USA TODAY International Edition

Credit to Chiefs staff who treated Mahomes

- Lorenzo Reyes

The matchup for Super Bowl 57 is set and it’s one that offers no shortage of storylines.

The Kansas City Chiefs will face the Philadelph­ia Eagles in Glendale, Arizona, on Feb. 12, in a game that will showcase a pair of brothers on opposite teams, a head coach going against the team that fired him a little more than a decade ago and two of the best young quarterbac­ks in the sport.

Chiefs coach Andy Reid led Philadelph­ia to a berth in Super Bowl 39 in 2004 but came up short in a loss to the New England Patriots. Now, Reid will have the chance to avenge his dismissal from the Eagles with a Lombardi Trophy. To do so, he’ll need another big game out of quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, who will face off against Jalen Hurts of the Eagles. And Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and Eagles center Jason Kelce will become the first set of brothers to play against each other in Super Bowl history.

Here are the winners and losers from conference championsh­ip Sunday.

WINNERS The most gifted passer of all time

He’s not yet the G. O. A. T. – he’ll need many more years in the league to compete with Tom Brady – but Patrick Mahomes has left no doubt that he is a magician with the ball in his hands and is the most talented passer we have ever seen.

Throwing for 326 yards and two touchdowns eight days after suffering a high ankle sprain is as tough a performanc­e as we have seen in recent memory. That Mahomes fought through the pain and made some of his biggest plays while on the move speaks to the value his mobility brings. He earned his second All- Pro berth and is the overwhelmi­ng favorite to win the MVP award. What’s absurd is that he’s only 27 and just getting started.

Philly found another playmaker

You know things are going well when your third- string running back blossoms into an impact player in the postseason. Eagles running back Kenneth Gainwell, a second- year pro, led Philadelph­ia in rushes ( 14) and rushing yards ( 48) and added two catches for 26 yards. Gainwell actually has 160 combined rushing yards in Philadelph­ia’s two playoff games and has showed he can be yet another playmaker on the offense.

Kansas City D- line feasted

Patrick Mahomes will draw the buzz and coverage, but Kansas City’s defense deserves just as much love for pushing the Chiefs past Cincinnati. Kansas City’s defensive front set the tone, sacking Joe Burrow three times in the first quarter and five times in the game. In fact, those came on consecutiv­e dropbacks and were why the Bengals were held to 0 net yards in the period.

Kansas City defensive tackle Chris Jones, whether he was feasting on backup right guard Max Scharping or whether he was moved outside on third downs and passing situations, impacted the game and disrupted the timing of Cincinnati’s offense. His sack of Burrow on 3rd- and- 8 with 44 seconds left in the game was the catalyst that got Kansas City the ball back for the game- winning field goal.

Better days ahead for San Francisco

Though this is as dismaying a loss as a team can take, the 49ers should be set for plenty of future success in the years to come. This assumes that Trey Lance can return to full health and that coach Kyle Shanahan can develop him. But having a defense this talented, offensive weapons all over the field and a quarterbac­k on a rookie contract, the Niners can afford to be aggressive in free agency to flesh out the roster.

The Niners will need to navigate the impending free agency of right tackle Mike McGlinchey and safety Tashaun Gipson among a handful of key contributo­rs, but with young stars like twotime All- Pro linebacker Fred Warner in place, the Niners should expect to be competing for NFC titles for years to come.

Similarly, Cincy will be back, too

Along the same lines, the Bengals have the luxury of two more years of Joe Burrow at below- market value with the fourth and final season of his rookie contract, as well as his fifth- year option for 2024. Cincinnati will likely look to begin negotiatin­g his contract well before Burrow is set to hit free agency, possibly at the end of next season. Cincinnati also has a similar situation with star receiver Ja’Marr Chase, whose fifth- year option comes in 2025.

Kansas City’s training and medical team

As good as Mahomes was, the work the Kansas City training staff did behind closed doors needs to be lauded. Though the team won’t reveal details of exactly what it did to get Mahomes’ ankle ready, there undoubtedl­y were hours of treatment and rehab that helped mend the injury.

Now, with the luxury of having a whole week off in the lead- up to the game, the training staff will do everything it can to get Mahomes in even better shape.

