AFC West
86 OVR
amazingjosh_
Offense
Total: 7226 (19)
Passing: 5334 (12)
Rushing: 1892 (20)
West Coast Zone Run
Defense
Total: 7322 (17)
Passing: 5408 (25)
Rushing: 1914 (9)
Disguise 3-4
Total: 8-9-0
Conf: 6-6-0
Div: 1-5-0
This Week
BYE
Last Week
 
{$awayScore}
{$awayTotalW}-{$awayTotalL}-{$awayTotalT}
 
 
 
{$homeScore}
{$homeTotalW}-{$homeTotalL}-{$homeTotalT}
 
Next Week
 
{$awayScore}
{$awayTotalW}-{$awayTotalL}-{$awayTotalT}
 
 
 
{$homeScore}
{$homeTotalW}-{$homeTotalL}-{$homeTotalT}
 
Passing Leaders
Player Comp/Att Yards TDs INTs
P.Mahomes 691/1092 10705 89 72
M.Jones 5/7 128 1 0
Receiving Leaders
Player Recs Yards TDs
X.Worthy 87 1715 14
I.Pacheco 92 1270 10
N.Gray 53 855 10
R.Rice 50 688 2
J.Palmer 27 334 6
Rushing Leaders
Player Ats Yards TDs
I.Pacheco 221 1385 14
P.Mahomes 48 312 9
B.Smith 34 106 1
J.McLaughlin 17 83 0
K.Calloway 3 27 0
Defensive Leaders
Player Tackles Sacks INTs FFs
C.Conner 48 0 2 0
T.McDuffie 43 0 4 0
N.Williams 38 0 1 0
C.Downs 36 1 3 0
L.Chenal 34 3 0 0
AFC West
TeamOverallDiv%
Top Cap Hits
Player OVR Pos cap Hit
Upcoming FAs
Player OVR Pos cap Hit

Headlines

Recent Posts

BATTLE OF THE BROTHERS: ANTWDAWG’S 7–6 NINERS VS. MIDNIGHT JOSH’S 5–8 CHIEFS

A SEASON-DEFINING CLASH FOR PRIDE, PLAYOFF SURVIVAL, AND FAMILY BRAGGING RIGHTS

In football, some games are about statistics. Some are about standings. Some are about postseason destiny.

But every once in a while, a matchup arrives that goes deeper than record books or playoff charts — a game rooted in pride, rivalry, history, and something far more personal.

That’s exactly what’s brewing as Antdawg’s 7–6 San Francisco 49ers prepare to face off against Midnight Josh’s 5–8 Kansas City Chiefs — a collision that isn’t just a regular-season showdown. It’s the Battle of the Brothers, a matchup where every play, every drive, and every decision carries extra weight because the opponent on the sideline isn’t just another coach or player… it’s family.

And when family is involved, the stakes rise faster than the playoff pressure.

A GAME BOTH TEAMS CAN’T AFFORD TO LOSE

For Antdawg and the 49ers, the situation is simple but unforgiving: at 7–6, they’re in the hunt, but standing on shaky ground. A win keeps them afloat, stabilizes their playoff push, and could even help them gain ground in a tight division race. A loss, though, sends them spiraling into the wildcard mess where one slip could erase everything they’ve built.

The Niners have spent the season battling inconsistency — dominant one week, scrambling the next — but they enter this matchup with a chance to reset their trajectory. And the last thing Antdawg wants is to drop a game to family, especially one that could cost him a postseason berth.

On the other side, Midnight Josh’s Chiefs are standing on the cliff edge. At 5–8, the margin for error is gone. One more loss and the playoff door slams shut. That pressure can crush a team… or transform it into the most dangerous version of itself.

Kansas City has lived a season filled with frustration, close calls, and missed breakthroughs. But they’ve also shown flashes of resilience, moments where everything clicks and the potential becomes obvious. Midnight Josh knows that a win here wouldn’t just keep their season alive — it could completely alter the energy of the team, giving them the spark they’ve been searching for.

And who better to ignite that spark against than his own brother?

