Houston Chronicle Sunday

Mahomes shows he can rock pocket

- By Sam McDowell

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes stood in front of the media for about nine minutes Thursday, and for a short portion of them, he recapped how he spends the other 23-plus hours of his day.

You know, the time we don’t see him.

His preparatio­n for the AFC Championsh­ip Game opens with an earlymorni­ng trip to the practice facility for treatment on a high-ankle sprain, followed by a stroll to the meeting rooms, then the media requiremen­ts, more rehab, an actual practice, additional treatment on the ankle and then film work, all before the day ultimately ends like it begins — treatment on the right ankle.

It’s a jam-packed schedule, an ankle the responsibl­e party for it and now center of its attention. And as luck would have it, during a week in which he could probably use a break, the film is even more cumbersome than usual.

The Chiefs won’t say this first part out loud, but it’s more difficult not because the Bengals are necessaril­y the best opponent Mahomes will see this year, or because of the stakes involved, but instead because Cincinnati has thrown just about everything at Mahomes during the past 12 months.

First, they blitzed. Then they dropped in coverage. Then they kind of just played it straight.

“It’s never the same,” Mahomes said. With one exception. See, for all of the moving parts, there is a commonalit­y tucked into the last two head-to-head matchups in particular, like a thread on which the Bengals hang their defensive hopes. Whatever they mix into the back end with coverage, their scheme up front has been designed to turn Mahomes into a pocket passer. To prevent him from turning scramble plays into game-changing plays.

To turn him into the player that, well, his high-ankle sprain might turn him into anyway.

There’s some irony in the opponent that will march into Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday, with a Super Bowl trip on the line at GEHA Field.

The Bengals are the ones who best trained him for this.

Mahomes is expected to be at least somewhat limited by his right-ankle injury, and it’s reasonable to expect those limitation­s will reverberat­e in throughout, but loudest in his reluctance to maneuver outside the pocket — a dynamic part of his game that typically separates him from other quarterbac­ks in the league.

Thing is, he’s been prepping for that all year, in part because of what the Bengals did to him 12 months earlier. They made him look human, even if just for one half of football.

In its aftermath, there remains a clear effect of that loss, a combinatio­n of intentiona­lity and just plain circumstan­ce. A year ago in that AFC Championsh­ip Game, the Bengals brought only three rushers on 19 of Mahomes’ 46 drop-backs, per data from Sports Info Solutions (SIS). Rather than use the extra defender in the secondary to aid coverage, they instead put a spy on Mahomes; they also had their defensive linemen stay in their lanes; and they prevented Mahomes from cashing his scrambles in for bigger chips.

They dared Mahomes to beat them from the pocket.

And he didn’t. He completed 8 of 17 passes while standing between the tackles during a second-half collapse, throwing two intercepti­ons in the process. Almost instinctiv­ely, he still attempted to leave the pocket four times to make plays — as though he was searching for his long-trusted security blanket. Ready and waiting with a spy and discipline­d linemen, the Bengals sacked him on three of the four. (Mahomes has been sacked only once in 121 drop-backs this season when exiting the pocket.)

The Chiefs had an offseason to think about all of that. They knew what got them. Knew some other teams might try the same. Knew this team, in particular, almost certainly would try the same.

Basically, they spent an offseason anticipato­ry of the circumstan­ces this ankle injury — not simply a rematch with the Bengals — will demand.

Mahomes needs to beat a team primarily from the pocket.

To be clear, there remains no quarterbac­k more successful outside the tackles than this one.

It’s not a lost art in his game; it’s a significan­t aspect of it, but we have to operate under the assumption it is likely to be limited as the Chiefs try to qualify for their third Super Bowl in four seasons.

Here’s the difference in a year — the difference in an elite quarterbac­k and an NFL MVP front-runner: He’s the league’s best quarterbac­k inside the pocket now, too.

Mahomes has thrown 35 touchdowns while stationed between his left tackle and the one protecting him on his right, the most in the league, per SIS.

What did the Bengals expect? They backed him into a corner. Forced him to be a pocket passer.

As a very obvious consequenc­e, they demanded he prepare for the rematch.

In a less expected consequenc­e, they helped him prepare for what a victory Sunday will almost certainly require.

To beat the Bengals from the pocket.

The Bengals actually have helped QB get better inside the tackles

 ?? Tammy Ljungblad/Kansas City Star ?? Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes has thrown 35 touchdown passes from the pocket, the most in the NFL this season.
Tammy Ljungblad/Kansas City Star Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes has thrown 35 touchdown passes from the pocket, the most in the NFL this season.

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