Chiefs vs. Commanders Game Schedule — Monday Night Football (Week 8, 2025)
Overview: The Kansas City Chiefs host the Washington Commanders at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium (Kansas City, MO) on Monday, October 27, 2025. It’s a prime-time MNF showdown on
Kickoff times (U.S. time zones):
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8:15 PM ET
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7:15 PM CT (Kansas City local)
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6:15 PM MT
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5:15 PM PT.
How to watch in the U.S.:
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TV: ABC (simulcast on ESPN, ESPN Deportes in many markets).
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Streaming: NFL+ (in-market/primetime rules apply). Check local listings for availability.
Tickets & entry:
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Official tickets for Oct 27 at GEHA Field are available via Ticketmaster (official partner). Mobile ticketing is required.
Stadium essentials (Arrowhead):
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Clear bag policy: Clear plastic/vinyl/PVC up to 12" × 6" × 12", or 1-gallon clear zip bag; small non-clear clutch up to 4.5" × 6.5" allowed. Larger bags/backpacks are not permitted.
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Parking & gate times: Parking lots generally open 4.5 hours before kickoff; for this MNF game, the club lists 3:00 PM parking, 5:30 PM all stadium gates, and
7:15 PM kickoff in the day-of rundown. Add tickets/passes to your mobile wallet before arriving.
Matchup storylines to watch:
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QB situation (WSH): Multiple reports indicate Jayden Daniels (hamstring) is out
for Monday; Marcus Mariota is expected to start. That shifts Washington’s offense and game plan. -
Form & context: Kansas City enters MNF at 4–3, Washington at 3–4 (records per ESPN’s game page). Prime-time at Arrowhead favors the Chiefs’ cadence and crowd noise.
Series & notes:
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This is only the second Washington–Kansas City meeting on Monday Night Football. Washington is 1–10 all-time vs. Kansas City and 0–5 in Kansas City.
Broadcast rundown (local U.S. times):
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MNF Kickoff: 7:15 PM CT (8:15 PM ET) on ABC/ESPN. Pre- and post-game coverage available across ABC/ESPN platforms.
Note: This article uses U.S. time zones only (no conversions). If you want a condensed “How to Watch” graphic plus hashtags/captions for Facebook, say the word and I’ll draft it.
CEO Clark Hunt with a Warm Gesture Defending Female Chiefs Fans After Controversial Incident

Kansas City, Missouri – October 28, 2025
After the Kansas City Chiefs’ dominant 31–0 victory over the Las Vegas Raiders at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium, a video circulating on social media sent shockwaves through the NFL community. In the clip, a group of female Chiefs fans wearing bikinis were seen dancing and cheering from the stands at the moment their team sealed the win. While many fans viewed this as a “spontaneous burst of joy,” it also faced harsh criticism from some spectators who called it “lacking public decorum.”

Amid public pressure, many awaited a response from the Chiefs’ leadership—and team CEO Clark Hunt took an unexpected stance: standing up to defend the group of fans.
“I don’t see anything shameful in it at all. They love the team, they love this victory, and they expressed their genuine emotions. In a world where everything is scrutinized, sometimes we forget that football—ultimately—is about joy, connection, and freedom of spirit,” Hunt said during a brief press conference Monday morning.

His statement quickly spread across social media, garnering thousands of supportive comments. Many Chiefs fans wrote: “Thank you Mr. Hunt, finally someone sees things with heart instead of judgment.”
One of the female fans featured in the video shared on X (Twitter): “We didn’t mean to offend. We were just so happy. When I heard Mr. Hunt speak, I started crying. I felt understood.”
Clark Hunt’s actions went beyond words. According to internal sources, he sent a personal thank-you letter to the group of fans, with the message: “The Chiefs are more than just a team—they are a family. And in this family, no one is left behind just for expressing joy.”
In an era where judgment spreads faster than empathy, Clark Hunt’s message rings out as a simple reminder: sports are not just about winning or losing—but about emotion and humanity.
