Madden 99 Club
Congratulations to Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes on being named to EA Madden's 99 Club for the fifth time in his career! Mahomes is the highest-rated QB in the game.
Congratulations to Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes on being named to EA Madden's 99 Club for the fifth time in his career! Mahomes is the highest-rated QB in the game.
Congratulations to Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs on their Super Bowl LVIII victory! Mahomes was named the Super Bowl MVP for the third time in his career, which makes him the first player in NFL history to have three Super Bowl MVPs in a five-season span.
Los Angeles, CA - The Equity Sports Family would like to congratulate Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes and San Francisco 49ers Safety Talanoa Hufanga on being named to the NFL’s annual Top 100 List! The NFL Top 100 is voted on each year by the players themselves. Go to the Equity Sports website to learn more. https://equity-sports.com/
'Quarterback' a show on Netflix takes you inside the huddle and shows you what it takes to do the toughest job in all of sports.
BY WILLIAM EMMERSHY
Being a professional quarterback is arguably the toughest job in football — maybe in any sport, period. Quarterback, the new eight-episode docuseries from NFL Films and Omaha Productions, follows three of the biggest quarterbacks in the game throughout the 2022 season, giving an unprecedented look at what it takes for the Kansas City Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes, the Minnesota Vikings’ Kirk Cousins and the Atlanta Falcons’ Marcus Mariota to succeed when all eyes are on them.
“Look — we’ve seen quarterbacks mic’d up for a game. We’ve certainly seen training camp. But we’ve never followed a quarterback throughout the entire season to see what he does Sunday night after a big win, after a brutal loss on a last-second field goal — what they do on Mondays and Tuesdays on their off days,” Hall of Fame quarterback and Quarterback executive producer Peyton Manning told Netflix. “Are they hanging out? Are they playing golf? Are they in the weight room and watching film and grinding for that next game? Which is the answer, by the way, not to give it away. There is no golf in the season.”
The series gives fans an inside look at the players’ lives on the field and off. It documents intimate moments with their families, friends, and trainers, following them from the field to their homes in a first-of-its kind, in-depth look at the job. It also reveals the many pressures involved: what it’s like to receive an entire stadium’s cheers or boos or be chased by a 300-pound defensive lineman and the reality of having to ask your loved ones to make sacrifices on your behalf. Given these demands, why add filming responsibilities on top of what’s already a brutal role? Manning explained: “A couple of the quarterbacks early on asked me, ‘Peyton, would you have allowed the cameras to follow you around?’ And maybe early in my career, because I didn’t really know what all that meant, I probably would’ve said no. But later in my career, absolutely, yes. I told Patrick, ‘You’re going to want your kids to know what you used to do, what you really went through.’”
Below, check out our comprehensive guide to Quarterback — what the job is, how the players set themselves up for success, how this extraordinary series was filmed and an overview of each episode to follow along.
The three players featured in the series are at completely different points in their careers. Mariota struggles to hang on to his starting role, while Mahomes is considered to be the best quarterback in the game. Cousins is an entrenched starter, but has yet to have an extended playoff run. And only one of the league’s 32 starting QBs can navigate all the pitfalls that pop up each season, lead his team to a Super Bowl win and reap the rewards that come with that success. As Manning told Netflix: “Mahomes balled out. Kirk had a good year. Marcus is going to be back.”
How was Quarterback made?
What sets Quarterback apart from other NFL documentaries is the unprecedented access granted during and outside of games. Mahomes, Cousins and Mariota all wore a microphone during practice once per week and during every game of the season, marking the first time the NFL had allowed such a setup with quarterbacks. They were also interviewed throughout the season, and each player was assigned a different director to coordinate their shoots, which involved letting the crews into their personal lives.
“If you can make the players comfortable with the person they’re dealing with, they’re going to be more trusting, more open to you,” Quarterback showrunner Joe Zucco told Netflix. “We’re really inside the lives of these three guys from Week 1 through the season.”
Beyond seeing how players experience wins and losses on the field, Quarterback allows us to understand how quarterbacks deal with those successes and setbacks at home in some of the most fascinating footage of the series.
“Any quarterback’s season is gonna be a roller coaster. Even with Patrick Mahomes, who only lost three games, there’s still ups and downs,” Quarterback executive producer Keith Cossrow told Netflix. “To be able to track those contours of a season gives people insight into what these guys go through and how they handle such a high-pressure job.”
