The Kansas City Chiefs’ playoff drought ends a decade-long streak for a franchise that has become synonymous with sustained dominance. After Sunday’s 16-13 defeat at home to the Los Angeles Chargers, Patrick Mahomes and his teammates find themselves eliminated from postseason contention with three games still on the schedule. This marks the first time since 2013 that the Chiefs will miss the playoffs, and it raises serious questions about whether the so-called NFL dynasty is entering a end-of-era phase.
The loss, Kansas City’s third in a row and fifth in six games, leaves them at 6-8 for the season. It’s a stunning turn for a team that has consistently reached the postseason under head coach Andy Reid, who has guided the Chiefs to the playoffs in each of the last ten seasons and steered them to five Super Bowl appearances in the past six years. The franchise claimed championships in 2020, 2023, and 2024, but could not secure a fourth title in five years during the most recent campaign.
Patrick Mahomes, 30, became the starter in 2018 and has reached at least the AFC Championship game in each of his seven seasons, a remarkable run that only the New England Patriots matched over a similar span. The Chiefs also boast the second-longest postseason streak in NFL history, trailing only the Patriots’ era of sustained playoff appearances (2009–2019).
In Sunday’s contest, Kansas City led 13-3 late in the second quarter, only for the Chargers to surge back with 13 consecutive points and seize control. Mahomes, a two-time league MVP, left the field after suffering a left-knee injury on a tackle with under two minutes to play. He required on-field treatment and assistance to leave the tunnel area as backup quarterback Gardner Minshew threw an interception with 20 seconds remaining, stifling a potential game-tying drive.
Following the game, Reid indicated Mahomes would undergo an MRI either late Sunday or on Monday, admitting the injury “doesn’t look good.”
Offensively, Travis Kelce has been a stalwart since 2014 and is one of six Chiefs players to have secured three Super Bowl rings. The 36-year-old tight end, who is engaged to music superstar Taylor Swift, has suggested he would postpone retirement decisions until after the current season. However, with the Chiefs’ postseason hopes dashed, the broader implications for the team’s quarterback play, injuries, and next steps will dominate conversations in Kansas City and across the league.