid has produced 13 winning seasons. He has won with several quarterbacks, from Donovan McNabb to Michael Vick to Alex Smith. And with those victories, Reid has worked with coordinators who have become head coaches. Brad Childress, Doug Pederson and Nagy were all hired to lead teams after working next to Reid. Dave Toub, the Chiefs’ assistant head coach and special-teams coordinator, said Bieniemy has the respect of players and the leadership traits to potentially be the next offensive assistant under Reid whom owners consider hiring for a head-coaching job. “Eric has certainly paid his dues, and he’s definitely deserving of this position,” Toub said. “It’s like getting a PhD. It puts him in a spotlight, which is great.”

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The Chiefs’ offense this season could be explosive. The team is confident in Mahomes’ playmaking ability, Kareem Hunt and Ware could be a strong duo, and receivers Travis Kelce, Sammy Watkins and Hill are all Pro Bowl-worthy players. The offensive line features several veterans, too. Bieniemy is aware of what might be possible, both for the team and his career, if the Chiefs become legitimate Super Bowl contenders. But Bieniemy didn’t allow himself to think of the future too much. His next task after a recent practice needed to be handled with the proper amount of attention. “The only thing I want to do,” he said, “is correct this tape, make sure we get the corrections right and move forward.”

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(Brett Veach) The Chiefs’ facelift is all Brett Veach ... with Andy Reid’s blessing, of course Vahe Gregorian Kansas City Star August 16, 2018

ST. JOSEPH If anything was clear about the state of the Chiefs after last season, it was that they had plateaued under coach Andy Reid. In five seasons, Reid had gone 53-27 in the regular season to restore dignity, competitiveness and hope to the franchise in turmoil when he took over after the 2-14 fiasco in 2012. Sterling work, in fact. But with another playoff cave-in, this time a 22-21 loss to Tennessee sprinkled with bizarre officiating but most notable for a botched 21-3 lead, the Chiefs fell to 1-4 in the postseason under the former Philadelphia Eagles head coach. With exasperation seeping into expectations, the Chiefs suddenly were at a different sort of crossroads. Meanwhile, if anything was unclear about the willingness and ability of not-yet-40 general manager Brett Veach to engage meaningful changes in his first year on the job, that’s been answered emphatically in the months since. Forty of the 90 men on the preseason roster were acquired in the offseason. Average age: 25.2. And that only starts to tell the story of their facelift. “You look at the roster, and you go, ‘He’s putting his stamp on it now,’ ” Reid said. With the boldness of someone Reid jokes still “looks like he’s about 14” but judgment and diligence that he figures is well beyond his years. “He’s relentless … (and) that energy isn’t coming out of a can or something,” Reid said. “That’s real, and he is that way 24-7. He goes and goes and goes.” So does the trust between them, built on a long-term, day-in, day-out relationship since Reid hired Veach in Philadelphia. And it’s imperative in the Chiefs’ operation. While Reid and former GM John Dorsey had known each other for years, spoke of wanting to work together and collaborated on the formula for the turnaround here, it’s hard to believe Dorsey would have been fired in mid-2017 if Reid had objected to it. But despite some superficial initial skepticism about the reason Veach was hired, it’s also significant that Reid didn’t want him in place as a mere “yes man.” 32


He knows Veach has a special eye for talent, including being a major voice advocating for Patrick Mahomes in his previous job as co-director of player personnel, but also the disposition to be his own man. “If he puts you in that position, it’s because he believes in you,” Veach said. ”And believing in somebody doesn’t mean, ‘I want to cross-check every single thing.’ “It means, ‘I believe in you, and you go do it.’ And I think that motivates me more than anything.” So Veach was motivated to engineer a major makeover of a vulnerable defense — on which Veach deployed his first five draft picks — and to make key changes on offense. Gone in the process are aging mainstays Derrick Johnson and Tamba Hali, volatile cornerback Marcus Peters and underappreciated quarterback Alex Smith. In one swoop that signaled Veach had the makings of something special in him, the trade of Smith cleared the way for the Patrick Mahomes era to begin in earnest. It also brought in cornerback Kendall Fuller and a draft pick and freed up some funds for an offseason that featured the signings of receiver Sammy Watkins, linebacker Anthony Hitchens and defensive tackle Xavier Williams. Part of the Chiefs’ massive turnover, which can’t be officially quantified until the cut-down to a 53-man roster on Sept. 1, also was about a change in culture — a term that everyone from Veach to owner Clark Hunt has mentioned in the last few weeks. No one has spoken out in that context about Peters, who was traded to the Rams after a season of observable on-field tirades, squabbles with coaches and aversion to tackling. Publicly, the Chiefs have remained vague about why they dealt him away, though Veach in March called it “a football decision” that had nothing to do with Peters not standing for the national anthem or some assumed mandate from Hunt. What has been stressed instead is who has been added. Culture and character are “something that’s very important to Brett Veach, and as he brought in players both in free agency and in the draft, he wanted to make sure that each of those players was going to be a positive contributor in terms of the character of the football team,” Hunt said. Or as Veach put the job of shaping the team: “We’re going to infuse some youth in this roster, and we need guys who can fly around and play hard. And within those specific skills we’re looking for, also look for guys who are grown men who do things the right way.” On one side of the ball, the effect will be a replenished defense likely featuring more than half its starting lineup changed. Whether that makes for winning football, particularly in the postseason, remains to be seen: Another wobbly defensive season could indicate that a change is, and was, needed as much or more at defensive coordinator than in personnel. Coordinator Bob Sutton is still in charge of the defense. But at least theoretically, a group anchored in the middle by another Veach acquisition from last year, linebacker Reggie Ragland, figures to be stronger against its past nemesis, the run. 33


On the other side, depending on the pace of Mahomes’ development, an offense that was among the most prolific in the NFL last year could be even more potent with Watkins as an added dimension beyond Tyreek Hill, Travis Kelce and Kareem Hunt. “If you are an offensive coordinator with the mind that (Reid) has and the creativity that he likes to bring to this game — that gets you excited,” Chiefs president Mark Donovan said. “And that goes back to Brett and what he has done and how they work together.” In the most practical sense, how they work together goes something like this: After they have what Veach calls “kind of a generic blueprinting dialogue,” Reid expects Veach and his staff to go “crank tape and crunch numbers and come up with ideas.” The potential solutions don’t come from “trying to reinvent the wheel, or pull out some formula that no one knows about,” Veach said. They stem from obsessive homework that includes keen attention to the sort of salary-cap ramifications that plagued Dorsey. By the time something is brought to Reid, he will know the case has been fully exhausted and vetted and more often than not will say, “Let’s do it.” “That’s what makes him special,” Veach said. “He’s not a guy who’s a control freak.” Veach is mindful of the meaning of that approach himself, saying his trust in others is as significant as his own instincts. “I know that I’m able to bring a lot to the table,” he said. “But at the same time, I know that when I come to the table I don’t have every answer to every problem that we have. “So you surround yourself with really good people, and you’re going to go in there and talk about things. I bring my knowledge and my energy to the table, but at the same time I defer to the people around who have other solutions to some problems that we’re having. “Then we kind of just work things out together.” Just over a year into the job now, Veach knows he still is growing into it in some ways and figures there are “probably still some scenarios I haven’t encountered yet.” But he also knows he had excellent grounding from Dorsey and Reid, a former GM himself, each of whom allowed him strong input in the past and exposed him to so much to prepare him for this. So there’s been no hesitance to put his stamp on the team and aggressively try to jolt the Chiefs through the ceiling they’ve hit. However it plays out, that’s what this franchise needed rather than basically staying status quo and just hoping for better days ahead.

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(Deland McCullough) Runs in the Family: Kansas City Chiefs running backs coach Deland McCullough went searching for his biological parents. He found them where he never would have expected. Sarah Spain September 2, 2018 ESPN

Carol Briggs placed her newborn son on the bed and removed all of his clothes. She tried to find herself in his face, searching his mouth, his nose, his eyes. "Not yet," she thought. She saw only his father. She looked him up and down, making a mental note of each of his 10 tiny toes, chubby legs, puffy belly and two little arms reaching up at her. "In my mind," Briggs says, "that was probably going to be the last time I ever saw him." It was Dec. 1, 1972, and a big snowstorm had hit the greater Pittsburgh area that week. Briggs had gone sledding with some of the other girls the night before, dragging a cardboard box up and down a big hill that emptied out right at the Zoar Home for Mothers, Babies and Convalescents in Allison Park, Pennsylvania. She woke up in labor around 2 a.m., and just 32 minutes later, she was a mother. She named her baby Jon Kenneth Briggs. Her parents and older brother drove the hour from her hometown of Youngstown, Ohio, to be with her at the hospital. After cleaning out her room at the maternity home and signing some papers, she was back in Ohio the next day, ready to resume her life as a 16-year-old high schooler and National Honor Society member. No one outside of her immediate family and her cousin Robin knew about the baby. Only when she was preparing to sign the adoption papers did Briggs consider sharing the news with the father, a teenage fling who had gone off to college before she discovered she was pregnant. She ultimately decided against it. "He was a kid too," she says. "He was off at college on a scholarship. I think I may have felt that I kind of got myself in this, I'm gonna do what I need to do to work my way through it." With her parents' blessing, Briggs had decided that when the child was born, she would put him up for adoption. "My mother was still cleaning up my room for me once a week," she says. "I wasn't in a position to be anybody's mother. I thought this was best for him, that I allow him to be placed with some family that would be able to give him all the great things that I had coming up because I had a mother and a father. I just didn't want him to get cheated out of anything." In her last interaction with the adoption agency, Briggs was told that baby Jon had been placed with a doctor and his wife in Columbus, Ohio. 35


In early 2017, now-Kansas City Chiefs running backs coach Deland McCullough signed on to coach the running backs at USC, having spent the previous six years in the same position at Indiana University. A few months before making the move to southern California, he and his wife, Darnell, welcomed their fourth son into the world. For the fourth time, the couple provided doctors with Darnell's medical history but couldn't do the same for Deland's side of the family. At 44 years old, McCullough knew nothing about where he came from. Growing up in Youngstown, his adoptive mother, Adelle Comer, could tell him only that he was adopted at a very young age and that she had no information about his birth parents. For a long time, that was enough. McCullough wasn't interested in finding them anyway. There was enough trouble in Youngstown those days, and he didn't want to burden anyone who might have bigger things to worry about. Things changed when he had his first child, and as his family grew, so too did his desire to know of his past. He wanted to know who gave him his deep voice and his muscular build and to whom he owed his pensive nature and quiet intensity. He wondered where son Dason got his height and which grandfather or uncle his bespectacled son, Daeh, might favor. He was so hungry for information that he never questioned whether the search might lead him to answers he couldn't handle. "I didn't know what was going to happen," McCullough says. "I didn't know how people would receive things one way or another. I didn't have a plan. I just knew I wanted to find out." New laws in Ohio and Pennsylvania had called for the unsealing of adoption records, giving McCullough new hope that he might find his birth parents. In November 2017, more than a year after filling out the requisite paperwork and years after his search began, he finally received his adoption files in the mail. For the first time, he saw his original birth certificate, complete with his name, Jon Kenneth Briggs, and the name of his mother, Carol Denise Briggs. There was no information about his father. Adelle Comer was living in a three-bedroom house on a cul-de-sac in Youngstown with her husband, popular local radio host A.C. McCullough, and their young son, Damon, when she got the call. It was a social worker reaching out to see whether she and A.C. would come see an infant at an adoption agency in Pennsylvania. Not long after the tragic death of their second son, Alex, who died of an intestinal birth defect after just 28 days, the young couple had started serving as foster parents, and they were looking to adopt. In January 1973, they met 6-week-old baby Jon. "He was asleep in a bassinet," Comer says. "And she put him in my arms, and when he woke up, his eyes were looking straight at me. It was instant connection. Love. Mother-son." By March of that year, Jon Kenneth Briggs had been renamed Deland Scott McCullough, and he was living at home with his new parents, Adelle and A.C. "We were still in love, a good couple," Comer says. "We went to church, partied, went to cookouts. We were working together and doing this together and wanting to make a home for our children. We knew that God's hand was in it. Deland came so fast to us. We knew that it was meant to be. Both of us."

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But things changed quickly. Comer's father had a stroke, and though A.C. wanted to put him in a nursing home, Comer brought her dad to live with the family in Youngstown. Their marriage deteriorated, and when Deland was just 2 years old, A.C. moved out. "They went through a lot of hurt and disappointment, but they took it," Comer says of her sons. "I said, 'God gives you an example of what to be and what not to be. You have to make the choice.' And that's all I had to say, and they got it." When Deland was in elementary school, Comer came home to find that he had cut three gashes into the couch for which she had just finished two years of layaway payments. Kids at school had been teasing him about being adopted, and he accused Comer of loving him less than her birth son, Damon. She explained that she loved the two boys differently, one because he had been in her belly and the other because she had chosen him. After that, Deland McCullough rarely spoke of his adoption. He got good at pretending to be whole. "The void was there," he says. "I wish that it wasn't, but I think I did a good job of hiding it." After the divorce, Comer had relationships with a few other men, some of whom were combative and abusive. "Some men don't understand what respect is," she says. "I've got two sons, and I'm not gonna allow my children to grow up with this type of lifestyle, this drama." Damon sometimes tried to physically defend her, but then he left for college, and Deland felt too small, physically and emotionally, to step in. His response to the violence was to try to tune it out, become emotionless, put blinders on and dream of a way out of the house and out of Youngstown. Comer acknowledges that she contributed to the chaos in her own way as well. "Biggest drama queen in the world, OK?" she says. "They called me Ma Barker because I'd shoot you and ask questions later." Comer took Deland with her to therapy for a while, hoping to make things at home a little less turbulent. New boyfriends came and went, but she mostly settled into life as a single mom, taking on multiple jobs to support her sons, including as a switchboard operator at the Cuyahoga County Department of Human Services, a waitress, a social worker and a short-order cook at the local bowling alley. She did her best to rear the boys on her own, but they moved a lot, and she struggled to pay the bills, sometimes having to choose between electricity and a working phone. But Comer stressed the importance of an education, insisting that she see the boys' homework to make sure they were taking it seriously. She taught them the value of a dollar and the importance of faith, demanding that they use a portion of their monthly child support for Sunday school and tithes at church. And she was always shuttling them to activities, from the theater program at the Youngstown Playhouse to football, basketball and track practices. Deland was a bit of a late bloomer in terms of talent, but the passion for football was always there. Early on in pee wee, he heard his name over the loudspeaker and a light went off in his head. He fell in love with the game and started carrying a football with him everywhere he went, even to bed. "It was an escape," he says. "When I was out there practicing, you didn't think about the electric is off, you know? You didn't even think about anything like that. You were just out there balling, doing your thing and competing and bonding with your friends." 37


Comer was a one-woman cheer squad, bringing multiple signs to Deland's games and running up and down the sideline rooting him on. One night when her ride didn't show up, she took her son's moped to the game. He looked up in the stands and saw her, still wearing his moped helmet, hollering and screaming for him: "D-MACK! D-MACK!" As a junior defensive back, Deland saw himself playing football at a small school or enlisting in the Navy, but an opportunity to show his talent at the running back position his senior year drew the eye of college recruiters. Suddenly, he was being pursued by the likes of Jim Tressel, then the head coach at Youngstown State; Bob Stoops, then the defensive backs coach at Kansas State; and Sherman Smith, then the running backs coach at Miami of Ohio. Deland McCullough looked out the window of his third-period English class at Campbell Memorial High School and saw a tall man emerge from a candy apple red Mercedes-Benz with tan interior and trickedout gold rims. A few minutes later, he got a pink slip message to leave class and go to the office, where the tall man stuck out his hand and said, with a firm handshake, "I'm Sherman Smith, the running backs coach at Miami University." A former star quarterback at Miami, Smith was a second-round draft pick at running back for the Seahawks and went on to play eight years in the NFL. He had a booming voice, thick arms and broad, square shoulders. He walked and talked and carried himself like a former pro; McCullough was immediately drawn to him. "It was just something about his personality," McCullough says. "The way he presented himself. He had things that I hadn't seen out of a man or mentor. He was on top of his details. He was successful. He had played in the NFL. He got his degree. I wasn't around that type of person. "The Mercedes was nice, too, you know?" he laughed. "That was slick." As a Youngstown native himself, Smith thought guys from the area were tough, but the coaches told him McCullough was special -- a thin kid, but when he couldn't run around people, he'd go through them. McCullough was serious that day in the office, offering few smiles and answering with a lot of "Yes, sir" and "No, sir," but he was also intelligent and expressive. Smith thought he'd very much like to work with him. The feeling was mutual. Despite interest from other schools, the decision to attend Miami University was easy for McCullough, especially after the home visit, during which Smith charmed Comer as well. "Well, Coach Smith was hard not to love," Comer says, laughing. "I fell in love with him the first time. He was just a gentleman. And he was very attentive and respectful to me." Smith drove them to visit the school and was back at Campbell Memorial a few months later for signing day, when McCullough signed his letter of intent to play at Miami. When McCullough arrived on campus, the coaches tried to turn him into a wide receiver, but he pushed for an opportunity to work with Smith and the running backs, accepting a redshirt freshman year to pursue the position he believed he was meant to play. "I would tell the players, 'You may not be looking for a father, but I'm going to treat you like you're my sons,'" Smith says. "And so I just looked at every guy like my son. I just wanted to be a positive role model for Deland and exemplify what I thought my father exemplified for me."

