Chiefs–Raiders rivalry

Kansas City Chiefs–Oakland Raiders
Kansas City Chiefs
Oakland Raiders
First meeting September 16, 1960
Dallas Texans 34, Oakland Raiders 16
Latest meeting January 3, 2016
Chiefs 23, Raiders 17
Next meeting TBD 2016
Statistics
Meetings total 114 meetings (including the playoffs)[1]
All-time series Chiefs lead 60–52–2[1]
Postseason results

Chiefs lead 2–1[1]

  • December 22, 1968: Raiders 41, Chiefs 6
  • January 4, 1970:
    Chiefs 17, Raiders 7
  • December 28, 1991: Chiefs 10, Raiders 6
Largest victory Chiefs: 42–7 (1964)
Raiders: 41–6 (1968)
Longest streak Chiefs: 9 (2003–07)
Raiders: 7 (1975–78)
Current streak Chiefs: 3 wins (2014–present)
Playoff and Championship Success

AFL Championships (4) (1960—1969)

Super Bowl championships (4)
AFL Western Division Championships (5) (1960—1969)
Super Bowl Appearances (7)
AFC West Divisional Championships (18) (1970–present)
AFC Wild-Card berths (13) (1970–present)

The Chiefs–Raiders rivalry is considered to be one of the National Football League (NFL)'s most bitter rivalries.[2] Since the American Football League (AFL) was established in 1960, the Kansas City Chiefs and Oakland Raiders have shared the same division, first being the AFL Western Conference, and since the AFL–NFL merger in 1970, the AFC West.

The Chiefs lead the series 58–52–2.[1]

The Chiefs are ahead in playoff match-ups with a record of 2–1.[1] The Chiefs are one of only four teams in the NFL with a winning record against the Raiders (with 10 or more contests).[3]

History

The teams first met in 1960 when the Chiefs were known as the Dallas Texans. The Texans defeated the Raiders 34-16 in the team's first game at Oakland,[1][4][5] while the Raiders defeated the Texans 20-19 at Dallas.[4][5]

The rivalry did not become so apparent until the Kansas City Athletics baseball team moved to Oakland, California in 1967. In 1969, the Kansas City Royals expansion team was placed in the same division as the Athletics. The 1966 Chiefs team participated in the first AFL-NFL World Championship Game, later known as the Super Bowl. The Chiefs and Raiders both had identical 12-2 records in 1968 and faced off in a playoff game to decide who would go to face the New York Jets for the AFL Championship. The Raiders won 41-6.

The following year, in 1969, the Raiders beat the Chiefs twice in the regular season[6][7] and went on to win the AFL Western Conference title. The 2 teams met in the 1969 AFL Championship Game at Oakland and the underdog Chiefs won 17-7.[6][7] The Chiefs participated in Super Bowl IV a week later and defeated the NFL's heavily favored Minnesota Vikings.[6] It was not until 1976 that Oakland finally won their first Super Bowl championship.[8]

In the first meeting between the teams during the 1970 NFL season–;both team's first in the newly merged NFL–;the Chiefs held a 17-14 lead late in the fourth quarter and appeared ready to run out the clock. Chiefs quarterback Len Dawson rolled right and gained enough yardage for a first down, and as he fell to the ground, Raiders defensive end Ben Davidson dove into Dawson with his helmet; in retaliation, Davidson was attacked by Chiefs wide receiver Otis Taylor.[2] After a bench-clearing brawl, Davidson and Taylor were ejected, and the penalties that were called nullified the first down under the rules at the time. Kansas City was forced to punt. The Raiders took advantage, as George Blanda nailed a 48-yard field goal with 8 seconds left to secure a 17-17 tie. The tie proved to be costly for the Chiefs, as Oakland clinched their first AFC West championship with a 20-6 victory in Oakland in Week 13. Due to this incident, the NFL changed the rules so that Davidson's personal foul would have been enforced at the end of the play, and Taylor's penalty would have been assessed only after the Chiefs had been awarded a first down.

