National Post

MAHOMES IS THE MAN IN BREAKOUT SEASON

CHIEFS’ DYNAMIC QUARTERBAC­K GETS NOD AS NFL’S MID-YEAR MVP

- John kryk

It’s Week 9 in the NFL. Most teams by this weekend (19 of 32, to be precise) have played at least eight games, or half the schedule.

So we’re at the midway point.

For the fifth consecutiv­e year, longtime NFL Network analyst Mike Mayock has shared with Postmedia his choices, and reasons, for the leading contenders in the race for the league’s major season-ending awards.

Namely: overall MVP, offensive MVP, defensive MVP, top rookies on offence and defence and comeback player of the year.

Mayock, you may not know, played briefly in 1981 as a defensive back with the CFL’s Toronto Argonauts before playing with the NFL’s New York Giants for two years. He cut his broadcasti­ng teeth in the 1990s with ESPN on CFL telecasts, and today serves as an analyst on Westwood One’s radio broadcasts of marquee NFL games, which air on TSN stations in Canada.

Mayock is primarily known as NFL Network’s chief pre-draft analyst. Each winter and early spring he’s widely regarded as a bar-setter in assessing incoming draft talent, top to bottom, as he is as plugged into the thoughts and assessment­s of the league’s top talent evaluators as anyone in the media.

Mayock’s 2018 major award leaders are young. All but one are age 25 or younger ...

OVERALL MVP Patrick Mahomes, quarterbac­k, Kansas City Chiefs 2nd year, age 23

Season synopsis: After mostly watching from the bench a year ago behind Alex Smith, Mahomes has burst onto the NFL scene as few firstyear players ever have. He leads the league in touchdown passes (26) and passing yards (2,526), is fourth in efficiency rating (115.3) and fifth in yards per attempt (8.86). And Mahomes’ TD to-intercepti­ons ratio is 26 to 6, or 4.33-to-1, when the NFL career leader in the latter category is current Green Bay Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers, with 4.13-to1. The Chiefs own the best record in the AFC (7-1) largely because of Mahomes. MAYOCK: “When he got drafted by Kansas City a year ago he go, I thought, ‘What a great place for him to go.’ (Head coach) Andy Reid is quarterbac­k-friendly and Mahomes gets a chance to sit behind Alex Smith — who’s a consummate profession­al — for a year. And he needed that. He had the most explosive package of talent you could see coming out of Texas Tech — big arm, athletic, baseball/football, competitor, leader, smart — but he was all over the place. You knew one of two things was gonna happen with every snap in college: something really, really good was about to happen, or something really, really bad. And I give Andy a ton of credit for mostly getting rid of the bad. He’s helping the young kid make good decisions, pocket decisions, when to throw, when to throw it away. K.C. has a 7-1 record with as explosive an offence as there is in football. There will be a lot of people talking about Todd Gurley and Jared Goff of the Rams for MVP, and that’s justified, too. The Rams are undefeated. Gurley’s on a ridiculous pace right now, which helps Goff. But if you told me I had one vote right now, it’d probably be Mahomes.”

OFFENSIVE MVP Todd Gurley, running back, Los Angeles Rams 4th year, age 24

Season synopsis: Gurley stood out last year in the high-powered Rams attack of then first-year head coach Sean McVay, leading the team in rushing yards and rushing TDs (1,305 yards and 13) and receptions and receiving yards (64 and 788, for six TDs). Gurley is even more of a yardage and touchdown machine in 2018. He leads the league in carries (169), rushing yards (800), rushing TDs (11), first downs gained rushing (44), total yards from scrimmage (1,151) and total TDs scored (15). MAYOCK: “Yeah, I think he has taken his game to a higher level. Right now if you projected him out, he’d finish the season with 2,200/2,300 scrimmage yards, and 29 or 30 touchdowns. You’re talking about a crazy offensive year for a running back, in a league that’s largely devaluing running backs … He’s in an offence that complement­s itself, with the run game and the pass game and what Sean McVay asks Goff to do. McVay has taken Goff, a kid with a lot of talent, to another level. And Todd Gurley, too.”

DEFENSIVE MVP (co-leaders) Jadeveon Clowney, edge rusher, Houston Texans 5th year, age 25

Season synopsis: After starting only 11 games in his first two NFL seasons because of leg injuries, after being the No. 1 overall draft pick in 2014 and missing two more games in 2016, Clowney has really come on as a dominant backfield disrupter. He had 9.5 sacks a year ago, and from a multitude of positions along the defensive line this year ranks tied for 25 th with 4.5 sacks.

