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Paul Pierce weighs in on the debate between the Buffalo Bills and Baltimore Ravens, asserting that Josh Allen and the Bills are the true threat to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC.
JUST IN・speak・1:25
Just 14 words into his postgame press conference Sunday night, Kansas City Chiefs coach Andy Reid turned from his team’s 22-17 win and pivoted to the opposition — the Atlanta Falcons and head coach Raheem Morris, who fell just short against the twice-defending Super Bowl champions.
Reid, who has over 400 wins and three Super Bowl titles as a head coach, believes the Falcons have a strong future under the leadership of Morris.
“My hat goes off to Raheem, being a new coach here — the Atlanta Falcons are in great hands,” Reid said. “They played hard, aggressive, good football on both sides of the ball.”
Perhaps nothing better represents this identity than Atlanta’s decision to go for it on 4th and 5 from the Chiefs’ 6-yard line with four minutes to play. Trailing 22-17, Morris kept his offense on the field.
“I was in four-down territory for a while there,” Morris said postgame. “We were going out there to win this football game. We didn’t come here to tie. We didn’t come here to lose. We didn’t come here to hope we win. We didn’t come here to allow Patrick Mahomes to work his magic.
“We came here to win the football game on our terms, and I lost it, so I’ll take that medicine all day.”
The Falcons failed to convert, but Reid saw the decision in a different light.
“He stayed aggressive,” Reid said of Morris. “He’s got a team that he’s training with an aggressive attitude. So that’s what they did.”
Reid’s Falcons-centric praise was echoed throughout the Chiefs’ locker room Sunday night.
Quarterback Patrick Mahomes, a two-time MVP, noted the quality of Atlanta’s secondary and overall defense. The Falcons held the Chiefs to just three net yards in the second half, and Mahomes thinks Atlanta will be much improved as the year progresses.
“That’s a good football team,” Mahomes said postgame. “I expect them to get better and better because whenever you bring a lot of different pieces in, it takes a little bit to get it going throughout the season.
“But, yeah, that’s going to be a team that’s going to make a lot of noise as the season goes on.”
Kansas City’s defense was similarly complimentary of Atlanta’s offense. Chiefs defensive end George Karlaftis, who had a pair of tackles, spoke highly of Falcons running back Bijan Robinson and the rest of the unit.
“He’s a great player,” Karlaftis said about Robinson. “We had a lot of respect for him. Not just him, their O-line, their receivers, their quarterback. They’re a great team. They were tough to beat.”
Robinson had a difficult day on the ground, taking 16 carries for 31 yards, though he added a one-yard rushing score. He was dropped for a three-yard loss on the Falcons’ final offensive play, a sweep to the left on 4th and inches.
Atlanta’s ground game struggled as a whole, as Robinson and Tyler Allgeier combined for 63 yards on 23 attempts, an average of 2.7 yards per carry.
The Falcons had more success through the air, as quarterback Kirk Cousins went 20-of-29 for 230 yards, one touchdown and an interception. However, Cousins was sacked twice and hit 10 times — which Chiefs linebacker Leo Chenal said was important to Kansas City’s game plan.
“It’s huge,” Chenal said postgame. “He’s a great quarterback. He’s been a very consistent quarterback, and we want to pressure more. We feel like we haven’t pressured enough the first couple of games and get him off the spot a little bit.
“Any quarterback is going to struggle if you get him off his spot and make him uncomfortable.”
The Chiefs did that, though Cousins and the Falcons still had a chance at the end — and perhaps that, not the aggressive fourth down decision, best shows the tenacity and quality Reid sees in the Morris-led Dirty Birds.
Morris, however, wants wins to back it up.
“We’re 1-2,” Morris said when asked how he evaluates the team through three weeks. “It’s pretty easy. The record assesses it for you.”
Kansas went into halftime trailing for the second straight game at Allen Fieldhouse, falling behind Arizona State 42-36. The 42 points were the most the Jayhawks had allowed in a first half all season.
The next 20 minutes completely flipped the script, as the Sun Devils scored just 13 points on five made baskets. It was the lowest amount an opponent had scored during a half since 2013 when TCU scored nine points in the first half.
