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NFL : Teaser Line Matchup
Sunday 12/8/2013Line$ LineOU LineScore
KANSAS CITY
 
WASHINGTON
-3.5  

+3.5  
-160

+140

44
 
45
Final
10

KANSAS CITY (9 - 3) at WASHINGTON (3 - 9)
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Week 14 Sunday, 12/8/2013 1:00 PM
Board SideTotal
131KANSAS CITY+3Over 38
132WASHINGTON+9Under 50
ADVANCED TEAM STATS
KANSAS CITY - Current Season Performance
 Straight UpAgainst SpreadTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsW-LO-UScoreHalfYardsYPPTOScoreHalfYardsYPPTO
All Games9-3+5.86-64-824.813.0337.2(5.3)1.017.88.6366.2(5.9)2.2
Road Games4-1+3.34-11-424.012.6318.6(5)0.615.07.0369.0(5.5)2.8
Last 3 Games0-3-3.50-32-127.715.0397.0(6.2)1.334.313.7484.3(7)1.0
Grass Games8-3+4.85-64-725.013.9348.8(5.4)1.118.38.5356.8(5.9)2.1
KANSAS CITY - Current Season Statistics
 RushingPassingTotal
 PPGHalfFDTOPATT-YDSYPRCMP-ATTPCTYDSPYAATT-YDSYPPYPPT
Offense (All Games)24.813.020.331:4627-124(4.6)22-3759.3%213(5.8)64-337(5.3)(13.6)
Opponents Defensive Avg.25.21221.131:5127-112(4.1)23-3761.6%251(6.7)64-363(5.6)(14.4)
Offense Road Games24.012.619.032:2128-125(4.5)21-3656.6%193(5.3)64-319(5)(13.3)
Defense (All Games)17.88.618.828:1426-117(4.6)21-3756.3%249(6.8)62-366(5.9)(20.5)
Opponents Offensive Avg.24.212.120.530:3527-111(4.1)23-3761.7%252(6.9)64-363(5.7)(15)
Defense Road Games15.07.020.227:3929-156(5.3)19-3849.7%213(5.6)68-369(5.5)(24.6)
KANSAS CITY - Turnovers, Penalties and Special Teams Statistics
 Turnovers LostThird DownsFourth DownsKickoff ReturnsPunt ReturnsPenalties
 INTFLTODIFF#-MADEPCT#-MADEPCTKR-YDSYPKRPR-YDSYPPRPEN-YDS
Stats For (All Games)0.50.51.01.214-535.9%0-016.7%2-68(28.3)4-38(9.7)7-49
Opponents Avg. Stats Against0.90.61.51.914-539.3%1-038.7%2-56(23.8)23-2(9.7)6-53
Stats For (Road Games)0.20.40.62.214-426.8%1-00.0%2-48(26.6)4-33(8.2)7-47
Stats Against (All Games)1.21.02.2 14-431.5%1-046.2%2-56(24.8)3-17(6.5)8-57
Opponents Avg. Stats For1.10.71.8 14-538.6%1-051.1%2-58(24)19-2(8.5)7-59
Stats Against (Road Games)1.61.22.8 14-430.6%1-028.6%2-45(25.1)3-15(5.4)7-48