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"He was everything," McCullough says. "If anything was going on, I was going to talk to Coach Smith. Everybody in that room gravitated towards Coach Smith just because that's the type of person he was. What he's about rubs off on you, so I always wanted to be around that." Smith left Miami University after that season to be the tight ends coach at the University of Illinois, but he and McCullough stayed in touch. He watched from afar as McCullough put together a Hall of Fame career in Oxford, rushing 36 touchdowns and setting a school record with 4,368 rushing yards. McCullough was surprised when his name wasn't called in the 1996 draft, but he was invited to a few workouts and ended up signing with the Bengals. He was leading the NFL in preseason rushing before he suffered a season-ending knee injury in Cincinnati's final exhibition game. After a few more looks in the NFL, a couple of seasons in Canada, several more knee surgeries and a brief flirtation with the XFL, McCullough finally accepted in 2001 that the dream of pro football was over. A few years later, married and the father of one son, McCullough took a job teaching communications and coaching football at Harmony Community School in Cincinnati. Despite rising to the ranks of principal and making a good salary, his first taste of coaching gave him the itch to coach full time, and he reached out to his alma mater about an opportunity to join the staff. Smith had followed a similar path, first teaching and coaching high schoolers, then working his way up the ranks from Miami University to the University of Illinois, the Houston Oilers, the Washington Redskins and, finally, the running backs coach for the Seahawks. He was with Seattle when he got a call from McCullough, asking for advice as he started his new job at Miami University. By 2014, McCullough was coaching at Indiana University, and the two were reunited on the field, as Smith welcomed McCullough to Seattle for a coaching internship. He saw firsthand that his former player had a real future on the sideline. He had no idea that off the field, McCullough was consumed by the search for his family. A few days before Thanksgiving 2017, Carol Briggs got home from work, sat down on the couch and opened a Facebook message from an unfamiliar man: "Did you have a baby in 1972 in Allegheny County that you placed for adoption?" "Luckily, I was already sitting," she says. Briggs had thought often of baby Jon. Every year, she wished him a "Happy Birthday" on her Facebook wall, and she regularly searched adoption websites to see if he might be looking for her. Briggs could still hear her mother's voice, saying more and more often in the years before she died, "You need to find that boy." Never married and without any other children, Briggs would joke to her cousin Robin that one day baby Jon might show up at her door and walk in to find her home alone, dancing around the house to Funkadelic. She called her older brother, who warned her that the message might be from someone trying to bribe or extort her. She responded anyway, and after a few short messages, she agreed to speak to McCullough on the phone that night after he got out of practice. In the hours before the call, she Googled his name and read every article she could find. She stared at his pictures and tried to find herself in his face. It wasn't hard to see it now: the mouth, the nose, the eyes. McCullough called Briggs from a hallway at USC as he awaited the start of a football family dinner.

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They spoke as if they'd known each other for years, an easy back and forth as they shared where life had taken them in the 44 years since she'd laid him down on that bed and let him go. She learned that he had never gone to live with a doctor in Columbus, that in fact they had been just a few miles away from each other in Youngstown for all of McCullough's childhood. She likely shopped at the same grocery store as Adelle Comer, perhaps even passing young McCullough in the aisles. She was certain that her sports-fanatic father, now deceased, had read about McCullough's high school exploits in the paper. McCullough was overjoyed to find his birth mother, though a mother had never been what he was missing. "Within probably the first five or six minutes, he says, 'Who is my father?'" Briggs says. She took a breath. She had probably told only three people the man's name. After making the decision to not tell the father all those years ago, she had been determined to never let him learn of the baby years later because of careless gossip. She hesitated but decided McCullough had a right to know. "Your father's name is Sherman Smith," Briggs told him. McCullough, leaning against a wall in the hallway, felt as though he might pass out. He started flashing back to all of his memories with Smith and all the times people had joked about him being a carbon copy of his coach. Throughout college, when he returned to coach at Miami University, during his internship with the Seahawks. "'Man, you and Coach Smith look alike.' 'Man, you all walk alike.' 'Y'all this, y'all this,'" McCullough says. "There's no reason to connect those dots because you weren't even thinking about them. A sense of pride that went through me, like, 'Wow, that explains these things.' And then I also start thinking about all the similarities of our path. That just blew me away." Not only had he known his father for 28 years, but Smith was also his mentor, the man he had looked up to since he was 16 years old. McCullough thought of a photo of him and Smith at Campbell Memorial High, both beaming as he signed his letter of intent to play at Miami University. The same photo he had pinned to the corkboard that hung in his college dorm room. The same photo that was at that moment sitting in a Ziploc bag in the drawer of his nightside table, a bag that had traveled with him through every job and every move. "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 says. "I felt like my blessings came full circle because I'd always wanted to be somebody like him." "I could hear him take a big breath," Briggs says. "And I could kind of hear him choke up a little. And finally he says, 'Well, I've known Sherman my whole life.'" The next morning, McCullough texted Smith asking if they could talk about something important. It was November, and Smith assumed that McCullough had gotten a coaching opportunity he wanted to discuss. Instead, McCullough began by talking about his search for his birth parents, how he had found his biological mother, and she was from Youngstown, just like them. "Praise the Lord!" Smith recalls saying. "What a blessing!" 40


"And then he said, 'I asked her who my biological father was, and she said you.'" Smith was quiet. Sixty-three years old, he had been married to his college sweetheart for 42 years and had reared a grown son and a daughter. He hadn't heard the name Carol Briggs in more than four decades. He never knew she was pregnant, never knew there was a baby. He knew he couldn't deny the possibility that he was McCullough's father, but he wanted proof. Even more, he wanted time to think. He asked McCullough if he could call him back later. Stunned and a little hurt, McCullough agreed. Smith sat in his office. Guilt washed over him. Even though he hadn't been told about the baby, he couldn't shake the feeling that he had let Briggs and McCullough down. He felt awful that he had left Briggs in such a difficult position and regretted all the years he had missed out on being a father to McCullough. He had built a life making a difference in young men's lives. He had spoken to his athletes and his kids about being responsible, being accountable. "Being irresponsible is not neutral," Smith says. "When you're irresponsible, someone becomes responsible for what you've been irresponsible for." He thought about what this would say about him as a man and found himself hoping that a paternity test would show that he wasn't McCullough's father. It was a thought that brought him only more guilt. He asked to speak to Briggs. Briggs cried her way through work the day she was set to talk to Smith. "I hadn't talked to Sherman in 45 years. And after 45 years, this is probably not the icebreaker conversation that you want to have with the guy that you used to fool around with. 'Hey, we've got a 45-year-old son. And how are you?' So, no, I wasn't looking forward to that at all. Not at all." There was no need to worry. Smith was calm and kind, and the two settled into a nice conversation, catching up for a long time before they even got to talking about McCullough. Smith apologized to her for her having to make such a difficult decision at such a young age, and Briggs explained why she had felt it was best to not tell Smith about the baby. She said that over the years, she just wanted to know that McCullough was OK, and Smith reassured her that her son was a good man. Briggs hung up full of emotion but relieved that Smith wasn't angry with her. Smith hung up feeling much more certain that McCullough was his son. Smith talked to his wife, Sharon, and his brother, Vincent. He talked to his children, Sherman and Shavonne. He thought about McCullough's coaching internship a few years earlier, how Seahawks assistant offensive line coach Pat Ruel hadn't stopped cracking jokes about Smith and his protege acting like a father-son duo. McCullough sent Smith an old article from his days in the CFL, and Smith couldn't believe his eyes. "I'm looking at this thing and thinking, 'I don't remember taking this picture. I don't remember doing this article,'" Smith says. "I'm looking at Deland, and I'm thinking it's me. That got me. "I called my aunt in Youngstown, and I told her about it. And she'd went on YouTube and pulled up some pictures of Deland, and she called me back. She said, 'Nephew, I can save you the money on the DNA tests.'"

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The more Smith thought about it, the more he realized the story wasn't about him and his guilt. It was about McCullough and what he had been through. It was about a life without a father, about the years McCullough had spent looking for his birth parents, hoping to fill a void, wanting to know where he'd come from. "It was said that humility is not thinking less of yourself, it's thinking of yourself less," Smith says. "I started thinking about Deland." Sometime in the weeks between that first phone call and the test results, Smith realized that he was hoping he was McCullough's father. That, in fact, he would be devastated if the results came back otherwise. When the test came in, it showed a 99.99 percent chance that Smith was, indeed, McCullough's father. Both were elated. "I look at it, and I just say it's a God thing," Smith says. "It's grace. It's undeserved. And that's what's made it great for Deland and for all of us, how everyone has embraced this and is excited about our new family." McCullough understood why Smith had been so curt at first. McCullough had spent his whole life wondering about his birth parents. Briggs had spent her whole life wondering about her child. Smith had gone from zero to a 45-year-old son in one phone call; he needed time. A few weeks after the paternity test came back, McCullough had a recruiting trip near Nashville, where Smith and his wife had relocated after his retirement. McCullough made a special trip to see the man he now knew as his father. "I'm pretty sure he was nervous," Smith says of that day. "I laugh because I'm looking out the window because I know he's supposed to be coming. I'm standing there, and I see he parks at the corner down there. And he's parked there for five minutes. I said, 'What's he doing?' He finally pulls up and gets out the car." As McCullough walked up the steps to the house, Smith greeted him with open arms and said, "My son." It was the first time in McCullough's life that anyone had called him that. "For so many years that I was around him, the embrace was, 'Hey, Coach, how you doing?'" Smith says. "But this is, 'Man, my son.' Maybe I was doing it for me, to help me really, fully understand." "I know he was saying it from a place of 'I'm proud. This is my son,'" McCullough says. "I'd never heard that. I'd never been referred to like that before -- period. It really hit me hard emotionally. When I sit here at this point, and I'm looking at the things that I've done, I'm happy that I'm able to be somebody that he's proud of." At first, McCullough was concerned that his adoptive mother might be upset by his relationships with his birth parents. But as soon as he heard that Briggs and Comer had hit it off in their first phone call, he knew everything would be fine. "All I can say is, 'Are you serious?' Over and over again. 'Are you serious?'" Comer says of McCullough's journey leading to Smith. "It's just a miracle that his birth father's been in his life since he was 16, 17 years old. That's my son, and I want nothing but 100 percent best for him. He needed that, and God gave it to him, and it's in God's time." 42


Both Smith and Briggs are endlessly grateful to Comer for raising McCullough with the wisdom they didn't yet have. "She did what I couldn't do," Briggs says of Comer. "She was an adult, she was married at the time, so you know she brought him into a family structure. That was what I wanted for him. I wanted him to have what I had, and she gave him that. She gave him all the tools that he needed in growing up to be the successful man that he is right now." "Now I know who I am and where I'm from," Deland McCullough says of finding his biological parents, Sherman Smith and Carol Briggs. This past June, the two Miami University Hall of Famers, Smith and McCullough, were back on campus to witness the verbal commitment of McCullough's son, Deland McCullough II, to the RedHawks football team. The younger McCullough is a defensive back, just like Smith's son, Sherman, who played the position at Miami as well. In July, a huge family reunion in Youngstown brought McCullough, Briggs, Smith and Comer together for the first time. All of McCullough's parents in one place, reflecting on nurture versus nature, what is inherited versus what is taught and the many different forms of parenthood. It was both the culmination of a journey and the start of something new for the families that the journey had introduced. A man found his parents, a mother found her child, and a father discovered a son he never knew he was missing. There is no jealousy, no resentment and no regret. There is just gratitude for the winding paths that brought them all together. "When I look at Deland, the type of guy he is, it was a gift to us," Smith says. "And to think -- Deland felt we were a gift to him." "Now I know who I am and where I'm from," McCullough says. "I got all of the pieces to the story. I got them all now."

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(Tyreek Hill) Why Chiefs' Tyreek Hill chucked up the 'deuces' in '17 Terez A. Paylor Kansas City Star January 27, 2018

ORLANDO, FLA. Throughout the course of the Chiefs’ 2017 season, it became an amusing and customary sight — receiver Tyreek Hill, streaking untouched into the end zone, middle and index fingers spread in a “V” shape toward the next closest defender, always several yards away. Make no mistake about it, Hill’s touchdown celebration — the chucked “deuces” — is a nod to his rare 4.24 speed, and the fact that no one can catch the self-proclaimed “Cheetah,” though Hill loves to have fun with those who quiz him on the meaning on the gesture. “I’m just trying to promote world peace with that,” Hill said at the Pro Bowl this week. “I’m not saying ‘bye,’ man. I’m not trying to be disrespectful like that ... I think.” He added the last part with a hearty laugh, just to make it clear he was joking. But honestly, it’s hard to blame Hill — who regularly uses the “deuces” emoji on Twitter and is increasingly adding it to his personal brand — for coining the celebration and having some fun with it. Because after an offseason in which the Chiefs’ unceremoniously dumped veteran Jeremy Maclin and elevated Hill, the 5-foot-10, 185-pound second-year pro, to the No. 1 wideout spot, there’s little doubt he rose to that challenge in 2017, as he proceeded to catch 75 passes for 1,183 yards and seven touchdowns. What’s more, while Hill made the Pro Bowl for the second straight year as a returner, it speaks volumes about his ability as a receiver that he was also named a first alternate at that position, as well. Hill, a fifth-round pick in 2016, doesn’t take the respect he’s garnered around the league for granted. “It’s amazing, absolutely a blessing just being around all these great guys, being around this amount of talent,” Hill said. “I just want to thank the Chiefs organization for giving me this chance.” Hill’s selection in the 2016 NFL Draft caused plenty of angst in Kansas City, as the club selected him after he had pleaded guilty to domestic abuse by strangulation of his then-pregnant girlfriend in 2014 and received a three-year suspended sentence. Since then, however, Hill insists he’s put the negative energy from that situation into positive fuel. “I just feel like I came in, and a lot of people just doubted me, a lot of people wrote me off because of my past and because of me not doing much in college,” said Hill, who has apologized for his actions. 44


“But I was always taught to never let another man write your destiny. So I came in, and I used that as fuel. I’m motivated by my family each and every day. “My son, my parents ... I can see how happy they are, and I want that same happiness for myself. They always taught me to work hard, so I want that.” Now, the focus for Hill is to continue to work on his craft. Despite his dynamite athleticism, the 23-year old knows he still has much work to do to fully draw the most out of his talents, though he added that receivers coach Greg Lewis is doing a nice job helping him do just that. “With me, I’ve got to be a good listener,” Hill said. “I sometimes take constructive criticism the wrong way. But I feel like with G-Lew, he came in and he challenged me and our other receivers to get better. And I liked it. So as the year progressed, I got better.” Specifically as it relates to his route-running. “Early in the season, I wasn’t as good at route-running — I was just running by guys,” Hill said. “But as the season went on, I was using the technique I was taught and my fundamentals and I was getting open more. So yeah, I still feel like I’ve got a long way to go as a receiver.” Hill also impressed with his toughness. The best ability for any football player is availability, and despite his size — and the absorption of a few massive hits along the way — Hill still played 15 regular-season games, only missing the meaningless regular-season finale so he could grieve the death of a beloved family member. “I’ve got a running-back profile, so I kind of understand the mentality of it all,” Hill said of his ability to take punishment. “I’m in the business for a reason; to get tackled and also make plays that look good.” Hill increasingly made those plays in 2017, as he not only established himself as one of the league’s best receivers, but did it with a little style, thanks to the increased usage of a brand-boosting gesture he actually broke out a year ago first. “I kind of did it when we played Denver my rookie year,” Hill said. “I just raised it up fast and I put it down.”

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(Eric Berry) Eric Berry Talks Exercise, Healthy Eating Habits and Life with Local Middle Schoolers Matt McMullen Chiefs.com February 7, 2018

When Kansas City Chiefs’ safety Eric Berry speaks, people tend to listen. Whether it be his teammates on the field at Arrowhead Stadium or an auditorium full of local kids, Berry’s authentic passion for seizing life’s hurdles commands the attention of those around him. That was again the case this Tuesday at Turner Middle School as Berry surprised over 60 students to congratulate them on being named the national “Fuel Up to Play 60 Kickoff” winning school. “It’s about getting kids active,” Berry explained. “When I was younger, even when it was cold outside, I’d see kids in my neighborhood playing outside. You don’t really see that too often nowadays…you see them inside or on their phone. So, anything I can do to promote kids to be active and have fun – that’s pretty good.” Fuel Up to Play 60 exists as a partnership between the NFL and the National Dairy Council that strives to encourage kids to embrace healthy lifestyles at a young age. More than 2,500 schools participated in the initiative this past year, with Turner winning national recognition among its peers and a visit from Berry. “Eric being here is huge,” said Dottie Ryan, Vice President for Fuel Up to Play 60. “I’m a registered dietitian and I can talk nutrition all day long, but when a pro athlete, especially somebody with Eric Berry’s inspirational story, comes in to a school and talks with kids, it really has an impact.” Berry’s advice on being active was simple enough. “Man, just do it more,” Berry said. “It’s OK to go outside, run around and get sweaty. You’ll come inside smelling bad and your parents might say that you stink, but that’s OK. Go out and have fun. That’s where your friendships are built. Get off your computer or your phone and just get outside and have fun being a kid.” Berry certainly has authority on the issue, earning five Pro Bowl nominations all the while battling back from multiple injuries and a cancer diagnosis in 2014, paving the way for just about anything he says to have a lasting impact.

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“Schools and teachers will tell us that days like this are the ones that their children will remember forever,” Ryan said. “Having a pro athlete really helps give this program sizzle, and it makes kids realize that, ‘Hey, maybe I should take care of my body if I want to do great things.’”

