In Week 5, the (2-2) Kansas City Chiefs step into a “Monday Night Football” matchup with a chance to prove that Week 4’s 37-20 victory over the Baltimore Ravens wasn’t just a bounce-back, but the start of something sustainable. Their opponent will be the (3-1) Jacksonville Jaguars — a team that may not carry the same postseason pedigree, but has quickly become one of the league’s hottest teams.
“They’re playing good football — and they’re coaching well,” head coach Andy Reid said of the Jaguars on
Thursday. “You can see the guys are listening to them and doing what they want. My hat goes off to them.”
In Sunday’s win, the Chiefs looked like contenders. Finally getting the protection he needed, quarterback Patrick Mahomes threw four touchdown passes. Wide receiver Xavier Worthy returned from a shoulder injury to claim five catches for 83 yards. But can they do that against a Jaguars defense that thrives on forcing mistakes?
“They catch the ball well, first of all, and they’re disciplined in their lanes on their zone drops,” said Reid. “[They’re] opportunistic on tipped balls — and then they’ve stripped out a couple of balls. They go after it; you have got to make sure you’re aware of that as you play them.”
Jacksonville leads the league with 13 turnovers — including an NFL-high nine interceptions. While Mahomes has been careful with the football — he’s thrown just one pick, which was during Week 2’s 20-17 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles — he knows he must be even sharper on Monday night.
“They’re causing the turnovers,” Mahomes said of the Jaguars’ defense. “It’s not like the turnovers are just happening. They’re punching the football out, tipping passes, intercepting when they get their hands on it.
“It’ll be a great challenge for us. We have to make sure we’re fundamentally sound as well. We can’t give them any opportunity, because they’re capitalizing on them.”
Defensively, Kansas City will be tested by a Jacksonville offense that excels at running the ball: it’s fourth in the league with 144 rushing yards per game. Jaguars head coach Liam Coen leans heavily on various kinds of misdirection to stress opposing defenses. Chiefs linebacker Leo Chenal notes that this puts a premium on defenders staying focused.
“What really sticks out is their use of pre-snap motion,” he observed. “Whether it’s jet motion or just moving guys across the formation, it’s really [about] having good eyes — and every single person has to be on the same page. If you get a jet guy — and then somebody’s swapping back —everybody’s got to be in their right gap.
“Then they’ll throw in a counter pass or something like that. So it’s just guys having good eyes, discipline in their technique, and trusting each other.”
For the Chiefs, this matchup is not just about climbing above 0.500. It’s about building upon last week’s success. While he knows there is still plenty of room for improvement, Mahomes believes that beating the Ravens clearly showed what the team can be. The challenge is carrying that momentum into Jacksonville — and succeeding against a defense that is built to punish mistakes.
“There’s still a lot to learn,” he said. “Early in the first half, there were some of those drives that stalled out like we had been doing earlier in the season. We’re trying to find ways to execute — especially earlier in football games — to build leads.
“Like I’ve always said, when you build a lead with [defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo] calling the defense, it really unleashes him to go out there. We’ll continue to work at the little things fundamentally and try to all be on the same page, so that we can execute at a higher level early — and then keep that momentum through the rest of the game.”