As for whether the series distracted the quarterbacks from their professional duties, Manning points to Mahomes as evidence that it did not: “Look, we are all set to move forward with season two of this series Quarterback, and we have a lot of quarterbacks that want to do it because now they realize, ‘Hey, if I do this, I'm going to win the Super Bowl and be the MVP of the league.’ Right? Mahomes has shown that. We had a couple quarterbacks pass last year because they said this might be too much of a distraction. Don't say that because that is not true.”
What does a quarterback do, exactly?
“You have to know everyone else’s job just as well as your own,” Manning said in the series. As the player who receives the snap at the start of every play, the buck starts and stops with the quarterback. The job demands the player not only know what his teammates are doing for any given play, but also for every play that could possibly be called. Before every play is begun, they assess the formation of the opposing defense. Once the ball is in their hands, they try to move the ball downfield, typically by either handing the ball off to a running back, or passing it downfield to a receiver before they can get tackled by a defender –– all while making sure not to turn the ball over via an interception or fumble. (Though coaches typically call plays, the quarterback has the freedom and responsibility to improvise or call an “audible,” before calling the snap count and receiving the ball from the center.)
But the role of quarterback extends far beyond the field and the sidelines. Quarterbacks are expected to be leaders in the locker room and, fairly or unfairly, the face of their franchise, answering for everything that happens within a team on and off the field. Because of football’s popularity, the pressure from both media and fans is unmatched.
Why Quarterback Is the Toughest Position in Football“Win or lose, you are going to be front and center,” Manning says in the series. “You have to give credit when it’s good, you have to take the blame when it’s bad. You have to face the music when times are tough.”
Part of the difficulty of the job is the physical wear and tear that players experience –– often compared to being in a car crash every week –– for 17 weeks per season (and more, if they reach the postseason). Former New England Patriots and Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady set a new standard for longevity in the position by playing until age 45 before his retirement in early 2023, but many top quarterbacks play until their mid-to-late 30s, before the job saps their physical skills to the point where they can no longer compete at the highest level.
Quarterback documents the physical demands on the players throughout their 2022 season. Cousins is 34, and has taken his fair share of hits over his 11-year professional career. He employs a chiropractor and masseuse to manage joint and soft tissue damage. Mahomes works out with his own personal trainer outside of team practices, while Mariota employs a private chef to manage his nutrition at home.
We get it: They’re athletic. What other skills does a quarterback need?
It takes more than a great arm to make a quarterback. The position demands intense mental preparation each week, reviewing game film and studying massive game plans with highly specific strategies. “When you finish high school and you finish college you kind of say, ‘Okay, now no more homework,’ ” Manning told Netflix. “And for a quarterback, the homework is just beginning. You have to know not just your assignment, [but] 10 other guys’ assignments as well.”
In Quarterback, Mahomes takes us inside the process of studying game film of not only his own performances, but also of his opponents. Mariota enlists the help of his wife to help him memorize wordy play calls, while Cousins uses neurofeedback exercises to train his brain to stay focused during stressful situations — such as having to deliver a pinpoint pass when he’s about to be tackled by a massive defender.
“I chuckle when I think back on my friends in high school or college who said I didn’t need to try in school because I’m an athlete,” says Cousins in Episode 4. “I laugh because getting ready for every game, all it is is me studying for a final exam like I’m in school again.”
How much do quarterbacks get paid?
If quarterbacks can handle the mental and physical workload that comes with the job, the benefits are unmatched. As the star attractions in a multibillion dollar industry, the most valuable quarterbacks earn around $50 million a year: Mahomes’ 10-year, $450 million contract with the Chiefs is the biggest in NFL history (though as is common in NFL contracts, much of that sum is not guaranteed, but will be paid in the form of bonuses contingent on Mahomes staying on the Chiefs’ roster). Cousins earned $40 million during the 2022 season with the Vikings, and Mariota made roughly $9 million after serving as a backup the previous two years. And, because quarterbacks are so prominent, the most successful and personable ones can rake in millions more from endorsements.
All said, the love of the game underwrites their paychecks. “I think all three of those quarterbacks would play for free,” Manning told Netflix. “They shouldn’t — they would never say that out loud, but I think they love football that much. That comes across in [Quarterback].”
What do quarterbacks do off the field?
It’s a high-stakes, high-stress job, but quarterbacks clock out just like everyone else. At home, each player has family responsibilities to attend to, as well as philanthropic commitments like Mariota’s work with Motiv8.