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(Patrick Mahomes) Chiefs are confident in leadership abilities of young Patrick Mahomes Terez A. Paylor Kansas City Star February 09, 2018 06:10 PM

Chiefs coach Andy Reid stepped to the microphone and awaited the questions about Patrick Mahomes. Mahomes, the club’s first-round pick in 2017, had just aced his first career start, completing 22 of 35 passes for 284 yards and leading the Chiefs’ game-winning drive in a 27-24 victory at Denver to close out the regular season. The kid had aced the test, and Reid knew it. So much so that the Chiefs’ usually unflappable coach had difficulty tamping down his excitement. When asked about Mahomes, Reid raved about the “complete control” the rookie had shown, comments Reid would elaborate on at the Senior Bowl. “He proved he could function at a high level,” Reid told The Star. “It’s not just calling the plays and lining up and doing it. It’s a matter of the protections against that defense, moving people around. “He had a center that was a backup at the time (Zach Fulton), and they had to work that together and get everything picked up, and he was able to handle that.” In retrospect, it’s clear that Mahomes’ impressive performance helped clear the way for general manager Brett Veach’s trade of veteran quarterback Alex Smith to Washington, which became the talk of Super Bowl week in Minneapolis. The trade cannot be fully consummated until the new league year begins on March 14, but that hasn’t kept anyone — fans, analysts, coaches, players — from speculating on what the Chiefs’ offense could look like with Mahomes under center. “He makes some throws where you say ‘Man, the QB we’re about to play can’t make this throw, so don’t even worry about that,’” Chiefs inside linebacker Derrick Johnson said of Mahomes’ work on the scout team. ESPN analyst Louis Riddick went so far as to say the Chiefs’ are “giddy” about handing Mahomes the job. “They think he is a unique, unique talent with a unique arm, not just in terms of strength but in terms of the accuracy in which he can use that arm,” Riddick said. “I know they are excited about it, and Chiefs fans should be excited about it. “The kid will not be discouraged, will not be talked out of being someone who is going to push the envelope in terms of making big plays. They love everything about him, from everything I’ve heard, and

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they cannot wait to see him taking all the reps, getting all the individualized coaching as far as nuance and playing the position under Andy Reid this offseason.” But if Mahomes is going to succeed as the Chiefs’ next quarterback, he must first earn the trust of the men in the locker room. And you do that, players and analysts say, by playing well and leading from the front. “Look, to be a good quarterback, you have to be cocky, confident,” said Geoff Schwartz, a veteran offensive lineman who spent 2013 as a starter for the Chiefs. “You have to command a huddle, even if you’re a rookie. You have to come in there and say, ‘This is my huddle,’ because it is. You’re in charge, this is your deal, right? Because (center) Mitch Morse is only doing so much for you.” That’s one of the reasons Reid was so happy with Mahomes after the Denver game. He knew the formations; he knew the defenses. And he let it all hang out, with no hesitation. That’s called swagger, and having it is necessary if you’re going to lead a room full of football-playing alpha males. “If you’re kind of timid at quarterback, I don’t think it works,” Schwartz said. “So I hope Mahomes is talkative and confident, a little cocky. You have to be, to be a quarterback.” The good news is that Mahomes has already shown some of this to teammates. “Pattycakes, man, he’s a confident player — he’s a confident football player,” tight end Travis Kelce said. “He’s still young; he’s still gonna go through some growing pains ... but I think he’s shown enough upside through the preseason, games and practices. “Just who he is as a competitor, man, he’s got all the confidence in the world. So I don’t think the transition is going to be too tough.” Johnson, the veteran linebacker, said Mahomes not only did a nice job blending into the background this season while serving as Smith’s understudy, he was eager to take advice. “He did a good job keeping his mouth shut and learning a lot,” Johnson said. “There were times on the field where he knows I like to jump routes, and there were times he’d really try to bait me into jumping a route ... and maybe it worked on some people, but I went up to him afterwards and said, ‘Hey, you don’t have to be that dramatic — that’s when I know you’re trying to bait me.’ “So I’m always talking to him when I’m out there, and he was always receptive, saying, ‘OK, I got you.’ He’s a guy that’s very humble for his stature.” Riddick said that in the NFL, while it’s important to have an on-field presence, there’s only one way to really win over your teammates at the quarterback position. “It isn’t about standing up, giving fiery speeches and making ridiculous gestures about eating W’s or anything like that,” Riddick said, referencing a maligned pregame speech by young Tampa Bay quarterback Jameis Winston. “This is a performance league, man. And although you’d obviously like players who have great football personal character who do all their (work) the right way. In the end, what really talks in the NFL is your performance, and that’s what he’ll need to do.”

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As long as Mahomes plays well on the field and doesn’t make any bad decisions off the field that would cost him his availability to the rest of the team, Riddick is confident Mahomes’ talent will help him be a successful leader, even at the young age of 22. “It’s just different, man,” Riddick said of Mahomes’ talent. “And we all know it’s different.” The big unknown, of course, is how Mahomes will fare over a full 16-game slate against the best football players in the world. The Chiefs are confident they know the answer. “They’re making the bet that he’s going to be everything they thought he was going to be,” Riddick said, “and I’m right there with them.”

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(Mitchell Schwartz) Mitchell Schwartz Meets with the Prime Minister of Israel Matt McMullen Chiefs.com February 21, 2018

The offseason is a time for players to take a break from the grind of an NFL season, whether that be spending time with family, picking up old hobbies or, in Mitchell Schwartz’s case, international diplomacy. Kansas City’s starting right tackle spent last week touring Israel with his brother and former Chief, Geoff Schwartz, along with the Titans’ Avery Williamson, the Jets’ Austin Seferian-Jenkins, the Falcons’ Vic Beasley, the Broncos’ Chris Harris Jr. and the Redskins’ Josh Norman. “We’re just really excited to be here,” Schwartz said in an interview with Israeli television. “It’s our first time and we’ve been talking about coming here for a while, so when this opportunity came up we couldn’t turn it down.” Schwartz took a dip in the Dead Sea, visited the Western Wall and enjoyed some Israeli cuisine among several other activities throughout the week, culminating in a meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday. The Schwartz brothers each presented Netanyahu with a jersey, one from the Chiefs and another from Geoff’s most recent team, the New York Giants, inscribed with Netanyahu’s nickname “Bibi” on the back. It’s an experience that Schwartz likely soon won’t forget. “You can learn about it and see pictures of it, but (it’s different) seeing it in person and standing where people stood 2,500 years ago with the same architecture and the same stones,” Schwartz said. “That’s when you realize how special this place is.” When coupled with fellow lineman Laurent Duvernay-Tardif’s Olympic broadcasting endeavors in South Korea this month, the Chiefs’ offensive line is making the most of their time away from the field this offseason.

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(Sammy Watkins) Chiefs see Sammy Watkins as another building block toward offensive juggernaut Terez A. Paylor Kansas City Chiefs March 15, 2018

In an increasingly pass-happy league, the Chiefs are pinning their hopes for the future on building an offensive juggernaut reminiscent of some of the all-time great NFL offenses: the early 2000s Colts or Chiefs, late '90s Rams or even the early-'90s Cowboys. Dead serious. How else can you explain their decision to pay a receiver, Sammy Watkins, $18 million per season for the next three years when they had one of the league’s worst defenses last season and just traded away one of the league’s best young corners in Marcus Peters? Indeed, while the Chiefs’ defense will continue to get younger and faster, coach Andy Reid and general manager Brett Veach figured their best bet to keep winning, at least for the near future, was to doubledown on offense. It' a fun proposition, one that not only sells tickets but also has the practical purpose of ensuring that second-year quarterback Patrick Mahomes, the man Reid and Veach have essentially staked their jobs on, has all the tools he needs to realize his vast potential. Neither man, Reid nor Veach, could stop smiling during news conferences on Thursday as they introduced Watkins to the media. The enthusiasm was particularly notable from Reid, who has seen and heard it all in his 20 years as an NFL head coach but smiled and joked more with reporters on Thursday than he has in a good, long while. Fact is, Reid couldn’t be more excited about handing the keys of his offense to Mahomes, who served as an apprentice under five-year starter Alex Smith last season and shined so regularly that reports of his prowess were constantly leaking out of the Chiefs’ typically info-stingy building. During the week of the Super Bowl, when the Chiefs moved quickly to trade Smith to clear salary-cap space, it was hardly a surprise. “If (Alex) had to leave here, we wanted him in the best possible situation that he could be in,” Reid said. “(Washington coach) Jay Gruden is one of the top offensive minds in the National Football League. I’m close to that family. I know he’s in good hands.” The trade would not have been possible, however, if Reid didn’t believe his offense was in equally good hands with Mahomes.

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Chiefs chairman Clark Hunt demands a competitive team, and the decision to hand the offense to Mahomes is an indication that leadership believe he at least gives them a shot to defend their AFC West crown. The way the Chiefs go about scoring points under Mahomes figures to be a little different, though. “We will try to utilize his strengths,” Reid said. “One of the things as a coach, that is what you do. You exploit their strengths and you work on things they need to get better at. Will the offense change a little bit? Yeah, it will. It will change a little bit, but that is fitting around his talents.” Mahomes came from a Texas Tech offense that featured four wideouts on practically every play and was accustomed to chucking the ball 50 times a game or more. In the Chiefs’ win over Denver in their regular-season finale —Mahomes’ only appearances of the season as a rookie — they used a ton of shotgun and three- and four-wide sets, along with plenty of route combinations he was comfortable with from his college days. “For that game, we molded that game plan around him,” Reid said. “(New quarterbacks coach) Mike Kafka spent a lot of time with him when everybody else was kind of working on the playoff game. We were able to get in there kind of mold it with what we had in the package at that time, mold it around him." Mahomes’ final stat line of 22 of 35 for 284 yards and an interception in the Denver game was not fully indicative of his performance, as he repeatedly made difficult throws from various platforms — the kind of throws that caused defenders to literally throw their hands in the air. The hope now is that when the Chiefs throw the ball next season, whoever's in single coverage, be it Watkins, Tyreek Hill, Travis Kelce or someone else, will be faster than the man covering him. “We feel like our short and intermediate game, we feel like we aren’t going to decline in that area,” Reid said. “We have guys that can go down the field.” This will also have a tangible effect on the Chiefs’ downfield passing game. A big reason for the Chiefs’ five-game losing streak during the middle of last season was their inability to complete the deep ball against combinations of zone and press corners. Defenses might be foolish to defend them that way this year. While Hill’s 4.24 speed discourages teams from pressing him, Watkins’ combination of size (6 feet 1, 214 pounds) and speed (4.34) should, too. Not that Reid would mind if teams want to give it a go. “We’d invite that,” Reid said with a laugh. Reid said Watkins will play the “X” receiver position in his West Coast offense, the spot previously manned by Chris Conley, whose 2017 season ended prematurely because of a torn Achilles. Receivers at that spot often align right on the line of scrimmage, as opposed to a yard off (like Hill at the “Z” position). With a quarterback who relishes opportunities to throw deep, the Chiefs believe their new-look offense will pose problems for opposing defenses. Hence the radiant mood of Reid and Veach on Thursday. “This is a great thing for the Kansas City Chiefs, most of all, and it’s exciting,” Reid said. “The energy in this building is unbelievable right now.” 53


(Xavier Williams) Chiefs have plans for new defensive tackle and KC native Xavier Williams TEREZ A. PAYLOR Kansas City Star March 22, 2018

Xavier Williams is a very superstitious man. So while the 26-year-old nose tackle had a sense there was a good chance he'd soon be playing for his hometown team, the Kansas City Chiefs, long before the news was announced Wednesday, he played this one close to the vest with his loved ones until the T's were crossed and the I's were dotted. “I don’t want to jinx anything," said Williams, a graduate of Grandview High School. "I even talked to my agent about it and I was like, ‘You know I think the last thing I want to do is get my mom pumped up that I’ll be coming home and then something crazy happens like I end up in New York or something like that.’ ” Her reaction to the news, however, proved to be worth the wait. “She freaked out — everybody was freaking out,” Williams said with a laugh. “My phone’s been blowing up since yesterday. Everybody with congratulations. Old schoolmates, all my family members, just everyone.” And why not? It's not every day a hometown kid gets to sign with the Chiefs during free agency. “I was a huge Chiefs fan — my mom and everybody still has all of their gear from way back in the day,” Williams said. “Huge Derrick Thomas fan, of course. Tony Gonzalez, Priest Holmes and Dante Hall, you know the ‘X-Factor.’ He was an exciting guy to watch.” Williams' return to Kansas City, however, is much more than a feel-good story. Despite his modest production to this point — his 20 tackles and a half-sack in 2017 with the Arizona Cardinals represented the best single-season marks of his three-year career — the Chiefs will be counting on Williams to help plug an oft-leaky run defense, one that ranked a miserable 25th in the NFL in 2017 and was also facing a potential future without their best interior run defender, nose tackle Bennie Logan, who remains a free agent. “Since I’ve gotten into the league, I’ve been a nose guard and if you’re a nose guard that’s your main job, stop the run,” said the 6-foot-2 Williams, who said he played last season at 295 pounds but expects to bulk up to 305 or 310 pounds in Kansas City. “Objective No. 1 if you’re going to be on the D-line always has to be to stop the run, so I take pride in that, making sure there’s nobody that can run on me. I’m trying to dominate centers, guards, whatever, trying to help out the linebackers.”

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In Williams, who could easily earn the starting job at nose tackle in the Chiefs’ 3-4 front, the Chiefs see a young player (26) who can grow with the rest of a defensive core that general manager Brett Veach wants to get younger, faster and more aggressive. “They mentioned (that),” said Williams, who was undrafted out of Northern Iowa in 2015. “If you look at the entire team, it’s a young team, bright future. That’s definitely a selling point. I’m excited about it. I hope I can be with it for years to come. Got a young quarterback, young receivers, everybody.” Williams also likes the scheme fit. The Chiefs, like the rest of the NFL, spend most of their time in nickel and dime subpackages, and while Williams has a well-earned reputation as a run-first player, he said the last three years he spent playing in an upfield, aggressive defense in Arizona leads him to believe he can contribute on passing downs in Kansas City. “From what I understand it’s an attack defense,” Williams said. “I talked to (defensive line) coach Britt Reid and coach Sutton (defensive coordinator Bob Sutton) and we were going through the philosophy and schemes of the defense and I think it really matched and was similar to what I was doing in Phoenix. This defense is something I think I can produce in.” Williams is working hard to improve his pass-rush skills. This offseason, he went down to Texas to work with a pass-rush coach, and he’s also been working on improving his flexibility. “Things that would help me tone in on smaller nuances of pass rush and balance,” Williams said. “I really have been attacking that hard this offseason.” He’ll keep on attacking it, too, right up until the Chiefs’ offseason workout program starts in mid-April. But in the meantime, he’ll also be taking on another task — figuring out where he wants to live now that he’s in his hometown. It’s a task he can’t wait to get started with. “This city has changed so much since I really lived down here from college to when I was out in Phoenix,” Williams said with a laugh. “I really have to get back and check the city out and try to figure out where everybody’s staying these days.”

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(Chad Henne) New Chiefs backup Chad Henne has experience mentoring young QBs

Adam Teicher ESPN March 23, 2018

The comments from general manager Brett Veach after the Kansas City Chiefs signed Chad Henne as a backup for new starter Patrick Mahomes II seemed to indicate his new team values the veteran quarterback as much for his experience as his potential to help win games, if need be. “Chad has been in this league a long time and has a tremendous feel for the game,” Veach said. “His experiences and knowledge will be valuable to our quarterback room, and on top of that, he has the physical tools to step in if needed.” The Chiefs, of course, hope Henne’s role is limited to being a mentor for Mahomes. Either way, his willingness to share his knowledge with Mahomes is a big reason the Chiefs sought Henne as the new backup. Veach and coach Andy Reid even discussed that with Henne before he signed. “I’m more than happy to help and make sure Patrick is ready to go and be the most prepared quarterback in the league,’’ Henne said. While with the Jacksonville Jaguars, Henne was teammates with a couple of quarterbacks who at one time were high draft picks, as Mahomes was last year. Henne played with both Blaine Gabbert and Blake Bortles, so he has experience serving as a backup to someone his team saw as a potential franchise quarterback. “Just setting a routine throughout the week, especially during the season, kind of showing them the ins and outs of how I prepare and how I learned to prepare and kind of just being a secondary coach, in other words,’’ Henne said when asked how he attempted to help Gabbert and Bortles. “They can talk to me. It’s easy to talk to me obviously as a teammate rather than always going to a coach. I can relay that back to the coaches as well. “Just kind of the routine, seeing what I see on the field, protections, if they need help with that. Just kind of going over the game plan with them, spend a lot of time with them and make sure they’re prepared for each and every Sunday.’’

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Henne and Mahomes met briefly last year, when Mahomes was in Jacksonville for a pre-draft visit with the Jaguars. “It was pretty much just to say hello,’’ Henne said. “That’s about it. I texted him as soon as I signed and just said, ‘Glad to be with the Chiefs and looking forward to working with you.'" But he knows the basics of Mahomes’ game. “Real strong arm, can make pretty much any throw, bright kid,’’ Henne said. “That’s about it until I kind of get into the meeting room and kind of get to know his personality and how he is. I’m looking forward to doing that.’’ Henne, who has started 53 games in a 10-year NFL career that included four seasons with the Miami Dolphins, said he has some advice for Mahomes. He learned it from Bortles, who had faced what seems to be a steady barrage of criticism since he joined the Jaguars in 2014. “The one thing that was good about Blake is that ... he just let everything go over his head and brushed it off his shoulders,’’ Henne said. “He didn’t really pay attention to it and just really cared about what his teammates thought. Obviously, with Patrick being a first-time starter, I think that’s the biggest thing. Really [surround] yourself around a good [group] of friends and family but also just remember you’re there to please yourself, first of all, but second, and most important, your teammates and coaches. Don’t worry about the external factors and really just go about your game, pleasing the people around you.’’

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(Kendall Fuller) Andy Reid Believes the Best is Yet to Come for CB Kendall Fuller Matt McMullen Chiefs.com March 29, 2018

The Kansas City Chiefs pulled off a true blockbuster of a move earlier this month, acquiring cornerback Kendall Fuller and a draft pick from the Washington Redskins in exchange for quarterback Alex Smith. Bringing Fuller to Kansas City certainly came at a price, as Smith led the Chiefs to four playoff appearances in his five seasons, but with second-year quarterback Patrick Mahomes ready to take over under center, the 23-year-old Fuller was worth the gamble for General Manager Brett Veach and Head Coach Andy Reid – and for good reason. Fuller recorded four interceptions, 10 passes defensed and a forced fumble last season – all improvements from his rookie campaign in 2016 – but it was the advanced metrics that really demonstrated his effectiveness. In fact, according to the folks at Pro Football Focus, Fuller was the sixthbest cornerback in all of football last season. The vast majority of that work was done while covering the slot, where Fuller allowed a league-low 55.0 passer rating and just 0.74 yards per play in coverage. It was a performance that drew the praise from around the league, and now in Kansas City, the Chiefs are confident that Fuller can replicate those results while playing as an outside corner. “He’s got tremendous upside and I think he’s just tapping into that,” said Reid at the annual league meetings this week. “He developed, you could argue, into the best inside defender - pass defender - in the league. Now, he has an opportunity to step outside and do that also - just kind of add that to his repertoire.” Reid indicated that Fuller will see plenty of action as an outside corner in 2018 while occasionally bouncing back inside if the situation calls for it. The Chiefs dealt for Fuller with that plan in mind, and though it came at a cost, Reid believes the best is yet to come for the third-year defensive back. “We felt like we needed defensive and secondary help, so I thought it was a win-win for both sides, which doesn’t happen very often in this league,” Reid said. “I thought it was great for the Redskins and I think it’s going to be great for us, too.”

