The Chargers are on the road Sunday with a date against the Kansas City Chiefs. Kickoff is at 10 a.m. (PT) from Arrowhead Stadium.

The Chargers-Chiefs betting line shows the Bolts are slight underdogs on Sunday.

Here are five final thoughts ahead of Week 15.

1. Another Chargers-Chiefs clash

The Chargers aren’t buying it.

They don’t believe the Chiefs season is over and done with. Nor do they think Sunday will be a walk in the park.

As the Chargers head to Arrowhead Stadium for a Week 15 AFC West clash, Justin Herbert and Co. expect the same hostile environment and yet another close game against a team that has been the standard bearer across the NFL for the better part of a decade.

“Still as loud as we’ve ever expected,” Herbert said this week. “They’re still a very, very good football team and we have a ton of respect for them. They’re much better than their record indicates as well.

“They’ve played a lot of tough games, a lot of close games and that’s the NFL. That’s the unfortunate part, you’re not going to go in there and dominate any team willy nilly,” Herbert added. “They’re very good and we have to be on our stuff this week.”

Entering Sunday, the Chargers and Chiefs each find themselves in unique spots.

Jim Harbaugh’s squad is 9-4 and in a Wild Card spot in the AFC playoff picture.

According to The Athletic, the Chargers currently have a 78 percent chance to make the playoffs, a number that can soar to 95 percent with a win Sunday.

The Chiefs, meanwhile, are 6-7 and in danger of missing the playoffs for the first time in a decade. The Athletic has Kansas City’s playoff odds at 12 percent, and they go under 1 percent with a loss to the Chargers.

In other words, the Bolts expect the Chiefs best effort — and maybe the kitchen sink — in Week 15.

“I expect that every time you go out there, guys are going to play desperate to win because they just want to win no matter the team, no matter the record,” Derwin James, Jr. said. “If you’re 9-4 and you aren’t playing like you’re desperate, then you’re in trouble, too.

“We desperate. They desperate. Let’s go out there and play,” James added.

Harbaugh noted: “It’s that time of the season where everybody is competing. Lay it on the line, a lot of cliches you can fill in right there. But everybody is fighting for their playoff lives, their football lives. That’s what it’s going to be. Going to be great noise, a competitive environment.”

The Chargers on Sunday can grab their 10th win, which would mean consecutive double-digit win seasons for the first time since 2006 and 2007.

The Bolts, of course, can also secure a season sweep of the Chiefs, something that hasn’t happened since 2013.

The Chargers and Chiefs usually play each other close, with plenty of classic games over the years.

If the Bolts can find a way to win this one, they could take a massive step toward the postseason — and make sure their biggest rival is sitting at home in January.

“I expect Arrowhead to be just as it’s been in the past,” Daiyan Henley said. “And the reason I expect that is that they still have a hell of a team over there and a hell of a quarterback and offense in general, plus a coach who has been a winner for a long time.

“I expect Arrowhead to have a huge vibe so we need to walk in with a steady head and calm spirits knowing that we have to get our job done,” Henley continued.

“We’re trying to win. We understand what we’re fighting for right now and it’s about controlling our destiny,” Henley added.