“Everybody sees the game days, but they don’t see the day-to-day grind,” Mahomes says in Quarterback. “They don’t see how you have to manage playing football and being a dad and being a husband.”
Follow the stories of Mahomes, Cousins and Mariota over the course of the 2022 NFL season, leading up to Super Bowl LVII in Feb. 2023, and watch Quarterback on Netflix now. Keep reading for a guide to each episode and its major players.
Patrick Mahomes Wins Best Male Athlete at 2023 ESPY Awards, Thanks Family for 'Making Me the Guy That I Am'
The Super Bowl-winning quarterback with the Kansas City Chiefs told fans: "We're going to do this thing again, we're going to keep this thing rolling"
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Patrick Mahomes is keeping the party going!
After winning the 2023 Super Bowl alongside the Kansas City Chiefs in February, the quarterback, 27, was named the best male athlete at the 2023 ESPY Awards.
In his speech, Mahomes celebrated their rollercoaster of a season.
"It was an incredible season, many ups, many downs," he said. "I have to thank my teammates, my coaches, basically just making me look good. I'm the quarterback, i just throw the ball and they make it all work."
He also thanked his family, teammates and "the best fanbase in the world" for getting him on the stage.
"I appreciate my teammates, my coaches, the guys that are here," Mahomes continued. "I have to thank my family; Brittany, Bronze and Sterling. I'm glad that all that hard work is paying off. they're making me the guy that I am, the man that I am, so I want to thank them."
"And finally, Chiefs Kingdom. Chiefs Kingdom, I truly believe, is the best fan base in the world. We're going to do this thing again, we're going to keep this thing rolling. I appreciate all y'all."
Mahomes had three nominations for the night, including a nomination in the best NFL player category and best team. His ESPY win comes after having a highly successful 2022-2023 season, where he led the NFL in passing yards (5,250), passing touchdowns (41), offensive yards (5,614), and offensive TDs (45).
After being named the NFL Most Valuable Player for his accomplishments at the 12th annual NFL Honors ceremony, he became the tenth player in NFL history to win the award multiple times. His first MVP award came during his first season as a starter in 2018.
The coveted award found Mahomes competing against Denver Nuggets star Nikola Jokić, Argentine soccer star Lionel Messi and New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge, who have all had big wins in their sports this year.
LARGEST CONTRACT IN PROFESSIONAL SPORTS HISTORY
The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Monday that the team has signed quarterback Humanitarian Award recipient, Patrick Mahomes to a contract extension.
"This is a significant moment for our franchise and for the Chiefs Kingdom," Chiefs Chairman and CEO Clark Hunt said. "Since he joined the Chiefs just a few years ago, Patrick has developed into one of the most prolific athletes in all of sports. With his dynamic play and infectious personality, he is one of the most recognized and beloved figures to put on the Chiefs uniform. He's an extraordinary leader and a credit to the Kansas City community, and I'm delighted that he will be a member of the Chiefs for many years to come."
"Getting this deal done has been a priority for us for quite a while now," Chiefs General Manager Brett Veach said. "I'd like to thank Chris Cabott and Leigh Steinberg for their efforts and patience, along with Brandt Tilis and Chris Shea on my staff. I'd also like to recognize Clark Hunt, Mark Donovan and Coach Reid who have all been incredibly supportive while we've worked though the details. I've said from the beginning that Patrick is one of the most impressive players I've ever scouted, but I don't think anyone could have envisioned everything he's brought to our football team and community. His abilities are so rare, and to couple that with an incredible personality is outstanding. We're going to continue to do everything we can to surround him with talent, and this deal provides us more flexibility to do that. He's obviously an integral part to our success and we're thrilled he's going to be the quarterback of the Kansas City Chiefs for a long time."
"I've had the privilege of coaching a lot of incredible athletes and special people in my career, and Patrick is without question on that list of players." Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid said. "The best part is he's still early in his career. He's a natural leader and always grinding, whether that's on the field, in the weight room or watching film, he wants to be the best. He's a competitor and his teammates feed off his energy. He makes us all better as an organization and we are blessed he's going to be our quarterback for years to come."
