The Daily Press

Mahomes, Hurts buoy Super Bowl teams amid QB injury spate

- By Josh Dubow and Howard Fendrich AP Sports Writers

It matters that Patrick Mahomes is spectacula­rly talented, of course. Might matter just as much that he is almost always available for the Kansas City Chiefs.

Same goes for the Philadelph­ia Eagles and Jalen Hurts.

Those are big reasons the Chiefs and Eagles will meet in the Super Bowl — with AP NFL MVP and Offensive Player of the Year finalists Mahomes and Hurts taking the snaps — on Sunday in Glendale, Arizona. Sure, the San Francisco 49ers nearly managed to make it all the way to the championsh­ip game with a last-pick-of-the-draft rookie bumped all the way up to starter from No. 3 on the depth chart because of injuries to others. But then Brock Purdy hurt his elbow in the NFC title game at Philadelph­ia, leaving the Niners to try to rely on journeyman Josh Johnson, until he got a concussion ... meaning Purdy needed to go back in ... despite being unable to throw.

“That,” 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan said, “was kind of just hard to stomach.”

This season revealed, like never before, a glaring amount of instabilit­y at quarterbac­k in the NFL, whether because of injury — the reason for nearly half of all changes during the regular season, according to an AP analysis — or poor performanc­e. A total of 68 QBs started at least one game, an average of more than two per team and a record for a non-strike year.

What’s more: 13 clubs, another high, needed to use at least three starters at the most important position in this, or any, sport. Some even turned to four — with the Arizona Cardinals using that many starting quarterbac­ks in a span of just four weeks.

Quarterbac­k shuffling can go a long way toward altering a team’s trajectory, as the Jets, Titans and Panthers found out on their way to missing the playoffs. The Dolphins made the postseason despite losing Tua Tagovailoa to a series of concussion­s, then had backup Teddy Bridgewate­r dislocate his pinky, leaving them with thirdstrin­g rookie Skylar Thompson and his 18for-45, two-intercepti­on performanc­e in their wild-card eliminatio­n.

“When you, as a defender, see a guy at quarterbac­k who has not played a lot, you are going to lick your chops and you assume he’s not going to be in rhythm and you assume he’s not going to be ready to go,” Hall of Fame defensive back Ronnie Lott said. “Our coach, Bill Walsh, basically said, ‘Hey, Ronnie, a team’s only as good as the backup quarterbac­k, because if the backup quarterbac­k can’t come in and do the things he needs to be able to do, a team is going to be in trouble.’”

And keeping the starter upright is almost always needed for success.

The top five regularsea­son teams in the AFC, including the Chiefs, had their No. 1 QB available for every regular-season game (and when Mahomes did leave a playoff game with a bad ankle, Chad Henne came in and delivered, leading a 98-yard TD drive in what turned out to be a seven-point victory).

In all, nine of the 14 participan­ts in the postseason never had to turn to a backup QB to start.

The Eagles came close: Hurts missed two games with a bad shoulder; Philadelph­ia went 0-2 with Gardner Minshew in his place.

Seems obvious: Having your preferred QB1 available week after week makes your offense more likely to succeed. And that makes your team more likely to win.

Consider that the passer rating for QBs slated to be starters was about 10 points higher than for replacemen­ts. Or look at the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars and Trevor Lawrence: He stuck around for 17 games and closed with five wins in a row — three against the QBtroubled Jets or Titans — to earn a playoff spot.

“It’s certainly key, just because everybody continues to gel. You get the chemistry together. The receivers know, ‘If I run this route on this step, the ball is going to be thrown to this point, just because we’ve done it a million times,’” Jaguars offensive coordinato­r Press Taylor said. “You can understand how (an injury absence) throws guys off.”

Backup quarterbac­ks generally get zero practice time with the rest of the first-team offense during the season, so when the top choice at that spot is removed, there can be growing pains. Purdy was an exception, of course, and there have been others.

“Sometimes when a quarterbac­k goes down,” Cowboys guard Zack Martin said, “there’s kind of a sense of panic in the locker room and on the team, like, ‘What are we going to do?’”

Some of the season’s dominant story lines involved sidelined QBs, from Miami’s Tagovailoa to Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson to the reigning Super Bowl champion Rams’ Matthew Stafford, or efforts via officiatin­g to protect them, whether the outcry among defenders over roughing-the-passer calls or the 15-yard penalty on Bengals defensive end Joseph Ossai for shoving an out-of-bounds Mahomes that helped KC get into position for the winning field goal in the AFC title game.

Lowering the number of quarterbac­k injuries is “obviously a major priority for us,” said Troy Vincent, the NFL’s executive vice president of football operations. “It’s critical that we examine ... where they’re coming from. Are they legal hits? Are they in the pocket? Out of the pocket?”

Increased impatience when it comes to wins and losses accounts for some of the switching — the same sort of itchiness that leads to first-year coaches getting fired.

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