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How Kansas City Chiefs Can Defeat Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LIX

As the Kansas City Chiefs pursue an unprecedented third straight Super Bowl championship, they’ll need a road map to make history and overcome the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LIX Sunday.

Conveniently, their most recent win, a 32-29 victory over the Buffalo Bills in the AFC Championship, should offer plenty of guidance for the upcoming game plan, as should a previous meeting with their upcoming opponent.

Certain to be near the top of the list for prioritization will be the Chiefs’ performance in short yardage, especially on defense and in critical moments Sunday.

Against Buffalo, the Chiefs managed to stuff the Bills on fourth down just twice in six attempts, but one of those stops came in a critical short yardage situation.

Bills quarterback Josh Allen converted a fourth-and-1 in the third quarter, picking up three yards on an option look. When the Bills were again successful on fourth down on the goal line, it was running back James Cook diving for the score.

Allen picked up another fourth-and-short a drive later. But four plays later, arguably the biggest play of the game, went to the Chiefs. Kansas City stood Allen up for no gain with the Bills nursing a 22-21 lead. 

The Chiefs scored to go ahead on the ensuing drive and went on to win the game.

Opinions remain divided on whether Allen crept across the first-down line to gain on that play. From any vantage point, the Chiefs’ defense showed a sturdiness in keeping it from being an automatic first down in a critical situation.

It wasn’t an aberration. The Chiefs managed to stuff Allen three separate times in QB sneak situations. Next Gen Stats credited KC for the most such stops in a single game the last nine years.

That could bode well against Philadelphia and its reliance on the infamous “tush push,” a short yardage formation that generally nets positive results for the Eagles and has befuddled the Chiefs defense in previous matchups.

Jalen Hurts scored twice out of the formation in Super Bowl LVII, a game the Chiefs won by three to kick off their current pursuit of a three-peat.

In the NFC Championship Game against the Washington Commanders, Hurts scored out of the formation twice and so frustrated the Commanders with the play that at one point referee Shawn Hochuli felt compelled to threaten Washington with awarding points to the Eagles to keep them from continuing to jump offsides.

If the Chiefs can win occasionally in those situations—and they now have evidence to believe that’s the case—it will go a long way in getting them a win on Sunday.

Kansas City likely will look to lean on another tactic that served them well in that previous Super Bowl, as well as in last week’s AFC Championship: exploit man coverage.

Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes was given the green light to run more against Buffalo, with several good gains on the ground coming at the expense of man coverage. Mahomes finished with a season-high 11 rushing attempts, which netted 43 yards and two touchdowns.

In addition, Mahomes defeated Buffalo’s man schemes through the air, most notably with a quick out to Xavier Worthy, which Worthy turned into an 11-yard scoring play.

Two years ago in this spot, Mahomes twice burned the Eagles with scoring passes in obvious man situations near the goal line and had similar success on the ground, running for 44 yards (on six attempts).

For the Chiefs to reach rarified air, the script might end up being that simple. Stand up strong on short yardage, and let Mahomes cook against man defense, and a third trophy lift in three years will very likely be on the menu.

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Teen's match-winner keeps New England rolling, Atlanta sliding

MLS: New England Revolution at Atlanta United FCApr 22, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; New England Revolution defender Will Sands (23) and Atlanta United midfielder Saba Lobjanidze (11) collide while fighting for the ball during the first half at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

Peyton Miller’s 78th-minute goal was the match-winner as the visiting New England Revolution defeated Atlanta United, 2-1, on Wednesday night.

Carles Gil assisted on both goals for the Revolution (5-3-0, 15 points), who extended their winning streak to four matches. They also snapped a six-match road losing streak dating back to 2025.

Atlanta (1-7-1, 4 points) dropped its fourth league match in a row and has gone winless in its last five MLS matches (0-4-1).

The 18-year-old Miller scored his team-high third goal of the season on a cross from Gil from the left side of the scoring area. The United States youth international chipped it over Atlanta goalkeeper Lucas Hoyos to make it 2-1 Revs.

The goal came shortly after Will Sands scored a 73rd-minute equalizer. Gil’s corner kick met Sands’ head and, with Hoyos off his line, it sailed into the net to make it 1-1. It was Sands’ first career goal.

Atlanta scored the match’s first goal after the Revs’ Alhassan Yusuf had his would-be opener disallowed on an offside call.

After Pedro Amador got on the end of a cross from Alexey Miranchuk, he fed it to Saba Lobjanidze in front of the goal. Revs goalkeeper Matt Turner parried away Lobjanidze’s point-blank attempt before Fafa Picault had a simple finish on the rebound to make it 1-0. It was Picault’s second goal with Atlanta United across all competitions.

Atlanta had an opportunity to equalize in second-half stoppage time, but Matt Turner stopped Emmanuel Latte Lath’s volleyed attempt.

Turner ended the evening with eight saves. Hoyos was credited with two saves for Atlanta.

With the loss, Atlanta United’s record in their last 13 matches at Mercedes-Benz Stadium fell to 1-6-6.

Wednesday marked New England’s first road win since a 2-1 victory over the Columbus Crew on August 23, 2025.

