If you do not have fatigue of chiefs, give it a year.
Although they were blown away in the Super Bowl Lix, the Chiefs continue to be the hottest property in the NFL. And the chiefs apparently have no qualms about obtaining as many large platform games.
The calendar only makes them play four of the 17 games at 1:00 pm HE: week 7 against the raiders, week 12 against the colts, week 15 against the loaders and week 16 in the Titans. (Each of the last three could, in theory, be bent on a day or another day.) Four other games are ready for a massive audience at 4:25 p.m. HE: week 2 against Eagles, week 4 against Ravens, week 9 in Bills, week 11 at Broncos.
The other nine games are scheduled for prime listening hours or other autonomous spots: week 1 Friday evening (at Chargers in Brazil), week 3 Sunday evening (at Giants), week 5 on Monday evening (in Jaguars), week 6 on Sunday evening (against Lions), week 8 on Monday evening (against commanders), week 13 to 4:30 p.m., Cowboys on Thanksgiv Thursday evening (against broncos at Christmas).
The only routine for chefs is that there is none. Only once, their games start the same day and the same time in consecutive weeks (week 15 and week 16).
Chiefs will not complain. They love it. They want to be a permanent element at Christmas. This year, they obtained the two major days in season.
They have the power of a star. And they generally play in tight matches, given the habit of playing with their food (and generally, to find a way to emerge with a victory).
If the games of the chiefs continue to accumulate large figures, they will continue to be the most visible branch of a tree at 32 teams. Again, they want it. They love it. Maybe at this stage, they feel like they need it.
That said, it is difficult not to wonder how much they would be if they could settle in a pace. This year, the season will be anchored with freestyle jazz anchored by a drummer who cannot deliberately keep time.