Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

News of ‘the pass’ is talk of the town

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — It is already being called “the pass” in Kansas City.

It happened early in the Chiefs’ game against the Atlanta Falcons, when Patrick Mahomes dropped back to throw. The pocket began to collapse around him, so Mahomes took a couple of jitterbug steps forward and let loose with a 69-yard heave that

Tyreek Hill caught nearly in stride for a touchdown.

The ball traveled almost the entire distance in the air.

Immediatel­y, the pass began trending on social media. Four days later, it was still being discussed on local sports talk radio. It had turned into memes blazing trails across the internet.

Just imagine if it had happened in a game that counts.

“I underthrew it, to be honest,” Mahomes said with a wry smile. “Tyreek outran it. If you have guys like that, that much speed, you just try to get them the ball and make plays.”

Yet there are few quarterbac­ks in the NFL capable of making that particular play.

It takes the kind of arm strength few possess, and the kind of vision to spot a streaking wide receiver 50odd yards downfield. It takes the confidence to step up in a pocket rapidly filling with big, bruising bodies, and the discipline to deliver the pass while taking a hit.

Chiefs Coach Andy Reid was asked Tuesday whether he could remember any similar throws, and he said only two came to mind. The first involved then-Packers quarterbac­k Brett Favre, with whom Mahomes has drawn plenty of comparison­s, and a long touchdown toss to Sterling Sharpe against Detroit. The second involved the Eagles’ Donovan McNabb, who hit DeSean Jackson in a Monday night game against Dallas.

Maybe that one came to mind because Jackson dropped the ball in celebratio­n before crossing the goal line, nullifying the touchdown. Then again, maybe it was the sheer audacity of the throw.

“Not everyone,” Reid said, “can do the long ones.”

Nor do their big arms always translate to big success.

JaMarcus Russell had otherworld­ly arm strength when he was drafted by Oakland, but he was never able to harness it in the NFL. Another ex-Raiders quarterbac­k, Jeff George, had a massive arm but only made two playoff appearance­s. Jim Hart parlayed his cannon into a long career with the Cardinals, but he never managed to win a playoff start, in part because of a weak supporting cast.

More often than not, though, arm strength has been a key ingredient to some of the most productive passers in recent history, especially as the NFL has become a quarterbac­k-centric league.

Favre, John Elway and Dan Marino, and more recently Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers, have all possessed the kind of arm it takes to fling the ball downfield as pockets are collapsing.

Hill, who is near-universall­y recognized as the NFL’s fastest player, said that “Pat is the first guy that I’ve played with that has the arm strength” to hit him in stride. “That’s not taking anything away from other quarterbac­ks I’ve played with,” he added, “but Pat is something special.”

The challenge now? Make sure those meme-inducing throws are long, impressive touchdown passes, not the kind of ugly intercepti­on that Mahomes threw earlier against the Falcons.

“That’s kind of the transition of getting into Pat’s mind,” Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce explained, “and be there play-specific where he needs us to be, or where he needs to throw the ball.

“And on those deep passes, man, just keep running.”

One thing Reid and new offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy have been stressing to Mahomes is to avoid making the same mistake twice. It could be failing to recognize a coverage scheme or identify a blitz package, or even delivering a throw to the wrong part of the field in a certain situation.

“He’s a young guy. He’s seeing things for the first time,” Reid said. “It’s important that when you see it again you don’t make the same mistake. That’s where it can be a problem.”

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