
By ROB MAADDI
AP Pro Football Writer
Tom Brady was finished. Bill Belichick couldnât coach anymore. The New England Patriotsâ run of dominance had ended.
Those were the premature headlines and hot takes after the âWeâre on to Cincinnatiâ game 11 years ago.
Now, itâs the Chiefs hearing similar questions.
The Patriots were destroyed by Kansas City 41-14 in front of a national television audience on Monday night, Sept. 29, 2014 to fall to 2-2.
Brady threw two interceptions and Jimmy Garoppolo played well in garbage time, prompting folks with ill-advised opinions to call for a quarterback change.
Belichick didnât care to rehash the lopsided loss when he spoke to reporters two days later, and he wasnât interested in questions about benching his 37-year-old quarterback.
Five times, Belichick responded: âWeâre on to Cincinnati.â
He made sure the team was focused on looking ahead and not dwelling on the past.
The Patriots routed the Bengals 43-17 to spark a seven-game winning streak, finished 12-4 and went on to win their fourth Super Bowl with Brady and Belichick.
They won a fifth and sixth Super Bowl title over the next four years.
That talk about the end of the dynasty in 2014 was nonsense.
Brady went on to win his seventh Lombardi trophy with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at age 43.
Good thing Belichick never listened to the âexpertsâ who wanted him to replace Brady with Garoppolo.
The Chiefs are in an unfamiliar position at 0-2 for the first time since that 2014 season, the last time they didnât win a division title. The offense is struggling and their decade-long reign over the AFC West is in a precarious position.
Like Belichick and Brady when they faced criticism in 2014, Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes are 3-2 in Super Bowls together.
Anything less than a Lombardi wonât be considered a success in Kansas City. But making the playoffs is going to be a challenge at this point.
Only five of the 43 teams (11.6%) that started 0-2 have made the postseason since the field was expanded in 2020. Only the 1993 Cowboys, 2001 Patriots and 2007 Giants have won a Super Bowl following an 0-2 start.
âListen, we havenât won (a) game so I understand, I get it,â Reid said about the criticism. âWe keep pushing, and weâll keep pushing and working forward and seeing what we can do going down the road here.â
The Chiefs havenât been blown out in their first two games. They lost 27-21 to the Los Angeles Chargers in Brazil in Week 1. The defense couldnât get a stop late in the game to give Mahomes a final drive to try to win it.
They lost 20-17 at home last week in a Super Bowl rematch against the Philadelphia Eagles, who dominated the Chiefs in February. The outcome probably would have been different if Travis Kelce didnât drop a pass at the goal line that turned into an interception in the fourth quarter.
Mahomes, who turned 30 earlier this week, is a long way from finished. He leads the team in rushing, which needs to change. He also doesnât have all of his playmakers. Xavier Worthy was injured in the opener and Rashee Rice is suspended through the first six games.
âEven though we have never been 0-2, weâve had stretches where weâve lost big games kind of consecutively and guys have responded,â Mahomes said. âItâs about the character of the guys in the locker room more than it is the play on the football field and I think that we have the guys that are going to continue to work. Theyâre not going to let this push them down, theyâre going to use it, if anything, as motivation to be even better.
âI think that gives me the most faith and then the coaches that we have theyâll continue to push to be even better. Weâll have a great week of practice this week and know weâre going to have to play our best football to win a game against a good football team in the Giants.â
The schedule is daunting after New York (0-2). Five of the next six games will be against playoff teams. The Chiefs host the Ravens in Week 4, the Lions in Week 6, the Commanders in Week 8 and visit the Bills in Week 9.
âYou take it one week at a time, but I think you just continue to even amplify the little details,â Mahomes said. âSometimes when youâre winning a lot, those little details get lost and thatâs how you lose, but when you lose early like this, you have to really just focus on those little details and maximize those and then you try and set the example on the practice field and stay after and do extra stuff and do a little bit here and there and push other guys to do the same. Weâre really good at that.â
What Brady, Belichick and the Patriots accomplished in New England â six Super Bowl titles in 20 years â may never be duplicated. The second half of that run â three championships in five seasons after Brady turned 37 and the âon to Cincinnatiâ game â is even more impressive the first.
The Chiefs have a long way to go to even enter that conversation but itâs way too early to count them out.