Mahomes (6-3, 230) has started 31 games in three NFL seasons with the Chiefs (2017-19). He's completed 724 of 1,099 pass attempts (65.9%) for 9,412 yards with 76 touchdowns and only 18 interceptions (108.9 rating). He's rushed 110 times for 500 yards (4.5 avg.) with four TDs. In postseason play, Mahomes has completed 115 of 184 pass attempts (62.5%) for 1,474 yards with 13 touchdowns and two interceptions (106.6 rating). Mahomes has started two seasons for the club, earning Pro Bowl honors in 2019 and 2020. He helped lead the club to back-to-back AFC Championship Game appearances followed by a victory in Super Bowl LIV, earning the game's MVP award.
Mahomes originally entered the NFL as the 10th overall pick in the first round of the 2017 NFL Draft by the Chiefs. Kansas City traded the No. 27 overall pick, a third-round pick and their 2018 first-round selection to the Buffalo Bills in order to move up to No. 10 where the club selected Mahomes. The Tyler, Texas native, played collegiately at Texas Tech.
To view the announcement from the Kansas City Chiefs: Click Here
Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, the reigning Super Bowl MVP, leapfrogged six-time Super Bowl champion quarterback Tom Brady for No. 1 overall merchandise sales, according to the NFL Players Association's list of top 50 selling players, released Monday.
The list, which covers sales reports for all officially licensed NFL player-identified merchandise, ranks players based on sales from March 2019 through February 2020.
Sales include online and retail purchases that are recorded by the NFLPA, and are made up of trading cards, bobbleheads, collectible figures, men’s, women’s and youth game jerseys, T-shirts and hoodies, wall decals, pennants, matted and framed photos, among other items. Total sales exceeded $1.9 billion during 2019.
Mahomes, the 2018 NFL MVP, has been rising in popularity, as the 24-year-old guided the Chiefs to a Super Bowl LIV victory. Brady, who signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers after 20 seasons with the New England Patriots, slipped to No. 2 on the list. Lamar Jackson, the reigning NFL MVP, shot up to No. 3 on the list after checking in at No. 41 last year. Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott was the top-selling non-quarterback on the list at No. 4.
The NFLPA's full top 50:
To view original story from USA Today: Click Here
By: Adam Kilgore
Feb. 3, 2020 at 5:44 a.m. CST
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Patrick Mahomes stood at the center of the huddle, ready to tell the Kansas City Chiefs what they would do at their most desperate point. For 3½ quarters of Super Bowl LIV, the San Francisco 49ers had battered Mahomes and strangled his offense. The Chiefs trailed by 10. The Hard Rock Stadium clock showed 7:13. To maintain practical hope, they needed to convert on third and 15. It was a situation that strains what a football team thinks is possible. The Chiefs still believed they would win, because the quarterback they were staring at was Patrick Mahomes.
Mahomes heard offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy’s voice over the speaker in his helmet. It relayed the play he had been pleading with Coach Andy Reid to call for most of the second half, a play the Chiefs had set up early in the game and saved for the moment they most needed it — a moment like this. In a calm voice, Mahomes called, “Tre Right, Three Jet Chip Wasp.”
And now, “Tre Right, Three Jet Chip Wasp” will live in Chiefs lore. It will reside forever next to “65 Toss Power Trap,” the play Hank Stram leaned on to win Kansas City’s first Super Bowl 50 years ago. The Chiefs won their second Sunday night, 31-20, after Mahomes played unevenly for 52 minutes and unleashed an unholy barrage in the final half of a quarter. The comeback hinged on that play, Mahomes’s 44-yard heave to wide receiver Tyreek Hill, a combination of tactical brilliance and the kind of throw both little boys and fellow NFL quarterbacks can only dream of making.
Before the play, the Chiefs were dead. Afterward, they scored a touchdown, forced a 49ers three-and-out and scored again. Mahomes delivered Reid his elusive Super Bowl title, earned MVP honors and stamped himself, at only 24, as one of the greats. It all happened in a rush, in two series that changed the Super Bowl, redefined legacies and placed Mahomes atop the sport.
“He’s definitely up there,” Chiefs backup quarterback Chad Henne said. “I would put his name up there with some of the greats. Joe Montana was like my idol growing up. Guys like that I admire. Obviously Tom [Brady]. You can definitely mention Patrick’s name.”
The 49ers’ ferocious pass rush, combined with a game plan reliant on Mahomes’s running ability, bruised Mahomes all night. The Chiefs ran four option plays in the first half, and on one, a fourth-down conversion, 49ers defensive end Nick Bosa obliterated him after he pitched. On another scramble, safety Jimmie Ward clobbered him so hard with a shoulder to the chest that Mahomes fumbled out of bounds. The hits appeared to take a toll. Mahomes threw two interceptions, including one in the fourth quarter, when he misfired behind Hill on a crossing route.
