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Chiefs vs. Bengals score, takeaways: Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City advance to Super Bowl on game-winning FG

The Kansas City Chiefs have avenged their AFC Championship loss of a year ago and finally got into the win column against Joe Burrow and the Bengals, defeating Cincinnati 23-20 in the conference title game Sunday to advance to Super Bowl LVII. 

Harrison Butker was able to kick the 45-yard game-winning field goal after Patrick Mahomes and the offense moved the ball 39 yards down the field with less than 30 seconds left in regulation. The key play on that drive came on a third-and-4 situation from the Cincinnati 47-yard line. Mahomes scrambled up the right side of the field for five yards and was hit out of bounds, which drew an unnecessary roughness penalty to put them within Butker's range and send them to the Super Bowl. 

This game was really a tale of two halves, with the first primarily owned by Kansas City. The Bengals had an uncharacteristically slow start, particularly in the first quarter when they registered zero total yards of offense. All the while, the Chiefs were moving the ball well and jumped out to a 13-6 lead thanks in large part to a 14-yard touchdown to Travis Kelce late in the second quarter. However, Cincinnati did show some signs of life in the final minutes of that first half, moving 90 yards in just over two minutes to boot a field goal before the break to cut the lead to a touchdown. 

They'd knot the game at 13 on their first drive of the second half, and that would begin a back-and-forth final two quarters between these two rivals. Mahomes and the Chiefs offense responded to that Cincy score with an 11-play, 77-yard touchdown drive of their own to retake the lead. A fumble by Mahomes on their subsequent drive, however, breathed more life into the Bengals, who'd tie the game at 20 on a drive headlined by a monumental fourth-and-6 conversation by Joe Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase. That score stood at 20 for the bulk of the fourth quarter until Kansas City's defense was able to force a punt with less than a minute in regulation, and the offense took care of the rest to clinch their spot in the Super Bowl. 

Mahomes finished 29 of 43 passing for 326 yards and two touchdowns. His go-to target on the night was wideout Marquez Valdes-Scantling, who hauled in six of his eight targets for a team-high 116 yards and a touchdown. On the other side, Burrow completed 26 of 41 for 270 yards, a touchdown, and two interceptions. He also added 30 yards on the ground. Tee Higgins was the most productive skill position player for Cincinnati, tallying six catches for 83 yards and a touchdown. 

For a more detailed breakdown of how this game unfolded, check out our main takeaways below. 

Why the Chiefs won

Patrick Mahomes was clearly not 100% in this game, but he put together an all-time performance. He was sharp out of the gate, completing 13 of 19 in the first half for 165 yards and a touchdown to give K.C. the seven-point lead. Over that stretch, Mahomes did seem to be a little less bothered by the high ankle sprain he suffered during the divisional round a week ago. However, he appeared to have aggravated it in the second half after rolling out to his left and completing an 11-yard pass to Mecole Hardman. To make the throw, Mahomes had to put his full eight on that bad ankle and could be seen with a more pronounced limp for the rest of the game. That said, he was still able to make a couple of insanely clutch plays, including a dart to Marquez Valdes-Scantling that resulted in a 19-yard touchdown. 

Earlier in the game, Mahomes also came up clutch as Andy Reid decided to keep the offense on the field on fourth-and-1 from the Cincinnati 14. While this was before Mahomes aggravated the ankle, he was still limited in his mobility but extended the play enough to eventually find Travis Kelce -- who was also dealing with an injury of his own -- for the touchdown. 

Mahomes still being able to pull off magical play even at less than full strength was a key reason for Kansas City advancing. 

Meanwhile, the defense by the Chiefs was able to suffocate Joe Burrow early and often and sacked him four times during Cincinnati's first three possessions on the day. That set the tone for the remainder of the game and helped force the quarterback into two interceptions. As we note in our "Turning Point" second below, the clutch play by Steve Spagnuolo's defense, particularly from veteran Chris Jones, helped slam the door shut on Cincinnati pulling off another late-game comeback. Those final possessions leading up to Harrison Butker's game-winner were perfect complementary football as the defense forced the punt, special teams gave the offense a short field, and that set up the kick that sends K.C. to Arizona. 

