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  Sunday, Oct. 10 1:00pm ET
Patriots' luck finally runs out in K.C.
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Although Adam Vinatieri missed the field goal, Lee Johnson wants everyone to know he might have missed the hold.

Derrick Alexander
The Chiefs' Derrick Alexander is upended by Patriots cornerback Ty Law.
Regardless of who was at fault, Vinatieri's 32-yard attempt in the closing seconds hit the right upright and bounced backward, allowing the Kansas City Chiefs to escape with a 16-14 victory over the previously unbeaten New England Patriots on Sunday.

"I could probably go out there and hit a hundred in a row right now. I just didn't hit one when I needed to," said Vinatieri, who had already booted two late game-winning field goals this year for the Patriots (4-1).

At that point, Johnson leaned into the crowd of reporters.

"I got the ball caught on my thumb, and I couldn't get the laces around," he said. "It was what I call a 3 o'clock lace, with the laces on the right side of the ball, and when that happens the kick usually goes wide right. Knowing Adam, he should hit that, but I just wanted everybody to know the hold was not up to my satisfaction."

The emotionally exhausted Chiefs (3-2) didn't care who took the blame.

"This is a 60-minute game," said offensive tackle Marcus Spears, who made his first career start in place of the injured Glenn Parker. "Fifty-nine minutes and 56 seconds won't get it done."

"When I saw the ball hit the upright and kick back onto the field, the feeling was hard to describe," added safety Reggie Tongue. "It was awesome. We finally got a break to go our way."

GAME NOTES
Kansas City has beaten New England in nine of their last 12 meetings
Terry Glenn's 49-yard touchdown catch was the longest pass play given up by the Chiefs this season, and New England's first first-quarter TD of the year. It also gave the Patriots their first halftime lead of the season.
Chiefs wide receiver Joe Horn set personal bests with four catches for 75 yards.
Bam Morris' 23-yard carry in the fourth quarter was his longest of the season.
Wide receiver Derrick Alexander, Kansas City's leader in receiving yards, suffered bruised ribs in the third quarter and did not return. He had two catches for 25 yards on Saturday, giving him 18 for 379 on the year.

Drew Bledsoe, after missing nine passes in a row, regrouped to hit nine of his last 11, including an 8-yard touchdown strike to Shawn Jefferson with 2:43 left that cut the margin to two points.

The Chiefs then had to punt, giving the Patriots the ball on their own 33 with 30 seconds left. Bledsoe's 27-yard completion to Jefferson set up the field goal try by Vinatieri that missed with four seconds left.

"You talk about highs and lows and dying in two seconds," Chiefs coach Gunther Cunningham said. "I never feel lucky. You make your own luck."

If Johnson didn't want to take the blame, Bledsoe was willing. Near the end of the first half, Jefferson worked his way free deep in the secondary, but Bledsoe overthrew a sure touchdown.

"Adam Vinatieri should have never been in that situation to have to make that kick," said Bledsoe, who was 23-for-45 for 334 yards and his first two interceptions in four games. He also fumbled.

"It's my job as the quarterback, first and foremost, to hold onto the ball, not give it to the defense," he said. "I gave it to them three times today. If I don't do that, Adam's not in that situation."

Elvis Grbac, who was booed in a lackluster first half, engineered three second-half scoring drives as the Chiefs remained unbeaten in three home games and made sure there were no more undefeated teams in the AFC.

The Chiefs, seeking to avenge last season's 40-10 loss to the Patriots, took a 16-7 lead with 4:52 left in the fourth period on Pete Stoyanovich's 23-yard field goal.

After Donnell Bennett's 1-yard TD run put the Chiefs on top 10-7 with 6:54 remaining, Grbac set up a 41-yard field goal by Stoyanovich for a 13-7 lead.

Although the defense forced turnovers on the New England 7 and 33 in the first half, the Kansas City offense was able to get only three points. The New England offensive linemen, obviously rattled by the deafening noise by nearly 80,000 fans, were whistled for four false start penalties on their first nine plays from scrimmage.

On the 10th, Derrick Thomas came on a blitz and sacked Bledsoe, stripping the ball. Chester McGlockton recovered, tried to lateral before the Chiefs wound up with the ball on the 7. But the Chiefs had to settle for Stoyanovich's 23-yarder.

In the second quarter, Bledsoe threw his second interception of the year when linebacker Donnie Edwards jumped in front of Terry Glenn and returned the ball 15 yards to the 33. But, as the big crowd booed, the Chiefs punted on fourth-and-11.

On their third possession, Bledsoe marched the Patriots 78 yards in just eight plays. On third-and-17, Glenn beat cornerback James Hasty on a 49-yard touchdown pass, putting the Patriots ahead 7-3 with 1:57 left in the quarter.

With less than a minute left in the half and the Patriots on their own 41, Jefferson got free in the secondary and did not have a defender within 20 yards. But Bledsoe overthrew him, squandering what would have been a sure touchdown.

"When you keep doing the things we were doing, the mistakes and the penalties, we were fortunate to be in a close game with a chance to win," said Bledsoe. "We are too good a team to keep beating ourselves."

 


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