WASHINGTON - Current Season Performance
 Straight UpAgainst SpreadTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsW-LO-UScoreHalfYardsYPPTOScoreHalfYardsYPPTO
All Games3-9-73-96-622.49.9386.2(5.8)1.730.215.7374.1(6.2)1.4
Home Games2-4-2.82-43-324.212.0385.7(5.8)1.529.316.3373.8(6.2)1.3
Last 3 Games0-3-3.10-30-313.06.7313.3(4.9)1.325.013.7330.7(5.9)0.7
Grass Games3-7-4.83-75-522.68.9376.8(5.7)1.829.716.0396.9(6.4)1.5
WASHINGTON - Current Season Statistics
 RushingPassingTotal
 PPGHalfFDTOPATT-YDSYPRCMP-ATTPCTYDSPYAATT-YDSYPPYPPT
Offense (All Games)22.49.922.131:4030-149(4.9)22-3760.9%237(6.5)67-386(5.8)(17.2)
Opponents Defensive Avg.24.611.721.531:5627-114(4.2)24-3862.2%264(7)65-378(5.8)(15.4)
Offense Home Games24.212.022.532:0730-142(4.7)24-3665.8%244(6.7)67-386(5.8)(16)
Defense (All Games)30.215.721.728:5027-109(4)22-3367.0%265(8.1)60-374(6.2)(12.4)
Opponents Offensive Avg.25.513.120.930:3828-121(4.4)22-3562.4%255(7.3)62-376(6)(14.7)
Defense Home Games29.316.321.228:5328-115(4.2)20-3263.7%259(8)60-374(6.2)(12.7)
WASHINGTON - Turnovers, Penalties and Special Teams Statistics
 Turnovers LostThird DownsFourth DownsKickoff ReturnsPunt ReturnsPenalties
 INTFLTODIFF#-MADEPCT#-MADEPCTKR-YDSYPKRPR-YDSYPPRPEN-YDS
Stats For (All Games)1.10.61.7-0.214-643.1%1-035.7%3-53(19.4)2-13(6.6)6-53
Opponents Avg. Stats Against10.61.61.914-539.0%1-045.3%3-64(24.3)18-2(8.9)6-55
Stats For (Home Games)1.00.51.5-0.214-642.9%1-042.9%4-76(18.9)2-13(7.9)7-53
Stats Against (All Games)0.90.51.4 12-435.9%1-175.0%3-61(20.3)2-32(15.9)5-44
Opponents Avg. Stats For1.10.81.8 13-539.3%1-056.1%3-59(23.5)17-2(9.3)6-55
Stats Against (Home Games)0.80.51.3 12-433.8%1-180.0%3-65(18.7)2-31(14.5)5-42
Average power rating of opponents played: KANSAS CITY 18.5,  WASHINGTON 21.1
SCHEDULE AND RESULTS
KANSAS CITY - Season Results
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateOpponentScoreSULineATSTot.O/URushingPassingTORushingPassingTO
10/13/2013OAKLAND24-7W-8W41.5U27-11114-31-105127-12518-34-1493
10/20/2013HOUSTON17-16W-6.5L38.5U32-12623-34-231224-7315-25-2211
10/27/2013CLEVELAND23-17W-7L39O29-13624-36-195015-5722-36-2831
11/3/2013@ BUFFALO23-13W-4.5W41U23-9519-29-115038-24118-39-2293
11/17/2013@ DENVER17-27L7.5L49U25-14421-45-200136-10424-40-3231
11/24/2013SAN DIEGO38-41L-3L43O18-11426-38-281227-10427-39-3870
12/1/2013DENVER28-35L5L50.5O25-15926-42-293131-13222-35-4032
12/8/2013@ WASHINGTON            
12/15/2013@ OAKLAND            
12/22/2013INDIANAPOLIS            
12/29/2013@ SAN DIEGO            