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(DeAnthony Thomas and Steve Nelson) De’Anthony Thomas and Steve Nelson Surprise and Encourage a Kid Battling Cancer at Arrowhead Matt McMullen Chiefs.com April 5, 2018

There are few things in this world as fundamentally despicable as childhood cancer. It interrupts what should be a joyous time in a child’s life with unthinkable circumstances, robbing them of what it means to be a kid. Kansas City Chiefs’ cornerback Steve Nelson and wide receiver De’Anthony Thomas had a chance to do something about that on Wednesday when they surprised 11-year-old Kaiden Lunn, who is battling two forms of leukemia, during a tour of Arrowhead Stadium. “He’s dealing with leukemia and at that age it can be really tough, but he has a family around him that’s encouraging him to stay strong,” Thomas said. “I feel like today helped with his recovery and it goes beyond being at Arrowhead or meeting Steve and I, it was just about brightening his day a little and I hope he remembers it forever.” Kaiden, who is battling both T-cell and myeloid leukemia, is currently undergoing bone marrow tests and chemotherapy at Children’s Mercy. It’s a tough break for anyone, let alone an 11-year-old kid. His family arranged a seemingly ordinary tour of the stadium to take his mind off of things for a few hours, but unbeknownst to Kaiden, Nelson and Thomas were patiently waiting in the Chiefs’ locker room to surprise him. “This means a lot to me and my family,” said Kaiden’s mother, Latisha Smith. “We have tried everything to get him to smile, so seeing his smile today really touched all of our hearts and it’s truly a blessing.” The two players presented Kaiden with a personalized jersey and an autographed football before spending the next several minutes simply just getting to know him. It was a moment that resonated with Nelson, who was meeting with patients at the VA Medical Center just a day prior. “It means a lot just because of the simple fact that everybody is human,” Nelson said. “Everybody can use some laughter and some smiles in their life.” And as familiar faces in a town that cares so much for its football team, Thomas and Nelson are eager to do just that.

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“It’s a great feeling because I feel like when I was growing up, I never really looked up to anybody and I always wanted to be that person that people looked up to,” Thomas said. “I feel like I’ve lived up to those expectations so far and I think it’s great that I can have that impact on children now.”

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(Spencer Ware) Spencer Ware on His Family’s Battle with Sickle Cell Anemia: “I Want My Mom to See Her Son Play” Matt McMullen Chiefs.com April 18, 2018

One in every ten African-Americans is a carrier of the trait and there's no known cure, though many people have probably never heard of it. It’s called sickle cell anemia - a blood condition that restricts the flow of oxygen in the body – and it’s an enormous part of Kansas City Chiefs’ tailback Spencer Ware’s life. “A lot of people in my family, most importantly my mom, have sickle cell anemia,” Ware said on Monday. “It’s something that’s affected people really close to me. I carry the trait and I know some other players that are dealing with it, too.” In sickle cell anemia, according to the Mayo Clinic, “the red blood cells become rigid and sticky and are shaped like sickles or crescent moons. These irregularly shaped cells can get stuck in small blood vessels, which can slow or block blood flow and oxygen to parts of the body.” Ware carries the trait, meaning he doesn’t have any medical issues himself, but he can pass along the disease genetically. His mom, along with others in his family, actually have the condition and have had to adjust their lives accordingly. His mom, for example, can’t travel to Kansas City because of the lack of adult treatment facilities in the area. “My mom can’t really come to games because there aren’t any sickle cell adult doctors in the Kansas City area,” Ware explained. “I just want my mom to be able to see her son play.” With that sentiment in mind, Ware decided to do something about it this offseason with the creation of the Spencer Ware Sickle Cell Anemia Foundation. “It’s in the early stages. I have my first event on April 26, the first day of the NFL Draft, and that will be to raise money for and to bring awareness to those with sickle cell,” Ware said. “I want to make people aware of the actual disease.” From there, Ware is hopeful that increased awareness will lead to a brighter future for those with the disease and other conditions that are largely overlooked.

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“The goal is to help people in this world,” Ware said. “The foundation not only wants to bring awareness to sickle cell, but also to be there for others and to be a backbone of support for other causes that most people may not know about.” To learn more about Ware’s foundation, check out its Facebook page and its website.

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(Armani Watts, Eric Berry) New Chiefs safety Watts: 'real humbling' to play with Eric Berry after NFL Draft Blair Kerkhoff Kansas City Star April 28, 2018

Armani Watts can fill a stat sheet. The Texas A&M safety and Chiefs’ fourth-round draft selection was all over the field throughout his Aggies career. Just last season, Watts came up with four interceptions, forced two fumbles and blocked a couple of kicks. “You really notice his instincts,” said Chiefs scout Willie Davis. “He’s not the biggest kid but he knows where to be, knows where to put players. He’s a tough kid.” The 5-foot-11, 204-pound Watts was a four-year starter at A&M and an All-SEC choice last season. Among his season highlights was an end zone interception in overtime to clinch A&M’s victory over Arkansas. Watts said he considers himself “a game-changer, a ball hawk, able to play anywhere, a versatile player with a real knowledge of the game.” And he’s looking forward to working with Eric Berry. “Oh, man, one of the best to play the game,” Watts said. “It’s going to be real humbling. I’ll get under his wing and learn.” Watts was the fourth player selected by the Chiefs in the draft, and the fourth defensive player. The first three were lineman or linebackers. Watts will be part of a position group that lost Ron Parker but expected to get back Berry, who missed all but the opening game with a torn Achilles. “He’s going to come in and compete, there’s no doubt about that,” Davis said.

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(Anthony Sherman) Chiefs' Anthony Sherman brings crew of teammates to NASCAR race at Kansas Speedway Sam Mcdowell Kansas City Star May 12, 2018

Two hours before kickoff for a Chiefs game last fall, fullback Anthony Sherman and his teammates could be found in the locker room, choreographing a touchdown celebration. These dances often come together on Friday afternoons after practice, but Sherman had received late notice that a couple of friends would be in attendance, one of them a member of NASCAR driver Kyle Larson’s crew. So after Tyreek Hill caught a 63-yard touchdown in the first half against the Los Angeles Chargers, there were Sherman and his teammates, treating Hill as though he were a race car in the midst of a pit stop. “Big NASCAR fan,” Sherman said, adding, “That one actually came to us a couple of hours before the game. We got to do it in the locker room and try to figure it out, and (it) ended up working out pretty good.” On Saturday, months after his friend in NASCAR visited the Chiefs, Sherman returned the favor. Sherman served as the honorary pace car driver for the KC Masterpiece 400 at Kansas Speedway. And he brought a dozen of his teammates and general manager Brett Veach along with him to attend the race under the lights. “Once these guys come down and see this stuff from their point of view, they become fans,” Sherman said. “I wanna say there’s 15 guys in our RV right now. We got a good showing tonight.” It’s the fifth NASCAR race at Kansas Speedway that Sherman has attended, including the third consecutive at the track. But it’s his first time getting behind the wheel of the car. His concern, he said with a smile, wasn’t so much the adjustment to the speed as it was getting his 242pound frame out of the car. “Not so much getting in, but trying to finagle your way out of the car is a tricky situation.” Sherman walked around the infield Saturday wearing a No. 42 hat — representative of his number with the Chiefs but also Larson’s car number. That connection sparked a friendship a couple of years ago, and Sherman remains friends with a member of the Larson pit crew. Perhaps, Sherman joked, he could one day join that crew. “I’d like to say the jack man,” he responded when asked about his role. “In case the jack doesn’t work, I’d try to deadlift the car."

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Before the race, Sherman was joined by another athlete who might be able to do just that. Valentina Shevchenko, the top-ranked flyweight contender in UFC, served as an honorary race official Saturday. In attending her first NASCAR event, Shevchenko rode in the pace car and walked from garage to garage to meet some drivers. In a matter of minutes, she spotted a similarity. Yes, a similarity between NASCAR and mixed martial arts competition. “I think the drivers have the same mentality as the martial artists,” she said. “I think the drivers have the same concentration before their competitions that we (have).” That word — concentration — is the operative word for Shevchenko on Saturday night. With UFC 224 also scheduled for Saturday, she acknowledged she will be skipping a fight involving bantamweight champion Amanda Nunes in which she normally would take significant interest. “I cannot miss it,” she said of the chance to attend a NASCAR race. “Today is race night. I will totally be present in the place I am right now.”

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(Laurent Duvernay-Tardif) Is there a doctor in the house? Chiefs have one on the field in remarkable Duvernay-Tardif Vahe Gregorian Kansas City Star May 31, 2018

When the Chiefs drafted Laurent Duvernay-Tardif as an offensive-line project in 2014, then-general manager John Dorsey understatedly called him a “very interesting fella.” It wasn’t just that Duvernay-Tardif played the violin and twice had been on approximately yearlong educational sailing trips with his family to open his mind to different cultures and ways of living, and that he was a rare Canadian NFL prospect. It was that he was in his third year of medical school at McGill University … and determined to keep going from where he was, which on the day the NFL Draft began meant he was amid a rotation in a neonatal intensive-care unit. So while family and friends and media were waiting for him in his Montreal apartment that day, he was detained for an emergency C-section with premature twins. “There’s protocol, you have to look for any meconium aspiration, you have to suction … so you end up doing a lot,” he explained upon his arrival in Kansas City as the Chiefs’ sixth-round pick. Words surely never before uttered by an NFL Draft pick. Immersed as he was, his intention to simultaneously continue pursuing his doctorate in medicine and the enormous physical and mental challenges of NFL line play — especially with his raw roots in the game — seemed daunting, if not downright preposterous. Early on in all this, he said, “Right now, I have the feeling that I’m studying more (football) than I’ve ever studied for medicine.” So his graduation earlier this week, coupled with his development as an offensive-line fixture for the Chiefs, was momentous and cause for celebration from Canada to Kansas City. “Congratulations Laurent! An incredible achievement that makes us proud,” Justin Trudeau, the prime minister of Canada, wrote on Twitter. This man is a treasure doing unprecedented stuff, and here’s hoping the NFL is smart enough to relent on policy and allow the first of its active players to earn an M.D. to have that adorned to his name on his jersey. “We’re working on it,” he said. 66


Whatever is to come of that, LDT radiated a certain joy about the achievement as he spoke Thursday after a Chiefs’ offseason workout. “It’s been a great journey for the last four years,” he said, smiling, while conceding he was glad it was over. In this time of celebration, maybe it’s easy to overlook how grueling and complicated it was to make this happen. It started with LDT just being a unique and iron-willed person who made a promise to himself “to keep grinding and keep pushing to combine my two passions to the highest level and show people it was possible.” Not that he didn’t wonder at times if he could or should keep trying to do both at once. But he always came up with the same answer: “I love medicine, I love football, so why not (be) doing both?” In moments of doubt, he summoned a vision of walking on the stage for graduation, relying on that when he had to rally to train in the offseason at 9 p.m. because he’d, say, just finished an emergencydepartment shift. It could be just as draining during the season, as mentioned in a tweet sent by teammate Mitch Morse. “I will never forget @LaurentDTardif studying the whole 11-hour plane ride back from London in 2015 after we had just played a game. It was just one example of the kind of work ethic and determination that Larry brings to everything he does. Congrats buddy, extremely proud of you.” The rest of that story: Duvernay-Tardif normally reserved any medical-school work for the offseason but had taken on an orthopedic-surgery exam during the bye week to follow that game. So while the rest of the team was enjoying a victorious flight home, he lasered in for an exam he said he aced. Another essential factor that Dorsey, coach Andy Reid and the Chiefs deserve credit for is being open to this fanciful idea (as was McGill, which worked with LDT on ways to make it happen). Many coaches and organizations expressed skepticism in pre-draft visits. “Medicine was kind of a question mark (for them): ‘How do we know you really want to play football if you (are staying with) medicine?’ ” he recalled hearing around the league. “With Coach Reid, it was totally the opposite. … I don’t think it would have been possible if not for him.” As it happens, Reid’s mother, Elizabeth, was a doctor of radiology who had studied at … McGill. “A great place,” Reid called it Thursday, without letting on it had been the school of his mother — whom the Reid family believes was among the pioneering females in the field. So LDT remembers Reid telling him, “If you’re here and you still have medicine as a Plan B, it’s because you really love to play football, and I’m going to help you to the best of my ability. And that’s what he’s been doing for the last four years.” 67


At their exit meetings every offseason, Reid would ask, “What’s next for you, Doc?” As for what’s next now, LDT is giving himself a year before he moves toward the five years it will take to become an emergency physician. That ambition relates to football, too, at least in terms of handling what he called the adrenalin rush. “I think there are a lot of similarities between football and emergency medicine, you know?” he said. “You never really know in the emergency (room) what’s going to step through the door. You’ve got to be able to, like, make rational decisions in really stressful environments and kind of take your emotion out of it. “And there’s a lot of similarity between that and trying to block a different pressure on third down (when) you’ve got to do it to convert.” Says the interesting fella who’s made an epic conversion that both opens up the notion for others and stands as a marvel. “You’ve got to love both if you want to succeed,” he said, “because it was kind of hard.”

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(Tyreek Hill) Chiefs' Tyreek Hill treats some kids to shopping spree Deaundra Allen Kansas City Star June 16, 2018

Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Tyreek Hill wants to use what he has as a professional athlete and give some back to the community. He was able to do some of that on Saturday with kids from the Boys and Girls Club. Nine lucky boys arrived at Academy Sports and Outdoors in Overland Park, not too sure what was about to happen. Moments later, they found out that Hill had given them each $100 gift cards to buy whatever they wanted in the store. The biggest thing Hill looked forward to was seeing their reactions. “(I looked forward to) seeing their faces. When you’re a kid, you want to the opportunity to be apart of something like this,” Hill said. “You want to meet stars and get to know them, see what their personality is like.” But it’s not just about meeting stunned kids. The 24-year-old Florida native looks back on many adventures in his life. He remembers his parents telling him to give back. “I mean, growing up as a kid, you always want to be apart of something that gives back,” Hill said. “My parents always taught me to give back, because that’s how you receive blessings. That’s how I was raised, and that’s what I’m going to continue." Some of the kids bought football gear. Cleats, gloves and mouthpieces for football camps. Others bought shorts, shirts and socks. Davis Smith, one of the children that was a recipient of Hill’s generosity, thought attending the Tyreek Hill Football Camp was enough. But when he found out he was able to get new shoes and gloves, he was ecstatic. “It was fun because I saved a lot of money and got a lot of stuff,” Smith said. “And, I got to hang out with Tyreek Hill more. I was happy to see him and I love that he helped me.” In the past, Derrick Johnson and Kareem Hunt also have worked through Academy Sports to give back. Amy Acock, the regional marketing manager at Academy sports, loves that professional athletes are willing to step up to the plate and give back.

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“For me personally, it is really exciting to see because we have to give back to our youth,” Acock said. “The kids look up to our professional athletes, and for our athletes to be a role model for them and take time out of their busy schedules to come and do a shopping trip with them, they don’t know what difference it’ll make in these kids’ life.” John Poke, a driver for the Boys and Girls Club, enjoys watching this happen. For him, the biggest highlight was watching them get their shopping spree and their reaction. “I wish I had someone doing this for me when I was younger,” Poke said. "Some of these kids, they come from circumstances that maybe their parents can’t afford to do extra things or buy them those cleats because they had to pay bills. Tyreek isn’t just helping the kids, this helps out the families too.” Although he didn’t come up with the idea, Hill still hopes it inspires other players to pay it forward. “It’s just apart of the plan, which is giving back,” he said “I told everyone earlier in my career that I want to be big in the community and I want to give back … I’m doing what I can.”

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(Reggie Ragland) Leadership Personified: Reggie Ragland’s Remarkable Journey Has Built Him for This Moment BJ Kissel Chiefs.com July 20, 2018

There were only a handful of people in the small coach’s office in the back of the locker room. It was the morning of a school day late in the spring of 2014, and Reggie Ragland—the former Bob Jones High School (AL) standout—returned to his alma mater to seek counsel from those who have known him since before he was the eighth grader playing Varsity basketball, or since before he was the five-star football recruit known by everyone living within a 50-mile radius. Reggie wasn’t a late-bloomer when it came to his athletic ability—he was always a step above his peers in that way, but in this moment, he wasn’t in a good place. He sat there in this small office, which can only be described as the quintessential high school football coach’s office—featuring concrete floors and cement blocks for walls, which here were painted red and white to represent the school’s mascot—the Patriots. There were a few work stations for the assistant coaches, plus a small couch, and a few lockers in the back. He was headed into his junior year at the University of Alabama, and was, at the time, dealing with an amalgamation of adversities that were testing the resolve of a person who—from an outsider’s perspective—had been the man his entire life and therefore shouldn’t have any reason to doubt himself. The guy who possessed an admittedly quiet but genuine and reserved soul had always been the rock for his family, friends, fellow classmates, and even his teachers, but in this moment, that same guy needed others to lean on and confide in. Reggie had just recently lost his best friend in a car accident, found out that both his mother and father were dealing with serious health issues, and football, which was always one of his saving graces, wasn’t the same escape it had been in the past. It became another 45-pound weight added to the bar on his back, and he was doubting whether or not Alabama football was a part of his future. Reggie in the stands of Bryant–Denny Stadium at the University of Alabama. He hadn’t been playing much in Tuscaloosa for the nation’s top program—tallying just 25 tackles in his first two years combined, and he didn’t understand his role or what he was being asked to do in their defense.

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Reggie was tagged by those around him as a future professional athlete before he turned 14 years old, and now he was in jeopardy of being left behind by a program that brings in the country’s best players and recruits in every year. Consequently, when you add in the personal tragedy and family health issues he was dealing with that were out of his control—the pressure all came together and got to a place where he knew something had to change. “I remember him sitting in the coaches’ office and thinking he wasn’t where he thought he should be at the time,” Bryan Styles, Reggie’s high school defensive coordinator at Bob Jones in Madison, Alabama, explained of that day. “This was his ‘make or break,’ and I feel like he was at that point of, ‘I’m either fixing to come home or I’m fixing to grow up and decide I’m a man.’ Ragland's former Defensive Coordinator at Bob Jones, Bryan Styles “I was worried,” Styles, who remembered being in that office with a couple of Reggie’s former teammates and some other coaches, added. It’s not hyperbole. This was a time in Reggie’s life where his journey hit a fork in the road. It was up to him on which path he wanted to take. “I was worried about myself because of all the stuff that was going on,” Reggie explained. “That really messed with me a lot. I knew I had to go and do something—either put up or shut up.” In that moment, Reggie accepted his own challenge to dedicate himself solely to the game—nothing else mattered after that, and he soon began to demonstrate the same leadership traits the people of Madison had already come to know about him. Robbie Clark didn’t always have the easiest time in school. He was autistic, which meant he saw and learned things differently, and that didn’t always jive well with his classmates. There was teasing, laughs at his expense, and plenty of teachable moments for the kids who didn’t know what being on the “spectrum” meant. Many of the lessons learned by Robbie’s classmates over the years came at the hand of his friend— Reggie, who was never shy about letting the other kids know what he thought about their actions. The two friends first met in the third grade at Challenger Elementary school before they eventually moved on to middle school together, and Reggie, who was always bigger than everyone else, looked out for his friend. At 10 years old, Reggie also already understood some emotional dynamics. Reggie and Robbie at their 8th grade graduation “The day the boys had their 5th grade graduation—we were talking about them going into middle school together, and of course being the parent of an autistic child, I was scared to death,” Maggie Clark—Robbie’s mother, recalled. “But then Reggie looked me in the eyes and said, ‘Don’t worry Ms. Clark, nobody’s gonna mess with Robbie, I’ve got him.’

