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Football Without Borders: Chiefs vs. Chargers in Brazil

Hunter Tierney 's profile
Original Story by Wave News
September 5, 2025
Football Without Borders: Chiefs vs. Chargers in Brazil

São Paulo. Friday night. Chiefs–Chargers. Free on YouTube. If you spoke those words out loud ten years ago, people would’ve laughed you out of the bar. Yet here we are, opening the season inside Neo Química Arena with the NFL handing fans an all‑access stream and two AFC West rivals that almost always find a way to make it weird.

This isn’t some overseas novelty game where one team is just happy to sightsee and the other is trying out a new mascot dance. Both sides come in with real expectations. The Chiefs want to show last year’s Super Bowl hiccup was just that — a hiccup — and that the defense is still the bully in the room. The Chargers, now powered by Jim Harbaugh’s personality and Greg Roman’s run‑heavy identity, want to land the first punch in a division they’ve spent years chasing.

Why This One’s Different: A Free Game That Everyone Will See

It’s the first NFL game streamed free on YouTube — no cable login, no app shuffle, no hunting for a sketchy stream with a chat box you can’t close. That alone changes the vibe. Instead of being tucked away on some premium network, this one’s basically sitting there on the world’s biggest video platform for anyone with Wi‑Fi to watch. That means more eyeballs, more casual fans stumbling in, and way more clips flying around in real time. Coaches know that too, which is why you can bet both staffs have a wrinkle or two stashed away so they don’t become the night’s meme.

Then there’s the other twist: travel and surface. This isn’t a hop from Kansas City to Denver — it’s a long haul to South America, and that always messes with body clocks a bit. Players say the right things, but you can feel the difference in those first couple of drives. Add in the field itself — natural grass over a hybrid base — and it plays just a little slower than the carpet‑fast indoor tracks most teams love. Slower turf favors patient offenses that are cool with grinding it out, running backs who keep their legs churning for extra yards, and defenses that fly to the ball and tackle clean. Not the flashiest storyline, but it’s the kind of detail that ends up mattering if the second half turns into a slugfest.

The Quarterbacks: Familiar Faces, New Questions

Sep 29, 2024; Inglewood, California, USA; Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) and Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert (10) shake hands after the game at SoFi Stadium.
Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Patrick Mahomes, Patience Mode

Mahomes is still the standard. The ring count says it, the tape says it, and so does the way defenses play him — almost everyone lived in two‑high shells last season, begging him to get bored. That’s been the book: force 10–12 play drives, keep the explosives off the menu, and hope someone drops a ball or a guard jumps early.

Kansas City can live in that world. With Rashee Rice suspended to start the year, the Chiefs lean on a lean-looking — and newly engaged — Travis Kelce as the middle‑of‑the‑field problem solver, Hollywood Brown to keep safeties honest, and Xavier Worthy’s motion speed to stress the edges.

Justin Herbert, Structure and Answers

Harbaugh’s second season is less about Herbert’s arm talent (we’ve all seen it) and more about answers. The Chargers reshaped the offense to give him clean pictures: a downhill run game on early downs, defined play‑action, and route distributions that get the ball out on time. When the Chargers have been their most frustrating, it’s because they drift into shotgun spread on 2nd‑and‑10 and ask Herbert to be a superhero. This version is better equipped to get them into 2nd‑and‑4, not 2nd‑and‑10.

Where This Game Actually Tilts: The Trenches

Chiefs’ Defensive Front vs. Chargers’ Shuffled Line

Chris Jones is the headline, sure, but Kansas City’s front is more than a one‑man show. Jones wrecks slide protections, George Karlaftis has developed into the kind of edge who can just bulldoze his way into the backfield, and Charles Omenihu loves looping on those twist games that confuse a young tackle. Then you’ve got linebackers who trigger downhill the second they see a guard pull.

