KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs were down to their third-string quarterback, operating behind their fifth and sixth offensive tackles, without the benefit of their starting right guard and a key wide receiver.
It was a wonder they scored at all in their 26-9 loss to the Tennessee Titans on Sunday.
The defeat nevertheless left the Chiefs with a fourth consecutive loss for the first time since 2017, and saddled Andy Reid with a 6-9 record, ensuring his first losing season since becoming coach in Kansas City following the debacle that was the 2012 season.
“Yeah, nobody like to lose in this business,” Reid said afterward. “My hat goes off to the guys that put together all these years. That's part of it. We can learn from it and need to do that going forward. Sometimes a good kick in the tail there helps you.”
Hard to see what happened Sunday helping Kansas City a whole lot.
The mess started with veteran backup Gardner Minshew hurting his knee, one week after Patrick Mahomes tore a pair of ligaments in his knee. And despite some bright moments from Chris Oladokun, things did not get a whole lot better against the Titans, whose victory over the reigning AFC champions just might spoil their own bid for the No. 1 pick in the April draft.
As for the Chiefs, a couple of more losses and they might have a top-10 pick of their own.
Not that anybody in the Kansas City locker room is thinking that way.
The Chiefs still have a chance to play spoiler when the Broncos visit Arrowhead Stadium for a Christmas matchup Thursday night. And the finale against the Raiders in Las Vegas offers another opportunity to knock off a hated divisional rival.
“We just want to go 1-0,” Chiefs linebacker Nick Bolton said. “There's not really a message. Just play football. Just like a little kid, and we get the opportunity to come out here and play the game we love. You put your whole heart into it. That's kind of what the mindset is. We're privileged. I don't want to lose sight of that. I don't ever want to lose sight of that. Regardless of how grim it looks inside the building — on the outside it may be looking like — that's the mindset we have. And there's a sense of gratitude and humility.”
Well, the Chiefs got to the stadium on time. Other than that, the biggest positive from Sunday may have been the effort shown by the players under difficult circumstances. The Chiefs could have thrown in the towel but played hard the entire way.
The training staff in Kansas City.
In the past three weeks, the Chiefs have put Mahomes on injured reserve along with left tackle Josh Simmons, right tackle Jawaan Taylor, backup tackle Wanya Morris, cornerback Chris Roland-Wallace, linebacker Leo Chenal, safety Nazeeh Johnson and tight end Jake Briningstool.
Minshew went down Sunday, when the Chiefs also played without injured wide receivers Tyquan Thornton and Rashee Rice, offensive tackle Jaylon Moore, cornerback Trent McDuffie, defensive tackle Derrick Nnadi and offensive lineman C.J. Hanson.
Given the circumstances, Oladokun played fairly well. He was 11 of 16 for 111 yards after the QB was suddenly called off the bench.
WR Xavier Worthy has made little progress in Year 2. The Chiefs desperately needed the 2024 first-round pick to step up given all their injuries on offense, and Worthy managed just two catches for 41 yards against the Titans.
By this point, it would be quicker to list the Chiefs who are healthy.
2: The number of games the Chiefs have left before the season ends.
The Chiefs play Denver on Thursday night. The Christmas Night matchup, which could have featured two elite QBs on teams angling for the playoffs, will instead feature Bo Nix and the Broncos against Oladokun and a bunch of Chiefs who are simply trying to get through the rest of the season.
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Kansas City Chiefs running back Isiah Pacheco (10) is tackled by Tennessee Titans cornerback Kemon Hall (40) during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Tennessee Titans tight end Chig Okonkwo (85) dives over Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Jaylen Watson (35) to score a touchdown during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/John Amis)
Tennessee Titans defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons (98) celebrates after tackling Kansas City Chiefs running back Kareem Hunt for a safety during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/John Amis)
NEW YORK (AP) — Four years ago, New York City Mayor Eric Adams swept into office with swaggering confidence, pledging to lead a government unlike any other in history and declaring himself the “future of the Democratic Party.”
On the first promise, the mayor more than delivered. But as his tumultuous term comes to an end, Adams, 65, finds himself in the political wilderness, his one-time aspirations as a party leader now a distant memory.
Instead, he has spent his final weeks in power wandering the globe, publicly mulling his next private sector job and lashing out at the “haters” and “naysayers” whom he accuses of overlooking his accomplishments.
For many of his supporters, the Adams era will be looked back on as a missed opportunity. Only the second Black mayor in city history, he helped steer New York out of the throes of the COVID-19 pandemic, often linking the city’s comeback to his own rise from humble roots in working class Queens.
At a moment when many Democrats were struggling to address voter concerns about public safety, he drew national attention for a “radically practical” agenda focused on slashing crime and reactivating the economy.
But while most categories of crime returned to pre-pandemic levels, Adams will likely be remembered for another superlative: He is the only New York City mayor of the modern era to be indicted while in office.
“That’s a disappointment for voters, especially for Black voters, who had high expectations and aspirations,” said Basil Smikle, a political strategist who served as executive director of the state’s Democratic Party. “He entered with a lot of political capital, and that was squandered, in part because of his own hubris.”
Equally memorable, perhaps, were the strange subplots along the way: his hatred of rats and fear of ghosts; the mysteries about his home, his diet, his childhood; and his endless supply of catchphrases, gestures and head-scratching stories that could instantly transform a mundane bureaucratic event into a widely shared meme.
