Journal Pioneer

New king of the gridiron

After leading Chiefs to Super Bowl win, the future belongs to Mahomes

- STEVE KEATING

MIAMI – The Kansas City Chiefs ended a 50-year Super Bowl drought with a dramatic 31-20 comeback win over the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday in a breathtaki­ng finish to the NFL’s 100th season that may have also revealed a new star to kickoff the next century.

The Chiefs’ young quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes stepped onto America’s biggest sporting stage and produced an enthrallin­g fourth-quarter rally that even the 49ers grudgingly applauded.

The 24-year-old’s performanc­e underscore­d why he is being called the heir apparent to six-time Super Bowl champion and future Hall of Famer Tom Brady of the Patriots.

With the Chiefs trailing 20-10, Mahomes engineered three scoring drives in just over five minutes, hitting Travis Kelce and Damien Williams with short touchdown passes to give Kansas City the lead.

Williams then raced 38 yards for the clinching score, sparking wild celebratio­n for long-suffering Chiefs fans who had not seen their team hoist the Lombardi trophy since their victory over the Minnesota Vikings in Super Bowl IV.

If Chiefs supporters were over-the-moon about the long overdue Super Bowl win at Hard Rock Stadium they will be doubly excited about what the future might hold with Mahomes calling plays for years to come.

With an aging cast of quarterbac­king greats marching towards retirement the NFL is searching for the new face of the league and after Sunday’s display Mahomes looks to be the man.

Mahomes, who completed 26 of 42 attempts for 286 yards and threw two touchdown passes, appeared out of sorts for nearly three quarters of the game but took charge when it mattered to earn the Super Bowl Most Valuable Player (MVP) honors.

He becomes the secondyoun­gest quarterbac­k to win a Super Bowl and the youngest to claim both NFL and Super Bowl MVP awards.

CHIEFS DYNASTY?

But while Mahomes has been more than willing to take on the responsibi­lities as a team leader he is not quite as prepared to assume the job of the NFL’s frontman.

“There’s several guys that could be the face of the

NFL,” he said. “Just how good the quarterbac­k play is now, guys come in here year in and year out and play great football.

“Lamar (Jackson of the Baltimore Ravens) won the league MVP last night and he was a unanimous choice and had one of the best season of all-time at the quarterbac­k position so there’s guys like that it seems every year.

“A lot of young quarterbac­ks and still a lot of veteran guys are playing at a very high level.

“I’m just try to be the best Patrick Mahomes I can be and win football games.”

Very few quarterbac­ks, veterans or newcomers, have demonstrat­ed the Houdinilik­e ability to escape defeat.

During the postseason, with Mahomes leading Kansas City’s explosive attack, no lead has been safe.

In the divisional playoffs, the Chiefs fought back from 24-0 down to beat the Houston Texans and then erased a 10-0 Tennessee Titans advantage in the AFC championsh­ip.

The strong armed, charismati­c leader has become a one-man highlight reel with his no-look passes and scrambling wizardry.

In just his second year as a starter, statistica­lly few have been better.

Mahomes became only the second quarterbac­k with 5,000 passing yards and 50 touchdowns in a single season.

 ?? SHANNON STAPLETON/REUTERS ?? Kansas City Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes celebrates with the Vince Lombardi trophy after winning Super Bowl LIV.
SHANNON STAPLETON/REUTERS Kansas City Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes celebrates with the Vince Lombardi trophy after winning Super Bowl LIV.

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