Joe Burrow, Bengals target another win over Chiefs
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[January 27, 2023]
Only one quarterback in the NFL has three consecutive wins against
Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, and he'll have the striped
orange helmet in the AFC championship game in Kansas City on Sunday
night.
Joe Burrow and the Cincinnati Bengals (14-4) can return to the Super
Bowl by eliminating Mahomes and the Chiefs (15-3) in the conference
title game for the second year in a row.
"Last time we played him, he didn't make a mistake all game," Chiefs
linebacker Nick Bolton said Wednesday of Burrow.
That last time was Dec. 4, a 27-24 win for the host Bengals that was
near the middle of the team's current 10-game winning streak.
Cincinnati's most recent loss was to Cleveland on Halloween. Burrow
would tie Russell Wilson for most wins (six) by a quarterback in
their first three seasons if he can knock off the Chiefs again.
"He's got an edge to him," Bengals coach Zac Taylor said of Burrow.
"I like that in our quarterback."
He hasn't been intercepted in his past three playoff games. In three
starts against the Chiefs, Burrow has nine TDs (one rushing), one
interception and a combined passer rating of 121.
"They know us, we know them," Chiefs coach Andy Reid said.
A takeaway on a fumble by Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce turned the
game at Cincinnati at December in the fourth quarter, and kicker
Harrison Butker missed a 55-yard field goal that would have sent the
game into overtime.
Mahomes will start his fifth conference championship game. His
overall playoff record is 9-3, and he has 32 touchdowns (28 TD
passes, four rushing) and three interceptions in 10 career home
playoff starts.
But Mahomes is dealing with a sprain of his upper right ankle. The
initial sprain forced him out of the Chiefs' divisional playoff win
over the Jacksonville Jaguars last week. He returned to the game
with limited mobility, completing 22 of 30 passes for a season-low
195 yards with two touchdowns and was not sacked.
Mahomes was a full practice participant Thursday and said how much
progress he makes during the rest of the week will be key.
"We'll see as we get closer and closer and we'll see during the
game," Mahomes said. "You can't fully do exactly what you're going
to be in those moments in the game but all I can do is prepare
myself the best way possible."
The expectation from the Chiefs is more shotgun formation and the
max-protection looks Kansas City showed in the second half of the
divisional playoffs.
If he's operating within a designed barricade in the pocket this
week, the Chiefs know the drill. Even though Kansas City leads the
NFL with pass attempts on the move, Mahomes also had an NFL-best 34
TD passes from the pocket (41 total TD passes).
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"They're just a physical team. They play physical, from start to
finish, all four quarters," Chiefs wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster
said.
From Mahomes' view behind center, he said the challenge of solving
the Bengals' defense is its ever-changing approach. In the AFC
championship game last season, ends Sam Hubbard (two sacks and a
forced fumble) and Trey Hendrickson (1.5 sacks) were unblockable at
times.
To beat the Buffalo Bills last week, the Bengals used 10 designed
cornerback blitzes, a look Mahomes said was rarely seen this season.
"They have no weakness," Mahomes said.
As for the Bengals offense, even with three starters on the
offensive line out with injuries at Buffalo last week, Burrow was
rarely pressured. Still, protection could be a problem for the
Bengals if left tackle Jonah Williams (knee) and right guard Alex
Cappa (ankle) are out again. Neither practiced Wednesday or
Thursday. Right tackle La'el Collins (knee) is done for the season.
In addition, tight end Hayden Hurst (calf) was added to Cincinnati's
injury report Thursday.
Taylor pointed out that the Bengals leaned on running back Joe Mixon
heavily against Buffalo (105 rushing yards) to get their replacement
linemen comfortable. That approach also has worked against the
Chiefs: Kansas City runs nickel or dime base defense more than only
four other teams in 2022.
"We can't let Joe Burrow sit in the pocket and get rhythm throws. We
have to force him out of the pocket," Chiefs safety Justin Reid
said. "We're not gonna win the game if we don't get sacks or
turnovers."
Wide receiver Mecole Hardman (pelvis) returned to practice -- he had
been limited the past two days -- but Reid said the Chiefs will
continue to monitor him closely. Hardman didn't play against the
Jaguars and has been sidelined since Nov. 6.
The Chiefs aren't expecting running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire
(ankle) to be activated from injured reserve though Reid allowed
there was a chance. He has missed the past eight games.
If Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo shifts gears from a
tendency to rush four, Burrow's options in the passing game are led
by wide receivers Ja'Marr Chase (513 career postseason receiving
yards) and Tee Higgins (103 yards in last year's AFC championship
game).
Andy Reid is seeking his third Super Bowl appearance in four seasons
and could find his former employer, the Philadelphia Eagles, on the
other sideline in Arizona on Feb. 12. A Bengals' win on Sunday would
make Taylor the third head coach in NFL history to appear in two
Super Bowls in his first four seasons.
--Field Level Media
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