Why the Bengals lost

Cincinnati didn't do themselves any favors by coming out of the gate flat. Throughout the year, the Bengals had been one of the better scoring teams in the first quarter and were able to put up points in each of their opening possessions this postseason until this matchup. They punted the ball away after just five plays and that continued as they went three-and-out on their ensuing possession. Over that stretch, the defense was able to play stout against the Chiefs, but they still came away with a field goal to go up 6-0. 

A common theme during those initial drives of the game was the leaky play along the offensive line. Burrow was sacked four times through their first three possessions. Burrow even seemed a bit rushed on what was an underthrown ball to Tee Higgins that was picked off on the fourth drive of the game. At that point, the offensive line did seem to find some cohesion right before halftime and throughout the second half, but a key sack late on Burrow by Chiefs defensive tackle Chris Jones helped put the nail in Cincy's coffin. Coming into this AFC Championship, the Bengals were 0-3 this season when Burrow was sacked five or more times and was 14-1 when he's sacked fewer than five times. That trend held here. 

Cincinnati also had a puzzling couple of play calls on their second-to-last possession. After Joe Mixon rushed for 7 yards on first down to give the club a second-and-3 situation from their 36-yard line, Burrow tossed back-to-back deep shots, with the first falling incomplete and the other being picked off by the Chiefs. While the running game had been nonexistent for the Bengals in this game (Perine and Mixon combined for 41 yards rushing), this might have been a spot to simply move the chain and live to fight another down. 

Defensively, it's hard to find too many faults with the Bengals as they limited the Chiefs early as the offense sputtered, and were able to force four second-half punts along with recovering a key fumble. However, the Bengals had nine penalties on the day, and a handful came on the part of the defense at less-than-ideal times. Eli Apple was called for DPI on a third-and-9 to erase a sack on Mahomes, and, of course, the unnecessary roughness penalty on Joseph Ossai assisted in allowing the game-winning field goal. 

Turning point

As you'd expect in a game of this magnitude, there were many swings in momentum throughout the evening. The sequence that truly moved the game in Kansas City's favor, however, was a key defensive stop by Steve Spagnulolo's unit late. Cincinnati's defense was able to force the Chiefs to punt the ball just before the two-minute warning, spoiling an opportunity to capitalize off of a Joe Burrow interception that happened the drive prior. With time ticking under a minute, Burrow completed a 23-yard pass to Hayden Hurst that was inching the Bengals closer to midfield and possibly setting up a game-winning field goal if they were to garner a few more chunk plays.

But, on a third-and-8 from the Cincinnati 35-yard line, Chris Jones came up with a clutch sack of Burrow, which led to an immediate timeout called by the Chiefs and a subsequent punt. That punt was returned 29 yards by rookie Skyy Moore which put the offense already at midfield, needing a manageable amount of yards to get within field goal range. 

That defensive stand and stellar return by Moore to give them a strong field position was enough of a swing in momentum to get the Chiefs in a position to kick the game-winner.

Play of the game

Because Cincinnati came out on the losing end of this matchup, this fourth-down conversion by Burrow to Chase may get lost in the history books, but it was a tremendous moment in the game. The Bengals had just recovered a fumble by Patrick Mahomes and seemed like they were going to let that opportunity split through their fingers with a three-and-out. However, Zac Taylor elected to keep his offense on the field for a fourth-and-6 attempt, which was one of the gutsiest calls of the night. 

The decision paid off for him as Burrow uncorked a 35-yard pass to Chase, who beat two defenders to make the grab. Two plays later and Samaje Perine barreled in for the touchdown to tie the game at 20 and, momentarily, keep Cincinnati's season alive. 

What's next

From here, the Chiefs will travel to Arizona, where they'll face the Philadelphia Eagles, who defeated the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Championship earlier Sunday. Super Bowl LVII will kick off at 6:30 p.m. ET from State Farm Stadium on Sunday, Feb. 12.  

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Live updates
 

Tee Higgins was huge on the final drive of the first half, and he catches the first pass of the second half. Bengals now working the perimeter to move the ball.

 

Mahomes not even close on the deep ball to MVS. Limp drive from the Chiefs to open the second half. Run up the middle for very little yardage, quick screen that goes nowhere, and a deep ball into double coverage that gets overthrown by 5+ yards. Good stop for the Bengals defense, and now the offense has a chance to tie the game.