A RIVALRY YEARS IN THE MAKING

This isn’t a one-time clash.

This isn’t a random matchup dropped in the middle of the schedule.

This is history.

From back-yard games to Madden battles to football debates that lasted all night, the competitive fire between Antdawg and Midnight Josh has always been burning. But now it spills onto the digital gridiron with real stakes. Every snap is part of a bigger story — one written through years of competition, one-upmanship, and bragging rights.

One brother enters with a winning record.

The other enters with a win-or-die mentality.

But both walk in with the exact same goal: don’t lose to him.

MATCHUP PRESSURE: SAN FRANCISCO’S MISSION TO CONTROL THEIR FUTURE

For Antdawg’s Niners, the key is discipline and stability. When they’re locked in, they’re one of the toughest teams in the league — physical, fast, balanced, and able to overwhelm opponents early.

But the danger lies in their tendency to let games slip away late. The fourth quarter has been a rollercoaster, and against a desperate team like the Chiefs, one lapse could flip the entire outcome.

Offensively, the Niners need to control the tempo, avoid turnovers, and force Kansas City to play on their terms. Defensively, the focus shifts to containing explosive plays — because Midnight Josh’s Chiefs can go from quiet to dangerous in one drive.

Antdawg knows exactly what’s at stake.

He knows a win puts him closer to locking up the division.

He knows a loss opens the door to chaos.

And he knows losing to family?

That might sting longer than missing the postseason.

KANSAS CITY’S FIGHT TO STAY ALIVE

Midnight Josh enters this game with a mindset shaped by urgency. At 5–8, the season has been a long climb uphill, but this game represents something bigger — the possibility of turning everything around.

The Chiefs don’t have the luxury of playing slow, safe football. They need aggression. They need creativity. They need those swing plays that flip momentum in their favor. Midnight Josh has coached aggressively all season, and now, that edge might be what keeps their season from ending early.

If Kansas City can disrupt the Niners’ rhythm, force punts, and capitalize on field position, they can dictate the game. And in a battle where the emotional stakes are sky-high, momentum is priceless.

A win doesn’t just keep their playoff hopes alive — it sends a message:

“We aren’t dead yet.”

And beating his brother to stay alive?

That’s the kind of storyline Midnight Josh would never let Antdawg forget.

BEYOND FOOTBALL: THE EMOTION OF FAMILY COMPETITION

What makes this matchup special isn’t just the records, or the standings, or the playoff implications.

It’s that the opponent is someone who knows your tendencies, your tendencies know theirs, and neither side wants to give an inch. There are no secrets here. No surprises. No hiding behind scouting reports.

This is brother vs. brother.

Pride vs. pride.

Legacy vs. legacy.

Every first down means something.

Every mistake stings twice as much.

Every touchdown becomes a message.

This isn’t about who’s better on paper — it’s about who steps up today.

THE AFTERMATH: WHAT A WIN MEANS FOR EACH TEAM

If Antdawg’s Niners Win:

  • Move to 8–6, strengthening their playoff position
  • Potentially gain ground in the division
  • Stay out of the stressful wildcard chaos
  • Add another chapter to the bragging rights story

If Midnight Josh’s Chiefs Pull Off the Upset:

  • Climb to 6–8, keeping their season alive
  • Maintain a path — narrow but real — to a miracle playoff push
  • Inject confidence and energy into a team that desperately needs momentum
  • Deliver one of the most satisfying wins possible: beating his own brother

THE FINAL WORD: THIS IS MORE THAN A GAME

The scoreboard will decide the winner.

The standings will decide the playoff picture.

But the rivalry? That lives long after the clock hits zero.

Whether the Niners cement their spot in the playoff race or the Chiefs shock the field and refuse to go quietly, one thing is guaranteed:

The Battle of the Brothers will be the game neither forgets.

Because in football, there are big games…

Then there are personal games.

And this one is both.