–Field Level Media

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DC United ends scoring drought, earns 4-4 draw with Red Bulls

MLS: D.C. United at Red Bull New YorkApr 22, 2026; Harrison, New Jersey, USA; Red Bull New York forward Jorge Ruvalcaba (11) reacts after scoring a goal against D.C. United during the second half at Sports Illustrated Stadium. Mandatory Credit: John Jones-Imagn Images

Tai Baribo scored his third goal in the 80th minute as D.C. United ended a long scoring drought and escaped with a 4-4 draw in an adrenaline-fueled match against the New York Red Bulls on Wednesday night in Harrison, N.J.

Jackson Hopkins added a goal and an assist for D.C. United (2-4-3, 9 points), who rallied from a two-goal deficit. D.C. has not won in its last five games, going 0-2-3 over that stretch.

The offensive splurge came from a D.C. team that entered the match with an MLS-low four goals. Baribo has now scored six of the team’s eight goals this season.

Jorge Ruvalcaba scored two spectacular goals in the second half for struggling New York (3-3-3, 12 points), which has won only one of its last seven MLS matches.

Ronald Donkor added a goal and two assists and Julian Hall scored his team-high sixth goal for the Red Bulls, who have surrendered 18 goals in their last five matches.

New York struck first in the 15th minute with a precise pair of passes by Adri Mehmeti and Donkor, which set up Hall for a low right-footed shot past on-rushing D.C. keeper Sean Johnson (one save).

Just six minutes later, the Red Bulls took advantage of a lack of pressure from the D.C. defense as a cross by 17-year-old Matthew Dos Santos was deflected by D.C. defender Aaron Herrera.

The ball found Donkor in the center of the box and he fired a right-footed shot to the bottom left corner for a 2-0 lead.

D.C. answered in the 37th minute in transition as Hopkins crossed from the right side to Baribo in the middle of the box. With a sliding right-footed shot, Baribo beat New York keeper Ethan Horvath (one save).

New York countered in the 52nd minute in transition as Emil Forsberg found Ruvalcaba sprinting down the left wing. Ruvalcaba beat one defender then watched another slide past before rifling a tough-angle shot into the top right corner for a 3-1 lead.

But D.C. answered, taking advantage of the tendency of the back line of New York to play too far forward. D.C.’s Joao Peglow won two balls near midfield and sent them forward for breakaway goals five minutes apart.

Hopkins scored the first to make it 3-2 and Baribo followed in the 59th minute to tie it up.

After Ruvalcaba scored again in transition in the 71st minute, Baribo answered from just in front of the goal line with his equalizer on a feed from Silvan Hefti, who had two assists in the match.

In stoppage time, D.C.’s Jacob Murrell appeared to score a transition goal but was called for a foul, shoving a defender out of his way before flicking in a shot with his left foot.

–Field Level Media

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Strong second period carries Flyers past Penguins for 3-0 edge

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Pittsburgh Penguins at Philadelphia FlyersApr 22, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Flyers right wing Travis Konecny (11) checks Pittsburgh Penguins right wing Rickard Rakell (67) during the first period in game three of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

Trevor Zegras, Rasmus Ristolainen, Nick Seeler and Noah Cates all scored their first career playoff goals to guide the Philadelphia Flyers to a 5-2 home victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Wednesday and a three-games-to-none series lead.

After capturing Games 1 and 2 of the Eastern Conference quarterfinal matchup in Pittsburgh, Philadelphia scored three times in the second period of this one, and Dan Vladar took care of the rest with 28 saves.

Owen Tippett had the other goal for the Flyers. Cates and Zegras each added an assist, and Jamie Drysdale, Sean Couturier and Noah Juulsen logged two assists apiece.

Evgeni Malkin and Erik Karlsson scored for Pittsburgh, which needs to win Saturday in Philadelphia to save its season. Stuart Skinner made 24 saves for the Penguins.

Pittsburgh opened the scoring 4:18 into the contest on a power play. Sidney Crosby, Bryan Rust and Malkin connected on a tic-tac-toe passing sequence that ended with Malkin’s tally from the doorstep.

That was the only goal of the first period, but the middle session saw plenty of offense — all from Philadelphia — and a significant amount of physical play.

The second-period scoring began with Zegras’ power-play goal on a one-timer from the right circle at 5:18.

At the time, there were 11 players in the penalty boxes. Following a scrum on the previous shift, all 10 skaters were assessed roughing penalties with Rust getting an extra minor that had to be served by a teammate.

Less than four minutes later, the teams were back at full strength when Ristolainen scored from the right circle after a nice feed from Juulsen. Ristolainen received the puck with space and beat Skinner through the five-hole.

About two minutes later, Seeler’s shot from the blue line got through traffic and found the back of the net.

Pittsburgh pressured in the third period, which turned out to be an eventful stanza for Vladar. He lost a skate blade early in the session and then hurt his right arm on a collision with Rust a couple minutes later.

The injury appeared to affect Vladar, as he promptly allowed a power-play goal when Karlsson’s shot snuck just under his arm with 10:21 remaining.

However, Philadelphia regained the momentum with a power-play goal less than three minutes later when Cates took a pass on the doorstep, reverse-pivoted into the crease and lifted a forehand under the crossbar.

Tippett’s empty-netter with 1:12 left put an exclamation point on the victory.

–Field Level Media

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