Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mahomes handed a great motivator

- VAHE GREGORIAN

TAMPA, Fla. — The morning after the Super Bowl a year ago, a bleary-eyed Patrick Mahomes arrived at a news conference and hugged Minnie Mouse in a preview of his imminent trip to Disney World.

Then he stepped behind a podium as he collected the MVP award for his pivotal role in the 31-20 comeback win over San Francisco. At 24, Mahomes was the youngest player ever to be so recognized .

It was all “surreal,” he said, and so began a victory lap that included some uncharacte­ristically unrestrain­ed celebratio­n in the days ahead.

But despite the truly incredible early success of his NFL career, including being named league MVP in his first full season as a starter the year before, Mahomes soon returned to training with the same ferocity as ever.

Because winning that Super Bowl didn’t so much culminate his ambition as validate it and commence it in earnest.

You could see it in his offseason workouts with longtime trainer Bobby Stroupe, as most recently chronicled by Men’s Health magazine.

It’s Mahomes, Coach Andy Reid said in training camp, who “keeps practice alive, challenges the defense, and really makes everyone around him better just by his attitude and how he goes about it.”

You saw all this unfurl anew during a 14-2 regular-season … only for the Chiefs to ultimately unravel in Sunday night’s 31-9 loss to Tampa Bay in Super Bowl 55, with Mahomes frequently left skedaddlin­g for his life behind a patchwork offensive line.

This was about as rotten as a sequel could play out, with the Chiefs becoming just the third team in Super Bowl history to fail to score a touchdown and appearing helpless most of the game.

Some of what happened will get fixed in the natural course of things, assuming, for instance, that offensive linemen Eric Fisher, Mitchell Schwartz and Laurent Duvernay-Tardif all are able to return to their form of last season.

But there are plenty of other concerns to fret over, including whether Tampa Bay just created a defensive blueprint for stifling Mahomes.

Just the same, let’s remember Mahomes still is just getting started.

And this is why we circled back to last year first. Let’s remember, too, that someone immune to complacenc­y and infinitely capable of conjuring perceived slights as motivation­al fodder figures to be all the more obsessive coming off a humiliatin­g defeat on the most visible stage.

So on the Monday morning after this Super Bowl, a resolute Mahomes considered the question about how his motivation might be different this time around.

“If you’re a competitor, and you get so close to your ultimate goal and you fall short, it’s something that will motivate you for the rest of your career,” he said, adding that this was a feeling he didn’t want to experience ever again.

In a similar vein, he later added, “It’s not the end of something. It’s going to be another chapter.”

Nothing is assured now, of course. But they’ll be again led by the magical Mahomes, who reaffirmed his charismati­c leadership both after the game and on Monday morning. He emphasized his own part in what went awry … even as he the offensive line was good at times but “sometimes they let guys through.”

“A lot of times it gets put on the line because I’m scrambling around,” he said. “But if we’re not executing as far as me making the right reads [and] getting the ball out of my hands to the receivers on time, then nothing’s going to work.

“So [the line gets] that blame sometimes when it’s not deserved … a lot of it’s on me, and people just don’t see it that way.”

This is part of why teammates love him and want to do more for him. And he’ll reinforce that with his work ethic in the months to come.

Everything has to get better, including Mahomes. He’ll be the first to tell you.

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