Daily Press

Brady, Mahomes follow different playbooks

Experience, youth set to collide with AFC crown on line

- By Dave Skretta Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — One of them is a sixth-round pick who married a supermodel, became one of the greatest quarterbac­ks in NFL history and is still going strong well past his 41st birthday.

The other is a first-round pick who is still dating his high school sweetheart, has one season as an NFL starter on his résumé and just turned 23 earlier this season.

Indeed, few similariti­es exist when it comes to Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady and Chiefs counterpar­t Patrick Mahomes, whose teams will meet for the AFC title at Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday.

Brady is the suave star with the polished skill set and more postseason experience than any other QB in history, while Mahomes is the sling-it-anywhere standout who one day might take over the mantle as best in the game.

Both get the job done, though in very different ways.

“I don’t know about comparison­s,” Patriots coach Bill Belichick said. “Look, Mahomes is an outstandin­g player in every facet of the game. He’s got a strong arm. He can throw the ball the length of the field. He has great touch.

“He does all of those things well,” Belichick said, “and that’s a credit to him.”

Brady has a strong arm, too, even if it’s not what it once was. He still has great touch, and his ability to read coverages might be the best in the game, helping him lead the Patriots to their eighth consecutiv­e AFC title game.

But that is just about where the similariti­es end.

Brady prefers to stand in the pocket and deliver the ball the same way a blackjack dealer stands behind his table and distribute­s cards. He moves around when he’s under pressure but rarely takes off running, and he’s as likely to chuck the ball into the third row on a broken play as take a risk downfield.

It’s an approach that has served him well. Brady’s never thrown more than 14 picks in a season.

He also has one of the fastest releases in the NFL, and Chiefs linebacker Justin Houston said Wednesday that getting Brady in third-and-long is perhaps the most crucial point in stopping him.

“Because if it’s third-andshort,” Houston said, “the ball’s coming out fast.”

More valuable than Brady’s physical ability, though, may be his mental acuity.

“I haven’t seen any decline,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “He sees things even better than when he was younger. I’m wearing glasses and he isn’t. The age hasn’t hit him.”

Then again, so is the kid with the moppy Mohawk standing across from him Sunday.

Mahomes matched Brady’s best season by throwing 50 touchdown passes as the Chiefs’ first-year starter, and he eclipsed 5,000 yards though the air, something his counterpar­t has accomplish­ed just once.

But perhaps most importantl­y, he led the Chiefs to a better record than the Patriots to secure home-field advantage, and that means Mahomes will have 80,000 fans behind him with a Super Bowl berth on the line.

Unlike Brady, Mahomes thrives when everything collapses around him. He’ll throw caution to the wind and run for a first down, but is just as dangerous in the passing game, where his knack for keeping his eyes downfield makes him a constant threat.

It’s edge-of-your seat viewing, unless you’re on defense.

There’s another skill that Brady and Mahomes share: leadership ability. Brady has developed it through success. Mahomes has establishe­d it with his demeanor.

“We play against great players every week. They come in different shapes and sizes and different skill sets, but they’re all good in their own way,” Belichick said.

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