Third-quarter interception leads to key TD in win over Bills
Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Sean Smith was exhausted after he picked off an errant pass by Buffalo quarterback Jeff Tuel and returned it 101 yards for a touchdown on Sunday.
"I was definitely happy I made it," Smith said. "I wanted to celebrate, but I was too tired."
That's fine, because the Chiefs are suddenly breathing easier after their defense kept the team's perfect start to the NFL season intact.
Smith's interception and linebacker Tamba Hali's 11-yard fumble return for a touchdown aided the Chiefs in overcoming a pedestrian offense and their own leaky defense in securing a 23-13 road win over the Bills.
Kansas City (9-0) remained the NFL's only undefeated team and matched the best start in franchise history, set in 2003.
The Chiefs now enter their bye week before a key AFC West showdown against the Denver Broncos (7-1) on Nov 17.
If the only thing perfect about the Chiefs is their record so far, coach Andy Reid refuses to make any apologies.
"We're not going to make excuses for it," said Reid, who in his first year has the Chiefs continuing their worst-to-first run after a 2-14 finish last season. "We're pretty happy that we got the touchdowns. We'll take them any way we can get them."
The Chiefs' defense led the way, outscoring the Alex Smith-led offense, which was limited to three field goals. And the defense had to compensate for its own problems in having difficulty containing a Buffalo offense headed by Tuel, an undrafted rookie making his first career start.
Despite allowing a season-high 470 yards of offense and 25 first downs, the Chiefs were opportunistic in holding their ninth consecutive opponent to 17 points or less, matching an NFL record set by the 1977 Atlanta Falcons.
Smith's interception turned the momentum, tying the score at 10 after Tuel had marched the Bills 79 yards on the opening drive of the third quarter.
Hali then put the Chiefs ahead for good by scooping up TJ Graham's fumble - forced by cornerback Marcus Cooper - and running it in to put Kansas City ahead 20-13 with 12:47 left.
"We don't really care what people think," Hali said of the Chiefs' victories lacking style points. "Sometimes the stats don't really tell you the outcome."
Tell that to the Bills (3-6), who were left stunned and frustrated in attempting to figure out how they let this one slip away.
"Horrible," offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett said. "It was shocking even to our guys. We did everything we wanted; we just couldn't finish it."
The difference was turnovers, as the Chiefs turned Buffalo's three giveaways - two interceptions thrown by Tuel and Graham's fumble - into 17 points.
The loss marred what began as a solid outing by Tuel, who became the third quarterback to start for Buffalo this season.
He played in place of interim starter Thad Lewis, who was sidelined by bruised ribs, and with rookie starter EJ Manuel missing his fourth game with a sprained right knee.
Tuel's 139 yards passing in the first half were the most by a Bills quarterback in the first two quarters this season. And he was in a position to improve his numbers after marching Buffalo to the Kansas City 1 on the opening drive of the second half.
Facing third-and-goal, Tuel took a shotgun snap, and looked immediately to his right, where Graham was running a slant pattern. Tuel, however, failed to account for Smith, who easily picked off the pass at the goal line and then took off up the sideline.
"It's very frustrating," Tuel said. "That's 100 percent my fault."
Tuel finished 18 of 39 for 229 yards passing, and a 59-yard touchdown to Marquise Goodwin.
For Kansas City, Smith completed 19 of 29 passes for just 124 yards. Running back Jamaal Charles was held under 100 yards from scrimmage for the first time this season.
Kansas City also snapped a six-game losing streak at Orchard Park, winning there for the first time since Sept 28, 1986.
Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Sean Smith intercepts a pass intended for Buffalo Bills receiver TJ Graham, who is tackled by Kansas City's Marcus Cooper in the end zone during the third quarter of Sunday's game in Orchard Park, New York. Smith ran back the interception 101 yards for a touchdown as the Chiefs won 23-13. Gary Wiepert / Associated Press |
(China Daily 11/05/2013 page24)