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“Even today, Reggie doesn’t remember saying those words,” she added. “But I will never forget them or the comfort they brought me. Reggie will always be family to us.” Robbie ultimately wrote a book specifically for autistic kids to help them get through school. In the book, In My Words: Stories of an Autistic Boy, Robbie shared several stories of situations in which he was picked on in school, and who was there to help him. "After PE class, everyone was changing back into their clothes,” he wrote. “I was trying to hurry up so I would not be late to class. I did not like being late… One day, some boys were in the locker room when everyone was getting changed, and they took my clothes from me. They kept throwing them back and forth and wouldn’t give them back. I tried to stop them. They were laughing at me. I got so furious and wanted to cry. They finally gave me my clothes back. I told the coaches about it, but a couple of days later, they did it again… Other kids told me (later) that Devin (another friend) and my other friend Reggie made sure those boys didn’t bother me again." It was true. Those boys didn’t bother Robbie anymore. It was a cycle that happened with a number of kids over the years, and it only happened with each of them one time. They learned their lesson quickly. When recently asked about their relationship, Reggie simply said “that’s my dude” about Robbie and didn’t go into any of the details of the times he had Robbie’s back, or vice versa as Robbie always made sure Reggie was on top of his schoolwork as well. Reggie and Robbie a couple years ago But it’s a consistent thing about Reggie—he’s not going to pat his own back about all the times he did something for a friend. He’s not wired that way. “It’s about right and wrong,” he explained. “That’s it. Be a good person. Believe in others and try and make the world a better place.” Reggie protecting and being a good friend to Robbie isn’t the only example of him displaying leadership characteristics not normally seen of kids before they’re teenagers. He was never afraid to speak his mind and stand up for anyone who needed it, and that carried on in high school. It helped that everyone knew Reggie. He was the best athlete in the area and everyone knew him, and he had a certain standing amongst his peers because of that. He could affect the dynamic of any room he was in at any given moment. Reggie’s graduating class at Bob Jones, which was one of the bigger schools in the area, wasn’t the easiest to teach. They had plenty of issues with kids getting suspended and causing other various problems. Reggie sought to be a positive influence with the standing he possessed as an athlete, and it was noticed and appreciated by his teachers.

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“If somebody had a joke, he might look up but he wouldn’t laugh, and I think the other student’s respected that,” Demarius Anderson, Reggie’s Algebra teacher his freshman year, explained. “I feel like his class got better—the behavior was better as a result of how Reggie carried himself. “I really feel like he helped me…it was like I had a bodyguard.” Reggie may have been a natural athlete, but he wasn’t a natural when it came to math, although he did earn the “Most Improved Student” Award out of a class of more than 500 students. He had raised his grade from a D to an A. Mrs. Anderson stayed in touch with Reggie after he graduated, and she clearly remembered one visit he made to the school in March after his last year at Alabama. It was right in the middle of all of the workouts he was doing to try and impress teams leading up to the NFL Draft that year. He was getting ready for his Pro Day and all of the team visits he had—basically the biggest interviews of his life. She was having problems with her class and confided in Reggie that she had a standing offer to leave education after 13 years to return to an old job with a telecom company. She was going to take that job on Friday. Reggie came to the school on Monday. He came in and spoke with her students, took the time to meet and talk with them individually— explaining the importance of education and why it mattered in the bigger picture that’s often lost among teens who are constantly thinking of only the here and now. For the kids, this message was coming from a legendary alum who was on the verge of being drafted to the NFL just months after winning a National Championship at Alabama, and one who was named the SEC’s Defensive Player of the Year that season. He had the status and the aura for those kids to hang on every word he said. “That was everything to me,” Mrs. Anderson explained. “The whole class changed after his visit. He really made a difference for those kids. I mean, those students were struggling.” Mrs. Anderson decided to stay in education that day after she was reminded by Reggie of the impact education has on the kids’ lives she’s working with every day. Another one of his teachers, Mrs. Roberts, who teaches English and is still very close with Reggie, explained that over the years she’s had a lot of the football players in her classes at Bob Jones, and she still does, and if she sees one that needs help or is really struggling, she knows exactly what to do. “Any time I see a kid like that—in that position—I text Reggie because he’s immediately on it,” she explained. “Reggie was one of those kids that never got involved in all that stuff—the drugs and alcohol, and he’s so good now about stepping up and mentoring these young kids and getting them on the right path.” Mrs. Roberts also remembered not only how crazy Reggie’s graduating class was, but how his presence around them always seemed to help her out.

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“It was kind of insanity in there,” she recalled. “But [Reggie] would always set the tone for how to respond and how to act. When he spoke, people listened. He wasn’t overly talkative or loud or anything like that, but if he had something to say, people stopped and they listened. “He could just command a room with little effort.” Reggie and Mrs. Roberts on the day Reggie was announced as an Under Armour All-American In all of her years of teaching, Mrs. Roberts said she’s never had anyone else who could do that. “Nobody has ever had his maturity or his ability to lead a group and command that kind of respect,” she added. “Nobody has even come close to that, honestly.” On the football field, Reggie was the kind of player who doesn’t come around often as well. Kevin Rose, who is the head football coach at Bob Jones, recalled one particular game Reggie had against Decatur his sophomore year. To him, it stood out above the rest. Bob Jones hadn’t beaten Decatur—a local rival—in 14 years, and they were facing a key fourth-and-4 late in the game, which was close at the time. “They’re like what do you want to do here? And I’m like, ‘Just throw it to Reggie,’” Rose laughed. “We ran a Y-Cross and [Reggie, who also played tight end] caught it and ran about 45 yards down the field to inside the five-yard line, and we ended up scoring and went on to win the game.” Since that day, Bob Jones has won eight-straight over Decatur. During Reggie’s three years (2009-11) as an All-State outside linebacker, Bob Jones amassed a record of 27-5. In the previous nine years before that, they had just two winning seasons. Rose credits a lot of their success—even to this day—to Reggie’s leadership and character. He was the guy who showed up early, held his peers accountable, and never made anyone feel inferior. “For you to be a great team, your best player has to be that guy,” Rose explained of Reggie, who he explained never said anything but ‘Yes, sir. No, sir,’ to him during those days. “We’re still feeding off what he did here because he helped us take our program from a very mediocre 5-5 one, to one of the best in the state year in year out for the last ten years. “I think he’s always been extremely humble, and to receive the national attention he’s gotten since he was 12 or 13 years old and remain that way—it’s special,” Rose added. “It wasn’t unusual for us to come in at 7-7:15 in the morning and Reggie was in there sweeping the locker room. “Nobody asked him to do it, but he was there and it needed to be swept, so he swept it up. I think that says a lot about him.” Reggie recently held a free football camp for hundreds of kids who live in the area.

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“He’s not some far away character that you just see play on TV,” Rose explained. “Reggie is in our locker room, our weight room, on our field and in our community. When he gets off time, he comes here. He’s not in the Bahamas. He’s at Bob Jones High School.” That school is part of Reggie’s foundation—almost a defining character in his journey. Another one of those defining characters is his best friend Dez, who always made sure Reggie was on the right path, particularly when anyone was tempting him to go the other direction. There was always a lot of attention on Reggie, so Dez was always busy. “I’ll never forget the first time I met Dez,” Reggie, who showed up to high school a week late because he was at an AAU basketball tournament in Orlando, laughed. “He walked up on me and said, ‘Man, I don’t like you.’” “I’m like, ‘Man, what do you mean?’” Reggie, who was taken aback, responded. “Because you big as hell,” Dez laughed. It was the start of a friendship that helped guide Reggie through years of notoriety, accolades and temptations that could have otherwise put his journey on a different path. “After that we just got real cool, and I got real close with his family,” Reggie noted. Even if Dez wasn’t always doing the right things, he never wanted the same for Reggie. “He’d always tell me, ‘If anyone has a chance of making it, you’ve got that chance,” Reggie said, explaining Dez’s point of why Reggie shouldn’t be hanging around him at certain times. “Ever since then, I knew he was a real friend of mine,” Reggie noted. Dez played football, too. He wore No. 9 while Reggie wore No. 19. They were a pair—always together. “Dez was the glue of that football team,” Rose explained. “He wasn’t the best football player on the team, matter of fact we probably made some packages to make sure we could get him on the field, but he was the glue that held everybody together. “He and Reggie just had an outstanding relationship.” That relationship continued on after Reggie left for Alabama as a five-star player with a character and work ethic that should have made for an immediate impact in Tuscaloosa, but he’d soon learn it wasn’t going to be that easy. The first two years at Alabama weren’t exactly what Reggie had expected. He had played only sparingly—amassing just 25 total tackles over that time, which was tough for a player who had always been the best player on whatever team he was on. There were zero issues with his work ethic, character, or ability. He had quickly made the switch from outside linebacker to inside, per the request of Alabama head coach Nick Saban. It just hadn’t clicked for Reggie yet.

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“It’s the first thing Coach Saban tells everyone, especially the freshman,” Reggie recalled. “All those stars you got, excuse my language, but that s**t is gone. Like, this is my world, this is my house, you’re going to do what I say. You’re either going to get with it or get gone.” That kind of approach was exactly what Reggie needed, but it took time to get there. “I think it’s pretty typical when guys come in that they have sort of this one set of standards that are created and set by external factors, which are expectations,” Saban, who has guided Alabama to six National Championships and won two National Coach of the Year Awards, explained. “They don’t really understand fully what it takes to be a great college player, but they have those expectations of what they want to accomplish. “I think in their first two years, and sometimes longer, it takes guys a little more time to realize what they need to do to be a good player.” Alabama head coach Nick Saban (AP Photo/David J. Phillip) “He’s going to put you in the perfect position to be successful on the field and off the field,” Reggie explained of playing for Saban. “The guys who understand that early are the ones who are very successful. Like a Julio Jones, Mark Ingram, Amari Cooper, or Landon Collins, a bunch of those guys, they all knew that. It took me a little bit longer to understand that because I get frustrated really fast.” Early in his career, Reggie studied and knew what to do, but when he got on the field, his mind would go blank and it frustrated him. Those mistakes led to other players, who were also five-star or highly-recruited players—guys like C.J. Mosely, Nico Johnson and Trey Depriest, getting on the field ahead of Reggie early in his career. “If I was [Saban], I wouldn’t have believed in me either because off the field I was doing the right thing, but on the field, I wasn’t accountable and I wasn’t up to the standard he wanted,” Reggie added. “I think in his first two years at Alabama he probably considered doing something else,” Rose explained of watching his former standout go through such a tough time early at Alabama. “Life is difficult and we all wish we could wake up and it’s 72 degrees and you’re walking downhill with the wind at your back, but we know that’s not true—there’s an obstacle every day. “I think after two years, he was kind of not knowing what he was going to do.” The problems soon hit home, too. Around that same time, Reggie found out his mother, Ann White, was a diabetic, and that his father, Reggie Ragland, Sr., had suffered a stroke. His mother was the rock of the family—the one who always preached that if he was going to start something, he was also going to finish it. “My mom made sure that I kept my head right in school,” Reggie explained, “but my dad made sure I had that mental toughness on and off the field.” Reggie’s father helped instill the passion and drive for whatever Reggie was going to end up doing in life. 77


His dad was the one to always keep him grounded, going through the mistakes Reggie made in the game that night back in high school, while everyone else was busy singing his praises. “My dad was always being hard on me and making sure that people were never going to give me nothing in life, basically,” Reggie noted. “He always meant well. Me and him bump heads like that all the time, but that’s my dog though. I love that man.” Reggie remembered one day when he was seven years old that his father took him out to work with him. His dad had worked as a laborer—doing whatever he could, whether it was painting houses, cutting grass, or whatever—to support his family. “He was like, ‘Man, do you want to do this type of work or do you want to be able to do what you want to do?” Reggie recalled of the conversation with his dad that day, which has stuck with him. Now, two of the most influential people in Reggie’s life were struggling with their health and he was a few hours away at college—also struggling. And all of this came after being destined for greatness since he was a kid by those who were now wondering what had happened. Then, it got even worse. Reggie received a phone call the day before the LSU game his Sophomore year that changed everything. “My cousin called me and was like, ‘Hey, have you heard about Dez? He got in a car wreck and died.’” Reggie’s best friend—the one who had been real with him from the day they first met and who had always gone out of his way to make sure Reggie was on the right path—even if he, himself, wasn’t—was now gone. Just like that. “I’ll never forget I had a test that day, too,” Reggie, whose tone went from cheery and playful to dark and reflective immediately, explained. “Everything in my room, I just threw it against the wall, broke my door, punched a hole in it, then went and took the test, left, and then just really sat in silence for a long period of time. “That was really my friend. I could truly say that man was a friend of mine.” For Reggie, the adversities were piling up. “It was crazy because like a year before, I had another real close friend of mine who also died in car wreck,” Reggie noted. “That was the day of the Tennessee game. I mean, losing two people I grew up with and that I was actually close with, it really hurt me.” It was a lot to deal with. “All of it can either make me or break me,” he recalled telling himself. Between the struggles his mother and father were going through health-wise, the personal loss of his best friend, and the fact that football wasn’t going well, Reggie needed help, and he knew where to go to find his answers—the same place he had always gone.

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Reggie sat in that coach’s office at Bob Jones for a few hours, talking out his goals, plans, and how he was going to change his approach to everything. Those who were around him that day were worried because they’d never seen this side of him, but they also knew the character and work ethic of the person they were dealing with. He had always been there for others and now it was their turn to be there for him. Reggie’s mother and father told him they were going to be alright and that they wanted him to concentrate on football, as did his godmother, Roslyn Barbee, who is another instrumental figure in his story. He often stays at her house when he’s back home. He says it’s quiet there and allows him to relax, at least when he’s not playing with his six-year old niece over there. Reggie's Godmother (left) and Mother (right) During this transition in Reggie’s life, he grew closer to his faith and shut out most-everyone who wasn’t directly involved with helping him achieve his football goals. He became singular-focused on being the player he was destined to become. “I locked myself away from everyone,” he explained. Then, it just clicked for him. He decided to step back and “just play football.” He credits former Alabama linebackers coach Kevin Steele for helping him flip that switch. Steele is now the defensive coordinator at Auburn. Reggie used everything he had gone through over the previous year for motivation. “I feel like it made me mentally tougher and stronger as a man and as a person,” Reggie explained. “I’m not happy at all that happened, but I’m glad I went through it to make me even better man and better person to really understand values of life and loving people, and since that happened, I’m loving people even more now. “My mom didn’t ever drop the rope, my dad ain’t drop the rope, and God ain’t never dropped the rope on me,” Reggie explained using a motto they used one year at Alabama. “He brought me this far and not to let me go. I’m a firm believer in that and I’m going to keep going—always going to keep going.” It didn’t take long after that attitude change that Reggie saw a difference in his role on the Alabama defense, and he naturally became more assertive. “It wasn’t two weeks later from when he went back to practice that I started hearing stories about how well he was doing,” Rose explained. “And from the moment he stepped back on Alabama’s campus that year, he was the starting linebacker.” Reggie started 13 games for Alabama as a junior and finished with 93 tackles (10.5 for loss). He was becoming the player everyone had always expected him to be. He returned to Alabama for his senior year and passed on the NFL because, for one, he promised his mother he’d get a degree, which he accomplished as he graduated with a degree in Consumer Affairs. He was also a finalist for the Senior CLASS Award, which honors student-athletes who make a difference on and off the field. He was a part of Alabama’s leadership council and dedicated more than 50 hours of his time to community service—visiting hospitals, churches, and schools. 79


