USA TODAY International Edition

Super Bowl: Mahomes plays the long game

- Nancy Armour Columnist USA TODAY

At 25, Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes is already bigger than the NFL, and there’s a lot more to come, writes Nancy Armour.

Patrick Mahomes says he likes to live in the moment, not looking beyond whatever is right in front of him. Yet everything he does signals that he is playing the long game.

Between his success on the field, long list of endorsemen­ts, commitment­s to the Kansas City, Missouri, community, willingnes­s to speak out on social injustice and, oh yeah, the monster contract that is the largest ever for an American athlete, Mahomes has positioned himself to be the most powerful and influential athlete of his generation.

“I don’t know if they make a better human,” Chiefs teammate and good friend Travis Kelce said this week. “Talk about somebody that wants to be in the community and make things better for everybody, make things easier on those that have had it harder in life.”

For an athlete to be a transcende­nt figure, he or she first has to have success in their sport. Mahomes wasted no time taking care of that.

He was the NFL MVP in his first year as a starting quarterbac­k. He won the Super Bowl in his second. This weekend, he and the Chiefs have the chance to become the first team since 2004 to repeat as Super Bowl champions, and he is likely to finish a close second to Aaron Rodgers in MVP voting.

Not bad for a guy who turned 25 in Week 2.

Mahomes often looks like a magician on the field, creating plays seemingly out of nothing. It helps that he has a coach with a bottomless bag of offensive tricks and no shortage of playmakers surroundin­g him.

But it’s intelligen­ce and work ethic that elevates him. He sees the field differentl­y than most, recognizin­g openings where others do not. He will find flaws in his game and then work relentless­ly on them, with he and coach Andy Reid both pointing to how much better he has gotten at reading defenses in the past season and a half as an example.

“One thing you love about Pat is he’s always taken his weaknesses and tried to turn them into strengths,” Reid said. “That tells a lot about a kid, but it’s also great for his teammates to see that. You can see the improvemen­ts of which he’s made every year. Whatever his weakness was, he’s attacked those things and turned them into strengths.”

His success on the field, along with knowing his teammates look to him as a leader, has given Mahomes the confidence to make an impact off the field.

“Patrick has unequivoca­lly become a sphere of influence in a way that transcends sports as an advocate, humanitari­an, business leader and of course an inspiratio­n to all based on his style of play and leadership,” said Chris Cabott, the CEO of Steinberg Sports and Entertainm­ent and one of Mahomes’ agents. “That type of influence will only increase in the years to come.”

In the spring after his MVP season, he announced his “15 and the Mahomies” foundation to benefit underserve­d kids in Kansas City and east Texas, where he grew up.

In less than two years, it has awarded more than $ 500,000 in grants to organizati­ons that focus on education, the arts, athletics and children with disabiliti­es. It also launched a program to encourage reading in elementary schools in Kansas City and Texas.

Last summer, three weeks after signing his 10- year, $ 503 million extension, Mahomes bought a share in the MLB’s Kansas City Royals. His fiancée, Brittany Matthews, a former soccer player, is part of the ownership group that brought the NWSL back to Kansas City.

“We want to invest in this community as much as they’ve invested into us,” Mahomes said. “It’s just the tip of the iceberg, and we want to continue to invest in this community to be the best community that it possibly can be.”

That investment goes beyond dollars and cents. He gives local kids something to aspire to, knowing a guy like Patrick Mahomes has their back. He gives residents a common point of pride, one thing everyone can agree on at a time when it seems no one can agree on anything.

“There’s just no end to how many good things he’s done and how many good things he will do,” said Frank White, the longtime Royals great who stayed in the area after his playing career and is now the county executive for Jackson County, which includes Kansas City. “When you have a signature player

who identifies with a team and a city, it not only elevates the team but it elevates the city itself.”

Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas can attest to that.

When he attends national events, whether it’s the U. S. Conference of Mayors or last month’s inaugurati­on, Lucas said he invariably gets the same reaction when he introduces himself. “Ah, the Kansas City Chiefs.”

“It is such a wonderful lead that then allows me to talk about zero- fare transporta­tion, allows me to talk about labor rights, allows me to talk about the improvemen­ts in race relations that we are trying to make and need to make in Kansas City,” Lucas said.

But Mahomes isn’t just trying to make a difference in Kansas City.

Mahomes is very intentiona­l about what he endorses, be they products or causes.

He is selective about those who speak for him, too, wanting to make sure the right message is conveyed.

So it spoke volumes when he joined

other Black and brown players in a video calling out the NFL for its silence after George Floyd was killed by a white police officer and its previous efforts to stifle peaceful protests by Colin Kaepernick and other players.

“Black lives matter,” Mahomes, whose father is Black and mother is white, said forcefully.

The next day, Commission­er Roger Goodell released a video of his own in which he admitted the NFL had been wrong and promised to stand with players going forward.

“It got people to take notice. It got people to pay attention. It got people thinking ‘ OK, maybe there are things we can do,’ ” said Lucas, the mayor of Kansas City.

Mahomes and Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson also organized a moment of silence before the season opener as a show of “unity” in the fight for racial justice. The two stood at midfield with their arms linked, joining their teams together.

“Patrick is forging his own path and

paving the way for a new generation of athletes,” said Jacquelyn Dahl, who founded 1UP Sports Marketing and is Mahomes’ marketing representa­tive. “Ones who understand the power of their voices and don’t take the responsibi­lity lightly.”

Mahomes said he has talked to LeBron James, who has become the model for athletes who’ve used their success in sports as a springboar­d for business ventures but also to drive changes.

He has also talked to other athletes and taken cues from how they’ve used their platforms and their voices in their own communitie­s.

Because Mahomes knows he can do more. He wants to do more.

“When you’re given a platform like I’ve been given, you want to try and use it and make the world a better place,” Mahomes said this week. “I truly mean that when I say that.”

And that, not the MVP trophies he’ll collect or the Super Bowls he’ll win, is what will make him an athlete for the ages.

 ?? DENNY MEDLEY/ USA TODAY ??
DENNY MEDLEY/ USA TODAY
 ?? DENNY MEDLEY/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes has led the defending champion Chiefs back to the Super Bowl after throwing 38 TD passes and just six intercepti­ons this past season.
DENNY MEDLEY/ USA TODAY SPORTS Quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes has led the defending champion Chiefs back to the Super Bowl after throwing 38 TD passes and just six intercepti­ons this past season.
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 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? A Patrick Mahomes cutout was in the stands before the opening- day MLB game between the White Sox and the Royals at Kauffman Stadium on July 31, 2020, in Kansas City, Missouri. He owns a share in the Royals.
JAMIE SQUIRE/ GETTY IMAGES A Patrick Mahomes cutout was in the stands before the opening- day MLB game between the White Sox and the Royals at Kauffman Stadium on July 31, 2020, in Kansas City, Missouri. He owns a share in the Royals.

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