“I took a couple hits, I’ll say that,” Mahomes said. “I was just trying to fight. I was just trying to find a way to win.”
The Chiefs took the field with 8:57 left and down 20-10 on their own 17. On second down, Mahomes ducked inside Bosa’s pass rush and saw open field. He darted nine yards, diving out of bounds over the first down marker. He had struggled all game, but for those who know him, that run represented a pivot.
“When he makes one play, the fire lights,” Bobby Stroupe, who has been Mahomes’s personal trainer since fourth grade, said in a text message. “When it starts burning, you’re done. I knew when he rushed for that first down, it was over.”
After another first down, the drive started to bog down. A false start and a near completion, ruled incomplete after a replay challenge, set up third and 15 from the Kansas City 30. The review gave Kansas City coaches time to pick a perfect play. They relied on what had transpired earlier in the game.
Andy Reid congratulated by Eagles, LeBron James, Mike Trout — heck, by just about everyone
All game, Mahomes said, the 49ers employed a “robber” coverage — one of the safeties in their trademark Cover 3 scheme would take away deep crossing routes in the middle of the field. In the first half, the Chiefs had run a deep shot for Hill, perhaps the most explosive receiver in football, down the center of the field. But the 49ers’ “robber” had defended it well, while a linebacker covered tight end Travis Kelce.
The Chiefs’ game plan contained a complement to that play. When the Chiefs reviewed pictures of the failed deep shot to Hill, they saw the 49ers’ coverage would be vulnerable, because once the “robber” saw Hill headed toward the middle, it would leave the outside vacant. After halftime, Mahomes started telling coaches to run it. That complement was “Tre Right, Three Jet Chip Wasp.”
“We knew we kind of had that play in our back pocket,” quarterbacks coach Mike Kafka said. “We just didn’t have a drive where we needed to get to it. But [Reid] was just going to unleash everything we had on the call sheet. Pat was the one that was talking to Coach about calling that play. He was the one who was emphasizing that play.”
All game long, the Chiefs frequently lined up Kelce out wide by himself on one side and three wide receivers to the other side. In Reid’s system, those wideouts are numbered, from outside to closest to the ball, 1, 2 and 3. Whenever the Chiefs positioned one of their fastest wide receivers — usually Hill, but sometimes Mecole Hardman — at the 2 or 3, the 49ers’ safety cheated toward him.
Hill would be the 2, and “Wasp” called for him to run a “dangle” route. He would start off sprinting toward the middle of the field, to make it look like the failed deep shot from the first half, then break toward the corner.
The play included an adjustment to the formation. The “Chip” referred to tight end Blake Bell. He would line up next to the right tackle and block speedy pass rusher Dee Ford before he ran a pattern, a tactic needed to provide Mahomes enough time to throw such a deep route.
As the Chiefs broke the huddle, Sammy Watkins told Hill, “Go make that play, man.”
Usually, Hill would break off his route and head to the corner at 18 or 20 yards. On the sideline, Henne watched Hill blaze past the mark, still in full sprint. In the secondary, Ward sprinted to the middle, just as the Chiefs wanted and anticipated. In the pocket, Mahomes drifted back as defensive tackle DeForest Buckner closed in, knowing Hill would be open, trying to buy as much time as possible. As Hill reached 25 yards and Buckner charged, Henne thought, “Break! Break! Break!”
Finally, Hill made his cut to the corner, into an open swath of grass. Mahomes planted his right leg on his 21-yard line, 14 yards behind the line of scrimmage. As Buckner walloped his left shoulder, Mahomes slung the ball through the night. The pass — off his back foot, thrown with a 6-foot-7, 300-pound man crunching him — floated 57 yards, marking the longest distance a Mahomes completion traveled through the air all season. It landed softly in Hill’s hands.
“That,” Watkins said later, “is the golden child.”
“I think everyone kind of knew,” Kafka said later. “If we get this ball back, we’re going to go down and score and win it.”
First, they needed the ball back. The Niners had gashed Kansas City most of the night, and Coach Kyle Shanahan’s running game had been the most devastating weapon of the postseason. The 49ers started the drive with a five-yard run. Quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo dropped back and, with Kansas City expecting a run, spotted George Kittle wide open over the middle.