The Chiefs defeated the Raiders 42-10 in the 1975 season, prompting the Chiefs' live horse mascot Warpaint to circle the field after each touchdown scored. After the game, Raiders coach John Madden said "We couldn't beat the Chiefs, but we damn near killed their horse."[9]

The Raiders would go on to win two more Super Bowl titles in 1980[10] and 1983[11] while the Chiefs were considered to be one of the worst teams in the NFL. The Raiders won most of the games between the 1970s and 1980s.[12] Following their victory in Super Bowl IV, the Chiefs returned to the playoffs in 1971, but lost in double overtime to the Miami Dolphins in the divisional round in the longest game in NFL history, the final game at Kansas City. Following that loss, Kansas City did not return to the playoffs until 1986.[13]

In the final game of the 1999 season, the Chiefs and Raiders faced off at Kansas City. A win for the Chiefs would put them in the playoffs. A game plagued by special teams mistakes for the Chiefs, including three attempted kickoffs that ended up out of bounds by kickoff specialist Jon Baker, helped keep the Raiders in the game and stop the Chiefs from sealing the victory. The game went into overtime and, helped by favorable field position after the third and final kickoff out of bounds, former Chief Rich Gannon drove the Raiders into Chiefs territory, setting up the game-winning field goal and knocking the Chiefs out of the playoffs, their first win at Arrowhead since 1988.[14]

On October 21, 2007, the Chiefs defeated the Raiders for a record ninth straight victory. On November 25, 2007, the Raiders defeated the Chiefs in Arrowhead for Oakland's first victory over Kansas City since December 23, 2002.

On September 14, 2008, the Raiders defeated the Chiefs 23-8 for the second straight time in Kansas City. Rookie Darren McFadden compiled 210 rushing yards and a touchdown.[15] On November 30, 2008, the Chiefs defeated the Raiders for the sixth straight time in Oakland.[16]

On September 20, 2009, the Raiders defeated the Chiefs 13-10, in Kansas City for the third straight time. The Chiefs became one of the few teams to lose to quarterback JaMarcus Russell.[17] On November 15, 2009, the Chiefs defeated the Raiders 16-10 in Oakland Coliseum for the Chiefs' seventh straight victory in Oakland.

On November 7, 2010, the Raiders would defeat the Chiefs in OT 23-20 in a match-up that revived the Chiefs–Raiders rivalry. It marked the 99th time these teams have met in the regular season and 102nd overall. On January 2, 2011, the Raiders defeated the Chiefs in Kansas City for the fourth straight time, 31-10, to finish a sweep of the AFC West.

On October 3, 2011, a Raiders fan filed a lawsuit against the Chiefs and two unidentified Chiefs fans, claiming that security did nothing as he was beaten during a brawl at Kansas City in 2009.[18]

The Chiefs broke Oakland's six-game winning streak in Kansas City on October 13, 2013 when they defeated the Raiders, 24-7, in a game where Kansas City set a then world record for the loudest open-air venue at over 137 dB.[19]

On November 20, 2014 the Raiders snapped a 16-game losing streak in Oakland against the Chiefs while Kansas City was in a 4-game winning streak the week after the Chiefs defeated the defending Super Bowl champions the Seattle Seahawks.

Rivalry statistics

The Chiefs-Raiders game in 2006 at Kansas City

As of week 15 of the 2013 NFL season, the Chiefs and Raiders have played 106 regular season games and three post-season games against each other.[1] The Chiefs lead the series 55-50-2 in regular-season play and 2–1 in post-season meetings.[1] The Chiefs have shut out the Raiders three times (1981, 1997, and 2011) and Oakland has done the same twice to Kansas City (2002 and 2012).[1] The record in overtime results is 2-1 in favor of the Chiefs.[1]

Chiefs wins Ties Raiders wins Chiefs points Raiders points
Regular season 55 2 50 2,210 2,074
Postseason 2 1 33 54
Total 57 2 51 2,243 2,128

Game results

Chiefs' victory Raiders' victory Tie Postseason meeting

Note: All game dates occur on Sunday unless indicated otherwise.
Source: Pro-Football-Reference.[20]

1960s (Chiefs 12–10)

