Header Image - Watch Patriots Football Game Online Streaming on Ipad, Iphone, Mac, Tablet PC or Any Devices From Any Where..

Category Archives

3 Articles

New England Patriots vs. Kansas City Chiefs Live score, video Stream: How to Watch in TV

New England Patriots vs. Kansas City Chiefs live score (and video online live stream*) starts on 8.9.2017. at 00:30 UTC time in NFL, Regular Season – USA. Here on SofaScore livescore you can find all New England Patriots vs Kansas City Chiefs previous results sorted by their H2H matches. Links to New England Patriots vs. Kansas City Chiefs video highlights are collected in the Media tab for the most popular matches as soon as video appear on video hosting sites like Youtube or Dailymotion. We’re not responsible for any video content, please contact video file owners or hosters for any legal complaints.

Patriots vs Chiefs NFL regular season

Match info: Patriots vs Chiefs NFL regular season
Start date: Thursday, September 7

Time: 8:30 PM ET

Where: Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts

Watch New England Patriots Game Today

You can watch New England Patriots vs. Kansas City Chiefs live stream online if you are registered member of bet365, the leading online betting company that has streaming coverage for more than 70.000 live sports events with live betting during the year. If this match is covered by bet365 live streaming you can watch american football match New England vs Patriots Kansas City Chiefs on your iPhone, iPad, Android or Windows phone. It’s also easy to find video highlights and news from the most popular sports leagues in the world. Live bet365 odds are viewable in SofaScore’s american football livescore section. We don’t offer a TV schedule here, if you would like to watch this match on TV you’ll probably find it it on some more popular channels like iTV, BBC, Al Jazeera Sports, Sky Sports, Gol TV, Canal+, SportTV, FOX Soccer, Setanta, ESPN, etc.

SofaScore livescore is available as iPhone and iPad app, Android app on Google Play and Windows phone app. You can find us in all stores on different languages as “SofaScore”. Install SofaScore app on and follow New England Patriots Kansas City Chiefs live on your mobile!

NFL Insiders debate: Snubs, overrated players in NFLRank top 100

NFLRank, our annual ranking of the top 100 players in the league, is out, and we’re sure not every fan base is happy. That’s why we’ve assembled a group of NFL Insiders to audit the list with their takes on who’s underrated, who’s overrated and much more.

New England Patriots Game 2017

New England Patriots 2017

Who’s the most underrated player in the top 100?

Matt Bowen, NFL writer: Landon Collins, S, New York Giants

Rank: 29

Collins is a modern-day hybrid safety with the physicality and playmaking skills to line up anywhere in the secondary. Based on his tape, he should’ve won the Defensive Player of the Year award in 2016. At No. 29 overall here? That’s too low given his impact on the game. And I expect him to have another huge season.

Domonique Foxworth, The Undefeated senior writer: Dak Prescott, QB, Dallas Cowboys

Rank: 77

Really!? I appreciate that being surrounded by several other top-100 players means there is a ceiling on the amount of credit Prescott will receive. But it doesn’t seem that discount was applied to the five other Cowboys offensive players, who outrank Dak despite obviously benefiting from his excellent play. I am far from a Dak fanboy. Even late into last season, I thought the Cowboys would have been better off with Tony Romo. But that doesn’t change the fact that Dak’s Total QBR (adjusted for strength of defenses) is better than seven of the nine QBs ahead of him. And in the playoffs, he went toe-to-toe with Aaron Rodgers, throwing for 302 yards and three touchdowns.

Dan Graziano, national NFL writer: Tyrann Mathieu, S, Arizona Cardinals

Rank: 59

I understand the likely reason he’s as low as he is because health issues have cost him so many games. But when he’s on the field, he’s able to change games in a variety of different ways, and if we evaluate him simply on skill and impact, I think he would deserve to be higher up the list.

Aaron Schatz, editor of Football Outsiders: Earl Thomas, S, Seattle Seahawks

Rank: 18

Have you seen the stat splits of Seattle’s defense with and without Thomas last season? With Thomas, Seattle’s pass defense DVOA (explained here) was minus-7.0 percent, which would have ranked fourth for the season. Without Thomas, it was plus-25.9 percent, which would have ranked 28th. It’s hard to prove the value of safeties with individual stats, but the team stats suggest that Thomas is one of the 10 most valuable players in the league.

Mike Sando, senior NFL writer: Calais Campbell, DL, Jacksonville Jaguars

Rank: 86

Campbell ranks 33rd among players listed as defensive ends, defensive tackles or nose tackles. He was one of the two or three most dominant interior defenders in the game last season and a true difference-maker. Now the 30-year-old is in Jacksonville, where the defense should be improved again.