Quartebacks
Name
Age
Hgt
Pos
OVR
SPD
ACC
AGI
COD
THP
SAC
MAC
DAC
TUP
TOR
PAC
BKS
Backs
Name
Age
Hgt
Pos
OVR
SPD
ACC
AGI
COD
STR
AWR
JKM
SPM
SFA
TRK
BCV
CTH
SRR
RBK
IBK
LBK
Receivers
Name
Age
Hgt
Pos
OVR
SPD
ACC
AGI
COD
STR
AWR
JMP
JKM
SPM
SFA
TRK
BCV
CTH
CIT
SPC
SRR
MRR
DRR
RLS
RBK
IBK
LBK
Offensive Line
Name
Age
Hgt
Pos
OVR
ACC
AGI
COD
STR
AWR
PBK
RBK
IBK
LBK
Defensive Line
Name
Age
Hgt
Pos
OVR
SPD
ACC
AGI
COD
STR
AWR
BSH
FMV
PMV
TCK
PWR
PUR
PRC
Linebackers
Name
Age
Hgt
Pos
OVR
SPD
ACC
AGI
COD
STR
JMP
AWR
BSH
FMV
PMV
TCK
PWR
PUR
PRC
ZCV
MCV
Defensive Backs
Name
Age
Hgt
Pos
OVR
SPD
ACC
AGI
COD
STR
JMP
AWR
ZCV
MCV
BSH
TCK
PWR
PUR
PRC
Kicking
Name
Age
Hgt
Pos
OVR
SPD
ACC
AGI
COD
STR
AWR
KPW
KAC

Regular Season

 
 
 
41
 
 
 
27
 
 
 
 
41
 
 
 
44
 
 
 
 
35
 
 
 
27
 
 
 
 
56
 
 
 
29
 
 
 
 
41
 
 
 
42
 
 
 
 
38
 
 
 
35
 
 
 
 
27
 
 
 
12
 
 
 
 
37
 
 
 
36
 
 
 
 
27
 
 
 
30
 
 
45
 
 
 
24
 
 
33
 
 
 
58
 
 
47
 
 
 
42
 
 
45
 
 
 
42
 
 
 
 
BYE
 
 
56
 
 
 
47
 
 
41
 
 
 
49
 
 
34
 
 
 
31
 
 
35
 
 
 
42
 

Playoffs

Preseason

 
 
 
28
 
 
 
32
 
 
 
 
10
 
 
 
32
 
 
 
 
17
 
 
 
27
 

Regular Season and Playoffs

Team Stats
Offense
Stat
Defense
7226 (19) Total Yards 7322 (17)
5334 (12) Pass Yards 5408 (25)
1892 (20) Rush Yards 1914 (9)
Passing
Player
Comp/Att
%
Yards
TDs
INTs
Long
Rating
P.Mahomes 691/1092 63.3 10705 89 72 89 95.4
M.Jones 5/7 71.4 128 1 0 55 158.3
Totals
705/1110
63.5
10980
90
72
89
96.3
Receiving
Player
Recs
Yards
Long
YAC
Drops
TDs
X.Worthy 87 1715 77 712 7 14
I.Pacheco 92 1270 70 1054 4 10
N.Gray 53 855 55 386 8 10
R.Rice 50 688 89 241 2 2
J.Palmer 27 334 37 117 3 6
Totals
376
5659
89
2973
31
51
Rushing
Player
Attempts
Yards
Long
Broken Tackles
TDs
Fumbles
I.Pacheco 221 1385 55 51 14 2
P.Mahomes 48 312 33 0 9 4
B.Smith 34 106 17 6 1 3
J.McLaughlin 17 83 14 2 0 0
K.Calloway 3 27 22 4 0 0
Totals
330
1894
55
102
24
10
Defense
Player
Tackles
Sacks
INTs
FFs
FRs
TDs
C.Conner 48 0 2 0 0 0
T.McDuffie 43 0 4 0 1 1
N.Williams 38 0 1 0 0 0
C.Downs 36 1 3 0 0 1
L.Chenal 34 3 0 0 1 0
Totals
450
26
18
8
5
4
Kicking
Player
FGs
Long
XPs
KOs
TBs
G.Smith 15/17 51 67/71 107 67
H.Butker 2/2 52 3/3 6 1
Totals
17/19
52
70/74
113
68
Punting
Player
Punts
Yards
Long
In 20
TBs
Avg
Net Avg
C.Johnston 11 494 50 3 1 44.9 37.6
G.Smith 7 229 36 1 0 32.7 31.7
M.Trujillo 5 182 50 1 0 36.4 32
B.Bradshaw 3 56 25 0 0 18.7 18.7
J.Crawshaw 1 44 44 0 0 44 36
Totals
27
1005
50
5
1
37.2
32.9

