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Patriots’ Domination of Chiefs Is Complete

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From Associated Press

After two narrow victories against mediocre teams, the New England Patriots wanted to make a statement. They did it, loudly, against one of the best.

Robert Edwards made history and Drew Bledsoe made a shambles of Kansas City’s highly touted defense as the Patriots routed the Chiefs, 40-10, on Sunday.

“To go out and beat a team like that really sets a standard for our team,” Patriot wide receiver Terry Glenn said after Kansas City’s worst loss in four years. “It shows people around the league what kind of team we have.”

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It’s the kind of team that outgained Kansas City, which had the NFL’s best defense, 438 yards to 134, and led 27-0 at halftime after needing late rallies to beat Tennessee and New Orleans.

“We played probably as good as we can play against a good team,” Bledsoe said.

Edwards, the rookie who replaced Curtis Martin, became the first player since the 1970 NFL-AFL merger with touchdowns in his first five pro games. Bledsoe threw three touchdown passes.

The Patriots defense held Kansas City to 14 yards rushing, the second-fewest in its history. The Patriots rushed for 206 yards and held huge advantages in first downs, 31-9, and time of possession, 41:48-18:12.

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“Nobody expected anything like that,” Patriot cornerback Ty Law said.

The Patriots (4-1) scored on seven consecutive possessions after punting on their first one as Edwards and Ben Coates each scored twice and Adam Vinatieri kicked three field goals.

The Chiefs (4-2), using Elvis Grbac at quarterback, suffered their worst loss since Oct. 30, 1994, when they were beaten, 44-10, at Buffalo. They had a fumble, a roughing-the-passer penalty and two fourth-down failures.

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