Field Yates, NFL Insider: Olivier Vernon, DE, New York Giants

Rank: 61

The Giants bucked their normal free-agency spending habits last offseason and paid substantial money to the coveted Vernon. He’s a ferocious edge rusher who constantly disturbs quarterbacks with a unique blend of power and explosiveness. He can bookend their run defense to funnel plays back inside and play in space. Vernon is a beast who is poised for another big season.

Who’s the most overrated player in the top 100?

Bowen: Tyron Smith, OT, Dallas Cowboys

Rank: 19

Smith has all the natural tools we look for in an elite tackle, and he’s ridiculously talented. But the reality is that he isn’t playing to the level of teammate Travis Frederick (No. 24). I don’t see him as a top-20 guy in the NFL.

Foxworth: Rob Gronkowski, TE, New England Patriots

Rank: 11

Gronk is returning from season-ending back surgery, which would be reason enough to expect a performance decline from most players. But he has made a habit of returning from injury and performing as if he never left. However, the Patriots traded for Brandin Cooks, which portends a shift away from the tight-end-centric passing attack to one built around the deep ball. The last time the Pats traded for a deep-threat receiver was 2007, when they acquired Randy Moss. They were almost unstoppable. Benjamin Watson, their talented tight end at the time, went from 49 receptions in 2006 to 39 in 2007. If Gronk is healthy, he will be better than that, but I wouldn’t expect the 80-catch, 1,000-plus-yard season needed to warrant his ranking.

Graziano: Eric Berry, S, Kansas City Chiefs

Rank: 17

Nothing against Berry, but I’m not sure I’m putting him at the top of the safety list in the entire league. Earl Thomas could be ahead of him, as could Kam Chancellor. Maybe even Landon Collins coming off the 2016 season he had.

Sando: Stephon Gilmore, CB, New England Patriots

Rank: 69

Gilmore is the ninth-rated corner despite coming off a down season. He outranks Jalen Ramsey and Desmond Trufant among corners on this list and is even 15 spots ahead of Calais Campbell, a player the Patriots presumably would much rather have on their roster. Leaving an organization that has been dysfunctional could help Gilmore justify his ranking in the future.

Schatz: Malcolm Butler, CB, New England Patriots

Rank: 56

Butler is a good cornerback — and a very good value given his low salary. He is not the seventh-best cornerback in the league. In the past two years, he has finished 20th and 17th in our charting for adjusted success rate in coverage, but he can be burned deep and has finished 56th and 49th in adjusted yards per pass. And there’s no evidence that Butler specifically discourages opposing quarterbacks from targeting the receivers he is covering — we charted him as middle-of-the-pack in target frequency last season. Janoris Jenkins and A.J. Bouye were better if we only consider last season, while Stephon Gilmore and Desmond Trufant have been better over the course of their careers.

Yates: Cameron Wake, DE, Miami Dolphins

Rank: 78

Before Dolphins fans lose their minds, hear me out. I love Wake. He has extraordinary power and an arsenal of pass-rush moves and counters. He is an emotional leader. But after playing just 51.1 percent of the defensive snaps in 2016, I had to factor that in relative to other players whose value is felt on an every-down basis. The 35-year-old Wake is a tremendous player, but Miami has utilized him in a more limited role compared to most players on this list.

Who got snubbed and should have made the top 100?

Bowen: Doug Baldwin, WR, Seattle Seahawks

Baldwin’s touchdown numbers dropped last season (seven), but he still produced 94 grabs and 1,128 receiving yards. He’s a super-underrated route runner who is tough and ultra-competitive on game day. Baldwin is a tempo-setter and at age 28 is still in his prime.

Foxworth: Brent Grimes, CB, Tampa Buccaneers

The 34-year-old Grimes remains one of the NFL’s most explosive players at any position. Last season, he had four interceptions and a league-leading 17 pass breakups while playing in the NFC South, a division overflowing with offensive juggernauts. The undersized, undrafted Shippensburg product is probably used to being undervalued, but he is deserving of a spot in the top 100. His reliability and knack for the ball are rare among cornerbacks and vital to the Bucs’ success.

Graziano: Damon Harrison, NT, New York Giants

He plays an underappreciated position, but Harrison plays it better than anyone else in the league does. Even in a passing league, the best run-stuffer should find a place in the top 100. The Giants pay him a premium salary because, even though he might come off the field on third down, the opponent is facing longer third downs because of the work he does on first and second.

