KANSAS CITY CHIEFS’ Jamaal Charles, right, is blocked from the end zone by Philadelphia Eagles' Patrick Chung during the second half of an NFL football game on Thursday in Philadelphia.

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS’ Jamaal Charles, right, is blocked from the end zone by Philadelphia Eagles’ Patrick Chung during the second half of an NFL football game on Thursday in Philadelphia.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — This was one time Andy Reid didn’t mind being a big target.

The man in the bull’s-eye so often when he coached in Philadelphia was easy for Chiefs receiver Donnie Avery to find. At the end of Kansas City’s 26-16 victory over the Eagles in Reid’s homecoming Thursday night, Avery gave Reid a Gatorade shower.

Reid already looked strange decked in all red on the visitors’ sideline. Now, he was drenched, too — but smiling, even joking he was doing Gatorade promotions.

“Yeah, it was different,” Reid said. “I was on the opposite side of the field than I normally am at. But I can’t tell you that I was caught up in that part of it.”

The result was similar to what he gave Philadelphia in his 14 years in charge of the Eagles, thanks to a dynamic Chiefs defense that forced five turnovers and sacked a harried Michael Vick five times. Vick even limped off after a late fumble — he said his ankle got rolled, but he was fine — but stayed around to hug Reid following the final play.

“It was great to see the players that are here,” Reid admitted. “I had a chance to talk to them after the game.”

Kansas City, which has not had a giveaway in opening 3- 0, has won one more game already than it did in 2012 — after which it hired Reid days after he was fired on the heels of Philly’s 4-12 finish.

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“It’s important,” he said of the fast start, “but there’s still a lot of season left. There no time to relax on what you have done.”

The usually stoic Reid showed some fire to match his bright red outfit late in the first half when he thought the Chiefs got a bad spot. He came out to the hash mark to yell at the officials, then walked off at halftime still gesturing his displeasure.

That was far more emotion than he displayed when he entered the stadium with the Chiefs just before kickoff. Although the Philly fans gave him a warm ovation, some standing in tribute to the man who won 140 games and six division titles for them, Reid walked briskly along the sideline, never turning his gaze toward the stands.

But he later said he recognized the tribute.

“I appreciate the fans and the support they gave me,” he said. “That was kind of them.”

Defense, special teams

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It was offensive master Reid’s defense and special teams that set the tone and put his team ahead early, silencing the sea of green at the Linc. The Chiefs forced four first-half turnovers and Justin Houston had three of their four sacks in the first half. He had another half-sack to start the second half, off a bad snap to Vick, and he forced Vick to fumble with 1:34 remaining. Houston has 6 1/2 sacks in three games.

“The defense, man — the DBs, the linebackers giving great coverage, the big guys in the middle pushing the pocket,” he said. “When they’re doing that, it’s real easy for me to do my job.”

Damaris Johnson’s muffed punt return gave Kansas City the ball at the Eagles 8, leading to Ryan Succop’s 33-yard field goal for a quick 3-0 lead. Derrick Johnson then deflected Vick’s ill-advised throw into the flat and Eric Berry picked it off, going 38 yards with the first interception of the year for the Philly quarterback.

There would be more mistakes as Philadelphia (1-2) lost its eighth straight home game.

But after falling behind 10- 0, Vick got the Eagles’ no-huddle, fast-tempo offense in gear with the longest run of his 12- year career. He burst up the middle, shook off two attempted tackles and sped 61 yards. Two plays later, it was his arm doing the damage. Under a heavy rush, he stood in and led Jason Avant perfectly in the left corner of the end zone for a 22-yard score.

That three-play, 87-yard spurt epitomized the fastpaced offense coach Chip Kelly brought from Oregon in replacing Reid.


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