The Telegram (St. John's)

Old school, new school matchup

- STEVE SIMMONS

MIAMI – The Super Bowl trophy is named for Vince Lombardi, who might have been talking about the San Francisco 49ers when he shed light years ago on one of his football secrets. “Football is two things,” the late, great Lombardi said. “It’s blocking and tackling. I don’t care about formations or new offences or tricks on defence. You block and tackle better than the team you’re playing, you win.”

Lombardi’s Green Bay Packers won the first two Super Bowls ever played, the first one against the Kansas City Chiefs.

But here we are, just days away from the 54th Super Bowl on Sunday and the matchup between the high flying Chiefs and ball control 49ers already looks epic in an old school vs new school kind of way.

The old coach, Andy Reid, who has been around almost forever, is playing new school football with a quarterbac­k in Patrick Mahomes, who has wonderfull­y improvised his way to the championsh­ip game.

The young coach, Kyle Shanahan, son of a two-time Super Bowl champion coach, maybe the next great NFL coach, is smart and sophistica­ted but he’s playing almost Lombardi style football on the way to championsh­ip Sunday. Nobody in the NFL blocks and tackles the way the 49ers do. They have dominated the line of scrimmage in both their playoff victories. They have physically overwhelme­d their opposition.

And that’s so much the fascinatio­n of Super Bowl LIV. What wins? The unstoppabl­e quarterbac­k, the Chiefs with all their speed, or the dominant running game and smash mouth football San Francisco plays. Is it pure speed and athleticis­m or is it the Lombardi way, winning with physical authority and technique?

“We have a special team,” said Shanahan. “They have a special team. Everyone knows how good their quarterbac­k is. Andy (Reid) is an unbelievab­le coach. When I started preparing for this game, I knew how good their offence was. I quickly realized how good their defence is.

“It’s always tough to game plan for good quarterbac­ks and Patrick is as good as any of them. He can be a freak out there and create things. I think this is going to be one helluva game. There’s so many elements to it.”

When the Miami Dolphins did what no one else in modern football history has managed – an undefeated season in 1982-83 – Bob Griese was the quarterbac­k. In their three playoff victories, he threw just 31 passes.

Think about that in the context of today’s football. Mahomes threw 35 passes in the AFC Final. Griese threw 31 in three playoff wins. The Dolphins controlled the line of scrimmage and the ball with their running game. They played great defence Griese didn’t have to be great. They blocked and tackled better than anyone they played against: Don Shula grew up coaching against Lombardi.

Jimmy Garappolo threw just eight passes in the NFC title game against Green Bay, 19 the week before against Minnesota. Because he didn’t have to throw, the way Griese didn’t have to throw in 1983. He’s thrown for 208 yards in his two playoff starts with one touchdown.

By comparison, Mahomes has thrown for 615 yards and eight touchdowns in two games, ran for 106 more and a for the ages touchdown scramble. That’s 721 yards just for him. “And this is just the beginning,” said KC receiver

Sammy Watkins. “He’s here (at the Super Bowl) and he’ll be here again and more than that. What he’s doing right now is almost magical. He does things no one else can do or could even think of doing. That run he made, we just watched in amazement. Who can do that?”

How do you lose if Mahomes

is your quarterbac­k?

How do you lose when the Chiefs can come back from 24-0 and 10-0 in playoff games to win rather easily.

How do you do that? You keep the ball and the way the 49ers run it by committee with Raheem Mostert, Tevin Coleman and Matt

Breida – mostly Mostert lately – Garappolo doesn’t have to win the Super Bowl by himself. Griese didn’t win by himself in Miami. Peyton Manning didn’t in his final Super Bowl with Denver. John Elway didn’t in either of his victories late in his career with the Broncos.

“They’re smart with their running backs,” said linebacker Frank Clark. “They use all of them, they keep them fresh, they’re really good about rotating them in and out.” Mostert, the special teams giant turned running back, ran for four touchdowns against Green Bay. Tevin Coleman, who was in the Super Bowl with Atlanta just a few years ago, ran for two touchdowns against Minnesota. Matt Breida led the Niners in rushing the first half of the season. “I think they have a pretty good line,” said Clark. “But I really think that the way they utilize their backs helps them a lot. It tells us we better be ready.”

Passing game advantage to Kansas City. Running game advantage to the Niners. Offensive line advantage to San Francisco. Quarterbac­k mobility goes to Mahomes and the Chiefs. And so it goes, back and forth.

You can come up with a reason Kansas City wins and come up with a reason San Fransisco wins and you can see a close game either way or a blowout either way. Shanahan is right. These are great teams. They couldn’t be more different. And I don’t remember a Super Bowl as intriguing as this one is.

 ?? KIRBY LEE-USA TODAY SPORTS ?? San Francisco 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan at Super Bowl LIV news conference in Miami on Tuesday.
KIRBY LEE-USA TODAY SPORTS San Francisco 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan at Super Bowl LIV news conference in Miami on Tuesday.

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