‘Aside from a 49-yard screen pass to Holmes against Oakland, Green has not hit a pass play longer than 27 yards in the last two games.’
Archives for November 17, 2002
What’s wrong with Morton? Maybe nothing
‘The Chiefs are wondering about Morton, too. They invested a $5.5 million signing bonus for, through nine games, 16 catches and one touchdown?’
Chiefs could use more vocal leadership
‘The Chiefs need a lightning rod, a personality that riles up the team and the fan base. Yes, the team got out of control a few years ago when Marty Schottenheimer recruited 25 percent of the team from a halfway house. Dick Vermeil has done a nice job cleaning up Marty’s mess and reshaping the image of the Chiefs. But this team is too nice and too humble.’
Chiefs have toughest schedule in the NFL
‘Chiefs’ opponents have a combined 46-35 record — the last four opponents alone are a combined 30-12.’
Chiefs must put heat on Bledsoe
‘”We’ve got to get to him and not allow him the time to pick you apart the way he can do,” said Hicks, Kansas City’s sack leader with five of the team’s 15. “We have to get after him and take some of the pressure off our secondary.”‘
Defenses holding back Gonzalez
‘”People hold him — tackle him! — so much. I’ve seen him spun around 360 degrees to get into the route and it’s not called.”‘
Sedgwick native has Pro Bowl credentials
‘But when the Bills’ offense stalls, it turns to a Sedgwick native, Larry and Jeannie Moorman’s son, to punt. And like Bledsoe, Moulds, Price and Henry, Brian Moorman is having a Pro Bowl-caliber season.’
Can the Chiefs defense continue its solid play against Bledsoe and the Bills?
The Bills’ offense, particulary its second-ranked passing attack, will be a huge test for the Chiefs, who are still last in the NFL in total defense. After holding Oakland to 10 points and San Francisco to 17, the Chiefs’ success this week will be based more on execution rather than doing anything fancy.
Drew Bledsoe is surrounded by quality personnel, with Eric Moulds, Peerless Price, Josh Reed and Larry Centers. Facing a multitude of talent is more of a problem for the Chiefs than the Bills’ scheme. The Bills have more than one or two players to throw to. The Chiefs will have to play a balanced style of defense. If they get too focused on one or two players, the Bills have three others who can burn them.
O'Shei's Three Keys to the Game
In the NFL, once one team finds a strategy that works against a tough opponent, other teams will try it, too. So if the Bills do happen to face a zone defense designed to limit Bledsoe to short passes, they'll have to rely on quick passes and steady running. Against the Patriots, Bledsoe threw for 300-plus yards, but the Bills' ground game was virtually grounded. Thus, Buffalo managed only seven points.