But he also returned for his final year because he had to leave the last game of his junior season with a concussion, and he didn’t want that to be the last memory he had of playing in college. Alabama’s head strength and conditioning coach Scott Cochran remembers the day Reggie first started running with the first-team defense as a junior. He said it was the first time he really noticed a change in him, and the leadership everyone who had ever known Reggie knew about really began to manifest itself. “He took the team over one time,” Cochran explained of one summer conditioning session heading into Reggie’s senior year. “I literally could have just walked off the field because in the summertime—it’s the players and the strength coaches—there’s no other coaches around during that time. It’s just us. “We run together as a group and he didn’t like one of the reps,” Cochran explained. “He didn’t like the 110’s we were running. It was like the fourth or fifth rep and he yelled, ‘Start it over.’ “And I’m like, ‘Huh? So, we’re going to run 16 of these and you want to start over after 5? The bigs might kill you,’” Cochran recalled saying to Reggie that day. “I’m a big too though, so let’s go,” Reggie answered. “We started over, and that’s when I said, ‘OK, we’re good. You got it. It’s your team,” Cochran recalled. Cochran added that it’s rare for a player—even at Alabama—to ever do anything like that, and that Reggie had never been on a team with someone who had done that before. “That was all him on his own,” Cochran noted. That’s the same year Alabama ultimately won one of their 17 National Championships in the program’s rich and storied history. That’s also the year Reggie was named the SEC’s Defensive Player of the Year and a consensus First-Team All-American. It was all connected. Reggie crouches next to a plaque honoring Alabama's 2015 National Championship outside Bryant– Denny Stadium at the University of Alabama. “If the player isn’t taking over than the coach has to, and if the coach has to then he has more investment in the team than the players do,” Cochran added of Reggie’s leadership and what it meant that day, and all of the other days he had done similar things. “It’s not a jerk coming off, it’s a humble guy who wants to win and he’s going to do whatever it takes to get there, and you just have to give him permission. “You have to give him permission to take the team over.” Reggie got permission, and he succeeded with that responsibility—both on and off the field. He won the local media’s “good guy award,” which is given to the player who was voted the best and most-friendly by the beat writers who cover the team on a daily basis. “He always came up with a big smile on his face,” Charlie Potter, who works for 247 Sports and covers the Alabama football program, explained of Reggie. “He always asked how everyone was doing and it 80


seemed genuine—a lot of that can seem forced or fake, but Reggie always seemed like a guy who really cared about other people.” “I tried to be real and be the same towards everybody,” Reggie said. Reggie speaks during the media day for the NCAA Cotton Bowl college football game Tuesday, Dec. 29, 2015, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/LM Otero) “He’s going to keep it real with you,” Cochran added. “I don’t think he tries to put on a front or a fake, which is hard these days with that generation you’d think that that’s the first thing they’re going to do, but he was very genuine in everything he did.” Saban—the guy at the forefront of Reggie’s football makeover—couldn’t have been happier to watch the development over the years of someone who became one the best players to ever go through the program, which is the most-dominant one in the history of college football. “He was the signal-caller on defense, so everyone looked to him for direction,” Saban explained. “Not only in what we were going to play, but how we were going to play it. I think he was really a good leader for us, he cared about his teammates. He always set a good example. He was somebody that other people could emulate, and I think it showed in not only how he performed, but how the players around him performed. “I think he represents the epitome of what we’d love every player to be—not only for when they’re a player here, but also when they leave here. They want to come back and they want to be a part of it.” Reggie left college on a high note. He had accomplished everything he wanted to after a rough couple of years to begin his time in Tuscaloosa. And heading into the NFL Draft that spring, he was considered the top middle linebacker available by most experts, and the majority of people had him mocked in the middle-to-late first round. Then just a few hours before the draft, there was a leaked report that claimed Reggie had an “enlarged aorta,” and everything he had worked for was put into flux. Teams had to go back and re-check their medical evaluations of him at the 11th hour, and some, reportedly, pushed him down their boards after that. Reggie has his suspicions on where the report came from, but doesn’t know, or won’t say, for sure. Ultimately, he fell to the Buffalo Bills in the second round and was taken with the No. 41 overall pick. Reggie Ragland poses for a photo on stage after being selected by the Buffalo Bills during the 2016 NFL Draft at the Auditorium Theatre on Friday, April 29, 2016 in Chicago. (Perry Knotts via AP) Then, soon after arriving in Buffalo, there was another setback. During training camp, Reggie suffered a torn ACL before he ever even took the field for a game. It cost him his entire rookie season. A year later, the Bills decided Reggie was expendable before he was even back to 100 percent, and that was to the tune of a future mid-round pick from the Chiefs. It was one of the first moves made by thennew Chiefs’ general manger Brett Veach. 81


“He came right in the midst of the whole thing, so you have no real foundation, no background in the system,” Chiefs’ defensive coordinator Bob Sutton explained of Reggie joining the team at the end of the preseason. “He was also coming off the injury, so there was a lot going on when he got here. I think credit goes to him and (inside linebackers’ coach) Mark DeLeone, who worked with him on the side outside of practice time, to bring him along.” Reggie didn’t see any action for the Chiefs’ defense for the first three games last year, but steadily saw an increase in playing time—leading to a career-high of 47 snaps played in Week 7 against the New York Giants. That’s where it all started. Reggie ended up starting the final 10 games of the season for the Chiefs’ defense and finished with 44 total tackles, including a dominant performance against his former team—the Buffalo Bills—in Week 12. He finished that game with a season-high eight tackles and helped hold Bills’ running back LeSean McCoy—one of the league’s top players and who finished fourth in the league in rushing—to just 49 yards on 22 carries. “Last year was only a little taste of what I can do,” Reggie smiled. “I appreciate the Chiefs giving me the opportunity to come back out and play football and do what I love to do.” This offseason, which is the first healthy one of his NFL career, Reggie has gotten himself into the best shape of his life, and that’s not just coming from Reggie, but from the guy who has been training Reggie since he was a freshman in high school. Andy McCloy, who owns BCI Performance and Fitness in Madison and has trained several current and former NFL players, probably knows more about Reggie the athlete than anyone out there. “From the minute I first met him, there was just kind of this aura around him,” McCloy, who had pictures of Reggie from high school on the wall of the entry way of his gym, explained. “His abilities were always significantly different than his peers—call it God’s plan, call it destiny—something along those lines, but I think his potential is limitless. “I don’t think we’ve seen even close to the best version of what he’s capable of putting out there. He’s a next-level type of guy and I just think as he learns how to be a pro, gets integrated more in the Kansas City system, we’re going to see more and more of that come out.” McCloy, who also trained Dez when he and Reggie were together in school, saw what happened when tragedy struck that group of friends. “That hurt a lot of people and there were a lot of people who went the wrong direction because of that, but Reggie stood tall and carried on and I think it’s been a huge motivator and driver for him over the years,” he said. “I think about Dez all the time. All the time,” Reggie added. “Any time I ride to go over and workout with Andy in the morning, I pass the graveyard and I always look and see Dez’s tombstone. I visited it for the first time in like two years a couple of months ago because it’s just hard going out there. “I just knew it was time to go out there. I’m always talking to him, thinking about him, but I needed to go out there and see him. But it’s tough, man. It’s very tough.” 82


Dez was one of the first people to not just believe that Reggie would find himself in the position he’s in today—because most people saw him as a future professional athlete, whether that was fair or not. But Dez was the one who was actively shielding Reggie away from things that could have jeopardized the course of this seemingly destined path. He was that friend. “I think he’d be proud of me,” Reggie noted. “I think he would.” Reggie, who began at Alabama wearing No. 18, decided to make the change to No. 19—the same number he wore in high school, to honor his friend, who had worn No. 9 when they played together. “My thinking is if I always have a “9” on my jersey—he’s always going to be there with me,” Reggie, who chose to wear the No. 59 with the Chiefs, explained. After finally seeing some NFL action last season, Reggie now heads into his second year with even more to prove—for his family, his fallen friends, his teammates, and for those who have always believed in him. He’s finally healthy and had an entire offseason to get stronger and faster, and he’s ready to take the next step as a playmaker and as another leader for the Chiefs’ defense, which isn’t short in that area. This offseason, when the Chiefs signed free agent linebacker Anthony Hitchens to start alongside Reggie, the first person Hitchens heard from was Reggie. They quickly developed a bond—hanging out at baseball games and spending time together away from the facility. “Those two are going to set the tone for our entire defense,” Chiefs’ general manager Brett Veach noted at a press conference earlier this offseason. Then, when the Chiefs took Ole Miss’ Breeland Speaks with their first pick of the NFL Draft this year, Reggie immediately reached out and welcomed him to the team. He did that with several of the rookies and other new additions to the team as well. “One thing about a leader—you’ve got to know your personnel,” Reggie explained. “I’m always talking to people because I just try to understand everybody because I want this thing to go great. I want everybody to be successful because if I’m successful and he’s successful, that means the whole team is going to be successful.” The Chiefs’ defense is filled with leaders at every level, and the voice of another guy in that room who has demonstrated elite leadership qualities throughout his entire life is only a good thing. Simply stated: Reggie personifies leadership. He spent his childhood sticking up for people like Robbie Clark—then going as far to assure Robbie’s mother that she didn’t need to worry about her autistic son going to middle school because Reggie, who was still only 11 years old at the time, would take care of him. He helped teachers like Mrs. Roberts and Mrs. Anderson control classes full of students who had a history of behavioral issues. He’d sweep the locker room before school as a five-star recruit and one of the top high school players in the country—not because he was asked to, but simply because it was needed. 83


In college, he demanded the best football players in the country start a summer conditioning session over one day in the heat because “it wasn’t good enough.” Basically, that’s the journey of Reggie Ragland. It’s a documented trail of humble leadership, earned success through adversity, and determination. He’s been challenged and he’s overcome. He’s never bought into the hype or let success change him— even when he had every reason to. He’s everything you want in a football player, a member of your community, and a face of your franchise. And based on his story, the best is still yet to come. “One thing I’ve always tried to do is be great by people because you never know who you’re going to need in life,” Reggie, who is beginning a foundation to help disadvantaged people, explained. “I’ve always tried to be the best person I can be towards people, and I want to keep being a good role model on and off the field—giving people chances, giving them a senseof hope.” While a lot of fans might see Reggie Ragland as a reason for hope for the Chiefs’ defense next season, the people of Madison, Alabama and Bob Jones High School see a lot more than that. They see the example of what you’re supposed to aspire to become. They have the answer because they know the man and they know the story. And now the rest of us do, too.

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(Spencer Ware) Chiefs’ Spencer Ware says his ‘Yes Lawd’ clothing line inspired him during knee rehab Brooke Pryor Kansas City Star) July 24, 2018

ST. JOSEPH Spencer Ware designs his line of Yes Lawd clothing for people who need a little encouragement. For those who need to be uplifted, to be reminded they’re working for a higher purpose. People a lot like himself. As he rehabbed from LCL and PCL tears of his right knee sustained during the 2017 preseason, Ware, an openly spiritual man, wore his YL logo gear. When the Chiefs running back got discouraged, all he had to do was look down at the giant screenprinted YL on his chest. “When I get tired or felt like I wanted to give up or was hurting, just take a look down at yourself and you remember your ‘why’ and then you got to thank the Lord,” Ware said. Eleven months removed from his catastrophic knee injury, Ware is trading his YL workout clothes for Chiefs gear as he gradually works his way back to playing form in training camp. “I attack everything head first,” Ware said after Tuesday’s practice. “That’s where the faith comes in at. ... Everyone believes in something, no matter what it is. I believe in my creator and he does great things. … Just stay focused on the things that you need to accomplish and just attack it.” During his rehabilitation, Ware found solace in working with his Marshawn Lynch-backed clothing line, even pushing out a line of women’s wear earlier this summer. Ware promoted his designs and chronicled his rehab progress on Twitter throughout the summer, posting two videos that showed his knee’s strength as he ripped through agility drills in a park. But personal workouts are a lot different from practicing with teammates and coaches in training camp. “It’s about being comfortable around bodies,” Ware said. “I’ve got to react more than having it already set up and I know exactly where I’m going, or I need to breakdown or make my cuts or whatnot.” Ware started 14 games in 2016, rushing for 921 yards and three touchdowns. He also had 447 receiving yards and two touchdown catches that season. He entered the 2017 season as the Chiefs’ top running

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back, but his season ending injury and Kareem Hunt’s dominant rookie campaign has likely forced Ware into a new role in the upcoming season. He’ll be vying for time in a crowded backfield that also includes Charcandrick West and newly signed veteran Damien Williams. Just two practices into camp, Ware said his coaches aren’t discussing a modified role quite yet. Instead, the directives are simple. “Just get your (butt) back,” Ware said. “That’s pretty much it.” Before Tuesday’s practice, ESPN NFL Insider Field Yates reported Ware agreed to restructure the final year of his three-year, $4.2 million contract, converting half of his $1.45 million base pay to incentives. The move frees up cap space for the Chiefs and makes Ware one of the cheaper options in his position. Williams, who signed a contract with the Chiefs in March, is on a one-year, $1.5 million deal. “I mean, that was a little personal on our side,” Ware said when asked about the conversations around the contract. “For my organization and my team, I trust them. “I’m happy with where I’m at in my rehab process, and we’re just going to keep moving forward from where we’re at.”

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(Chris Conley) Chiefs’ Chris Conley talks passions and preseason thoughts at charity bowling event Shaun Goodwin Kansas City Star July 24, 2018

The Kansas City Chiefs’ Chris Conley may have reported for camp earlier this week, but that hasn’t stopped the wide receiver from finding time to film a movie or go bowling over the past couple of days. Driving straight from the Chiefs’ training camp in St. Joseph, Mo., to Blue Springs, Mo., on Tuesday evening, Conley was present to attend his second-straight DollarDays Strikes For Kids Backpack Giveaway. Hosted at Lunar Bowl by Strikes for Kids, the two-hour event is designed to get school supplies and backpacks into the hands of kids for the upcoming school year. “You take the time, you find the time and you make it. Having an opportunity to change lives, it’s not trivial, it’s not small,” Conley said. “This is just as, if not more, important than what we do on the field.” The event comes just days after Conley spent the weekend filming a movie in downtown Kansas City. The movie, called “Love Color,” focuses on showing different ways to love other people. “It’s basically a short film about loving your neighbor. It involves a little bit of music, some dance, things like that. Really the whole plot is by loving your neighbor, you can literally change the world around you,” Conley said. “We kind of take that, and we boost it, crank it up to 10 in this world that’s kind of otherworldly, but it still exists in the now.” Both activities were passions of Conley’s during his time as a student-athlete at Georgia. He volunteered for the Boys and Girls Club throughout the year, and spent time writing and producing short films. But once Conley was drafted by the Chiefs in 2015 as the 76th overall pick, he had to drop his passion of writing and filmmaking in order to focus on his football. “I took a little break from that when I got drafted to Kansas City because you’ve got to establish yourself, let the organization know that you’re serious about your job,” Conley said. “But now I had a little bit of a break, and I’ve been writing, and it’s about time to get back behind the camera.” As the season kicks back into gear, Conley’s passions may have to take a backseat once again as he claimed the Chiefs won’t stop until the Super Bowl. Conley missed the majority of the 2017 season after succumbing to an Achilles injury in Week 5 against the Houston Texans. Conley had picked up 11 receptions for 175 yards before the injury.

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“Feeling great. We’ve had a month off, I was spending it in Atlanta — training, being around family, just getting prepared mentally for the season because the season is a long haul,” Conley said. “Once you get up there, and you get started in camp, you don’t stop until February.” The Chiefs’ training camp will continue through to Aug. 14, with their first preseason game coming against the Texans at Arrowhead Stadium on Aug. 9.

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(Eric Fisher) Chiefs LT Eric Fisher Finished His Passion Project This Offseason BJ Kissel Chiefs.com July 27, 2018

“It’s always been a dream car of mine ever since I was young.” Kansas City Chiefs left tackle Eric Fisher is a car guy—specifically his newly-restored 1970 Chevelle, which is more-aptly known as the “Ultimate Muscle Car,” and the process of restoring it has been a passion project of his for the last four years. And it’s something his teammates know all about. “He loves that thing,” center Mitch Morse laughed. “You can hear him coming from all the way down the road. You hear it and you’re just like, “There’s Fish." When he’s not in Kansas City playing for the Chiefs, Fisher can be found at home in Michigan in his garage that he has set up to work on cars, and trucks, or basically anything with a motor. After his rookie season in 2014, Fisher was looking for a project, and he was flipping through Craigslist one day to find a car to restore. He ultimately found the one car he had wanted since he was a kid. “My uncle was into hot rods and drag racing and had a bunch of project cars. Being around them growing up I always thought it would be a fun hobby to get into,” Fisher explained. “I started looking at pictures online one time and (the Chevelle) just caught my attention. It just became a dream of mine to own that car one day.” Fisher bought the car off Craigslist and began what would turn out to be a four-year-long project. “Restoring a car is always more of a project than you think it is,” he explained. “I ran into a lot of hiccups. I ended up naming the car ‘natural disaster’ because, I think it was in 2015, the city of Detroit flooded and the building the car was in flooded also. It was bare metal at the time, so it totally rusted, which caused a few problems.” That was hardly the end of his problems with the car, though. They continued. “In 2016, I ended up burning the car to the ground,” Fisher said, with a chuckle. “It’s something I have to laugh about now that it’s done.” Fisher, who wasn’t laughing back then, explained what happened that day. “For my height and size, we had to cut the floor pans out and recess the seats further down,” Fisher, who stands at 6-feet-7 and 315 pounds, explained. “When we welded the floor pans back in there, a 89


spark must have flown into just the right spot and smoldered there for the next four hours as we were working. “We had no idea it was happening. There was no smoke, nothing to tell us anything was wrong. Seven hours later we got a call from the fire department that something was on fire, and it was my car." First, there was water, and then there was fire, so the name “natural disaster” really made sense. Ultimately, after working through a flood, a fire, and several of the other more-usual issues that come along with restoring a car, Fisher and a friend finally finished up the project this past offseason. “I have a good buddy back home and we’ve developed a pretty good relationship working on this project,” Fisher explained. “He has always been into wrenching on classic cars as a hobby, so I was able to learn a lot working alongside him. We outsourced the bodywork and a lot of the high-tech electrical stuff, but we’d work on it on the weekends or whenever we had time.” “The first year I was like, ‘I want to get this thing done,’” Fisher added. “But then you come to this realization that it’s not an overnight project. There’s a lot that goes into basically building a brand-new car, especially when it’s almost all aftermarket parts.” Fisher said the car only has about 400 miles on it right now and that he only plans on taking it out on special occasions—like game days when he’s driving to Arrowhead Stadium, although he does enjoy all the comments and waves he gets while driving it around Kansas City. “I never plan on getting rid of the car, and hopefully, I never have to,” he added. Another reason the car is extra special—besides all the time, money, and headaches it caused throughout the process of restoring it, is that there’s a little personalization to it. “There was a company called Fisher Body in Detroit in the early 1900’s,” Fisher explained. “It started out as a carriage company and they ended up selling to General Motors later on. According to my family, we are distant relatives of the Fisher brothers that started the company. “So, it’s pretty cool that on the step plate of the car, I have the ‘Body by Fisher’ logo on there. As of now, the only teammate of Fisher’s who has taken a ride in the car is right guard Laurent Duvernay-Tardif, although that could change soon. “He came in the locker room one day and said, ‘Hey Fish, can I drive that?’” Fisher laughed. “I said, ‘I don’t think so, but I’ll take you for a ride.’" Duvernay-Tardif agreed to ride in the car, but for all the beauty the car has on the outside, the real story behind the car is what Duvernay-Tardif hadn’t yet understood, and that’s what was under the hood. “[Duvernay-Tardif] told me he didn’t think he had ever been in a car with over 200 horsepower. I looked at him and said, ’Hold on.” Fisher then accelerated with all the power of the car, which has an LS9 Crate motor with 636 horsepower—the same engine used in a Corvette ZR1. Basically, it’s the most-powerful regular-produced engine that’s offered in a GM car. 90


The torque, the power, the sound, it was enough for the newly-appointed doctor to understand the power behind the wheel, and why Fisher had put so much time, money, and effort into it. “I gave it a go and he quickly said, ‘OK, that’s enough.’” It didn’t take long for Duvernay-Tardif to understand what the car is all about, and his reaction that day is the kind of thrill Fisher was looking for when he began this whole process four years ago. It’s the first car Fisher ever restored, and he said it’s something he might do again one day but probably not until he has finished his playing career. “I look back and I learned so much about what I want to do down the road,” Fisher added. “It definitely made me think about having a post-career in that field, but it would probably be more of a hobby than anything. I definitely love doing it.” When asked what the next car would be, Fisher said he already knows. “I want to restore a 1969 Charger,” he noted. “That will be probably in retirement. I want to definitely go through the same process but hopefully not run into the same complications.” The real question isn’t a matter of when he’ll find the time to restore another car, but whether or not Duvernay-Tardif will take a ride in that one after it’s done as well.