“So many mayors want to be filtered, they want to pretend who they are and act like they are perfect,” Adams said during a recent speech at City Hall, a freewheeling affair that ended with the mayor burying a time capsule of his achievements beneath a Manhattan sidewalk. “I am not.”
Adams took over from Mayor Bill de Blasio in January 2022, amid a COVID-19 spike that was killing hundreds of New Yorkers every day, along with a worrisome uptick in both violent crime and unemployment.
Adams, a former police captain, Brooklyn borough president and state senator, increased patrols on streets and subways, brought back a controversial anti-crime unit and appointed the department’s first female police commissioner. He also raised eyebrows for installing many of his former police department allies, including some ex-officials with histories of alleged misconduct.
As he encouraged New Yorkers to return to their pre-pandemic lives, Adams made an effort to lead by example, frequenting private clubs and upscale restaurants in order to “test the product” and “bring swagger back” to the city, he said.
But if New Yorkers initially tolerated Adams’ passion for late night partying, there seemed to be a growing sense that the mayor was distracted, or even slacking off, according to Hank Sheinkopf, a longtime Democratic consultant and supporter of Adams.
“There was a tension between swagger and seriousness,” Sheinkopf said. “New Yorkers wanted to see more seriousness. They didn’t want to see him out partying at some club they couldn’t afford to go into.”
It didn’t help that Adams often declined to say who was footing the bills for his meals, his entry into private clubs or his flights out of the city. When reporters staked out his nighttime activities, they found that Adams, who long professed to be a vegan, regularly ordered the branzino.
Asked about his diet, the mayor acknowledged that he ate fish and occasionally “nibbled” on chicken, describing himself, as he often would in the coming years, as “perfectly imperfect.”
The corruption investigation into Adams' campaign, launched quietly in the early stages of his mayoralty, first spilled into public view in the fall of 2023, as federal agents seized the mayor's phones as he was leaving an event. It loomed for nearly a year, as Adams faced new struggles, including a surge of migrants arriving in the city by bus.
Then, on Sept. 26, 2024, federal prosecutors brought fraud and bribery charges against Adams, accusing him of allowing Turkish officials and other businesspeople to buy his influence with illegal campaign contributions and steep discounts on overseas trips.
Investigators also seized phones from the mayor's police commissioner, schools chancellor and multiple deputy mayors. Each denied wrongdoing, but a mass exodus of leadership followed, along with questions about the mayor’s ability to govern.
Adams insisted, without evidence, that he had been politically targeted by the Biden administration for his criticism of its immigration policy. But his frequently invoked mantra — “stay focused, no distractions, and grind” — seemed to lose potency with each new scandal.
Among them: a chief adviser indicted by state prosecutors in a separate alleged bribery scheme involving a bike lane and minor TV role; another longtime adviser forced to resign after handing a chip bag filled with cash to a reporter; and a string of abuse and corruption allegations within the police department, many of them linked to longtime friends Adams had installed in high-ranking positions.
Looking back at what went wrong, both supporters and critics of the mayor tend to agree on at least one point: Adams could be loyal to a fault, refusing to distance himself from long-serving allies even after they appeared to cross ethical lines.
“There was one City Hall made up of dedicated and competent leaders focused on executing his priorities,” said Sheena Wright, Adams’ former first deputy mayor. “There was another City Hall made up of people who knew the mayor for a long time, and who were allowed to operate outside the norms of government.”
Facing a plummeting approval rating and the prospect of years in prison, Adams began aligning himself with President Donald Trump, going to great lengths to avoid criticizing the Republican and even leaving open the possibility of switching parties.
That seemed to work: Weeks after Trump took office, the Justice Department dismissed the corruption case, writing in a two-page memo that it had interfered with Adams’ ability to help with the president’s immigration agenda.
But in the view of Evan Thies, one of Adams’ closest advisers at the time, that was the moment that sealed Adams’ fate as a one-term mayor.
“The memo hit like a nuclear bomb,” Thies said.
The damage worsened a few days later, when Adams appeared on Fox & Friends alongside Trump’s border Czar Tom Honan, who threatened to “be up his butt” if the mayor didn’t comply with Trump’s agenda.
“It seemed to confirm the belief that he had traded his duty to New Yorkers for his personal freedom,” Thies recalled. “It wasn’t true, but that was perception.”
Adams adamantly denied striking a deal with the Trump administration. He has continued to suggest a broad conspiracy against him, at times blaming bureaucrats in the “deep state."
Even with his case behind him, Adams struggled to build a re-election campaign. Earlier this year, his approval rating sank to a record low. In September, he abandoned his efforts, throwing his support behind former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a one-time rival he’d recently referred to as a “snake and a liar.”
As of late December, Adams’ plans for life after he leaves office remain uncertain.
“I did what I had to do, I left everything I had on the ice, and I’m looking forward to the next step of my journey,” he said during a farewell speech at City Hall.
Then, for the third time in as many months, Adams took off on an international trip. This time, the destination was Mexico.
FILE - NYC Mayor Eric Adams speaks to the press after the arrival of Luigi Mangione, a suspect in the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, Dec. 19, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Pamela Smith, File)
FILE - New York City Mayor Eric Adams takes his seat at the witness table during a House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform hearing with Sanctuary City Mayors on Capitol Hill, March 5, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr., File)
FILE - New York City Mayor Eric Adams arrives to court, Feb. 19, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson, File)
FILE - New York City Mayor Eric Adams talks to the press in front of the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Oct. 4, 2023, in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo, File)