So after the most embarrassing loss of
the season (so far), the Chiefs make the change to Brady Quinn,
bringing an end to the frustrating Cassel Era. Also, the flimsy
rumors about the Chiefs offering Pioli a contract extension, at
exactly his lowest point of fan popularity, have all been vehemently
denied by the organization. On top of these nuggets of good news, we
have a winnable game against the always fun-to-hate Raiders at
Arrowhead this week. So, are you excited?
I can tell what you're thinking, and I
know. I know, I know, I know. The season's over, the team sucks and
they should just keep losing so we can draft a real quarterback
next year. How can I be excited about this crappy team? How can I
even be expected to care?
Well,
truth is that I'm not here to spread hope and joy. I'm not a
professional, I'm just a fan, and I'm just as upset as all the other
fans. My objective today isn't to fart rainbows into your morning
coffee- not only because that sounds really gross and frightening,
but also because I'm fully aware of how hopeless this season feels.
But even after such disappointment, there is
reason to be excited for this game. Problem is, the reason to be
excited is, itself, disappointing.
By
now, you've either noticed a lot of Chiefs fans that want the team to
suck in order to improve the draft position, or you've become on of
them. Whether you want the team to lose enough to pick up Geno Smith
next year, or you're holding onto hope and still rooting for a wild
card spot, you'll soon be disappointed. The simple truth is, this
team has way more talent than the average NFL bottom-feeder, and
winning a few more games is inevitable. The Chiefs still have two
Raiders games on their schedule, as well as home games against the
Panthers and Colts, and a very winnable game in Cleveland. With a
schedule like that, they'd have to be trying to lose in order to
avoid three or four more wins. That puts the Chiefs at 4-12, at
worst. Other teams with tougher schedules will have worse records
than that by season's end, putting them ahead of Kansas City in
drafting order. That means no Barkley, no Geno, no elite quarterback
for the Chiefs next year.
That's
right folks- the Chiefs will even suck at sucking. Doesn't it all
sound like a bad joke? Cheering for KC is so awful that they can't
even make us happy when we want them to be terrible. So, why be
excited about a meaningless game against two awful teams in the
middle of hopeless seasons? Because an exciting game against a hated
rival is all we're going to get, and hope is still a distant speck on
the horizon. There will be no losing hard enough to ensure getting
our pick at QB next year, and with Cassel being benched that means
it's time for some *gulp*
rebuilding with a new, mediocre quarterback.
This
is assuming Scott Pioli won't trade up in the draft, which to some
would seem like an unfair assumption. Many have hope, even automatic
confidence that he'll make moves to get the #1 or #2 quarterback in
the draft. I'd love to have that kind of faith, but until Pioli
employs anything more than his usual boring, conservative tactics,
I'll keep on assuming. So now, we're talking about these Jason
Campbell, Matt Flynn, Kevin Kolb kind of guys that are happy to be
starting anywhere, so long as they aren't the guy holding the
clipboard. That may be fun for a while, but it will be a Band-Aid on
a bullet wound to the stomach. So, let's just sit back and enjoy the
aura of mystery surrounding Brady Quinn this week. Savor that new QB
smell for a moment, before he explains to us all why he failed to win
a starting job anywhere else. For this week, he gets the Rich Gannon
treatment. It's all the fans' what-if's and pipe dreams, suddenly
becoming a reality. With little to root for these days, that should
be something we can all embrace and enjoy, at least for a day.
Because, who knows? Maybe he's the guy, this determined, studious 1st
round draft pick. There's no knowing for sure until he gets a chance,
and today is the day he gets it. So yeah, there's reason to be
excited. Hope is gone, but today there's potential for some serious
entertainment. Isn't that all you can hope for, after the games
become technically pointless because
all hope is gone?
So please, appreciate the game this afternoon, and don't let this
cloud of disappointment ruin today's entertainment. It's the Raiders
at Arrowhead and we've got a new QB. Enjoy it.
Until
then, let's take a closer look at today's competition- the Joker to
our Batman, the Ivan Drago to our Rocky Balboa, the reviled,
revolting Raiders.
This Oakland team is erratic and
unpredictable. With a competent quarterback to run the show, the
Raiders offense is clearly more potent than it's been in prior years.
Their offense is 9th league-wide in passing yards, but their rushing
attack is second to last behind Darren Mcfadden. Oakland's offense
showed potential in their 34-31 win against Pittsburgh, in which
Palmer completed 70% of his passes for 3 TDs and Mcfadden averaged
6.3 yards a carry. But, they showed inconsistency in Miami, where
Mcfadden had 11 carries for 22 yards, and Denver, where the Raiders
scored only two field goals. Their secondary is struggling, their
rushing defense ranks near the middle of the pack, and the
defense has mustered only 7 sacks in 6 games. There is admittedly
more talent in black and silver than we have seen for several years,
but nothing extraordinary is happening in Oakland. New coaching, new
quarterback, same old mediocrity for Raiders fans.
Usually this would be my time to poke
fun, to use demeaning nicknames and make crude jokes about our bitter
rivals. At this point, though, I could go to a bar in Kansas City,
overhear a drunk guy talking about how his beloved Raiders suck year
after year with no hope in sight, and easily mistake him as one of my
own. That is the ultimate
fear. Only after looking deep into the soul of your enemy can you
truly understand yourself. I think some smart, famous person said
that, I'm not sure, but it's applicable to this situation. Look hard
at the past few years of Raiders football. Since 2007, they have 30
wins in total. Now, look at that same time-frame for the Chiefs. Go
ahead, count 'em up. That's 27 wins. 27 wins in five years. Let me
put it another way: the Kansas City Chiefs, UNDER SCOTT PIOLI'S
COMMAND, spent the last five years sucking more than the Raiders.
Hell, that's not the ultimate fear. The fear has become reality, and
now it is the ultimate evidence of how awful the Pioli Regime has
been for Kansas City.
A
few weeks ago, following a loss against the Chargers, I shared an
opinion on this blog that a particular point in that game was the
worst moment for fans since Pioli took over. While that was not
untrue at the time, I learned a valuable lesson from saying something
that weighty so early in the season. Honestly, every moment since
then has been worse. The bad play makes the constant bad breaks
all-the-more jarring, and vice versa. Trying to think of a single
moment so far seems pointless, but it makes me wonder; could anything
be worse than a loss this week, at home against the damn Raiders? It
would be bad, but at least now I'm wise enough to say that it
couldn't get worse. Hopefully, this newly found wisdom will aid me
this week in my commonly unsuccessful five predictions.
- I refuse to believe this team is mentally downtrodden enough to play lazy against the Raiders. With only a few practices to prepare him, Quinn fights through a shaky defense with a wobbly offense and wins a close game, 27-23. The Chiefs defense makes a big hold late to end it, giving Arrowhead a reason to really explode for the first time this year.
- Oakland is trying to avoid their ugly traditions by avoiding penalties and limiting turnovers. The Chiefs haven't won the turnover battle in a single game this year, and only last week against the Bucs could they keep the ratio even. Look for these disturbing trends to continue with the installment of a new Chiefs QB. Kansas City ends the day with a -2 turnover ratio, and still wins.
- Javier Arenas is making me complain about him much less nowadays. Look for him to improve his average yardage this week with some broken tackles on punt returns. I'd still put Devon Wylie in his place, though.
- With all the magical possibilities that come with a new starting QB, there come twice as many possibilities for disaster. Expect at least one interception from Mr. Popular today.
- In the name of tradition, the Raiders commit at least two egregious penalties to continue drives for KC. You still suck, Oakland. Don't ever forget it.