American Football: Domination

Chapter 338: Maintaining Momentum



Lance. Again and again, it was Lance.

With the Kansas City Chiefs and Tennessee Titans struggling to find their rhythm in this wild-card showdown, Lance stepped up—

He shook off four tackles, sprinted 24 yards into the red zone, and broke the stalemate.

Although Tennessee's red-zone defense held strong, limiting gains on the first two plays, they couldn't stop Lance on third-and-one.

The Chiefs struck first.

"0-7."

Just like in Week 14 against the Oakland Raiders, where Lance's early breakthrough set the tone, the Chiefs were now fully energized, igniting on both offense and defense.

First, Kansas City's defense shut down Mariota's read-option plays, hitting the third-year quarterback hard and forcing Tennessee into consecutive punts.

Then, Smith used Lance as a decoy, opening up the passing game. The Chiefs' quarterback repeatedly manipulated Tennessee's Pro Bowl-caliber cornerbacks, Williams and Orakpo, with misdirection, before connecting on a 14-yard touchdown pass to tight end Kelce—

Kelce bulldozed Orakpo and powered into the end zone.

Kansas City extended their lead.

The entire first half felt like déjà vu. Just like in the final four weeks of the regular season, the Chiefs were steamrolling their way through opponents, leaving the Titans with little room to breathe.

With two minutes left in the half, Mariota finally found some rhythm, using his legs to drive Tennessee downfield before their special teams converted a 49-yard field goal to get on the board.

But the Chiefs were relentless.

Smith's passing attack went into overdrive, methodically working the sidelines to stop the clock. With seconds remaining, he connected with Hill on a 13-yard touchdown pass, delivering a brutal blow to Tennessee's hopes just before halftime.

"3-21."

At the break, Kansas City held a commanding lead.

The broadcast booth buzzed with astonishment—this wasn't the playoff battle they had expected. It was a complete demolition.

"No doubt about it, the Chiefs came prepared."

"As of this season, Kansas City has lost five straight home playoff games—the longest streak in NFL history. If they lose tonight, they'll push that record even further, and that's something the Chiefs desperately want to avoid."

Kansas City's last playoff win? A road victory against the Houston Texans in the 2015 wild-card round.

A home playoff game meant Kansas City had earned a higher seed through strong regular-season play. Whether in the wild-card round or the divisional round, the home team was supposed to be the favorite.

Yet here they were, carrying the shame of five straight home playoff losses—

In some ways, it was even more humiliating than their infamous 24-year playoff win drought.

Failing to win a playoff game for 24 years could be chalked up to rebuilding, missing the playoffs, or struggling to be competitive. But losing five consecutive home playoff games? That meant the team had been good enough to host playoff games—only to collapse when it mattered most.

No team wanted to carry that burden.

No wonder analysts like Bart never trusted the Chiefs in the postseason.

When it mattered most, they just didn't deliver.

But today?

"The Chiefs' preparation is evident. They're dominating on both sides of the ball."

"In the first half, they scored three touchdowns in three different ways, each from a different player. Meanwhile, their defense is smothering Mariota's read-option attack, and their run defense is rock-solid."

"For the first time in a long time, Kansas City is playing like a true contender."

"For Tennessee, the situation is dire. In NFL playoff history, coming back from an 18-point deficit is almost unheard of…"

Derrick Henry stood on the sideline, watching Hill celebrate his touchdown in the end zone. With just two seconds left in the half, Kansas City had struck again, driving the dagger deeper into Tennessee's heart.

But Henry's gaze shifted—to Lance.

A perfect deception.

On the play, everyone—Henry included—thought Lance would be the primary target. Even Tennessee's defense bought into it.

Instead, Lance was a decoy, drawing attention while Smith found Hill for the score.

Lance didn't even need the ball to dictate the game. He was transforming into the focal point of Kansas City's offense, redefining the role of a running back.

But what about him?

Henry's chest tightened.

All this time, he had blamed the coach for not giving him enough chances. He had resented Murray for not sharing carries. He had felt frustrated that Tennessee's offense revolved around Mariota.

Excuse after excuse.

Two seasons in the NFL, and all he had done was complain. He had become nothing more than a cleanup back, far removed from the star he was at Alabama.

In college, he was a king. In the NFL, he was an afterthought.

Once, he had been untouchable. Now, he had to beg for carries. And he had never adjusted. He had never accepted his role.

Including tonight.

Mularkey's game plan revolved entirely around Mariota. Henry was nothing more than an afterthought, orbiting the quarterback with nowhere to go.

But he wanted to run.

He wanted to break through.

He wanted to take on defenders head-on.

He wanted to prove to his Alabama brothers that he was still that same dominant force.

But reality was cruel.

No need to check the stat sheet—Henry knew he had been invisible in the first half.

Meanwhile, Lance was thriving.

That damn rookie.

So what now? Admit defeat? Surrender? Give up?

No.

Absolutely not.

Watching Lance, Henry realized what he had been missing.

No more excuses. No more complaints.

In college, they had been stars—the center of everything. But the NFL was different. He needed to be part of the team. He needed to understand that winning didn't have to come from individual dominance. That working within a system, alongside teammates, was also a path to success.

It had taken him two years to see it.

And now, watching Lance, it finally clicked.

Henry recalled his mentor Burns' words—

"Yes, he's a rookie. But that's exactly why he can see the game with fresh eyes. It's his greatest advantage. Derrick, there's something you can learn from him."

Back then, Henry had dismissed it.

Now?

Now, he understood.

And it wasn't too late.

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Powerstones?

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