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(Derrick Nnadi) Now more than ever, rookie Derrick Nnadi tapping into wisdom and drive of his true hero, his father Nate Taylor The Athletic July 28, 2018

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — Every day, Derrick Nnadi talks to his father for encouragement, and every morning, Fred Nnadi tries to think of just the correct words to share with his son through text messages. With the help of his father, Derrick has successfully navigated every level of football he has played in life. The defensive tackle arrived at the Chiefs’ training camp Sunday and began his rookie season by asking his father for more wisdom. Fred reminded his son of the NFL draft in April, and how being selected by the Chiefs was his gateway to prove himself in the league. Throughout their chats this week, Fred has asked one question to motivate his son: Have you done your job? When it comes to inspiration, Derrick is speaking with the right man. Fred, a 63-year-old Nigerian immigrant, has become an American citizen, made a successful career in engineering and has raised seven children into adulthood with his wife, Christy. “My father is probably the hardest-working person I’ve ever met in my life,” Derrick said Tuesday. “He’s told me tons and tons of stories.” Each story holds a lesson, a reminder of how success is developed from determination. Derrick, listed at 6-foot-1 and 312 pounds, wants to become an immediate contributor for the Chiefs, a player strong enough to help improve the team’s run defense. He has spent hours learning the playbook. He has taken notes during meetings when defensive coordinator Bob Sutton goes through the plays. Derrick wants to play as many snaps as he can in practice to polish his techniques. He plans to earn his way into the Chiefs’ defensive line rotation. Before camp, Derrick, 22, wondered what gesture he could do for his father to demonstrate his appreciation. When Fred learned of Derrick’s intentions, he explained to his son that he didn’t want anything material. “In this career, there are going to be a lot of people that are going to call, and every time they call you, they’re going to want something,” Fred told Derrick. “As your father, if I call you, the only thing I want you to do is be a better you.” When he was young, Fred said the biggest attribute he learned from his father was courage. John Nnadi was a tribal chief in Nigeria who had several wives and many children. 92


“My father was a very wealthy man,” Fred said in a telephone interview Thursday. “When I was growing up, we were privileged.” Nigeria, however, changed in 1967 when the country broke into a civil war to become an independent nation from the United Kingdom. As the government’s conscription increased, Fred, a teenager at the time, wanted to join the army to fight in the war. Fred was grateful his father didn’t discourage him, and from that moment on, he wanted to improve his life. Fred arrived in America with his brother in 1978 and became an engineering student at Old Dominion. He grew to love the country, even though the culture was completely different. In 1980, Fred made Virginia Beach, Va., his home. Christy followed Fred from Nigeria, and the family grew; Derrick became the couple’s youngest child on May 9, 1996. Derrick was big from the start. He wanted to run on the track and field team in middle school, but the school didn’t have a uniform that fit Derrick’s large frame. The team that could give him a proper uniform was the football team, so as an eighth grader, Derrick began to understand and enjoy the sport. So did his father. “I love football, and I always have an opinion,” said Fred, who grew up playing soccer. “I’m just like every person who watches the game.” Fred attended every game Derrick played at Ocean Lakes High in Virginia Beach. As one of the biggest players on the field, Derrick was encouraged by Fred to dominate his opponent at the line of scrimmage. Together, the father and son created a mantra for Derrick to remember on the field: “When you get to the field, nobody is better than you, nobody is bigger than you, nobody is stronger than you.” “I would say, ‘You have to remember you are better than anybody else, and you have to be,’” Fred said. “I went on and on, and I didn’t know if he would pick it up.” Derrick did. He become one of the best defensive linemen in the country during his senior year when he recorded 20 sacks and 71 tackles while receiving scholarship offers from several powerhouse programs. Derrick learned the nuances of the game quickly, and though he has a gentle personality, he became a fierce competitor both on the field and in the weight room. “He’s one of the most talented athletes I’ve had here, but also one of the hardest-working,” Ocean Lakes coach Chris Scott told The Virginian-Pilot in February 2014. At Florida State, Derrick impressed his coaches with his willingness to accept criticism and listen when being taught something new. Fred would advise Derrick that the player’s voice didn’t matter when it came to the coaches, the men who controlled his playing time. In his four seasons at Florida State, Derrick played in 48 games and collected 165 tackles to go along with eight sacks. He was one of the most consistent defensive players on the field — and he became one of the toughest and strongest. As a junior, Derrick benched 525 pounds and squatted 750 pounds. All of his teammates, in amazement, agreed, listing him as the strongest player on the team in a poll on Rivals.com. More importantly to Fred: Derrick graduated in December with a bachelor’s degree in social science.

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“You want to be the best of the best of the best of the best of the best,” Derrick said, repeating the phrase his father used to tell him. “You’ve got to say it five times.” Once Derrick shifted his focus toward the NFL — with the potential to earn millions — Fred shared a personal story from a time before his youngest son was born. In 1992, Fred was pursuing his master’s degree in engineering. In order to have a better career, he had to quit his job to go back to school. Christy, who had three children at home at the time, couldn’t work, either. For almost a year, Fred and his family had to live on just $2,000. He took a loan for his education and bought used clothes for his children. The meal Fred remembers his family eating the most back then was rice and bread. “My first daughter used to say, ‘When are we going to eat meat in this house?’” Fred said. “She was very, very young. I said, ‘Don’t worry, it will come some day.’” In 1993, Fred earned his master’s degree. He started a new job soon thereafter and paid back his student loan debt in three years. “I thank God,” Fred said. “It was the worst year. I don’t know how we survived, but we did. I remember filling the refrigerator (after that). We had meat.” No matter how much money Derrick makes in his NFL career, his father’s story teaches him that what matters most is how well he manages his priorities. Beyond the financial struggles his father once went through, Derrick is most proud that the biggest attribute he learned from his father is perseverance. “All my siblings are having wonderful lives right now,” he said. “It’s all thanks to him and my mother being great parents.” Since the draft, the color red has become a dominant one inside Fred’s house. He has placed the Chiefs’ emblem in several rooms. A Chiefs flag flies in the front yard. Fred is eager to see his son play in his first NFL game. “This is Chiefs Kingdom,” Fred said of his home. “We are very, very happy for Derrick. He’s a good kid, but the good kid doesn’t just stop. I’m going to continue talking to him.” Fred admits he talks to Derrick these days a bit more often than his older children. The next task he wants his son to focus on is the correct business approach he must have off the field. Everything in camp, Fred tells his son, matters. How are you talking to people? How attentive are you in meetings? If an issues arises, how will you help resolve it? Derrick hopes his positive attitude and commitment to improve will be noticed by his coaches and older teammates. “In this business, how I see it, you get what you put in,” he said. “If you want to play, you can put in as much as you want to get on the field. If you don’t really care about it, you’re not going to do as much as studying film, you’re not going to care as much when you’re on the practice field, you’re not going to care about what food you put into your body. You’re not going to worry about how much sleep you’re getting. It’s about how much you really want to get on the field.”

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When Derrick talks with his mother at night, he can hear her smile and joy on the phone, which at times has made him emotional. His father, though, remains steady. On Thursday morning, Derrick received his daily text message, the one that’s always meant to motivate him. “Prove yourself every day,” Fred wrote to his son. “Have you done your job?”

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(Eric Berry) Chiefs safety Eric Berry: ‘I just keep on trucking’ Brooke Pryor Kansas City Star July 28, 2018

ST. JOSEPH Sometimes, Eric Berry’s mind wanders to the what-ifs. What if he didn’t have two season-ending injuries? What if he never got cancer? What if he didn’t spend nearly half of his NFL career on the mend? But before the five-time Pro Bowl safety can escape too far down the rabbit hole of alternate realities, he pauses and remembers the positives that came from those negatives. “You really can’t wonder where you would be,” Berry said. “There’s no telling. Because I learned so much throughout all three of those processes — including this one — and I just keep growing. I can’t really tell you where I would be without them.” Saturday morning, Berry pulled on pads for the first time since he exited the season-opener against New England with a torn Achilles in the fourth quarter. Right before he went down, Berry felt like he was finally close to peaking. He was in excellent shape and primed for a big season. He had the same feelings in 2011 and 2014 when his seasons were cut short by an ACL tear and a Hodgkin lymphoma diagnosis, respectively. It would be easy to feel cheated by the cruel timing of those maladies, but Berry doesn’t. “I learned so much,” he said. “The whole cancer deal was actually a privilege, to be honest with you. It was a blessing at the same time because I learned so much. I helped so many people and so many people helped me as well and inspired me, just being able to connect with them through that common thread of having cancer and being able to overcome it.” His experience recovering from the ACL tear and the cancer fueled him through his latest rehabilitation, and he tried to follow the same blueprint he used then to get ready for this season. But at nearly 30 years old, Berry knows his body can’t take the physical beating the way it used to. So much of his preparation now is mental. He relies on putting in work in the film room and in walkthroughs instead of banging bodies during extended 11-on-11 scenarios.

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“You can’t overdo it physically,” he said. “You’ve got to make sure you prepare mentally because you only get a few opportunities on the field to be like, ‘OK, this is the situation, this is the down and distance. Let’s see if we can make the play or make sure we are perfect on this play, make sure we get it done.’ Because you only going to get so many reps on the field where you get a game-like situation.” After three catastrophic setbacks, it would be easy to get discouraged. But Berry’s support network doesn’t let that happen. Before Berry departed for training camp, his dad gave him the same advice he’s given him during each of his rehabilitation journeys. “Sometimes I might tend to overthink things at times instead of just doing it,” Berry said. “He’s always been the person to ground me and keep me humble, and also put things in perspective for me. ... He’s always been there to be like, ‘Look, just take care of business. And you’ll be fine.’” Berry’s journey isn’t lost on his teammates. Entering his ninth year with the organization, Berry is the unquestioned leader of the young group, and his status as the comeback king only builds his legacy in the locker room. “Eric’s our leader,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “We appreciate when he’s out there going. The guys feed off him. It’s the whole story. It’s not just that it’s Eric Berry, It’s the whole story, the whole thing that he went through. The fact that he does everything out here and works his tail off. It’s a phenomenal story.” Berry doesn’t know what this season will bring. He doesn’t know if he has another comeback in his system. But he’s not worried about what he can’t control. “I just keep on trucking,” Berry said. “I don’t know what life is going to throw at me. That’s just period. You never know what’s going to come your way. However it comes to you or whatever it is, you just roll with the punches and keep pressing forward.”

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(Patrick Mahomes)

Chiefs broke a trend by drafting Patrick Mahomes, now hope he bucks another Blair Kerkhoff Kansas City Star August 15, 2018

Patrick Mahomes is beginning his role as his franchise’s quarterback in a different way than many, and not because of his arm strength, hairstyle or love of his pit bull. No, this involves other factors, like his scant time under center in the NFL, and suggests that lofty expectations for the second-year pro may be out of whack based on recent history. But the idea in the short term, as the Chiefs prepare for a season in which a fourth-consecutive playoff appearance is the objective, is that his inexperience will be offset by advantages the Chiefs have created for him. And that those benefits will help Mahomes defy the odds of career success of quarterbacks selected in the first round. How inexperienced is Mahomes? When he was selected with the No. 10 overall pick in the 2017 draft, he became the 28th quarterback taken in the first round since 2007. The 29th went three picks later when Houston took Deshaun Watson. Every one of those quarterbacks played more in his first year than Mahomes. One, Jamarcus Russell, started only once as a rookie in 2007, the same as Mahomes last year, but he appeared in three other games. Another, Jake Locker in 2011, didn’t start as a rookie, but wound up taking more snaps for the season. So much is expected from someone who has played so little, but that’s where we are with the 22-yearold Mahomes, the quarterback Kansas City can call its own and has waited decades to embrace. “I get it,” said former Chiefs quarterback Trent Green. “This is a different situation from what the Chiefs have had.” Green then hit the reverse-chronology button on Chiefs quarterbacks: Alex Smith, Matt Cassell, Damon Huard, Green, Elvis Grbac, Steve Bono, Joe Montana, Steve DeBerg ... The Chiefs’ era of importing quarterbacks began with DeBerg, who arrived in 1988. After that season, Marty Schottenheimer took over and every coach since then started the season with a plan centered around a quarterback who launched his NFL career elsewhere. 98


Before DeBerg, the previous decade had seen a run of Chiefs-drafted signal callers: Steve Fuller, Bill Kenney and Todd Blackledge. One might call that period the second era of homegrown Chiefs quarterbacks, with Len Dawson and Mike Livingston representing the first. Mahomes begins the fourth era, and the fact that he and the team are standing at the doorstep of something new and fresh helps explain the fervor around him. It also helps that he’s embraced this popularity, endearing himself to fans in the offseason by attending Royals and Sporting KC games and various concerts ... and showing up for a race this spring at Kansas Speedway wearing a pair of jorts. He’s an original Kansas City quarterback, and the organization is banking on offsetting his inexperience with advantages. Consider this: Many teams drafting quarterbacks in the first round are either filling an immediate need or creating a competitive situation. Also, in many cases, that team is in a state of flux or instability with its coaching staff or front office. “Most of the first round picks went to teams that weren’t very good at the time and maybe an unstable environment,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “Then you look and see if it was an offensive (minded) head coach or a defensive coach.” Teams that select a quarterback high in the draft must plot out how to handle the succession plan at the position. Taking a quarterback in the first round usually means drafting a future leader with the intent of replacing an incumbent. But young quarterbacks are often thrown into fire of competition too soon, costing those teams in the win-loss department. That wasn’t the case for the Chiefs when they selected Mahomes. It was never the intent to have him battle Alex Smith in 2017, who was starting his 13th NFL season. In that way, Mahomes was like Aaron Rodgers, who apprenticed three years behind Brett Farve before becoming the Packers’ starter. No first-round quarterback in this century has waited as long as Rodgers to make his starting debut. In both cases, a young quarterback had the luxury of time through organizational patience. They joined winning teams with veteran quarterbacks, and although it wasn’t the job of Smith or Rodgers to groom his successor, the understudies got to observe how successful veterans went about their business. “It was tremendous amount of value there, with Pat being able to observe Alex,” Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy said. “Not just what he did on the field, which was a great deal, but in the classroom and just showing how to be a professional.” The Chiefs are banking on their plan bucking another trend. Stretching the timeline of quarterbacks selected in the first round to 2000, their batting average in terms of career success is well below .500. From 2000 to 2017, 48 quarterbacks were selected in the first round. The list starts with Chad Pennington, taken by the Jets in 2000. He was the only quarterback chosen in the first round that year. Michael Vick was the only one the following year.

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All of those quarterbacks since 2000 have started at least one game — Mahomes’ one game to date is the fewest — and only 19 have posted winning records. Twenty-seven have losing records, and two are even in terms of wins and losses, including Watson, who went 3-3 before last year’s season-ending injury with the Texans. For every Ben Roelisthberger, Phillip Rivers and Matt Ryan, there’s a Patrick Ramsey, Kyle Boller or EJ Manuel. The Cleveland Browns have fared the worst of any franchise in this area. Starting with Tim Couch, the overall top pick in 1999, the Browns have drafted five quarterbacks. Baker Mayfield, taken first in April, is the latest. The Browns’ picks that have played — Couch, Brady Quinn, Brandon Weeden and Johnny Manziel — have a combined record of 34-78 as starters. Not even being the overall top pick guarantees success. Twelve quarterbacks have been taken first since 2000. Six have winning career records. “I’ve wondered that before,” Reid said. “How many quarterbacks would have been (more successful) if they were in the right environment?” The Chiefs believe they have created conditions that will put their young but promising quarterback in a position to succeed, not only with their patience but by surrounding him with players such as tight end Travis Kelce, wide receiver Tyreek Hill, running back Kareem Hunt — all Pro Bowlers — and a key newcomer, wide receiver Sammy Watkins. “That kind of goes with the stability,” Reid said. The Rams’ Jared Goff is an example of someone whose trajectory changed with the conditions. Things couldn’t have gone worse in the 2016 top draft pick’s rookie season. He lost all seven of his starts that year. The Rams changed coaches, bringing in Washington offensive coordinator Sean McVay, and Goff’s production changed dramatically. He lead his teams to 11 victories and a playoff spot while earning a Pro Bowl selection. “There are a lot of factors that go into this,” Reid said. “You hope for Pat this is the right situation. Then he’s got to go out and play. That’s what it comes down to.”