Sando: Malcolm Jenkins, S, Philadelphia Eagles

Jenkins and Ezekiel Ansah are two players who stood out. Ansah is coming off an injury-affected 2016 season, but Jenkins hasn’t missed a game in three-plus seasons. He’s a top-flight player who would start and be an impact player for the vast majority of teams in the league.

Schatz: Doug Baldwin, WR, Seattle Seahawks

Last season, even with his quarterback hurt for part of the year and the offense collapsing around him, Baldwin came out ninth among receivers in value based on Football Outsiders metrics. The year before, he was second, behind only Antonio Brown. I’m not sure what else people want from this guy except maybe a better nickname. Damon “Snacks” Harrison definitely has him on that one.

Yates: Matt Paradis, OC, Denver Broncos

In a league in which offensive linemen are exceedingly difficult to find, the Broncos discovered a diamond in the rough with Paradis. He played hurt throughout 2016 yet never misses time. You can count on him being out there every snap on Sundays. The center position involves more than just the physical skill set; a top-flight center is a mental edge for an offense. Paradis fits that mold.

Looking ahead to 2018: Who will rise into the top 25 of NFLRank?

Bowen: Joey Bosa, DE, Los Angeles Chargers

Bosa racked up 10.5 sacks in only 12 games as a rookie, and he’s much more developed at the point of attack than I expected. With the speed to win on the edge and the counter moves to set up blockers, he should be in line to produce a monster season in L.A.

Foxworth: Landon Collins, S, New York Giants

In just his second season, Collins was the best safety in the NFL in 2016. It is that simple. And at just 23 years old, he is still learning the nuances of the position. Outside of an unfortunate injury, I can’t imagine a scenario that leaves him out of the 25 again.

Graziano: Mike Evans, WR, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

I’m a big Bosa guy, so I almost just echoed Bowen here, but Bosa is close enough to the top 25 as is. Give me Evans, whose physical tools could vault him into the same discussion as the top three or four wide receivers on this list. With DeSean Jackson working downfield, Evans could be in for his best season yet.

Sando: Joey Bosa, DE, Los Angeles Chargers

Easy one here. Not much elaboration required.

Schatz: Joey Bosa, DE, Los Angeles Chargers

Sorry to be so uninteresting, but he’s already near the top 25 and should develop further in his second NFL season.

Yates: Leonard Williams, DL, New York Jets

The Jets are undergoing a major franchise rebuild, but it could be argued that Williams is the centerpiece of it all. He’s that good, that young and that talented. Williams is a long-levered, forceful interior lineman who can anchor space in the middle of the New York defense but also provide pocket disruption. He’s a superstar in the making.

The rookie who will crack next year’s NFLRank is …

Bowen: Christian McCaffrey, RB, Carolina Panthers

With the route-running skills of a wide receiver and the lateral speed to shake defenders in the open field, McCaffrey should be a matchup nightmare as a rookie. Good luck checking this guy in the passing game. Plus, with the ability he has shown this preseason to push the ball between the tackles, he could be a three-down weapon for the Panthers.

Foxworth: John Ross, WR, Cincinnati Bengals

Calling Ross fast is an understatement. His record-setting 4.22 40-yard dash time was the talk of the combine. But he isn’t just a sprinter. Ross is a skilled route runner with the ability to change direction suddenly. And he gets off press well. He will be a nightmare for even the best corners. But he’ll likely be matched up with weaker corners because perennial Pro-Bowler A.J. Green will attract the attention of the top corners. As long as the Bengals’ weakened offensive line can protect Andy Dalton, Ross will impress.

Graziano: Christian McCaffrey, RB, Carolina Panthers

 I think his role in the Carolina offense is going to be significant enough — and varied enough — to make him an instant star. Panthers players on both sides of the ball were lauding totally different aspects of McCaffrey’s game in training camp, and I think he’s going to help as a runner, pass-catcher and overall game-changer for this offense.

Sando: Christian McCaffrey, RB, Carolina Panthers

I spoke with an NFL team executive who thought McCaffrey could become Carolina’s biggest star, which is saying something.

Schatz: Myles Garrett, DE, Cleveland Browns

There were three quarterbacks chosen in the top dozen picks of the draft this year. The Browns, who needed a quarterback, took Garrett instead of one of them. There was a reason they did this.

Yates: Christian McCaffrey, RB, Carolina Panthers

When it comes to evaluating whether a rookie can make an instant impact, it helps to identify those who have a defined role. While the preseason can be fool’s gold in some ways, it’s apparent that the Panthers are dedicated to manufacturing touches for the electric McCaffrey. Moreover, he has value in three phases of the game: as a runner, receiver and returner.

