The Kansas City Chiefs will take on the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl 59 on Feb. 9. Here's what to know about the red and gold team's hometown.
The Cousins Curse suggests any team that loses to Cousins in the regular season cannot win a world championship. It’s a trend that covers the entirety of the veteran quarterback’s 13-year career, but began in earnest in 2016.
For the second time this season and the fourth time in the last five postseasons, the Buffalo Bills will face off with the Kansas City Chiefs, this time on Sunday, Jan. 26 in the AFC Championship Game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo.
The New England Patriots and Kansas City Chiefs have been the NFL's only two dynasties in the free agency and salary cap era.
With Super Bowl 59 on the horizon, we only have one more game to worry about before the NFL goes into the heart of the offseason. While the AFC champion Kansas
It was another close call, but this was more subjective. The Chiefs had fourth-and-16 trailing 25-23 late in the game, and on their last chance Patrick Mahomes threw deep. Bengals rookie safety Daijahn Anthony was called for pass interference. Kansas City kicked a field goal to win the game after that.
The green flag drops on another Cup Series season Sunday night with the exhibition Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium.
KC used a similar concept to clinch the game just a few weeks earlier. In a Week 16 victory against the Houston Texans, the Chiefs freed up Perine on a late third-and-4, running two receivers across the field as diversions to gain 16 yards on a similar run-out-the-clock drive.
Jalen Hurts bucked decades of history just by getting back to the Super Bowl after losing his first trip there as a starting quarterback.
The Chiefs began their dynasty as a high-scoring, overpowering force. This year has been quite different but still could end with a Super Bowl title.
Super Bowl 59 participants Jawaan Taylor and Chauncey Gardner-Johnson are both 2016 Cocoa High grads, are both former Florida Gators and are cousins.
Fullback — x-Patrick Ricard, Baltimore. Wide Receiver — x-Ja’Marr Chase, Cincinnati; x-Jerry Jeudy, Cleveland; Nico Collins, Houston; y-Zay Flowers, Baltimore; Brian Thomas Jr., Jacksonville.