Chiefs most to blame after playoff fate gets sealed vs. Chargers

Chiefs most to blame after playoff fate gets sealed vs. Chargers
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For the first time in more than a decade, the Kansas City Chiefs are officially watching the playoffs from the outside. Sunday’s 16–13 home loss to the Los Angeles Chargers was the end of an era defined by inevitability. In a season where margins steadily shrank and mistakes quietly stacked up, the Chiefs finally ran out of escape routes. Arrowhead became the site of Kansas City’s formal elimination from postseason contention. It was a sobering moment that underscored just how far this team had drifted from its championship standard.

A familiar script ends the season

The Chiefs’s loss officially eliminated them from playoff contention for the first time since 2014. Kansas City jumped out to an early 13–3 lead but failed to score again. Their offense unraveled behind a porous offensive line that surrendered five sacks. They also produced a disastrous third quarter that netted minus-four total yards.

Patrick Mahomes finished 16-of-28 for 189 yards with no touchdowns and one interception before exiting late with a leg injury. The run game offered little support as well. Isiah Pacheco and Kareem Hunt combined for minimal production. Meanwhile, backup QB Gardner Minshew’s desperation-drive interception to Derwin James sealed the Chargers’ comeback. Los Angeles completed its first season sweep of Kansas City since 2013. They rallied with timely field goals and late defensive plays to close the book on the Chiefs’ 2025 season.

Here we’ll try to look at and discuss the Kansas City Chiefs most to blame for their Week 15 loss to the Chargers.

Patrick Mahomes

There is no escaping the truth here, even with context and compassion applied. Mahomes did not lose the season on Sunday. However, he played a decisive role in ending it.

Mahomes’ numbers by the game’s end were pedestrian by his standards. That said, the moments mattered far more than the box score. The fourth-quarter interception at the Chargers’ 1-yard line was devastating. With Kansas City driving and down 16–13, Mahomes tried to force a jump-ball to Hunt. The Chargers read it perfectly. Game flipped. Season tilted.

Mahomes’ late knee injury looms larger than the loss itself, of course. This is especially true with the offseason ahead. Still, this was another game where timing felt off and rhythm never developed. Mahomes appeared to be pressed in moments where patience once defined him. For a franchise quarterback who has built a career on rewriting endings, this season offered far too many final chapters written in frustration.

Running backs

Kansas City’s ground game has quietly vanished when it’s needed most. Against one of the league’s better defenses, the Chiefs’ running backs were overwhelmed. Pacheco Hunt, and Brashard Smith combined for just 34 yards on 19 carries. That stat line simply cannot support an offense already struggling to protect its quarterback and finish drives.

Hunt did his job in short-yardage situations late. He even converted two third downs on the Chiefs’ final possession. Outside of Mahomes’ 12-yard touchdown run, though, the ground attack offered no explosiveness,...