Source Website

NFL Preseason 2017: Week 4 TV Schedule, Odds And Expert Picks Against The Spread

The 2017 NFL preseason is coming to an end. After three weeks of injury-laden exhibition football, many fans are more than ready for it to finally wrap up, while others are just glad to have more pigskin in their lives. Regardless of what side of that fence you fall on, Week 4 will be here and over before you know it as every single team in the league is in action on Thursday night.

Watch New England Patriots Game Today

Most clubs will use this preseason finale as an opportunity to get one last long look at the players on the roster fringes before final cuts have to be made. Organizations are required to submit a final 53-man roster to the league by 4 p.m. on September 2nd, which means there is precious little time to decide on who to keep and who to say goodbye to.

New England Patriots Preseason Week 4

For this reason, most starters generally do not play many, if any, snaps in Week 4. It may not be the most exciting slate of games, but sportsbooks are offering odds on these contests and wagering can make the games much more enjoyable to watch. There’s also a good amount of value to be found if you know where to look.

A respected football handicapper, has been helping readers pick winners all month long and has one final preseason tip in store. Before getting to his play of the week, let’s take a quick look at the odds for every game and complete schedule—including TV information—for Week 4 of the 2017 NFL preseason.

2017 NFL Preseason Week 4 Schedule and Odds

Date/Game Time (EST) / TV Odds Over/Under
Thursday, August 31  
Los Angeles Rams at Green Bay Packers 7 p.m. GB -3.5 38
Philadelphia Eagles at New York Jets 7 p.m. / NFLN NYJ -1 36
Cincinnati Bengals at Indianapolis Colts 7 p.m. IND -2 36.5
Jacksonville Jaguars at Atlanta Falcons 7 p.m. ATL -3 38
Pittsburgh Steelers at Carolina Panthers 7:30 p.m. CAR -4 38
Washington Redskins at Tampa Bay Buccaneers 7:30 p.m. TB -2.5 36.5
New York Giants at New England Patriots 7:30 p.m. NE -3 38.5
Cleveland Browns at Chicago Bears 8 p.m. CHI -3 36.5
Baltimore Ravens at New Orleans Saints 8 p.m. NO -3 37
Miami Dolphins at Minnesota Vikings 8 p.m. MIN -3 38
Tennessee Titans at Kansas City Chiefs 8:30 p.m. KC -3.5 38
Arizona Cardinals at Denver Broncos 9 p.m. DEN -2.5 37.5
Los Angeles Chargers at San Francisco 49ers 10 p.m. SF -1 38
Seattle Seahawks at Oakland Raiders 10 p.m. / NFLN SEA -1 40

Preseason Week 4 Pick: New York Giants at New England Patriots

This is one of the more interesting matchups of the preseason, especially considering the history between the two storied franchises. These teams have met in the preseason finale for the last 12 years straight and 27 times total before, with the Giants holding a 17-9 edge in exhibition play.

It’s the meetings when it counts that have been far more interesting, however, especially considering how the two recent Super Bowl showdowns played out. New York captured both of these as an underdog in stunning fashion, but the bad blood extends beyond the big game. These non-conference foes have met in three regular season games over the past decade, with New England holding a 2-1 advantage. All five of these matchups could all be described as nothing short of thrilling, as they were each decided by four or fewer points.

The Patriots won the most recent battle, a 2015 regular season contest in which they overcame a double-digit deficit in the second half to escape with a 27-26 victory after Stephen Gostkowski booted a last-second field goal. It represented at least a modicum of revenge for the Pats, as they lost the prior Super Bowl matchup on a last-minute touchdown drive. It was a familiar heartbreak for fans in New England, who had to endure a loss in the first Super Bowl meeting with the G-Men thanks in large part to David Tyree and his legendary “Helmet Catch” deep in the fourth quarter.

Those tough defeats on the sports’ grandest stage stung for the Patriots, but they didn’t let it derail their franchise. The team has won two of the last three championships and is the odds-on favorite to win it all again this season.

The real road to a title doesn’t begin until September 7, however, when they kick off the 2017 campaign against the Kansas City Chiefs on Thursday Night Football. The Patriots will likely exercise extreme caution in this one, not wanting to risk any further injuries after losing star wideout Julian Edelman for the season to a torn ACL in their Week 3 preseason game.

It was a huge blow to the squad, as Edelman has been quarterback Tom Brady’s favorite target since his breakout 2013 season and has hauled in 436 receptions—including the postseason—since that time. That is 187 more catches than Rob Gronkowski, who is the next leading pass-catcher on the Patriots with 249 receptions in the same span.

Source Site