KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Patrick Mahomes did just about everything for the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday. He even toted Tyreek Hill back to the sideline after a touchdown catch.
In near-flawless execution of coach Andy Reid’s run-pass option attack, the reigning Super Bowl M.V.P. Award winner threw for 416 yards and five touchdowns, leading the A.F.C. West-leading Chiefs to a 35-9 romp over the winless Jets.
“I mean, it’s always fun to go out and score touchdowns and do all that type of stuff,” Mahomes said, “but we’ve been saying it all year long, we have a lot of ways to beat teams. Today, they did a good job of stuffing up the run. We took it to the air and threw the ball and did it that way. It’s about taking what’s there and finding ways to win.”
Hill wound up with two of the touchdown catches. On the first, he celebrated by jumping into the stands and tossing the football to a fan, and Mahomes was there to help him back onto the field. On the second, Mahomes claimed to see Hill “a little banged up” and decided to carry him back to the Kansas City sideline.
“Just having a little bit of fun,” Mahomes said of the ride with a wry smile. Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce added 109 yards receiving and a touchdown, Mecole Hardman and Demarcus Robinson also scored, helping the Chiefs (7-1) give Andy Reid his 229th win to move into a tie with Curly Lambeau for the fifth most in N.F.L. history.
Le’Veon Bell, getting a crack at the Jets just a few weeks after they released him, was held to just 7 yards rushing with three catches for another 31 yards — though it wasn’t as if Kansas City needed him.
Darnold, who was without top receivers Jamison Crowder and Breshad Perriman because of injuries, was just 18-of-30 for 133 yards as the Jets fell to 0-8 for the first time since the 1996 team of Rich Kotite. “It’s obviously not where we wanted to be,” said Jets Coach Adam Gase, whose team went three-and-out on five of its first six second-half possessions and finished with 221 yards of total offense. “I’m just like everybody else from the aspect of, I’m doing this job to win, not to go out there and get my face stomped in.”
The Jets next face the New England Patriots (2-5), themselves reeling from a four-game losing streak, at MetLife Stadium next Monday night.
The Chiefs were astounding 19-point favorites coming into the game, and the opening series made it clear that wouldn’t be nearly enough. Mahomes was 5-of-5 for 85 yards, and he finished off the 90-yard drive with a 30-yard pass to Hardman.
While the Jets answered with the first of three first-half field goals, the Chiefs kept scoring touchdowns.
Mahomes threw a dart over the middle to Hill for a 36-yard touchdown on their next drive, then he flipped a nifty pass underneath the Jets coverage to Kelce for his third touchdown pass of the half and a 21-9 lead at the break.
Any hope the Jets could keep building some momentum with offensive coordinator Dowell Loggains calling plays for the second straight week evaporated in the second half. They went three-and-out on four of their first three series and, when they finally picked up a first down, they promptly fumbled the ball away on their next play.
Darnold took a big hit late in the game and appeared to be favoring his right shoulder, which he sprained against the Denver Broncos on Oct. 1 causing him to miss two games. Gase said the quarterback will be re-evaluated but “seems to be OK.”
It wasn’t unlike last week, when the Jets managed four yards the entire second half against the Buffalo Bills.
There wasn’t much lull in the Chiefs offense, though. They may have squandered a scoring chance when Bell was stopped on fourth-and-1 at the Jets’ 14-yard line, but they reached the end zone a few minutes later anyway. Mahomes hit Robinson from 26 yards out for his fourth touchdown pass, giving Kansas City a 28-9 lead late in the third quarter.
Mahomes capped his big day with his second touchdown throw to Hill early in the fourth quarter. His five touchdown passes were second only to a pair of six-touchdown games he had against the Pittsburgh Steelers and Los Angeles Rams — incidentally, the Jets have four touchdown passes all season — and his yardage total was the fourth most of his career.
“It’s funny, we have this whole R.P.O. thing going on and some of those runs ended up being throws,” Reid said, “but we’ll just count them as yards. I thought it was a nice job by Patrick and again, he had complete command of everything going on.
Source: Football - nytimes.com