Year Date Winner Result Loser Location
1960[lower-alpha 3] September 16 (Fri.) Dallas Texans 34–16 Oakland Raiders San Francisco (Kezar Stadium)
October 9 Oakland Raiders 20–19 Dallas Texans Dallas (Cotton Bowl)
1961[lower-alpha 3] September 24 Dallas Texans 42–35 Oakland Raiders San Francisco (Candlestick Park)
November 26 Dallas Texans 43–11 Oakland Raiders Dallas (Cotton Bowl)
1962[lower-alpha 3] September 23 Dallas Texans 26–16 Oakland Raiders Oakland
November 25 Dallas Texans 35–7 Oakland Raiders Dallas (Cotton Bowl)
1963 November 3 Kansas City Chiefs 10–7 Oakland Raiders Oakland
November 8 (Fri.) Oakland Raiders 22–7 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
1964 September 27 Kansas City Chiefs 21–9 Oakland Raiders Oakland
November 8 Kansas City Chiefs 42–7 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
1965 September 12 Oakland Raiders 37–10 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
October 31 Kansas City Chiefs 14–7 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
1966 September 18 Kansas City Chiefs 32–10 Oakland Raiders Oakland
October 16 Oakland Raiders 34–14 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
1967 October 1 Oakland Raiders 23–21 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
November 23 (Thur.) Oakland Raiders 44–22 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
1968 October 20 Kansas City Chiefs 24–10 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
November 3 Oakland Raiders 30–21 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
December 22 Oakland Raiders 41–6 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
1969 November 23 Oakland Raiders 27–24 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
December 13 (Sat.) Oakland Raiders 10–6 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
January 4, 1970 Kansas City Chiefs 17–7 Oakland Raiders Oakland

1970s (Raiders 12–6–2)

Year Date Winner Result Loser Location
1970 November 1 17–17 Kansas City
December 12 (Sat.) Oakland Raiders 20–6 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
1971 October 31 20–20 Oakland
December 12 Kansas City Chiefs 16–14 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
1972 November 5 Kansas City Chiefs 27–14 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
November 26 Oakland Raiders 26–3 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
1973 September 30 Kansas City Chiefs 16–3 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
December 8 (Sat.) Oakland Raiders 37–7 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
1974 September 22 Oakland Raiders 27–7 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
December 8 Oakland Raiders 7–6 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
1975 October 12 Kansas City Chiefs 42–10 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
December 21 Oakland Raiders 28–20 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
1976 September 20 (Mon.) Oakland Raiders 24–21 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
November 14 Oakland Raiders 21–10 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
1977 October 3 (Mon.) Oakland Raiders 37–28 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
December 18 Oakland Raiders 21–20 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
1978 October 15 Oakland Raiders 28–6 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
November 5 Oakland Raiders 20–10 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
1979 September 23 Kansas City Chiefs 35–7 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
November 18 Kansas City Chiefs 24–21 Oakland Raiders Oakland

1980s (Raiders 12–7)

Year Date Winner Result Loser Location
1980 September 7 Oakland Raiders 27–14 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
October 5 Kansas City Chiefs 31–17 Oakland Raiders Oakland
1981 October 11 Kansas City Chiefs 27–0 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
October 25 Kansas City Chiefs 28–17 Oakland Raiders Oakland
1982[lower-alpha 4][lower-alpha 5] December 12 Los Angeles Raiders 21–17 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
1983 October 9 Los Angeles Raiders 21–20 Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles
November 6 Los Angeles Raiders 28–20 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
1984 September 16 Los Angeles Raiders 22–20 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
November 18 Los Angeles Raiders 17–7 Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles
1985 September 12 (Thur.) Kansas City Chiefs 36–20 Los Angeles Raiders Kansas City
October 6 Los Angeles Raiders 19–10 Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles
1986 October 5 Los Angeles Raiders 24–17 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
December 14 Kansas City Chiefs 20–17 Los Angeles Raiders Los Angeles
1987 October 4 Los Angeles Raiders 35–17 Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles
December 13 Kansas City Chiefs 16–10 Los Angeles Raiders Kansas City
1988 October 16 Los Angeles Raiders 27–17 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
October 30 Los Angeles Raiders 17–10 Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles
1989 September 17 Kansas City Chiefs 24–19 Los Angeles Raiders Kansas City
October 15 Los Angeles Raiders 20–14 Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles

1990s (Chiefs 18–3)