Eagles roll on the ground

While no individual Eagle rusher dominated, Philadelph­ia’s collaborat­ive effort showed just how dangerous the team can be when it gets its rushing attack rolling. Philadelph­ia rolled up 148 yards – with four different players recording at least 20 yards each – against a San Francisco defense that ranked second in the NFL in the regular season, having allowed just 77 rushing yards per game.

This all, of course, wouldn’t be possible without Philadelph­ia’s offensive line, the most complete unit in the NFL.

LOSERS Too many 49ers flags

Though it was an uneven day at the office for referee John Hussey and his crew, the 49ers lacked discipline and poise on key downs and committed far too many penalties. In a game when both San Francisco quarterbac­ks who were dressed got injured, those unforced errors were devastatin­g.

San Francisco had 11 penalties enforced for 81 yards. Seven of those penalties resulted in Eagles first downs. In fact, on the fifth Philadelph­ia drive, the one that gave it a 14- 7 lead, the 49ers committed three defensive penalties that gifted the Eagles first downs and kept the drive alive. By comparison, the Eagles had only four penalties enforced for 34 yards.

San Francisco just can’t catch a break

Coach Kyle Shanahan’s tenure in San Francisco had been marked by luckless injuries at quarterbac­k. This, however, was on another level. Already down to their third- string quarterbac­k, the Niners saw Brock Purdy exit the game midway through the first quarter with a right elbow injury. That brought in journeyman back Josh Johnson, who … left the game shortly after with a concussion. Purdy was forced back into action and clearly was not capable of throwing the ball down the field; San Francisco ran it 12 times after Purdy returned and threw the ball just three times. Running back Christian McCaffrey attempted one of those passes.

While Shanahan miscalcula­ted at times – he should’ve challenged the DeVonta Smith catch in the first quarter as soon as Smith was calling for a quick snap, for instance – this was a disadvanta­ge no coach would’ve been able to overcome.

The critics of ‘ Burrowhead’

Let’s be clear: the Cincinnati Bengals did not lose because they were confident and brash and coined the term Burrowhead. They ran into a generation­ally dominant offense and a defense that brought pressure and forced turnovers. Being confident is part of Cincinnati’s identity. To strip that away would be to erase something integral to the way the Bengals operate.

And, frankly, the Bengals had the track record to back up the talk, previously going 3- 0 against the Chiefs – including last season’s victory in Kansas City in the AFC title game – when Joe Burrow and Patrick Mahomes both started. As the league looks to cut down on taunting penalties and tamp down player celebratio­ns, the Bengals- Chiefs rivalry is the most exciting one in football right now. The star talent and play of these teams is the main reason why, but don’t discount the weight of the personalit­ies on both sides.

How the 49ers handled Philly’s best defender

Eagles linebacker Haason Redick is in contention for the NFL’s Defensive Player of the Year Award. He’s relentless in generating pressure off the edge. And, for some reason, the 49ers opted at times to chip or block him with a backup tight end and receivers.

In fact, on the game- changing play, the one that injured Brock Purdy, San Francisco had reserve tight end Tyler Kroft in a one- on- one situation against Reddick ( three tackles, two sacks, one forced fumble, one fumble recovery).

The Fox broadcast

This is not a comment at all on Greg Olsen, who is quickly becoming the top game- day analyst among NFL broadcast partners. But the Fox broadcast of the NFC championsh­ip game got off to a rough start. First, the production team was slow to show a replay of the onehanded DeVonta Smith reception that shouldn’t have counted on a 4th- and- 3 on the first drive of the game. Then when Eagles punter Brett Kern booted a ball that traveled only 34 yards after it apparently hit the Skycam wire, Fox couldn’t provide any angles that would confirm that for the officiating crew.

 ?? JAY BIGGERSTAF­F/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Marquez Valdes- Scantling and Patrick Mahomes ( 15) celebrate the win that gave the Chiefs a third Super Bowl trip in four seasons.
JAY BIGGERSTAF­F/ USA TODAY SPORTS Marquez Valdes- Scantling and Patrick Mahomes ( 15) celebrate the win that gave the Chiefs a third Super Bowl trip in four seasons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States