Yardbarker
x
2 Most Interesting Observations From Chiefs’ OC This Week
Kansas City Chiefs running back Kareem Hunt (29) celebrates his touchdown in the fourth quarter with teammate Kansas City Chiefs guard Trey Smith (65) during a Monday Night NFL football game at EverBank Stadium, Monday, Oct. 6, 2025, in Jacksonville, Fla. [Doug EngleFlorida Times-Union] Corey Perrine/Florida Times-Union / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The Stumble Six would’ve lived a short shelf life. Patrick Mahomes would’ve jumped back into the MVP conversation, and this week’s showdown against Detroit may have had even more anticipation.

If only Mahomes and Hollywood Brown were on the same page.

Facing second-and-10 with all three timeouts, with 10 seconds on the clock, Mahomes missed Brown deep over the middle. Had they connected in stride, the speedy wideout likely would’ve gotten into Harrison Butker’s field-goal range for a game-tying attempt. The incompletion might’ve even played a role in getting Tyson Campbell traded. The body language of the veteran cornerback showed the Jaguars were lucky.

Corey Perrine/Florida Times-Union / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

It was one of those “winning plays” Mahomes lamented this week, snaps the Chiefs have to convert to get back to tipping the scales in close games.

Offensive coordinator Matt Nagy addressed that play and one other important aspect of Monday’s loss the Chiefs will carry forward when Detroit (4-1) visits Kansas City (2-3) on Sunday Night Football (7:20 p.m. CT, NBC/KSHB-TV, Channel 41, 96.5 The Fan).

Corey Perrine/Florida Times-Union / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The last drive of the fourth-quarter was a critical miscommunication

“It's probably a little bit of both,” Nagy said of finding fault on the last-second pass intended for Brown. “It's one where that end-of-game-situation stuff, we obviously practice all of that, and we have certain things for it, but I think probably the best way, and easiest way to say it, is there you got to certainly be on time with some of that stuff.

“And they were just off a little bit, and neither one of them was right or wrong in that moment. We'd love to be able to have them both be on the same page so we can get down and call timeout.”

Denny Medley-Imagn Images

The next-to-last drive of the fourth quarter was a critical building block

“It spoke volumes to where we're at right now,” said Nagy, addressing the dominant, 12-play, 86-yard touchdown drive that consumed most of the fourth-quarter clock. “We talked about it as a team, just making sure these guys understand, when adversity hits, what type of team are we?”

They know now, if they didn’t already. The Chiefs can dominate games, offensively. Even the drive that ended in Devin Lloyd’s 99-yard interception return was an 11-play, 65-yard march. Kansas City enters this week tied for third in the league with 12 drives of 10-or-more plays.

Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

And even though the special teams and defense ultimately combined to surrender the winning touchdown, there wasn’t a crumb of dysfunction afterward.

“And so, you can take that to the offensive side and say, ‘Do we point the finger at the defense? Does the defense point the finger at us?’ None of that. And I think Coach Reid and what he's built here, the culture of togetherness, the sideline the last couple games has been phenomenal.

“We wanted to do our part – after giving up that pick-six – of going down there and making sure that we put together a good drive. Right before that, the defense got a pick, and we went in and took advantage of that.”


This article first appeared on Kansas City Chiefs on SI and was syndicated with permission.

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

Yardbarker +

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!