Marcus Allen won the Super Bowl Most Valuable Player Award with the Raiders in 1982 and the NFL Comeback Player of the Year Award with the Chiefs in 1993.
Year Date Winner Result Loser Location
1990 November 4 Kansas City Chiefs 9–7 Los Angeles Raiders Kansas City
November 25 Kansas City Chiefs 27–24 Los Angeles Raiders Los Angeles
1991 October 28 (Mon.) Kansas City Chiefs 24–21 Los Angeles Raiders Kansas City
December 22 Kansas City Chiefs 27–21 Los Angeles Raiders Los Angeles
December 28 (Sat.) Kansas City Chiefs 10–6 Los Angeles Raiders Kansas City
1992 September 28 Kansas City Chiefs 27–7 Los Angeles Raiders Kansas City
December 6 Los Angeles Raiders 28–7 Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles
1993 October 3 Kansas City Chiefs 24–9 Los Angeles Raiders Kansas City
November 14 Kansas City Chiefs 31–20 Los Angeles Raiders Los Angeles
1994 November 6 Kansas City Chiefs 13–3 Los Angeles Raiders Kansas City
December 24 (Sat.) Kansas City Chiefs 19–9 Los Angeles Raiders Los Angeles
1995[lower-alpha 5] September 17 Kansas City Chiefs 23–17 (OT) Oakland Raiders Kansas City
December 3 Kansas City Chiefs 29–23 Oakland Raiders Oakland
1996 September 8 Kansas City Chiefs 19–3 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
December 9 (Mon.) Oakland Raiders 26–7 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
1997 September 8 (Mon.) Kansas City Chiefs 28–27 Oakland Raiders Oakland
December 7 Kansas City Chiefs 30–0 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
1998 September 6 (Sat.) Kansas City Chiefs 28–8 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
December 26 Kansas City Chiefs 31–24 Oakland Raiders Oakland
1999 November 28 Kansas City Chiefs 37–34 Oakland Raiders Oakland
January 2, 2000 Oakland Raiders 41–38 (OT) Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City

2000s (Chiefs 12–8)

Terdell Sands was drafted by Kansas City in 2001 but became a starter while with Oakland.
Year Date Winner Result Loser Location
2000 October 15 Oakland Raiders 20–17 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
November 5 Oakland Raiders 49–31 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
2001 September 9 Oakland Raiders 27–24 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
December 9 Oakland Raiders 28–26 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
2002 October 27 Kansas City Chiefs 20–10 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
December 28 (Sat.) Oakland Raiders 24–0 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
2003 October 20 (Mon.) Kansas City Chiefs 17–10 Oakland Raiders Oakland
November 23 Kansas City Chiefs 27–24 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
2004 December 5 Kansas City Chiefs 34–27 Oakland Raiders Oakland
December 25 (Sat.) Kansas City Chiefs 31–30 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
2005 September 18 Kansas City Chiefs 23–17 Oakland Raiders Oakland
November 6 Kansas City Chiefs 27–23 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
2006 November 19 Kansas City Chiefs 17–13 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
December 23 (Sat.) Kansas City Chiefs 20–9 Oakland Raiders Oakland
2007 October 21 Kansas City Chiefs 12–10 Oakland Raiders Oakland
November 25 Oakland Raiders 20–17 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
2008 September 14 Oakland Raiders 23–8 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
November 30 Kansas City Chiefs 20–13 Oakland Raiders Oakland
2009 September 20 Oakland Raiders 13–10 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
November 15 Kansas City Chiefs 16–10 Oakland Raiders Oakland

2010s (tied 6–6)

Year Date Winner Result Loser Location
2010 November 7 Oakland Raiders 23–20 (OT) Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
January 2, 2011 Oakland Raiders 31–10 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
2011 October 23 Kansas City Chiefs 28–0 Oakland Raiders Oakland
December 24 (Sat.) Oakland Raiders 16–13 (OT) Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
2012 October 28 Oakland Raiders 26–16 Kansas City Chiefs Kansas City
December 16 Oakland Raiders 15–0 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
2013 October 13 Kansas City Chiefs 24–7 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
December 15 Kansas City Chiefs 56–31 Oakland Raiders Oakland
2014 November 20 (Thur.) Oakland Raiders 24–20 Kansas City Chiefs Oakland
December 14 Kansas City Chiefs 31–13 Oakland Raiders Kansas City
2015 December 6 Kansas City Chiefs 34–20 Oakland Raiders Oakland
January 3, 2016 Kansas City Chiefs 23–17 Oakland Raiders Kansas City

Connections between the teams

Quotes

We knew we had to go through Oakland to win the championship, and they knew they had to go through Kansas City...that made it a very bitter rivalry.

