Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mahomes’ footwork is super

- Barry Wilner

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Arrowhead Stadium rocked to Whitney Houston’s “I Want To Dance With Somebody.”

Kansas City fans’ half-century wait to boogie in the Super Bowl is over – in great part due to their quarterbac­k’s magical feet, not to mention his majestic arm.

With his best imitation of a tightrope walker, Patrick Mahomes high-wired the Chiefs into their first Super Bowl since 1970.

Oh sure, Mahomes did his usual superb job passing, but it was his 27-yard tap dance down the left sideline late in the first half that gave the Chiefs their first lead.

From there, they outran the run-oriented Tennessee Titans and star back Derrick Henry for a 35-24 victory Sunday in the AFC championsh­ip.

At last, for the third time overall, the Chiefs (14-4) are Super Bowl bound.

“I mean, it’s amazing. It really is,” Mahomes said. “To be here, to be a part of Chiefs Kingdom and to be able to do it here at Arrowhead, these people deserve it. And, we’re not done yet.”

Adding to the joy of the achievemen­t, coach Andy Reid and owner Clark Hunt accepted the Lamar Hunt Trophy – named after his father – emblematic of the AFC title.

It was handed over to them by Chiefs Hall of Famer Bobby Bell, with Mahomes and safety Tyrann Mathieu jumping for joy on the makeshift stage.

Next up: chasing the Vince Lombardi Trophy.

“Very excited and very emotional to win the trophy that has my dad’s name on it,” Hunt said. ”Yeah, 50 years were too long, but we’re going to another Super Bowl.

“Chiefs Kingdom, we are going to the Super Bowl.”

The Chiefs lost in 1967 in the first AFL-NFL Championsh­ip Game – it wasn’t called the Super Bowl yet – to Vince Lombardi’s Green Bay Packers, 35-10.

Three years later, one year after the New York Jets shocked Baltimore to lay claim to the AFL being equal to the longestabl­ished NFL, Kansas City was back. This time, it was known as the Super Bowl – indeed, Lamar Hunt is credited with coming up with the name – and his Chiefs hammered Minnesota, 23-7, with the typical Wild West offensive flair and a staunch defense. Those are characteri­stics that helped carry KC this season.

Reid isn’t as animated as Hall of Famer Hank Stram, who famously urged the Chiefs team to “keep matriculat­ing the ball down the field, boys.” Caught up in the moment Sunday, Reid said, “It’s awesome,” before asking the crowd to chant, “How about those Chiefs?”

Moments later, standout tight end Travis Kelce proclaimed, “You gotta fight for your right to party.”

There will be plenty of partying on South Beach for Chiefs Kingdom heading into the championsh­ip matchup.

“Fired up to go to Miami, got to get on a diet so I can fit into my clothes,” Reid said. “Very proud.”

As they had done in their past three “eliminatio­n” games, the sixth-seeded Titans (11-8) got started quickly.

The difference at Arrowhead as opposed to Houston, New England and Baltimore was that the Chiefs had Mahomes, Tyreek Hill, Sammy Watkins and Damien Williams on offense, and a vastly upgraded defense from when they lost in last year’s AFC title game. Henry was held to 7 yards rushing in the second half.

“They were doubling all these guys,” Mahomes said of his spectacula­r TD run on which he barely stayed in bounds. “I just ran it and got some good blocking at the end and found a way to get in the end zone.”

A week after they overcame a 24-0 deficit against Houston, the Chiefs had to rally again. Down 10-0 and 17-7, Kansas City didn’t flinch, building a 35-17 lead while controllin­g the clock with a strong ground game. Naturally, Mahomes complement­ed that with sharp passing, spreading the ball on short and deep throws. The dagger came with a 60-yard completion to Watkins for the Chiefs’ 28th straight point midway in the final period.

Mahomes thrust both arms in the air as the crowd sang “I Want To Dance With Somebody.”

The Chiefs easily outrushed the Titans on Sunday. Mahomes led the way with 53 of those yards and also was 23 for 35 for 294 yards passing.

Reid goes back to the Super Bowl for the first time since the 2004 season, when his Philadelph­ia Eagles lost to New England.

 ?? PRESS ?? Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes runs for a touchdown past Tennessee’s Tramaine Brock, left, and DaQuan Jones on Sunday.ASSOCIATED
PRESS Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes runs for a touchdown past Tennessee’s Tramaine Brock, left, and DaQuan Jones on Sunday.ASSOCIATED

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