WASHINGTON - Season Results
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateOpponentScoreSULineATSTot.O/URushingPassingTORushingPassingTO
10/13/2013@ DALLAS16-31L5.5L52U33-21619-39-217219-4818-30-1651
10/20/2013CHICAGO45-41W1W47.5O43-20918-29-290122-14017-28-2191
10/27/2013@ DENVER21-45L11L58.5O28-11220-39-154534-10730-44-3394
11/3/2013SAN DIEGO30-24W-2W49O40-20923-32-291116-6929-46-3412
11/7/2013@ MINNESOTA27-34L0L48O36-19124-37-242024-9121-27-2161
11/17/2013@ PHILADELPHIA16-24L4L54U38-19117-35-236233-12617-26-2760
11/25/2013SAN FRANCISCO6-27L5.5L45U27-10017-27-90133-7615-24-2281
12/1/2013NY GIANTS17-24L0L45.5U31-13924-32-184123-8022-28-2061
12/8/2013KANSAS CITY            
12/15/2013@ ATLANTA            
12/22/2013DALLAS            
12/29/2013@ NY GIANTS            
KEY GAME INFORMATION
KANSAS CITY: New head coach Andy Reid will bring his West Coast offense to K.C., but unlike in Philly, his personnel with the Chiefs will force a more run-heavy approach. Jamaal Charles will be the focal point of the offense, as the Chiefs will incorporate a lot of zone blocking and stretch plays outside the tackles. They'll also use a lot of shotgun and spread formations to create space for Charles. Reid rode LeSean McCoy hard in Philly, and Charles is looking at a similarly huge workload. Rookie Knile Davis is coming off a rough season at Arkansas, but could emerge as the thunder in the Chiefs' backfield. Reid and new offensive coordinator Doug Pederson, most recently his QB coach with the Eagles, will run a classic West Coast offense. Alex Smith will work off play-action a lot and they'll move the pocket around for him. Dwayne Bowe will spend most of his time at flanker as the No. 1 receiver in this offense, with Donnie Avery stretching the field as a split end. The Chiefs are built for a lot of two-tight end sets, with Anthony Fasano in-line and more likely to stay in and block, and rookie Travis Kelce as the pass-catching H-back. Reid has talked up Dexter McCluster, but he figures to be only a part-time weapon. In the red zone, Smith will likely be put on a lot of sprint-outs on what are run-pass options. No team forced fewer turnovers (13) than the Chiefs last year, who had just four takeaways over the final eight games. New defensive coordinator Bob Sutton will try to mix things up with his 3-4 base that provides multiple looks and will blitz more than last year. The Chiefs had only five sacks coming from their defensive line in 2012, but OLBs Justin Houston and Tamba Hali combined for 19 sacks. The team added free agent CBs Dunta Robinson and Sean Smith to give the front seven more time to apply the pressure.
WASHINGTON: Only Seattle was more run-heavy than the Redskins last season, and even when he didn't keep it, everything they did was based on Robert Griffin III. It's head coach Mike Shanahan's classic zone blocking up front in the running game, but with the added threat of Griffin keeping and rolling out each time. It adds another dimension to an already excellent running scheme. Alfred Morris is a three-down workhorse and will take the overwhelming majority of the reps again. Evan Royster and Roy Helu will battle for the scraps, with Royster's versatility giving him an edge. The passing game works off the running game, using a lot of play-action and rollouts for Griffin. Pierre Garcon is the closest thing to a No. 1 receiver, getting a lot of catch-and-run and crossing opportunities, and getting a fair share of bubble screens as well. They use three receivers often, with Josh Morgan staying in the lineup because he blocks so well. He'll get only a handful of catches as a possession receiver. Leonard Hankerson will push Santana Moss for third receiver reps. While H-back Fred Davis is close to a No. 2 receiver, the backs are rarely used to catch passes. The Redskins remain run-heavy in the red zone, with RGIII running outside the pocket or Morris pounding between the tackles. Because the Redskins stuffed the run so effectively (96 YPG allowed, 5th in NFL), opponents chose to throw on them more than any NFL team (39.7 attempts per game) and piled up serious yardage. Rookie CB David Amerson and former Bucs CB E.J. Biggers should help the overworked secondary. Six different defenders scored touchdowns last year, but DE/OLB Ryan Kerrigan (8 sacks) was the only player with at least five sacks. Ageless ILB London Fletcher, 38, is still productive, and OLB Brian Orakpo is now healthy.
PREVIEW
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PA SPORTSTICKER PRO FOOTBALL PREVIEW (KANSAS CITY-WASHINGTON) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

*Chiefs-Redskins Preview* =========================

By JEFF MEZYDLO STATS Senior Writer

As much as the Kansas City Chiefs have struggled of late, they're still in much better shape than the reeling Washington Redskins.

