KANSAS CITY – The last two weeks served as a litmus test for this young, emerging Bengals team.

Were they for real after a 4-1 start? Were they ready to show they belonged in the conversation of the true contenders in the AFC?

There was no need to speculate, we said, we would learn on the field.

Two weeks later, we know. Undeniably. They are not ready.

And judging by Sunday night's 45-10 boat race, they are farther away than we thought.

Bringing it back to the Steelers last week, this is the kind of big-game embarrassment that has fueled the frustration of the fan base over the years.

Entering this Kansas City buzzsaw would be a heavy lift no matter how the Bengals played. Losing would be understandable. Few were chalking this up in the big picture of capturing a playoff spot anyway.

But to come out sloppy, undisciplined, overwhelmed and outclassed, almost all of the flirts that peppered the first five games of the season can only be considered highly discouraging.

WEEK 7: 32 things we learned

MISSED KICK: Tucker holds himself accountable after Ravens' loss

WINNING FORMULA: Saints' Payton scales data with his own insights

It represents a heaping dose of "same old Bengals" in a year they planted seeds of belief they would not be.

The Chiefs are living in an elite stratosphere in the NFL and look to rematch New England in the AFC title game.

The Bengals (4-3) are in the orbit of not ready for prime-time players.

That much, we know for sure.

Game ball

A.J. Green. The Bengals Offense Green on Sunday night. The Bengals had 139 total yards in the first half and 110 of those came via Green receptions. Even against the poor Chiefs defense, you can not be one-dimensional or else you are doomed. It was a major factor in Andy Daltons pick-6 in which he tried to force himself into Green early in the third. All that did not change how good The Chiefs threw at him. He finished with seven receptions for 117 yards on 14 targets. Nobody else on the team had more than five targets.

Play of the game

Kareem Hunt took advantage of some shaky Bengals tackling one of the most athletic plays you'll see.

Injuries

LB Vontaze Burfict left the game in the third quarter with a hip injury and did not return.

TE Mason Schreck went on with a knee injury in the fourth quarter of the Bengals' tight end room continues it's awful run of luck. If this ends up being serious, it might force the Bengals to make a trade for a tight end this week.

WR John Ross aggravated the groin injury that kept him out the last two weeks and left the game in the fourth quarter.

Three up

The Macarena. I'm in love with this guy – 90s – craze for this awful dance craze from the 90s – goal kudos for the willingness to put yourself out there after a big time. C.J. Uzomah's touchdown on third-and-goal from the 4s.

Andrew Billings. Did not suggest this year, but he made a number of notable plays in the first half on Sunday night, including the first sack of his career, wrapping up Patrick Mahomes to force a third -and-long.

C'est fini. There was a positive effect in this respect – the toughest on the schedule – is in the rearview mirror is a positive. A winnable home game against the Bucs is on deck, then a need bye week.

Three down

Fake punt attempt. If you want to call it that. Clayton Fejedelem jumped in front of what appeared to be a regular punt snap as if he was going to make a run on the fake. When Clark Harris' snap came out hot, he could not handle it and set Kansas City up at a short field.

Tackling. Vontaze Burfict missed tackles on back-to-back plays Kareem Hunt touchdown of the night. He missed another badly on Travis Kelce before halftime. He was far from alone. Everybody Gets to Take Their Turn Whiffing on Chiefs' Ball Carriers.

End of half defense. Stop me if you heard this one before. For the 16th time in the last 23 games the Bengals gave up in the final two minutes before half. This time it was an easy 17-yard touchdown strike from Mahomes to Demetrius Harris, then a double dip allowing an eight-play drive for a field goal with eight seconds to go.

Photo of the game

Bengals fan after another Chiefs touchdown. And this screen shot followed by fans all over the night.

Four key numbers

17

Consecutive drives without forcing a punt by the Chiefs defense entering the game. Then they opened up forcing punts on the first three possessions of the night against the Bengals offense.

9

Consecutive losses by the Bengals on Sunday Night Football. It dates back to 2005 and only three of those games were decided by one possession. They've lost and lost big.

21

This ended up of eight consecutive games where the Bengals scored at least 21 points. That was tied for a record franchise.

9 of 12

The Chiefs' third-down conversation rate. That's 75 percent and this continues to be one of the worst third-down defenses this franchise has ever fielded.

autoplay

Show Thumbnails

Show Captions

Last SlideNext Slide

If you love talking football, we have the perfect spot for you. Join our new Facebook Group, The Ruling Off the Field, to engage in friendly debate and discuss with fellow football fans and our NFL insiders.