Chiefs Fear the Worst, but Escape
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — When the Arizona Cardinals scored quickly in the fourth quarter to get within a touchdown, the Kansas City Chiefs feared the worst.
“Losing six games in a row, you tend to lose your confidence,†linebacker Donnie Edwards said. “Everybody was thinking, ‘Don’t let it happen again, don’t let it happen again.’ â€
So they didn’t.
The longest losing streak in Marty Schottenheimer’s 15-year coaching career and the longest for the Chiefs in a non-strike season since 1985 came to an end Sunday with a 34-24 victory over the Cardinals.
Not only had the Chiefs (5-7) lost six in a row, they had blown a 17-point, fourth-quarter lead against San Diego Nov. 22.
“The guys on the sideline were saying, ‘Oh, no, not again,’ †safety Jerome Woods said.
Rich Gannon threw three touchdown passes and the Chiefs, struggling with many of the same mistakes that marked their six-game slide, took a 31-17 lead with 10:26 left on Derrick Alexander’s 15-yard touchdown catch.
But the Cardinals (6-6), who had moved into playoff contention by winning three of their last four, answered with an 80-yard drive aided by a pass interference call and made it 31-24 on Mario Bates’ one-yard touchdown plunge.
“We’re human beings. Doubt came into our minds,†linebacker Anthony Davis said.
Not until Pete Stoyanovich kicked an 18-yard field goal for a 10-point lead with 1:57 left was that doubt removed.
“There’s a lot of fight in this football team,†said Gannon, who completed 21 of 28 passes for 231 yards.
Arizona’s Jake Plummer completed 20 of 37 passes for 250 yards.
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