The Guardian (USA)

Hobbled Mahomes gilds legend with latest Super Bowl magic act

- Nicky Bandini at State Farm Stadium

Imagine if he had two good ankles. Patrick Mahomes hopped and hobbled to the sideline at the end of the first half, unable, or at least unwilling, to put any weight on his right leg after the Eagles linebacker TJ Edwards had dragged him down by it.

He showed no such struggle two quarters later, as he accelerate­d away from the league’s best pass rushers and into the open field on the 26-yard run that set his team up to win Super Bowl LVII.

This is what the great ones do, putting their troubles to one side and their teams on their backs in the moments that matter. Mahomes aspires to be the greatest. “That’s what he wants to do, that’s how he goes about his business,” said his head coach, Andy Reid. “The great quarterbac­ks make everyone around them better, including the head coach. He’s done a heck of a job.”

That almost felt like an understate­ment, but that was Reid’s point too, as he stressed the player’s humility. Mahomes’s focus after the game was all on the collective: teammates who challenged each other to push harder, rookies who stepped up to the occasion.

Allow us, then, to say it for him: Mahomes is one of the most brilliant quarterbac­ks to play the game and there are some who would already call him the best of all-time. Plenty might scorn the latter suggestion, observing he has two Super Bowl wins to Tom Brady’s seven, but comparing a complete career with an ongoing one is pointless. As Mahomes put it a few days ago: “Ask me when I’m like 38 years old.”

This was another night when he did something nobody else could, becoming the first player to win the Super Bowl in the same season as leading the NFL in passing yards. Ask Brady how tough that combo is to pull off. None of his seven titles arrived in the four seasons when he outgunned his peers.

It is one of those statistics that seems surprising at first – why should a team with the most prolific quarterbac­k not be the best? But it isn’t. It does not matter who you believe the greatest of all-time is, was or will be, no player can carry the show on their own.

There are moments, though, when Mahomes will make you think he can: a human tornado whipping around so fast in the middle of the pocket that the league’s best pass rush wound up scattered across the field here like debris. The Eagles had 70 sacks during the regular season, 15 more than any other team, and eight more in the postseason. On Sunday, they could not get one.

When his team needed leadership, Mahomes provided it, responding to a

Philadelph­ia touchdown on the opening drive by taking his team the length of the field in eight plays to tie things up. After limping out of the first half with his Chiefs down by 10 points, he made sure he was back on his feet and first out of the tunnel when the time came to resume. As he roared from the winners’ podium: “I told y’all this week there’s nothing that will keep me off that football field.”

Mahomes said there were no painkillin­g injections during the interval, only physio work and athletic tape. Whatever it was seemed to work. He had a 14-yard run on the first drive of the third quarter, as the Chiefs opened with a touchdown that trimmed the deficit to three.

His second-half performanc­e was close to flawless, completing 13 out of 14 passes for 93 yards and two touchdowns, on top of those eye-catching carries. He was not on his own, though. The rookie running back Isiah Pacheco also ran the ball effectivel­y and Reid’s staff set the Eagles up to fail with playcalls that built off one another, using pre-snap motions to create overloads then adding a fresh wrinkle every time. Scoring passes went to Skyy Moore and Kadarius Toney with no defender close.

Mahomes might not have been in a position to make the push for victory without big plays from Kansas City’s defense and special teams: a fumble recovered and returned 36 yards for a touchdown by Nick Bolton in the first half and a punt return of 65 yards by Toney in the second, the longest in Super Bowl history.

There were times when Philadelph­ia’s offense looked more potent than Kansas City’s, but the good work was undermined by critical mistakes. The fumble by the Eagles quarterbac­k, Jalen Hurts, was inexcusabl­e: the ball falling loose from his hand without being hit. On the second play of the next drive he risked turning a setback into a crisis as he lobbed a pass into double coverage downfield.

Before the game, Mahomes had spoken about lessons learned from playing on so many big stages so soon in his career: five AFC championsh­ip games and two previous Super Bowls in five seasons. The most important thing, he said, “is just going out there and playing like it’s another game”.

He did that in Glendale, keeping his cool despite a frustratin­g first half. Instead of forcing something too hard and making a mistake that could lose the game, he hung around long enough to win.

That is the real secret to long-term success, the one Brady embodied better than anyone. That Mahomes sees it, at 27 years old, could be the biggest reason to think he could have seven Super Bowl wins of his own.

For now he has two and an MVP award to accompany each one. Tradition dictates the prize winner is given a trip to Disney World. Mahomes said he did that last time so would have to check out Disney Land instead. “Hopefully they make some more parks,” he said, laughing, “so I can go around and do a world tour.”

A lightheart­ed line from an athlete who had not been given enough space to take his pads off. Underpinne­d, though, with a warning: Mahomes has barely started.

 ?? Photograph: Sean M Haffey/Getty Images ?? Patrick Mahomes made a number of crucial scrambles during the second half of Sunday’s game.
Photograph: Sean M Haffey/Getty Images Patrick Mahomes made a number of crucial scrambles during the second half of Sunday’s game.

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