San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Next QBS take over marquee

- BARRY SVRLUGA Guest column Svrluga writes for the Washington Post.

The divisional weekend of the NFL playoffs is here, and Tom Brady is home after what may have been the final playoff game of his career. Aaron Rodgers didn’t appear in these playoffs, and who knows whether he has played his last game in Green Bay — or last game, period? Peyton and Eli Manning spent the season goofing on “Monday Night Football,” providing a mixture of insight and folly that seems perfect for two players who have settled comfortabl­y and lucrativel­y into retirement.

The playoffs now belong to Josh Allen and Joe Burrow, to Patrick Mahomes and Trevor Lawrence, to Jalen Hurts and Dak Prescott, to Daniel Jones and, yes, to Brock Purdy, too. The oldest starting quarterbac­k entering this weekend was Prescott, at 29. The players were drafted in 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, two in 2020, 2021 and 2022. The baton has been passed. The next generation of NFL quarterbac­ks is here.

The reason to mention the whereabout­s of the four aging — or flat-out old — quarterbac­ks is because their presence in this round of the playoffs has been darn near constant for the better part of two decades. Since 2003, one or more of Brady, Rodgers and the Mannings has appeared in the NFL’S second playoff weekend every single year. No breaks.

Indeed, of the 76 playoff games held in this round over those 19 seasons, 35 involved one or more of them. Twenty of the 38 conference championsh­ip games involved at least one, and seven times they beat each other at that stage. And a Super Bowl without Brady, Rodgers or a Manning in that span? Just four of 19.

The bottom line: If you turned on a divisional playoff game since 2003, there was a better chance you would have been watching Brady, Rodgers and/or a Manning than not. That’s a constant cast of characters with which the nation became intimately familiar. Their departure from the stage would seem a blow to the league, like a television show signing off.

Turns out the spinoff is going just fine — or better.

The matchups began Saturday afternoon: Mahomes, already an MVP and a Super Bowl champion at age 27, and his Kansas City Chiefs against Lawrence, the first overall pick in 2021 who took a major leap forward in his sophomore campaign, and his Jacksonvil­le Jaguars.

Hurts, a national champion at Alabama and a Heisman finalist at Oklahoma, and his top-seeded Philadelph­ia Eagles vs. Jones, the sixth pick in the 2019 draft who finally fulfilled his potential this season, and his New York Giants.

Today brings Allen, the seventh pick in the 2018 draft and an absolute star, and his Buffalo Bills vs. Burrow, the top pick in the 2020 draft who already took his team to the Super Bowl, and his Cincinnati Bengals. Finish it all off with Prescott, the 2016 rookie of the year, and his Dallas Cowboys vs. Purdy, the only one without pedigree but also — even as the final pick in the 2022 draft — the only one without a loss, and his San Francisco 49ers.

Not a dud in the bunch. The NFL is sports Teflon. Stars seem unique and irreplacea­ble — until they’re replaced by the newest version of what once was. It doesn’t mean this group is different. It does mean it’s capable of sustaining and growing what the legends built before them.

The Mannings have moved on. Rodgers and Brady will soon. The next generation of quarterbac­ks isn’t next. It’s now. Maybe in two decades, we will look back on a landscape and wonder when the last time a playoff weekend didn’t feature Mahomes or Lawrence or Burrow or Allen. We have them all right now — and more.

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