-
Final
TB
ATL23
20 -
Final
CIN
CLE17
16 -
Final
MIA
IND8
33 -
Final
CAR
JAX10
26 -
Final
LV
NE20
13 -
Final
AZ
NO20
13 -
Final
PIT
NYJ34
32 -
Final
NYG
WAS6
21 -
Final
TEN
DEN12
20 -
Final
SF
SEA17
13 -
Final
DET
GB13
27 -
Final
HOU
LAR9
14 -
Final
BAL
BUF40
41 -
Final
MIN
CHI27
24 -
Final
DAL
PHI20
24 -
Final
KC
LAC21
27
Chiefs Full Throttle
- Updated: September 12, 2022

As the Chiefs began the post-Tyreek Hill era, quarterback Patrick Mahomes sliced and diced the Cardinals’ secondary to the tune of 30 of 39 for 360 yards and 5 touchdowns. Sometimes, press conferences are worth taking with a grain of salt. But the team messaging throughout the offseason was that though Hill was a generational player, the Chiefs would be just fine, adding four new receivers as they retained Mecole Hardman.
On Wednesday, Mahomes apologized to fantasy owners because the scoring was going to come from “everywhere.”
As we would find out against the Cardinals, Mahomes’ words were only partially true.
Since Mahomes took over as starter in 2018, tight end Travis has been his most usual suspect. Kelce served the quarterback reliably on Sunday, finishing with eight catches for 121 yards and a touchdown. As somewhat expected, wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster was next up with eight targets, finishing with six catches and 79 yards. Despite an untimely fumble that could have kept the Cardinals in the game, Smith-Schuster looked comfortable as Mahomes trusted to throw it to him.
In all, Mahomes connected with 10 different receivers — and even the running game looked good. The Chiefs didn’t run much, but they pushed the Cardinals around when they did. Even running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire looked the part, completing a 74-scrimmage yard game and notching two receiving touchdowns.
The Chiefs’ offense may not be as explosive without Hill — but in its first look, it would be hard to describe it as less efficient. To be fair, this Cardinals team was beat up, missing defensive end J.J. Watt. But you can’t pick who you play — and against an injured team, the Chiefs both dominated and exploited its opponent.
Sans a rough early touchdown drive that required a second-and-18, 24-yard pass to Greg Dortch and a 21-yard scramble by quarterback Kyler Murray, it could be argued the Chiefs defense was just as good as its counterpart.
Led by safety Juan Thornhill, who had a near-interception as part of two total pass breakups, Steve Spagnuolo’s unit played quicker, faster, stronger. There had been some fans rightly upset when Kansas City opted to move on from Tyrann Mathieu in favor of Justin Reid, but the move paid dividends right away through his play on defense — and yes, even in what had seemed like a gag: his value as an emergency kicker. Reid hit an extra point — and on kickoffs, was exploding through the ball for touchbacks.
The Chiefs made Murray uncomfortable throughout the game, hitting him four times and only allowing only 29 rushing yards (including that one, long 21-yard run). Rookie defensive end George Karlaftis earned one of those quarterback hits and batted down a pass at the line. The late-camp signing of veteran Carlos Dunlap paid off with a sack. Cornerback L’Jarius Sneed also had a sack and two quarterback hits. As a team, the Chiefs recorded seven passes defensed. Just like on defense, the Cardinals’ offense was missing key pieces in DeAndre Hopkins and Rondale Moore — but still, the Chiefs new-look defense started especially strong. We certainly couldn’t say that in 2021.