Preseason

Team Stats
Offense Stat Defense
861 (26) Total Yards 941 (11)
674 (21) Pass Yards 633 (8)
187 (31) Rush Yards 308 (15)
Passing
Player Comp/Att % Yards TDs INTs Long Rating
P.Mahomes 61/89 68.5 681 7 2 29 108.1
C.Beck 29/46 63 390 4 5 55 73.7
G.Minshew 25/49 51 291 1 1 38 67.5
Totals 115/184 62.5 1362 12 8 55 88.6
Receiving
Player Recs Yards Long YAC Drops TDs
X.Worthy 10 179 55 28 1 1
J.Royals 9 113 20 30 0 1
B.Smith 6 87 27 63 0 0
J.Reagor 6 85 23 26 0 1
J.Wiley 5 63 25 27 0 0
R.Rice 7 56 20 30 0 1
C.Collier 4 46 20 41 0 2
N.Gray 3 25 10 12 0 0
I.Pacheco 3 15 14 11 0 0
Totals 53 669 55 268 1 6
Rushing
Player Attempts Yards Long Broken Tackles TDs Fumbles
I.Pacheco 25 108 9 5 0 0
B.Smith 18 45 15 4 0 0
P.Mahomes 4 19 10 2 0 0
C.Beck 5 18 5 2 0 0
J.Wiley 0 0 0 1 0 0
R.Rice 0 0 0 2 0 0
J.Reagor 0 0 0 1 0 0
N.Gray 0 0 0 1 0 0
C.Collier 1 -3 0 2 0 0
Totals 53 187 15 20 0 0
Defense
Player Tackles Sacks INTs FFs FRs TDs
K.Fulton 11 0 1 1 0 0
T.McDuffie 11 0 1 0 0 1
N.Bolton 7 0 0 1 2 0
D.Tranquill 7 1.5 0 0 0 0
M.Muhammad 7 0 0 0 0 0
J.Hicks 6 0 0 0 0 0
J.Bassa 6 0 0 0 0 0
M.Moore 5 0 0 0 0 0
A.Gillotte 5 0 0 0 0 0
N.Williams 5 0 0 0 0 0
L.Chenal 5 2 0 0 0 0
K.Chaisson 5 1 0 0 0 0
O.Norman-Lott 5 0 0 0 0 0
C.Downs 5 0 0 0 0 0
C.Conner 4 0 0 0 0 0
Z.Harris 4 0.5 0 0 0 0
G.Karlaftis 3 1 0 0 0 0
C.Roland-Wallace 2 0 1 1 0 0
L.Anderson 2 0 0 0 0 0
A.Gilman 1 0 0 0 0 0
F.Anudike-Uzomah 1 0 0 0 0 0
J.Clark 0 0 0 1 0 0
Totals 107 6 3 4 2 1
Kicking
Player FGs Long XPs KOs TBs
H.Butker 3/4 44 6/6 11 4
J.Crawshaw 0/0 0 0/0 2 1
Totals 3/4 44 6/6 13 5
Punting
Player Punts Yards Long In 20 TBs Avg Net Avg
J.Crawshaw 9 420 56 3 0 46.7 42.9
Totals 9 420 56 3 0 46.7 42.9

Draft Picks

Team Year Round Pick Overall

Players

Player Pos Value OVR Age Dev Cap Hit Net Savings Penalty Salary Bonus Length Years Left