On the first drive of the game, defensive tackle Chris Jones had smashed Garoppolo. From that point, Jones expected the 49ers to double-team him, which altered his approach. “They was not going to block one-on-one from the beginning, and I knew that,” Jones said. “So I had to get my hands up, find another way to affect the quarterback. That’s what I did.”
Garoppolo fired a pass to Kittle, a certain first down, potentially a game-sealing play — until Jones swatted it down. The Chiefs stopped Garoppolo again on third down, and after using only 63 seconds, the 49ers punted back to Mahomes.
During the game, as the Chiefs’ offense sputtered, inactive veteran running back LeSean McCoy turned to backup quarterback Matt Moore. “Yo,” he said, “we need to go to Sammy more.”
After the Chiefs crossed midfield, to the San Francisco 48, Reid called a play that originated from the offensive system Shanahan’s father, Mike, created. It was a throwback pass designed for Watkins, who would find a hole in the zone between a shallow corner and deep corner. Watkins snuck behind cornerback Richard Sherman, and Mahomes hit him for a 38-yard gain.
“This is one of the biggest moments of my life,” Watkins said.
On first down, Mahomes escaped the pocket and scrambled for six yards. He tried another run on second down, but safety Jaquiski Tartt downed him a yard behind the line of scrimmage. On third and goal from the 5, running back Damien Williams snuck out to the right flat. Mahomes hit him in stride, and Williams glided over the pylon.
In a six-minute onslaught, the Chiefs had taken a 24-20 lead. Before those decisive drives, Mahomes had completed 18 of 31 passes for 172 yards with no touchdown passes and two interceptions. He was being outplayed by Garoppolo, and Reid’s best chance to win a Super Bowl was slipping away.
But the Chiefs have long loved Mahomes not only for his talent but also for his resilience. Before the Chiefs traded up to draft Mahomes 10th overall in 2017, General Manager Brett Veach watched him in person in a handful of games when Mahomes played for Texas Tech. “I saw him play Iowa State,” Veach said. “He left in the second quarter with a shoulder injury. He came back in the game — it was 45-7; it was meaningless — because he wanted to play. He’s so competitive.”
If Mahomes was built like most athletes, he probably wouldn’t have been on the field — in Week 7, he dislocated his kneecap on a quarterback sneak. One week later, inside the Chiefs’ practice facility, he was competing in drills against Henne, who was also rehabbing. “Dude, you just dislocated your kneecap, and a week later you’re out here throwing with me,” Henne told him. He returned two weeks later.
Last month, Mahomes led playoff victories after facing deficits of 24-0 and 17-7. While taking a beating Sunday night, he never showed any effects. In those two drives with the Super Bowl at stake, after the NFL’s most fearsome defense had pummeled him for more than three quarters, Mahomes completed 8 of 11 passes for 114 yards and two touchdowns while adding 15 yards rushing.
“He’s a tough kid,” Kafka said. “He wouldn’t let you know if he was feeling anything.”
“He’s going to be sore,” Stroupe said. “He had to fight his [rear] off tonight.”
In the Chiefs’ locker room late Sunday night, jubilation numbed any pain. Mahomes sauntered toward his locker, a fresh championship T-shirt over his shoulder pads, and posed for pictures holding the Lombardi Trophy. He stripped down to his skivvies and wrapped a towel around his waist. He informed a reporter who he had been promising a one-on-one interview he needed to shower first. “Is that cool?” Mahomes asked. “Won’t take long.”
Patrick Mahomes, in Super Bowl comeback, showed why he is the best player in the NFL
Mahomes walked across the room, black curls bobbing on his head. He stopped to high-five a teammate. “We won the Super Bowl,” Mahomes told him as they hugged.
In the coming years, Mahomes may be saying that again and again. He is on an all-time track, if he has not already reached that status. He is the youngest quarterback in NFL history to win both an MVP and a Super Bowl. Late Sunday night, Henne pondered the preposterous-but-not-really-preposterous question of whether Mahomes, right now, is the best player the sport has seen.
“I mean, it’s hard to say right now,” Henne said. “But, I mean, talent-wise right now, yes. He can do anything.”
For now, Mahomes walked around a corner and out of view. He had delivered the Chiefs, and he was ready to celebrate. There went Patrick Mahomes, the man who makes anything possible.
To view original story from Washington Post: Click Here
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