Though the Chiefs are trying to avoid a fourth consecutive loss, they have a chance to clinch a playoff spot and hand the Redskins a fifth straight defeat Sunday.

Kansas City is the first team in NFL history to win its first nine games then lose three in a row. However, it leads the AFC wild-card race and can secure its first playoff berth since 2010 with a win at Washington (3-9) and a loss or tie by Miami or Baltimore on Sunday.

If the Chiefs tie the Redskins, they would need the Dolphins or Ravens to lose.

"We still have everything we want in front of us," quarterback Alex Smith said. "It's no time to point fingers or do anything like that. Just continue to do what we've been doing."

What the Chiefs have done since their Week 10 bye has not worked.

Kansas City allowed 111 points through the first nine games while facing two teams that currently have winning records - Dallas and Philadelphia, both 7-5. The Chiefs since have sandwiched two losses to Denver around a defeat to San Diego, giving up 103 points.

All three defeats came by 10 or fewer points. Six of their first nine results were decided by the same margin.

"Earlier in the year we were coming out the other end of it," Smith said. "We just have to continue to fight. I think this team has that kind of character."

Kansas City didn't allow more than 283 passing yards in the first nine weeks but the Broncos and Chargers averaged 371.0 in the last three. Peyton Manning threw for 403 yards with five touchdowns and two interceptions in a 35-28 win at Kansas City last Sunday.

Kansas City's struggles against the pass might stem from a recent lack of pressure. The Chiefs recorded 35 sacks in the first seven games but have two in the past five and one during the skid.

Justin Houston, the team leader with 11, could miss a second straight game with an elbow injury.

Kansas City coach Andy Reid won't use injuries or facing the AFC-leading Broncos twice as an excuse for his team's poor play.

"I told the team this isn't college football. This isn't the end of the season," said Reid, who went 17-11 against the Redskins during his 14 years in Philadelphia. "Now it's important that we get ourselves back and ready to go, and finish the season like we're capable of doing, and our guys, coaches and players, will do that."

Despite the slide, Kansas City ranks ninth in the league with 24.8 points allowed per game.

The Chiefs have posed a difficult challenge for the Redskins through the years, going 7-1 and winning five straight in the all-time series. Dwayne Bowe had six receptions for 109 yards and Tamba Hali recorded a safety during Kansas City's 14-6 win at Washington in 2009 in a game that did not feature a touchdown.

Ending the head-to-head losing streak may not be easy for the Redskins, who have been eliminated from playoff contention after winning the NFC East last season.

"You don't like to play for pride, but sometimes that's the card that's dealt," said coach Mike Shanahan, whose team last dropped five straight during a six-game slide Oct. 16-Nov. 20, 2011. "That's where we're at right now."

Washington blew a 14-0 lead at home and lost 24-17 loss to the New York Giants on Sunday. Though the officials' incorrect movement of the down marker on the Redskins' final drive led the team to believe it had a first down when instead it was third, Pierre Garcon had the ball stripped after a reception two plays later that would have given them the actual first down but instead sealed the loss.

The Redskins also committed eight penalties and Alfred Morris ran the ball twice after halftime en route to finishing with a career-low 26 yards on 11 carries.

Though Washington's postseason hopes have ended, Shanahan insists his team will not quit.

"You play just as though you were in the playoffs," he said. "You want to spoil somebody else's year. You want to play at a high level. You're always being evaluated for the future. And that never changes."

Robert Griffin III, who completed his first 12 passes for 111 yards, finished with 207 and a TD to become the fourth player since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger to throw for at least 3,000 yards in each of his first two seasons. He also ran for a season-high 88 yards on 12 attempts.

Garcon has a career-high 84 receptions and is 20 yards shy of his first 1,000-yard season. He caught five passes for 125 yards and two TDs against Kansas City in 2011 while with Indianapolis.

Kansas City's Jamaal Charles is second in the league with 1,463 total yards and tied for third with 11 overall touchdowns.

Game Notes:


Last Updated: 3/28/2024 12:48:56 PM EST.


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