KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The most turnover-prone team in the NFL has two banged-up quarterbacks who are struggling anyway, a head coach who appears out of touch with the offense and a defense that just gave up 26 points to the Oakland Raiders.
Is there any surprise the Kansas City Chiefs are 1-6?
Now, they don’t even have a chance to ruminate over their dismal showing Sunday. The Chiefs have to be back on the field Thursday night at San Diego, where they’ll try to end a four-game skid that has positioned them well to have the first overall pick in the NFL draft.
“When you lose, it gets tough on you, mentally, you know? You wonder about who you played, what you could have done differently, why things are happening the way they’re happening. You get down a little bit,” head coach Romeo Crennel said Monday. “We have to get them to put this behind us.”
That’s not exactly going to be easy.
For one thing, the Chiefs aren’t sure who they’ll have under center after Brady Quinn took a blow to the head and Matt Cassel got banged up late in the game against Oakland.
Quinn was being evaluated for a possible concussion on Monday, and Crennel said he’ll remain the starter if he’s cleared to play. Otherwise, Cassel will be back under center after losing the starting job last week due to his own poor performance the first five games of the season.
Quinn was just 2 of 4 for a single yard before getting hurt, either on a sack by Rolando McClain or on the ensuing play, when he threw an interception. Cassel didn’t fare a whole lot better, throwing for 218 yards with a touchdown and an interception in the 26-16 defeat.
The two interceptions thrown by Chiefs quarterbacks, along with two fumbles, ran the team’s league-leading total to 25 turnovers this season.
Then there was the fact that Jamaal Charles only had five carries for four yards against Oakland. When asked why Charles got so few attempts, Crennel said, “Now, that I’m not exactly sure either.”
Still, Charles only had eight touches in the game. By comparison, the slow-footed Cassel led the team in rushing with seven carries for 35 yards.
“When you’re ahead, you can run it more,” Crennel said. “When you’re behind, generally you try to throw it to get chunks of yards and move down the field a little faster.”
Therein lays another one of the Chiefs’ problems: They’ve never played from ahead.
All season long.
The Chiefs are the first team since at least 1940 that has gone through its first seven games without holding a lead in regulation, according to STATS LLC. Their only victory came when Ryan Succop kicked the winning field goal against the Saints in overtime.
“All the time we go in planning to get a lead, or planning to score so we can have a lead, but here again, 3-0, 6-0 and 6-3, that’s not even a touchdown’s difference there,” Crennel said. “So even though it might not be a lead, you can still catch up really easily from that difference.
“Now as soon as it gets to be a 14- or 21-point lead, then it’s a different deal.”
There’s been plenty of those deals this season, too — blowout losses to the Falcons, Bills and Buccaneers. It’s little wonder that two more banners, paid for by fans, were towed by an airplane over Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday pleading for general manager Scott Pioli to be fired.
The Twitter handle (at)saveourchiefs, which had a hand in the banners over the stadium, went over 100,000 followers over the weekend.
Anger has turned to apathy. Cynicism has set in.
“As a player, you get tired of losing, and that’s where we are now,” Pro Bowl linebacker Derrick Johnson said. “We have to stick together. We do more together than apart. It’s one of those year’s It’s going to be a tough year, and we have to stick it out.”
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Sunday
At Kansas City, Mo.
Arrowhead Stadium
Oakland 26, Kansas City 16
Oakland 3 10 10 3 — 26
Kansas City 0 6 3 7 — 16
SCORING SUMMARY
First Quarter
Oak — FG Janikowski 36, 9:51.
Second Quarter
Oak — FG Janikowski 35, 14:44.
KC — FG Succop 30, 10:21.
KC — FG Succop 42, 4:12.
Oak — Moore 9 pass from Palmer (Janikowski kick), :49.
Third Quarter
Oak — FG Janikowski 29, 13:58.
KC — FG Succop 52, 8:40.
Oak — Heyward-Bey 32 pass from Palmer (Janikowski kick), 5:40.
Fourth Quarter
Oak — FG Janikowski 32, 8:14.
KC — McCluster 10 pass from Cassel (Succop kick), 2:27.
A — 74,730.
TEAM STATISTICS
Oak KC
First downs 15 17
Total Net Yards 344 299
Rushes-yards 34-135 22-102
Passing 209 197
Punt Returns 3-38 5-59
Kickoff Returns 2-46 2-52
Interceptions Ret. 2-25 1-17
Comp-Att-Int 14-28-1 22-34-2
Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 3-22
Punts 6-42.7 5-47.2
Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-2
Penalties-Yards 2-20 5-40
Time of Possession 28:58 31:02
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING — Oakland, McFadden 29-114, Goodson 4-22, Palmer 1-(minus 1). Kansas City, Cassel 7-35, Hillis 4-23, Quinn 2-18, McCluster 2-15, Draughn 2-7, Charles 5-4.
PASSING — Oakland, Palmer 14-28-1-209. Kansas City, Cassel 20-30-1-218, Quinn 2-4-1-1.
RECEIVING — Oakland, Moore 5-96, McFadden 4-23, Myers 3-49, Heyward-Bey 1-32, Streater 1-9. Kansas City, McCluster 6-54, Moeaki 4-57, Bowe 3-65, O’Connell 3-18, Charles 3-6, Baldwin 1-7, Draughn 1-7, Hillis 1-5.