The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Super Bowl rematch has important ramificati­ons

Chiefs, Eagles want to keep their conference’s No. 1 seed.

- By Dave Skretta

The storylines are ripe for the choosing when the Philadelph­ia Eagles visit the Kansas City Chiefs on Monday night.

Favor some good, old-fashioned revenge? The NFC-leading Eagles (8-1) will try to exact some when they visit Arrowhead Stadium just nine months after the AFC-leading Chiefs (7-2) used a second-half rally to beat them in the Super Bowl.

Love seeing some points? Eagles quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts and Chiefs counterpar­t Patrick Mahomes, the MVP of that memorable February showdown, have you covered. They’re the triggers behind two of the league’s top 10 offenses.

Hankering for some history? Andy Reid can pass Hank Stram as the winningest Chiefs coach and become the first to hold that distinctio­n with two franchises; the other just happens to be Philadelph­ia.

How about social intrigue, the kind at the intersecti­on of sports and entertainm­ent? Eagles center Jason Kelce and younger brother Travis Kelce will match up one more time. And this time, rumors are flying that pop superstar Taylor Swift, who has been seeing the Chiefs tight end for the past couple of months, could be bringing her parents to meet his for the first time.

“It’s going to be a great game. You’ve got great teams in general,” Mahomes said. “Jalen is a great quarterbac­k, but I think just the whole entire team on both sides — two teams that usually find a way to get a win, playing on ‘Monday Night Football’ in front of the whole world. I think it’s going to be a great game.”

Given the circus surroundin­g it, the game almost seems like an afterthoug­ht.

One with important ramificati­ons, though.

The teams are coming off a relatively late bye, which has freshened them up for the back half of the season. And while both currently hold the No. 1 seed in their respective conference­s, and the lone playoff bye that comes as the reward, the standings are tight enough that the Eagles and Chiefs need to keep winning if they want to earn a postseason week off.

They know that is the easiest way to get back to the game that matters the most.

“Our job is to get prepared for this game,” said Eagles coach Nick Sirianni, who along with Reid could not help

but look at video of their Super Bowl showdown this week, and certainly had a much different experience while doing it.

“What happened in the past, happened in the past,” Sirianni continued. “We’ll learn from our mistakes. We’ll get better from the things we did well. But I would be lying if I didn’t say, ‘Argh, if this would have happened or that would have happened,’ once in a while. But we’re not dwelling on it.”

Reid is so proficient at winning after a week off — he is 31-6 after a bye, including the postseason — that many coaches have tried to get some tips from him. But not even Reid can pinpoint the reasons behind his remarkable record, which includes a 13-1 mark during 14 regular seasons in Philadelph­ia and a 9-3 record in postseason games.

“I get asked that because we’ve had success,” Reid said, “but we just go play. I don’t know. We’ve had good players.”

The Chiefs are 4-1 in games decided by fewer than 10 points, which falls in line with their ability under Reid to win the close ones. Philadelph­ia is 5-1 in games decided by a touchdown or less. Both are coming off close wins before their bye with Kansas City beating Miami 21-14 in Germany, and Philadelph­ia beating Dallas 28-23.

 ?? HEATHER KHALIFA/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? “It’s going to be a great game. You’ve got great teams in general . ... Two teams that usually find a way to get a win, playing on ‘Monday Night Football’ in front of the whole world,” says Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes.
HEATHER KHALIFA/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER “It’s going to be a great game. You’ve got great teams in general . ... Two teams that usually find a way to get a win, playing on ‘Monday Night Football’ in front of the whole world,” says Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes.
 ?? CHRIS SZAGOLA/AP ?? Eagles quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts threw for one touchdown and ran for three more but still lost 38-35 to Mahomes and the Chiefs in the Super Bowl. Hurts can exact a little revenge Monday in Kansas City.
CHRIS SZAGOLA/AP Eagles quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts threw for one touchdown and ran for three more but still lost 38-35 to Mahomes and the Chiefs in the Super Bowl. Hurts can exact a little revenge Monday in Kansas City.

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