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(Patrick Mahomes) Good and lucky: How Patrick Mahomes wound up in Kansas City, quarterbacking the Chiefs Sam Mellinger Kansas City Star September 04, 2018

TYLER, TEXAS Everything the Chiefs think they can be is dependent on Patrick Mahomes being everything they believe him to be. He is too important to fail, the Chiefs making the grandest single bet in its tortured history without a safety net. This is a desperate franchise putting its future on a man who only became a full-time football player three years ago, one of the great offensive minds of the 21st century handpicking him for a potential ride to the Hall of Fame, a region of fans attaching their hopes to a viral, no-look passing, record breaking college football freak show — who nearly quit the sport. Twice. “Crazy to think about now,” Mahomes said. “But it’s true.” His story has been told in parts, but always just in parts, a series of snacks without the main course. You probably know some of the outline. Son of a big-leaguer. Hung out with A-Rod as a kid. Eventually a potential pro himself, then a prolific quarterback at Texas Tech. Then a draft curiosity, then a draft obsession, then the first quarterback taken by the Chiefs in the first round since 1983. But when a story is done in bits, the details are always left out, which is a shame because the details make the biggest plot line of Kansas City sports’ next decade so tantalizing. Like, did you know football was his third-best sport two years into high school? That he chose it over the others largely because he had so much to learn? That he became so good and so daring so quickly that he and his best friend essentially ad-libbed the playbook, without practice and without asking their high school coach for permission? That he has a photographic memory, and that teams with Hall of Fame quarterbacks wanted to trade up for a kid who only became a full-time football player two years earlier? Randi Mahomes always had a four-year plan for her first child, and that plan never included any of this. A dream is now reality, but even that might be misleading because it implies Patrick or anyone around him dreamed it before three years ago. 101


He is now in a delicate place. When he came to Kansas City, he did not know of the pain and angst of a giant institution in a small market that hasn’t won a Super Bowl since before his parents were born. Those around him deploy mental gymnastics to mesh what they see with the odds. They say the hype is too much, but the general manager calls him the best college player he’s ever evaluated. They talk about his need to improve, but the head coach giggles at some of the throws. Mahomes did not ask for any of this. He is to be not just a star, but a wildly entertaining one — substance and style. Decision makers inside the organization are convinced this is ground zero for a new chapter in one of pro football’s historic franchises — there was Before Mahomes, and now there is With Mahomes. It’s an absurd weight. So far, Mahomes’ life has been a string of lucky breaks made good through supernatural talent and confidence and work. That’s been enough to get him here, but he’s never gone against something like this. “He was meant to do this,” said Pat Mahomes, Patrick’s father. “You’re going to see some stuff this year you’ve never seen before.” Lucky break No. 1 The first lucky break defined his childhood. Born to a father who pitched 11 years in the major leagues, dragging him through clubhouses and having him catching fly balls before the World Series at age 5, Patrick’s grade-school years served as something like a PhD-level class in how to be an athlete. “He learned how it works,” said LaTroy Hawkins, a retired 21-year major-leaguer and Patrick’s godfather. “How to gain those guys’ respect, how to deflect credit. Walking the walk. That came at a very young age.” Raised by a single mother whose job as an event coordinator meant loads of nights and weekends, Patrick had to help raise his younger brother and saw an up-close and real-time model for hard work. “Stable, always there,” he said of his mother. “Always there for us. Showed us you have to work hard to get what you want.” Surrounded by a core group of a half-dozen best friends, all sports-obsessed and most eventual college athletes, Mahomes’ childhood was in some ways the perfect blueprint for a future in sports. Even now, those guys talk the same, with the same inflections, the same chuckle that begins many sentences, all on the same text thread making fun of each other and asking about Patrick’s last highlight. “I knew he’d be a professional athlete when he was 7,” Randi said. “I’m serious. There was never a question to him, and I knew he had the talent.” Soccer, baseball, karate, basketball, ping pong, golf. Patrick was obsessed with all of it, and better than most of his peers, too. He’d watch, study, listen. By age 8 or so, he’d call pitches in the big-league games he watched, and nailed it more times than not. By 10 or so, he could diagnose a golf swing on TV. Everything was sports. Sports was everything. Once, when Patrick was 4, a teammate of his dad’s asked Randi how she got him to play catch so much. 102


“How do I get him to stop?” she replied. He was competitive, too. Wanted to throw the farthest. Run the fastest. Make the most shots. Spell the most words correctly. He never cared much about the result of winning. Just the process, the feeling. He’d win a tournament, get home, and hear mom ask about the trophy. “Oh,” he’d say. “I don’t know.” Pat and Randi — they separated when Patrick was 6; he and his younger brother lived with mom — can only remember one time Patrick didn’t want to play a sport. Pop Warner football. Patrick wanted to play quarterback. Coach put him at linebacker. Patrick wanted to quit. Mom and Dad made him finish the season. He did, but it wasn’t the last time Patrick wanted to quit football. Lucky break No. 2 The second lucky break defined Mahomes’ adolescence. It came just after the second time he nearly quit football. We’ll get to that story in a second, but let’s begin with Mahomes in an incredibly awkward quarterback competition during his junior season at Whitehouse (Texas) High. The other guy: Patrick’s best friend, Ryan Cheatham. They were both pitchers, too, and damn good ones. When they played together in the summer, Patrick would pitch the semifinal, and Ryan the championship. Patrick stayed at Ryan’s house so much he was like family. And now, they faced each other for one of life’s great privileges — starting quarterback at an East Texas high school football powerhouse. “A little awkward,” Ryan admitted. Big, strong, reliable — Ryan did his drop, made his reads. If the throw was there, he made it. If not, he ran forward for a respectable gain. Patrick never had a private coach in any sport and didn’t do 7-on-7 camps. His footwork may be a little loose because of it, even now, but the upshot is that his creativity was never coached out of him. He was a lightning bolt. “Ryan could’ve been a (Division I) quarterback, no doubt in my mind,” said Adam Cook, Whitehouse’s offensive coordinator that year. “He’d do what you needed, and he’d get you those five yards. Well, Pat’s trying to take 95 on every play.” The coaches were split between the more gifted Patrick and the more dependable Ryan. Cook made the decision at halftime of the second game. The plan was to rotate Patrick and Ryan, but at halftime Cook changed the plan. Ryan was heartbroken, and the next week coach and player cried together. But Ryan remained happy for his friend and is still proud the stress never touched their bond. 103


“Once he started making those big plays,” Ryan said, “I was like, ‘Yeah, OK. I don’t know if I can do that.” Mahomes was a star, and right away. Cook, the offensive coordinator, had walked on at Texas Tech, so Whitehouse ran all the same plays the Red Raiders did. Mahomes’ highlight reel from high school looks a lot like what he eventually did in college — just wilder. Two playoff games in a row, he made the same scramble-right, scramble-left, scramble-right-again, chuck-it-60-yards touchdown pass. College football recruiters were slow to come around. Some didn’t know about him. He started late, didn’t take part in many camps, wasn’t plugged in with a specialty coach — wasn’t on what some college coaches call “the circuit.” Mahomes and childhood friend Ryan Cheatham were on-field teammates (and competitive adversaries) for years. They remain friends. East Tennessee Sports Network screen grab The coaches who did know worried about wasting their time. Patrick threw baseballs in the mid-90s, with good off-speed stuff. Everyone knew about his dad, too, so do the math. Recruiting classes are often built around quarterbacks. The risk was real, because even Patrick thought his future was baseball. That’s why he nearly quit football before all this happened. Texas was among the schools recruiting him as a safety, a position Patrick only tolerated, so if football brought an injury that compromised his real professional future, what was he doing? He thought about this a lot before his junior season. Even told his mom he’d made up his mind. That was it. Quitting. No more football. She would’ve been happier that way. Football always scared her. Still does. But she loves her son, and knows her son, so she told him she didn’t see him happy watching his friends play from the stands. Maybe that’s why, six years ago this fall, Patrick decided to give football one more season. Baseball had one more shot at Patrick, in the draft after his senior year. He told teams he wanted $2.5 million to skip his football scholarship, a number he now calls “ridiculous,” something he came up with because he didn’t want to say no. A sample of scouts who watched Mahomes back then projected his talent would be worth anywhere from a second- to third-round pick. That could’ve been worth up to a $1.6 million bonus, maybe more if Mahomes got the so-called multi-sport bump. But he was consistent. One scout who talked with him still remembers that Patrick drove the meeting — rare for a high school kid, particularly the son of a big leaguer. The Tigers took him in the 37th round, the scout telling Patrick he just wanted him to be able to say he was drafted, and that he looked forward to talking again in three years. Patrick wanted to play football, even though at the time he figured he’d go back to baseball. Everyone did. He was a seven-figure baseball talent. As a football player, he began his college career behind a sophomore starter with an NFL future of his own, third on the depth chart in Lubbock. 104


Lucky break No. 3 The third lucky break defined Mahomes’ three years at Texas Tech. Lots of folks back home didn’t understand why Mahomes went to Tech in the first place. Davis Webb was the Red Raiders’ starter, good enough that Baker Mayfield transferred away, and just a sophomore. Classically trained, too — 6-foot-5, strong arm, a graduate of the famed Elite 11 camp. He was thought to be one of the Big 12’s best quarterbacks when Mahomes signed. “If those other guys are better, then they should play,” Patrick told his father. Then Webb got hurt. First a shoulder, then an ankle, and once Mahomes played the decision was easy. He threw 16 touchdowns and just four interceptions as a freshman. Webb transferred to Cal, where he was good enough for the New York Giants to take in the third round of the NFL Draft. The combination of Mahomes’ talent, Tech’s wide-open offense and, um, wide-open defense made for plays and numbers that look made up. There’s the 50-yard, sidearmed flick against his body for a touchdown against Louisiana Tech. The no-look pass in the last 2 minutes of a crucial drive against Oklahoma State. The NCAA-record 819 total yards in a single game against Oklahoma. It all happened so fast. Mahomes played baseball his freshman year but found himself late to practices and even games because of a football workout, or sometimes just being buried in video. He’d only been a quarterback for two and a half years, so pro baseball still made the most sense as a future. He was, literally, years behind anyone he was theoretically competing against for an NFL job. Plus, Tech had a lousy track record of producing good pro quarterbacks. But, dammit. Patrick really loved playing quarterback. When he wanted to quit, it was never about football. It was about playing quarterback. That’s what he wanted. Baseball began to bore him. He’s unfailingly polite, so he won’t say it that bluntly, but it’s the truth. Baseball is routines. It’s the same basic matchup — pitcher vs. hitter — over and over and over. Football is different. Football can be anything. Each play is its own, each defense unique, the math of 11 humans on each side creating infinite possibilities. Patrick’s always been a thinker, always been attracted to a challenge. “Baseball, I felt like I almost already peaked,” he said. “I felt like I knew everything about baseball. In football, I’m still learning something every single day.” So, as a college freshman, and less than two years before the Chiefs would use two first-round picks to bet their future on him, Mahomes finally became a full-time football player. Who does that? Who quits the sport they definitely have a seven-figure future in for the one they might be able to make work? You hear the story and it’s easy to see a young man with house money. He can do the unorthodox — in both how he plays quarterback and that he plays quarterback — because he has a million or more from baseball to fall back on. It’s a theory, anyway.

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“I see what you’re saying,” said Coleman Patterson, one of Mahomes’ best friends from Tyler and a teammate at Tech. “But I don’t think he played fear-free because he had baseball. Honestly, I just don’t think he ever thought he’d fail.” Patrick’s sophomore season changed everything — 4,653 yards, 36 touchdowns and 63.5 percent accuracy. He led the Big 12 in most passing categories. Scouts swarmed. Wasn’t just the obvious, either. After the Baylor game, Patrick had dinner with his dad. Ran through an interception, everything from what his receivers did to how each defender reacted. It was the linebacker. Patrick lost track of the linebacker. “But now I’ve seen it so I know what to do,” Pat remembers his son saying. “I promise you,” Pat said at the memory. “He hasn’t made that mistake again.” Mahomes left Tech following his junior season, just four months after his 21st birthday. Draft season was bonkers. At first, they projected him for the third round. Then the second. Then late in the first. He went to ESPN and, wearing a shirt and tie, threw a ball over a walkway and into the lap of a dummy on a bench on the other side. Jon Gruden called Patrick his favorite quarterback in the class. Seventeen teams met with him in person. Leigh Steinberg, Mahomes’ agent, cited the Chargers, Giants, Saints, Steelers and Cardinals among those with the heaviest interest. Which brings us to Patrick’s fourth and final lucky break — when the Chiefs traded three picks, including two in the first round, to select him 10th overall so that Patrick could define their future. Lucky break No. 4 Quarterbacks fail all the time. Some of them simply can’t hack it. But good ones fail, too. They fail because they were in the wrong place, with the wrong coach, surrounded by the wrong people. Or, maybe the right coach was fired, and the new coach is the wrong coach. “I’ve studied that,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “How many quarterbacks could have been if they’d had the right environment?” Reid is the Chiefs’ most powerful football man, one of the league’s highest-paid coaches, and now his top priority is making sure Mahomes has the right environment. He’s had good quarterbacks before, but never quite like this. The Chiefs finished fourth in points last year, sixth in yards, and believe speedy receiver Tyreek Hill is not only a perfect fit for Mahomes’ arm but getting better overall. They spent $48 million on receiver Sammy Watkins. Tight end Travis Kelce remains in his prime. Running back Kareem Hunt led the league in rushing last year as a rookie. Mahomes is the most emphatic piece now, the lightning bolt from Tyler replacing the predictable Alex Smith, and one of the NFL’s most starved fan bases is buried in possibility. Kansas City has never seen a quarterback like this. He’s the youngest starter in franchise history, with almost certainly the best arm. He sends practice highlights to friends back home over Snapchat. He sits in the front row at Kauffman Stadium, wears a kit to Sporting Kansas City games, and jorts and a sleeveless Kansas City T-Bones jersey to a NASCAR race. 106


There’s a story behind that, too. Gehrig Dieter, the Chiefs receiver and one of Mahomes’ closest friends on the team, wore “regular” clothes the year before, and fullback Anthony Sherman wore him out about it. As Mahomes tells it, he’s from Texas, so obviously he had jorts and decided to “give Sherm what he wanted.” Is it exaggerating to say no Kansas City athlete has done anything more popular since Eric Hosmer’s mad dash home in New York during the 2015 World Series? “No regrets at all,” Mahomes said. “I loved it.” When it comes to sports in KC, Mahomes has become THE man about town, especially now that former Royals stars like Eric Hosmer and Mike Moustakas have moved on. He is a star, in other words, already the most visible quarterback the Chiefs have had since Len Dawson anchored the 10 o’clock news after practice. At least at the moment, that status is based entire on potential. He’s on billboards, his jersey a top seller, all before his first season as a starter. How often has this much been expected from someone with so little history? The Chiefs chose Mahomes over Deshaun Watson, the former Clemson star who beat Alabama in the last minute for a national championship. “What makes this difficult is that Deshaun Watson made it look so easy that first year,” Steinberg said. Mahomes’ football success, then, depends largely on how quickly he can play catch-up. His physical gifts are obvious, but he’s wicked smart, too — the 2016-17 Big 12 Scholar-Athlete of the Year in football, blessed with the type of mind that not only recalls facts from a book, but can remember where the words were on the page. That’s terrifically advantageous now, flashes of film and past snaps scrolling through his mind as he approaches the line of scrimmage. “I was a good student and stuff like that,” Mahomes said. “But this is like my favorite class.” Quarterbacks soar or fail based largely on what they make of adversity, and for all the talk of his inexperience under center, his most glaring inexperience is against obstacles. He just hasn’t had many. Throughout the reporting for this story, many of those closest to him — from childhood friends to his parents to Reid — were asked about Mahomes’ greatest challenge. “Oh, Lord, that’s a good one,” Randi said. “We never had to face a lot of adversity,” Patterson said. “He hasn’t done it yet, so it’s uncharted territory,” Reid said. Eventually, they all took guesses. Growing up with a single mom wasn’t easy. Pat’s history as a big leaguer produced outsized expectations from the jump. Choosing football over baseball wasn’t easy, and neither was grinding against his best friend for the job in high school. So, you can come up with stuff. But nothing like this. Careers and reputations are on the line, from the jobs of assistants to Reid’s case for the Hall of Fame to the franchise itself wiping away five decades of postseason failures. The stakes are clear, and unforgiving. 107


Vague plans are in place to set up scholarships and legacy foundations — first in Tyler, then Lubbock, finally in Kansas City. This is what legends do, and at this tender moment, when Mahomes has neither succeeded nor failed, when he has neither lived up to the hype nor disappointed, two facts are abundantly clear. Patrick Mahomes, relative quarterback neophyte, the hand-picked replacement for a Pro Bowler who had the season of his life in 2017, needs to be great and appears entirely unbothered by any of it. “I want to win Super Bowls here,” he said. Plural? “That’s the goal,” he said. “I want to be great. I’ll put that pressure on myself, so we can do it, so it’s not like I feel any pressure from anyone else. “I love this game. I love working, so being able to come in here every day is enjoying life. People before you have built the foundation, so you have to just go out there and finish it off.”

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(Tyreek Hill) ‘He only sees the end zone’: Tyreek Hill makes everyone on the field around him disappear Lindsay Jones The Athletic September 10, 2018

CARSON, Calif. — Tyreek Hill stood just a few yards outside of his own end zone, stared up at the rapidly descending punt, and everyone around him seemed to disappear. “Once I caught it, I was like, ‘Man, this is wide open,’” Hill said. When you’re as fast as Hill, the Kansas City Chiefs’ speedy wide receiver and punt returner, wide open has a different meaning. To get from the 9-yard line on the west sideline to the east corner of the far end zone, 91 yards away, Hill had to outrun the first Chargers’ coverageman (cornerback Craig Maker) and race laterally along the 10-yard line to the opposite hashmark before turning right to sprint down the far sideline. Once Hill made his turn, he had only the Chargers’ long snapper and punter to beat. That Hill scored untouched was a credit to his blazing speed, and maybe gives credence to a teammate’s theory about him: That when Hill has the ball in his hands, it’s as if no other players on the field exist. “It’s like everyone is invisible,” Chiefs receiver and fellow kick returner De’Anthony Thomas told The Athletic. “To him, he only sees the end zone.” And on Sunday, after reaching the end zone, Hill also saw no need to stop. So as he charged across the white C of the Chargers’ name in the end zone, Hill kept on running, Forrest Gump style, up the ramp and toward the locker room. That’s because, as any elite sprinter would tell you, it’s dangerous to just slam on the breaks. Somehow, Hill’s speed seemed to stun the Chargers. But it shouldn’t have. Since Hill’s arrival in Kansas City in 2016, he’s electrified the Chiefs offense and special teams units, and after Sunday’s punt return touchdown and 58-yard touchdown reception from Patrick Mahomes, he now has 13 career touchdowns of at least 50 yards. Just two players in NFL history, Hall of Famer Gale Sayers and former Bears returner Devin Hester, have that many 50-plus yard scores in their first 35 games. Hill also added a third touchdown Sunday with a 1-yard catch in the fourth quarter. He celebrated the hat trick by performing a standing back flip in the end zone. “I had to show my athletic ability,” Hill said. Yes, Tyreek, we get it. You’re an athletic freak.

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What’s quickly becoming clear is that even with a new starting quarterback in Patrick Mahomes — or perhaps even because of the arrival of the big-armed Mahomes — Hill is even more ingrained as the Chiefs’ most dangerous weapon. On Sunday in the Chiefs’ 38-28 win against the Chargers, Hill made it so the tight end Travis Kelce, running back Kareem Hunt and receiver Sammy Watkins were non-factors. That certainly won’t always be the case, and those other three players are far too talented to stay off the stat sheet for long, but Hill continues to prove that he should be in the discussion as one the league’s best receivers, not just its quickest. “Tyreek’s really worked on his route running and everything in order to make himself the best wide receiver in the league,” Mahomes said. “I think today has showed that he has improved in his part, and has the speed to bring it anytime.”

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