This season's lack of wins against a “good” football team
forces me to wonder about the identity of the 2017 Kansas City Chiefs. KC's a top-ten team according to power rankings
from NFL.com, Sports Illustrated, ESPN and CBS Sports, but where's our signature
win? I guess the Chiefs' most impressive victory so far was their Week 1
comeback against the last-place, 3-4 San
Diego Chargers. That comeback gave both fans and teammates confidence that Alex Smith could elevate this offense
when KC needed him most. Sadly, Smith then went on to score 14 points or less
in two of KC’s next three games.
The offense has rarely been a total disaster, thanks to Spencer Ware's weekly Pro Bowl-caliber
contributions, but rarely has it looked fully operational. KC ranks 19th league-wide
in total yards per game, 17th in points per game and 14th in turnover
percentage. They epitomize "average offense.” Bright sides include the 3rd-least-penalized
offense in the NFL and a +7 turnover ratio that ranks 4th, but
limiting mistakes alone doesn’t automatically make you great, or even good.
We can’t forget about the Oakland Raiders looking like a cellar dweller against our Chiefs in
Week 6, and some may justifiably consider that KC’s greatest accomplishment of
this youngish season. The Raiders aren’t half as legit as their 5-2 record
would indicate, so I respectfully disagree. Oakland hasn’t beaten a team with a
winning record, and they won three of those five games by 3 points or less. At
least the Chargers can say they beat the Broncos in Week 6.
KC has four more games coming up against teams currently
below .500. Each Sunday presents its own set of challenges, the Chiefs can't
sleep on any of these hungry football teams and blah blah blah all those other clichés
you’ve heard about "any given Sunday". That being said, KC won't be
underdogs again until Week 12 when they travel to Colorado. That means the
Chiefs could realistically reach an 8-2 record without defeating a “good”
football team.
I wish I could say this upcoming game will give us some
answers, but it looks like rinse-and-repeat (-and-repeat) for KC in Week 8. Oakland
and New Orleans had several obvious similarities, and we can draw apparent
parallels between the Saints and Indianapolis Colts, too. SI's Chris Burke even
referred to Indy as "the AFC Saints" in his latest power rankings.
So, for the third straight week, KC faces an opponent with a dynamic passing
offense and a porous defense. They can still reuse much of the gameplan Andy
Reid designed during the Week 5 bye. That alone would make the Chiefs a Vegas
favorite this Sunday.
So, what is this team’s identity? When you think of this
year’s Chiefs, what comes to mind? I’ll answer my own question with another
question: is it a cop-out to just name the most outstanding players on the team?
I definitely envision Marcus Peters
picking off infuriated QBs while Spencer Ware blasts through opposing defenses,
but a team identity rises above individual pieces. Due partly to their lack of
a signature win this season, and despite being a top-ten team in the NFL, KC
doesn’t have that. Losing is the only thing that can change the Chiefs’
identity until November 27th, when they face off with the Broncos at
Mile High Stadium.
Doug LaCerte tries not to neglect his Twitter account @DLaC67, and he occasionally still uses his Facebook page.
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