
The Kansas City Chiefs don’t look like a 5-5 football team on paper, but yet they are closer to missing the playoffs than to go back fo the Super Bowl.
The defending AFC champions enter Week 12 as one of the NFL‘s most productive offenses – top-10 in scoring (25.4 PPG), total offense (364.2 YPG), third-down conversions (41.3%), successful play rate (53.6%), passing yards (2,625), and total touchdowns (30).
Advanced metrics like EPA even grade Kansas City as the second-best offense in the league. And yet, if the season ended today, the defending AFC champions would be watching the playoffs from home. Why? Because for all the yards, points, and efficiency, the Chiefs have faltered at the worst possible times. Their biggest issue isn’t scheme or talent – it’s execution in critical moments.
A great offense that keeps leaving the door open
All five of the Chiefs‘ losses have come by just one score. Three of them were decided by a single field goal. Take last week’s loss to the Denver Broncos. Kansas City had two late fourth-quarter possessions – one with the lead, one with the game tied – and failed to capitalize on either, punting both times.
These are the kinds of moments that have separated this Chiefs team from its usual championship standard. The margins are razor thin, and right now Kansas City isn’t finishing the plays that swing the outcomes of close games. And then comes the third-quarter tone-setter problem
There’s also a hidden trend quietly defining their season. In all five of Kansas City‘s wins, they scored a touchdown on the opening drive of the third quarter. In their five losses, they’ve done it just once (back in Week 1 vs. the Chargers). That first possession out of halftime has been a true barometer for how the Chiefs finish games – either setting up a surge or foreshadowing a letdown. Against an 8-2 Colts team riding one of the league’s hottest streaks, Kansas City cannot afford another slow start to the second half.
Home sweet (dominant) home
If the Chiefs need a spark, Arrowhead might be it. Since Week 4, Kansas City is 4-0 at home, outscoring opponents by an average of 20.5 points per game. Patrick Mahomes has been at his sharpest in Kansas City as well, throwing a league-leading 14 touchdown passes at home against just three interceptions.
This week’s matchup with Indianapolis even mirrors their earlier showdown with Detroit. The Chiefs entered that October game off a close, frustrating road loss – and responded by dominating the No. 1 scoring offense in the league in all three phases.
They’ll need that same level of complete performance to slow down the red-hot Colts and get their season back on track. A season-defining Sunday at Arrowhead . At 5-5, the Chiefs‘ playoff margin for error has evaporated. They have the firepower. They have the quarterback. They even have the analytics on their side. What they don’t have is the execution when it matters most.
Against Indianapolis – a team with an 8-2 record and serious AFC aspirations – Kansas City has a chance to send a message: that the reigning conference champs are still very much in the fight. But if the Chiefs don’t start turning opportunities into points late in close games, one of the NFL’s best offenses will continue to be one of its most puzzling teams.