Aaron Donald, defensive lineman, Los Angeles Rams 5th year, age 27

Season synopsis: Widely regarded as the most dominant interior defensive linemen now, if not of the decade, Donald held out for almost all of training camp before signing a six-year extension at the end of August worth up to US$135 million, with $87 million guaranteed and a $40-million signing bonus. That makes him the NFL’s highest paid defensive player. Donald’s production and effectiven­ess through eight games has only increased. He leads the NFL with 10 sacks, just one off his career high. MAYOCK: “I think the predominan­t feeling here would be Aaron Donald as defensive MVP. He’s got 10 sacks and he’s explosive every single snap of the game. When you talk to top quarterbac­ks around the league, they all say the thing they dislike most is immediate pressure up the middle. And that’s what Aaron Donald does. But from my perspectiv­e, the guy I’m partial to a little bit right now is Jadeveon Clowney. You don’t hear a lot about him, especially with J.J. Watt’s comeback. But I mean, I put his tape on from two weeks ago against Jacksonvil­le and they couldn’t block him in the run game, they couldn’t block him in the pass game. He dominated the football game. He was on the edge, he was in the A-gap, he was in a two-point stance, he was in a three-point stance. And then I went back and watched some more of his tape and it’s been like that every game. I love a couple of things about Clowney: (a) he’s healthy, (b) you’re starting to see his talent take over and (c) the ways they’re using him defensivel­y is really intelligen­t. They’re poking and prodding each offensive line, every pass protection. They’re forcing teams to account for him all over the line of scrimmage. So to me, I’d almost like to say at this point — and I like Aaron Donald and I’m a believer in him — but I would say there’s almost a codefensiv­e MVP here, with Jadeveon Clowney.”

TOP ROOKIE, OFFENCE Saquon Barkley, running back, New York Giants 1st year, age 21

Season synopsis: Although the rookie from Penn State, as in college, continues to bounce the ball outside too often, and seldom gains many yards on most handoffs, as a pro he still makes jaw-droppingly big plays whenever he finds himself in open space, be it on a run or pass. Barkley ranks second in the NFL behind Gurley with 1,016 yards from scrimmage, and Barkley’s yards per touch actually is higher than Gurley’s, 6.0 to 5.8. MAYOCK: “This goes to Saquon Barkley and justifiabl­y. He’s already over 1,000 scrimmage yards. You talked about Gurley and his ability in the pass game, and I think that’s the one thing people didn’t understand when Barkley came in. That not only was he a great running back, but how talented he was as a receiver, both out of the backfield and moving him around as a chess piece. I think Saquon Barkley is everything that people thought he would be, and maybe even more because of the type of person he is in your locker-room. Unfortunat­ely, offensive linemen are never gonna get a look for this kind of award, but Indianapol­is guard Quenton Nelson from Notre Dame is killing people. He makes a mistake here and there, but he’s a centrepiec­e for what’s going on, in learning how to protect Andrew Luck. Barkley gets the award, but Nelson has been a dominant force already as a rookie guard.”

TOP ROOKIE, DEFENCE Derwin James, strong safety, Los Angeles Chargers 1st year, age 22

Season synopsis: Is earning raves across the league for his strong play in a variety of pass coverage and run support roles on a muchimprov­ed Chargers defence, co-ordinated by former Jacksonvil­le head coach Gus Bradley. MAYOCK: “I wish Saints defensive end Marcus Davenport had started earlier. He’s a raw project. I love what New Orleans is doing with him. I think by the end of the year, you’ll see him and Denver defensive end Bradley Chubb continuing to take huge jumps. But right now it’s probably a defensive back. Either Derwin James or Cleveland cornerback Denzel Ward. I would probably say Derwin James. I think what he’s done with that Chargers defence, and the fact they are where they are today, he’s as advertised: a physical, big cover guy that can tackle, be a leader, turn the football over. He has played extremely well. And Denzel Ward has played extremely well on the outside in Cleveland.”

COMEBACK PLAYER OF THE YEAR Deshaun Watson, quarterbac­k, Houston Texans 2nd year, age 23

Season synopsis: After tearing the ACL in his right knee exactly one year ago Friday to end a spectacula­r debut pro season at the midway point, the former Clemson University star recovered fast enough to be able to start this season in Week 1. After struggling somewhat in three losses to open the campaign, he is dazzling again. Houston is on a five-game win streak and Watson ranks seventh in TD throws (15) and 12th in efficiency rating (98.4) which, in a year when NFL passers collective­ly have never been better, are eyepopping comeback accomplish­ments.

MAYOCK: “Not only is he coming off an ACL, but he had limited starts in the NFL before that — and at the most important position. After starting slowly this year, all of a sudden this team is in first place at 5-3 and he’s starting to look like the player he was before he got hurt a year ago. So I love (Indianapol­is QB) Andrew Luck coming back, and (Houston DE) J.J. Watt, but I just love the Deshaun Watson story — not just from an injury perspectiv­e, but he didn’t have as deep a well to draw from. And that’s what’s really impressive to me.”

 ?? DAVID EULITT / GETTY IMAGES ?? Kansas City Chiefs second-year quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes leads the NFL in touchdown passes (26) and passing yards (2,526).
DAVID EULITT / GETTY IMAGES Kansas City Chiefs second-year quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes leads the NFL in touchdown passes (26) and passing yards (2,526).
 ?? SAM CRAFT / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Houston Texans defensive end Jadeveon Clowney has come on as a dominant backfield disrupter.
SAM CRAFT / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Houston Texans defensive end Jadeveon Clowney has come on as a dominant backfield disrupter.

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