“We understood we were having trouble guarding there for a while, that first half,” Zeke Mayo said postgame. “[We] let up a couple of shots that the scouting report we didn’t really want to give up, including myself. It was kind of an emphasis at halftime to dig down, play desperate, play with a lot of intensity. I think we did that in the second half.”
Kansas didn’t blow away Arizona State with its offense. The Jayhawks shot a worse percentage in the second half, but their defensive effort allowed them to come away with a comfortable victory.
“We were great defensively,” Bill Self said. “Who would’ve thought we shot the ball worse the second half from two, we shot it worse from three, and basically held them to 11… that was exceptional.”
Shakeel Moore was one of the catalysts of the second-half defense. Moore had a sequence where he picked up steals on consecutive possessions, leading to two dunks as part of a 20-5 run in the first 10 minutes.
“If I was gonna pick an MVP of the game, I’d pick Shak, just because of the energy that he brought,” Self said. “He doesn’t score a ton of points, but he makes plays that, to me, give teams confidence and spark energy as much as anything.”
One of his steals came out of the full-court press, which Kansas opted to implement more often in the second half. It helped ratchet up the pressure, but it also wore out an Arizona State team that played just seven players.
“When you’re playing everybody 33, 35, 37 minutes, the more you make them have to earn things and not give them times where they can rest, I think it makes it harder,” Self said. “That’s one thing we wanted to do, but we actually talked about that a lot in practice, that we were gonna try to be different.”
Mayo echoed that pressure was a part of the team’s scouting report. The Sun Devils played with one true ball handler, and he thought the full-court press was a good way to attack them defensively.
“A lot of their guys didn’t really handle pressure very well,” Mayo said. “That second half, coach emphasized getting after them, picking up full court. It kind of messed with their offense a little bit.”
Self added that he thought the press was good, and he thinks Kansas may use more of it going forward.
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JUST IN・speak・1:25
Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Right-hander Michael Lorenzen and the Kansas City Royals finalized a $7 million, one-year contract on Wednesday that includes a mutual option for 2026 and $2.5 million in annual performance bonuses.
Lorenzen gets a $5.5 million salary this year, and the Royals have a $12 million option for 2026 with a $1.5 million buyout.
He can earn $1.5 million for innings in each season: $250,000 each for 100 and 125, and $500,000 apiece for 150 and 175.
Lorenzen also can get $1 million for pitching appearances: $100,000 for 10, $150,000 for 20 and $250,000 each for 25, 30 and 40.
He would earn $100,000 for All-Star selection or election, $50,000 for winning a Gold Glove, $100,000 for winning a Cy Young Award, $50,000 for finishing second through fifth in the voting and $25,000 for sixth through 10th.
The 33-year-old was acquired by Kansas City in a trade with Texas just before the deadline last July and became a dependable part of the pitching staff down the stretch. He went 2-0 with a 1.57 ERA in six starts and one relief appearance to help the Royals clinch a wild card, then tossed 2 1/3 innings over two appearances in the playoffs.
Lorenzen took the loss in Game 1 of the AL Division Series against the New York Yankees, giving up Alex Verdugo’s go-ahead single in the seventh inning of a 6-5 defeat. The Royals went on to lose the series in four games.
Lorenzen spent his first seven seasons in Cincinnati, then spent a year with the Angels, before splitting the 2023 season between the Tigers and Phillies, getting selected to his only All-Star Game while with Detroit and throwing a no-hitter for Philadelphia after being traded. He has a career record of 47-44 with a 3.99 ERA and 15 saves in 368 games, including 93 starts.
The top of the Royals’ starting rotation appears to be set, with Michael Wacha returning on a three-year, $51 million contract to join Seth Lugo and Cole Ragans, both of whom made the All-Star Game for Kansas City last season.
The Royals hope Kyle Wright can return to the form he displayed in Atlanta after spending last season rehabbing from shoulder surgery. Kris Bubic and Alec Marsh are among those who will compete with Lorenzen for one of the remaining starting spots.
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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/mlb
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