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Vahe Gregorian

Vahe Gregorian: Psychic sidekicks Mahomes, Kelce made Chiefs' rally at Raiders seem almost inevitable

An hour or so after the last time the Chiefs played the Raiders, tight end Travis Kelce presented this cryptic-but-tortured post on Twitter: "I HAVE TO BE BETTER!! For my teammates and coaches ... . this loss is on me ... and the only way to fix it is to go to work ASAP!!"

For the record, Kelce had eight catches for 108 yards in that 40-32 loss. But when he at last spoke with the media a few weeks later, he allowed as how he had been guilty of "running routes that weren't called, and I screwed the team doing it. Stuff that you won't see on the film, you won't see on the stats."

So maybe it was fitting that he scored the game-winning touchdown Sunday night in the Chiefs' 35-31 rematch victory in Las Vegas on a play that you will see plenty on the film and in the stats ... but also that reflected what can't be seen: the virtually telepathic dynamics between Kelce and quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

The play featured Tyreek Hill as the primary option along the left sideline, at least as Mahomes explained it late Sunday night, enough so that Mahomes looked that way a second time as he scrambled. Meanwhile, Kelce initially misread the coverage.

"I'm not going to lie; I kind of got tricked on it," he said.

So instinct took over as he continued downfield.

"I felt an opening on the opposite hash" he said, smiling. "Might as well go where the void is,"

Meanwhile, with Mahomes on the move as a threat to run, he lured a safety his way and instantly knew where Kelce would gravitate.

Because, after all ...

"I feel like I see and I feel what Patrick sees back there in the pocket sometimes," said Kelce, who had eight catches for 127 yards.

Part of that sense comes from their close off-the-field relationship and earned chemistry through practice, practice, practice. Part of it comes from Kelce's own past as a quarterback, which evidently was at play in coach Andy Reid trusting him earlier in the game to make an underhand red-zone pass to Byron Pringle with Mahomes in motion. The play was good for 4 yards and a first-and-goal.

"Slot Machine Right," Kelce said it was called, adding, "I was hoping we would have hit all 7s on that son of a buck."

At least it was more sound than the interception Kelce threw on his only other career pass in 2017. Not that there wasn't room for criticism:

While calling Kelce's pass execution "sweet," Mahomes seemed to wonder if it was time for Kelce to reciprocate with a pass to him.

"I was even open a little bit in the flat if he wanted to sling it out there as well," he said.

Another time, perhaps.

Or not: Their more traditional exchanges are more than ample, enough so that it's becoming more and more easy to envision Kelce on trajectory to the Pro Football Hall of Fame ... where Mahomes already seems a foregone conclusion to land.

With his 23rd career 100-yard game on Sunday, Kelce passed Jackie Smith to move into fourth place among tight ends in NFL history. His next such game will tie him with Kellen Winslow and leave him trailing only Tony Gonzalez (31) and Rob Gronkowski (28) in that category.

In his eighth season, he now has 573 career receptions — three more than Gonzalez had at this point in his career. In Chiefs lore, he already has arrived at second in career receiving yards (7,361) behind Gonzalez (10,940) after passing Otis Taylor (7,306) on Sunday.

But it's the penchant for the big moments that looms largest in his profile, including the latest entry on what was his 44th career receiving touchdown.

That score with 28 seconds left was the longest play of the night for the Chiefs, who had fallen behind with 1:43 left and had 75 yards to go in a jiffy.

Yet you weren't alone if you thought advantage, Chiefs, at that point. Rookie running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire summed up for many with a sideline quip to teammate Darwin Thompson: "We've got Patrick Mahomes, I'm not worried about anything."

Indeed, it's Mahomes that is the foundation of faith even in dire predicaments. Among Mahomes other tales to astonish, that was well-encapsulated in the three double-digit comebacks that defined the 2019 postseason on the way to the first Super Bowl triumph in 50 years.

"You know you're always in it, and that's the biggest thing (with Mahomes) ...," Kelce said. "One-five (Mahomes) is always ready for the moment."

But much as Mahomes is an irresistible force, it would have all the impact of one hand clapping without the essential, and practically unfair supporting elements, embodied by Kelce and Hill (who had 11 catches for 102 yards on Sunday).

Now, we could have a panel discussion about whether Hill or Kelce is more fundamental to this equation.

Put it against a backdrop featuring any number of their distinctive individual highlights and perhaps a snapshot of that play on Sunday when the Raiders were nabbed holding each.

But even as Edwards-Helaire and thousands of others were visualizing the rally, it was nearly as simple to anticipate in whose hands it would end, wasn't it?

"He has a great understanding (of) not only zone and man coverage and how to get himself open but how to be on the quarterback's timing," Mahomes said.

Especially this quarterback's.

Stuff you might not see in the stats but that said it all on Sunday, when part of Kelce's post-touchdown celebration included a shoulder massage for Reid on the sideline. As if to say, "Had 'em all the way," ... which most of the time the Chiefs do these days in no small part because of Mahomes' psychic sidekick.

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