Hank Stram, former Texans/Chiefs head coach

Those were my favorite games...I always likened them to a heavyweight fight. You knew you were going to get beat up, but it was fun. We needed the Chiefs. We wouldn't have been as good without them.

Ben Davidson, former Raiders defensive end.

It's something special. It's not just media hype...You can sense it with coaches and players. Then you get out into the community, and you realize what a huge game this is for both cities.

Will Shields, former Chiefs offensive guard.

In Oakland...the games you always really wanted to come see were the Niners and the Chiefs. You grew up hating red...It goes deep. It's not just the teams. It's the organizations, you know, which organization is better? These are two teams that played in the old AFL against each other. Most of the history goes back to it. They've been AFC West rivals for a very, very long time. It's always been the must-win game.

Kirk Morrison, former Raiders linebacker.[21]

It's a dark game. I characterize it as a lot of darkness." When asked whether "dark" was meant as 'a good vs. evil dark'—"You can read between the lines.

Gunther Cunningham, former Raiders defensive coordinator and former Chiefs Head coach and defensive coordinator, currently working as the Detroit Lions defensive coordinator.[22]

Only one word: Blood.

Harvey Williams (who was with Oakland that season after four years in Kansas City) in a 1995 NBC interview for the team's first meeting in Oakland since 1981.

See also

Notes

  1. The Raiders and Kansas City Chiefs finished tied with a 12–2 record, but the Raiders were crowned 1968 division champions. Both teams qualified for the AFL playoffs.
  2. Since the AFL–NFL merger, the Chiefs have never won the AFC Championship.
  3. 1 2 3 The Kansas City Chiefs were known as the Dallas Texans from 1960–62, and played their home games at the Cotton Bowl.
  4. The Chiefs and Raiders met only once during the strike-shortened 1982 season.
  5. 1 2 The Raiders relocated from Oakland to Los Angeles in 1982, and played their home games at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum from 1982–1994, before returning to Oakland in 1995.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Kansas City Chiefs vs. Oakland Raiders All Time Results". The Football Database.
  2. 1 2 "Top 10 NFL Rivalries of All Time". Sports Illustrated. si.com.
  3. "Oakland Raiders' Record by Opponent". The Football Database.
  4. 1 2 1960 Dallas Texans — Pro Football Reference
  5. 1 2 1960 Oakland Raiders — Pro Football Reference
  6. 1 2 3 1969 Kansas City Chiefs — Pro Football Reference
  7. 1 2 1969 Oakland Raiders — Pro Football Reference
  8. 1976 Oakland Raiders — Pro Football Reference
  9. Chiefs cheerleaders and mascots Accessed 15 March 2008.
  10. 1980 Oakland Raiders — Pro Football Reference
  11. 1983 Oakland Raiders — Pro Football Reference
  12. The Rivalry - Kansas City vs. Oakland ChiefsWarpath.com
  13. 1986 Kansas City Chiefs — Pro Football Reference
  14. Raiders die with their boots on SFGate.com, 3 January 2000.
  15. http://scores.espn.go.com/nfl/recap?gameId=280914012
  16. Associated Press (2008-11-30). "Johnson's 2-yard plunge lifts Chiefs over woeful Raiders". ESPN. Retrieved 2008-12-01.
  17. http://scores.espn.go.com/nfl/recap?gameId=290920012
  18. http://www.businessinsurance.com/article/20111003/NEWS05/111009987
  19. Kuhla, Andrew. "Arrowhead Sets World Record For Loudest Stadium". Fansided. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  20. "Boxscore finder: Kansas City Chiefs vs Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders". Pro-Football-Reference. June 16, 2014. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
  21. Associated Press. Oakland rookie well-versed in Raiders-Chiefs rivalry ESPN.com, 15 September 2005.
  22. Branch, John. Rivalry depends on point of view Colorado Springs Gazette, 4 December 1999.
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