When the Chiefs travel to Green Bay to take on the Packers on Monday Night Football, they'll be putting a rare streak of sorts on the line.

The Chiefs are one of just two teams who have never lost at Lambeau Field, as they enter Monday's Week 3 showdown with a 3-0 record in one of the NFL's most iconic stadiums. Houston is the other team able to make such a claim, standing at 1-0 at Lambeau.

It's a small sample size, sure, but it's impressive nonetheless.

Kansas City hasn't made the trip to Green Bay for a regular season game in more than a decade, but the last Chiefs game at Lambeau was certainly a memorable one. Led by then-quarterback Trent Green, Kansas City outlasted Green Bay for a 40-34 overtime win October 2003, continuing what ended up being a 13-3 season for the Chiefs.

Green was the hero of that game, throwing for 400 yards and three scores, including the 51-yard game-winning touchdown pass to Eddie Kennison. Now a color analyst for NFL games on CBS, Green remembers that play -- and the entire day -- like it was yesterday.

"It's one of those plays and one of those games where everything just kind of comes back to you because that was a special game," Green said. "And then it was at Lambeau Field, which has an incredibly rich history. I love going to Lambeau. I've had the opportunity now to broadcast several games there. It is a special place. It really is unique."

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And for most teams, it's not an easy place to win. The Packers have won their last 10 home games, including the playoffs, and quarterback Aaron Rodgers goes from arguably the best quarterback in the league to possibly the best quarterback of all time when playing at Lambeau. In his last 545 pass attempts at home, which covers 18 games, Rodgers has thrown 43 touchdowns and zero interceptions, leading Andy Reid to deliver quite the understatement earlier this week.

"He's probably a pretty good player," said Reid, who spent seven years as a coach with the Packers before going to Philadelphia in 1999. "He does a pretty good job. You've got to start there."

The last time the Chiefs played at Arrowhead, Green outdueled the Packers' last all-time great, Brett Favre, who threw crucial fourth-quarter touchdown that was returned 79 yards for a touchdown by Jerome Woods.

"A lot of pretty cool things happened that day," Green said.