Now, picture that against a Chargers line that’s still adjusting on the fly — new left tackle, new help calls, probably leaning on bootlegs just to slow the rush down. Spagnuolo isn’t going to sit back and let them get comfortable. He’ll dial up stunts early, the kind of stuff that forces offensive linemen to talk to each other on the fly. If the twists and games hit in the first quarter, Los Angeles will start shortening routes and leaning even harder on the ground game to keep Herbert clean.

Chargers’ Front vs. Chiefs’ New‑Look Left Side

This is going to be a real test for Josh Simmons, who’s looked sharp in the preseason after slipping to the Chiefs in the draft, and now he’s getting thrown right into the fire. Welcome to the NFL, kid — you’re blocking Khalil Mack on Friday night. Not exactly a soft landing.

And on the other side, Tuli Tuipulotu is no picnic either. Minter doesn’t even have to send heat to stress a protection call. With Mack and Tuli working the edges and the interior line slanting to force one‑on‑ones, the Chargers are perfectly happy to rush four, sit back with seven in coverage, and make Mahomes hold the ball just long enough to let those rushers eat. That’s the whole design: frustrate him, squeeze the pocket, and hope the scramble drill doesn’t turn into another Kelce highlight.

Kansas City’s answer has to be simple: get the ball out. Screens to slow down Mack, RPOs to punish light boxes, darts to the slot, Pacheco in full effect — anything that forces those edge rushers to think instead of just pinning their ears back. If Mahomes hangs onto it, Mack and Tuli are teeing off. If he plays quick, the Chargers eventually have to roll a safety down to clog the easy stuff. And that’s when the fun comes — because the moment LA cheats down, you know Reid is dialing up the deep over to Worthy. That’s the cat‑and‑mouse game.

Five Matchups That Swing It

Jan 18, 2025; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) reacts after catching a pass for a touchdown against the Houston Texans during the fourth quarter of a 2025 AFC divisional round game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium.
Credit: Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images
  1. Kelce vs. a Physical Defense — If the Chargers dedicate bodies to bully Kelce on third downs, the whole stadium is going to hold its breath. Does Xavier Worthy’s track‑speed or Hollywood Brown’s deep threat make them pay for leaving single coverage outside? The trick is in the body language of the safeties. If they’re standing flat‑footed and static before the snap, Mahomes is licking his chops — KC will run option routes until someone makes a mistake.

  2. Joe Alt on the Blind Side vs. Spags’ Games — Alt’s a stud, no doubt, but flipping sides and dealing with Spagnuolo’s endless stunt menu is like cramming for a calculus exam with a Spanish dictionary. One or two free rushers a quarter completely change drives. If Alt settles in, LA can breathe. If he looks like a freshman flipping his notes mid‑exam, Herbert might spend the night ducking.

  3. Light Boxes vs. Pacheco — If the Chargers sit back with two‑high shells, Pacheco turns into a human snowplow. He’ll happily churn out 5 yards a pop until the safeties creep down. And once LA cheats? That’s when Mahomes goes hunting for the post‑safety voids. Pick your poison.

  4. Chargers’ Condensed Sets vs. Chiefs’ Force Edges — Those tight splits help the run game, creating traffic for rub routes and making defenders fight through bodies. If KC’s edge players don’t set a hard wall, Roman will keep calling 12 personnel until somebody taps out. It’s not glamorous, but it’s the kind of trench warfare that wears a defense down while the box score looks boring.

Finally, Something Free from the NFL

At the end of the day, this is going to be a showcase on a new stage, with both of these teams trying to prove something in front of a global audience that may be tuning into their very first NFL game. For Kansas City, it’s about showing they can win ugly if needed — that the offense doesn’t have to be fireworks every drive, and that Spagnuolo’s defense can still bail them out. For Los Angeles, it’s about proving the new Harbaugh/Roman blueprint travels, even when the line is shuffled and the opponent is the current dynasty of the league.

Either way, fans are getting a game that’s worth staying up for. It’s going to be physical, and it’s certainly going to be strategic. However it unfolds, Friday night in São Paulo won’t feel like some throwaway Week 1 matchup — it’ll feel like a glimpse into how the AFC West is going to be shaped all year long.

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