x
Chiefs Should Study Duke’s End-of-Game Breakdown
Dec 21, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid before a game against the Tennessee Titans at Nissan Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Patrick Mahomes tweeted his reaction immediately. He wasn’t alone after witnessing one of the most dramatic endings in recent sports history.

Catch and Face. It’s a basketball concept coaches drill relentlessly, something Duke failed to execute in the critical final seconds of its 73-72 loss to UConn Sunday afternoon. It’s also something Chiefs coaches would be wise to explain to their players this offseason.

And not only did Cayden Boozer turn over the ball, his teammate Isaiah Evans failed to get his hands in the sightline of Braylon Mullins before the freshman drained a 41-foot shot to doom the Blue Devils. Afterward, Duke rued its eight second-half turnovers (UConn had one) and credited the Huskies for holding the No. 1-seed Blue Devils to just 28 second-half points. UConn, not Duke, is in the Final Four.

Amber Searls-Imagn Images

Yes, it's about one play

So, put an arm around heartbroken Boozer and Evans. But don’t lose sight of the striking parallels between Duke’s crushing loss and the Chiefs’ inability to close out games. And don’t believe the narrative that one play didn’t lose the game.

“Well, of course it's not about one play, until it's only one play,” analyst Jay Bilas said on Monday’s edition of Get Up. “There was an execution.

“When it gets down to one play, you still have to make the play, and UConn made it.”

Amy Kontras-Imagn Images

The Chiefs didn’t. An NFL-worst 1-9 in one-score games, they clearly lacked the late-game dominance they showed over Patrick Mahomes’ first seven seasons as a starter.

In the fourth quarters of five 2025 games, nearly 30 percent of the season, the Kansas City offense failed to convert with chance to tie or take the lead. That foul quartet consisted of nine total possessions – four of which came in one game, the 20-10 loss to Houston on Dec. 7.

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

Defense had late-game blemishes, too

The offense wasn’t alone. Steve Spagnuolo’s unit was solid most of the season but struggled late in games. In four games, the Chiefs allowed the game-tying or game-winning points on the opponent’s final drive, or next-to-last drive.

What’s more, in three games, the Kansas City defense surrendered a first down to allow an opponent to run out the clock with a lead.

Amanda Perobelli/Reuters via Imagn Images

It’s a critical 180 the Chiefs need to make in 2026. And if last year’s memories aren’t fresh enough, Kansas City coaches got a phenomenal visual aid on Sunday, courtesy of Duke.

“And that's sort of the issue of late-game situations,” Bilas added. “It’s why teams try to simulate that in practice … A lot of coaches do it. They'll show their teams tape from other teams, whether college teams, NBA teams, late-game situations, to put it in their heads. And because you can't always simulate these things, that's the value of experience.”


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!