Giants-Chiefs: 5 Plays that led to the loss

Giants-Chiefs: 5 Plays that led to the loss
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Like the Washington Commanders in Week 1, the Kansas City Chiefs were sloppy. But teams can afford to be sloppy against the New York Giants. The Chiefs had several penalties that extended Giants’ drives or gave the Giants an excellent opportunity to capitalize. But, as we’ve witnessed for far too long, the Giants rarely do successfully seize upon the mistakes made by the opponent.

The Giants finished 2 of 14 on their third and fourth down conversions. Cam Skattebo was their leading rusher and receiver; they had just 281 yards of total offense in their home opener. The offense appeared hapless and unprepared. A complete difference from what we witnessed last week against a poorly orchestrated defense.

This game was tough to watch. Here are the five plays, or sequence of plays, that led to the Giants’ downfall.

Play 1: Mahomes with the strip

The Giants’ defense kept the game competitive and nearly came away with the play of the season. However, Patrick Mahomes had different plans:

Patrick Mahomes wisely tracked down Bobby Okereke and stripped the football away from the veteran linebacker, which prevented a scoop & score, and halted the potential seismic change in its nascent phase. The game was just six to six at this point. The Chiefs did have to punt two plays later, but the Giants’ offense did little with the football.

Play 2: Malik’s gotta be somewhere

Wilson’s second interception – in a tied game with 56 seconds left in the first half – was devastating for a Giants’ team that was bailed out by several Kansas City mistakes. Less than a minute after Mahomes stole the football from Okereke, Chiefs’ gunner, Joshua Williams, took a Kick Catch Interference penalty that gave the Giants excellent field position.

Then, on second-and-10, Nohl Williams was called for a face mask – tack on another 15 yards for New York, giving Russell Wilson this opportunity from the Kansas City 23-yard-line:

Inexcusable mistake by Wilson, who was late on the throw. The ball was underthrown and it was an easy interception for Jaylen Watson.

I would be a fool to assume the Giants would have scored on this possession, due to their dismal efficiency in the red zone and their overall offensive ineptitude; and because the Giants’ 38-year-old kicker hurt his groin in the pregame. Nevertheless, the play removed POSSIBLE points for the Giants and put Patrick Mahomes in the situation below.

Play 3: Bad sequence for Dru Phillips

The Giants defense forced an incompletion on third-and-ten with 27 seconds left in the first half. Phillips, however, was called for an illegal contact penalty that extended the drive. This happened on the next play:

It’s nearly impossible to cover for 10 seconds, but Phillips dragged Tyquan Thornton down. As tough as it may be to do, the consequence was substantial for the Giants. Thornton would conclude the Chiefs’ opening second-half drive with a touchdown as well, against Phillips.

Play(s) 4: Tyquon Thornton’s big game

Andy Reid and the...