 

Neither team has gotten anything going in the run game at all: 8 carries for 19 yards for the Bengals, 9 carries for 22 yards for the Chiefs.

 

McPherson kick is good and it's 13-6 going into halftime. KC will get the ball to start the third quarter.

 

That time it was Higgins working against Jaylen Watson for the big play down the sideline. And then again on the goal line fade, which Watson broke up with a great play on the ball.

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Higgins working against Joshua Williams, who is in the game in place of Sneed. Sneed won't return due to the concussion he suffered on the opening drive.

 

Juan Thornhill gets an interception after the ball pops up into the air on a throw to Hayden Hurst over the middle... but it's taken off the board with a pass interference call on Bryan Cook, who definitely got there a fraction of a second early.

 

Mahomes just straight-up missed that throw. Skyy Moore was open. MVS was open on the deep over, too.

 

And Burrow gets picked by Jaylen Watson. Looked like he was shaken up by the pressure bearing down on him in the pocket and just forced a throw that wasn't there. Bad, bad play.

 

Bengals tried to use some misdirection with Chase in the backfield to create some space for that Mixon run, but Nick Bolton read in the whole way. 

 
 

Of note: The Chiefs did not "take the points" on fourth-and-1. They aggressively went after MORE points, and it paid off.

 

Travis Kelce was questionable coming into today due to a back injury, and he scores the game's first touchdown. And it's on a Mahomes improvisation, which was also under question throughout this week. Great play by two great players.

 

Second jet sweep carry of the game for Hardman. With Kadarius Toney in the locker room, Hardman will be the gadget guy the rest of the way.

 

Mahomes hit a very similar pass to MVS in the first game these two teams played this year. It was just to the right side of the field instead of the left. 

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Mahomes was looking for a quick-hitter underneath but Sam Hubbard dropped off his pass rush to take the lane away. So he scrambled to the outside and found MVS for a first down.

 

Burrow was looking for Hayden Hurst on a wheel route working against Justin Reid. Basically a perfect ball but Reid had good coverage so it fell incomplete. McPherson comes on for the field goal to make it 6-3 Chiefs.

 

Boyd beats McDuffie again, this time just running right up the seam. McDuffie fell down on the route.

 

Tyler Boyd working against rookie CB McDuffie in the slot and wins on the out-breaker. Juan Thornhill wasn't able to break on the ball in time force an incompletion. Bengals on the move in KC territory.

 

Burrow had a second to scan the field at the top of his drop, but nobody was open. Once he felt pressure and stepped up in the pocket, Karlaftis was right there to take him down.

 

That is Cincinnati's first first down since the second play of the game. Now let's see if the Bengals can keep moving the ball.

 

Bengals started the game with a quick screen to Chase. Went back to it on their first play of the second quarter.

 

KC averaged 6.4 yards per play in the first quarter and CIN averaged 0 per play, but the Chiefs are only up 6-0 a few seconds into the second quarter. If the Bengals can feel good about anything, it's that.

 

Kelce looked like he was getting ready to throw another pitch, this time to backup TE Noah Gray. Instead he just gets as many yards as he can and the Chiefs will trot out Butker for another field goal try on the first play of the second quarter. 3-0 with a short kick to make it 6-0 after the break.

 

ALMOST an incredible play by slot CB Mike Hilton, who makes a ton of plays around the line of scrimmage. If he wasn't blocked by a teammate, that might have been an interception. And then Kansas City finds the end zone on the next play, but it gets called back due to a holding penalty on Andrew Wylie.

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Wow, that would have been a HUGE play if Kelce had gotten a better pitch to McKinnon. Chiefs come back on the next play and find McKinnon for a nice gain to pick up a first-and-goal opportunity anyway.

 

Chiefs already have four different plays with a rush and five with a catch. Spreading the ball around as the Bengals try to make them inch their way down the field.

 

Pacheco's career-high is 3 catches. He has 2 in the first 10 minutes tonight.

 

And now another sack. First career playoff sack for Chris Jones, who is a finalist for Defensive Player of the Year along with Nick Bosa and Micah Parsons.

 

Another early sack for the Chiefs defense. Burrow was only sacked once last week. 

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