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After Patrick Mahomes’ nightmare Super Bowl, what comes next?

getonscoop 02/10/2025


NEW ORLEANS, La. — When a coach realizes his quarterback could be the greatest of all time, it should be a feeling of pure joy, right?

Not in the case of the Kansas City Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes.

“It makes it so much more stressful,” Chiefs passing game coordinator Joe Bleymaier told ESPN on Wednesday of Super Bowl week. “You feel the burden as a coach and as you’re putting a game plan together to not waste his abilities. To not go through a season where you don’t give him the opportunity. To not screw it up as the coaching staff. So rather than feeling like this just unbridled excitement that we could do anything, it’s actually more like a terror, like we cannot be the reason that we screwed this guy up or this team up.”

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Every week when Bleymaier is putting together the game plan with coach Andy Reid, offensive coordinator Matt Nagy and the Chiefs staff, he can’t stop wondering, “Are we utilizing him the best? Are we giving him the stuff that he needs? It’s just constantly second guessing ourselves just so that he has everything he needs to go be himself.”

That burden weighed heavily on many of the Chiefs players after a 40-22 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in the silent and stuffy Super Bowl LIX postgame locker room Sunday night. At halftime, linebacker Leo Chenal said Mahomes, who threw a pick-six in the first half, told them that he needed to play better. He could hear in Mahomes’ voice how much he was hurting by not playing up to his own standard.

“He demanded better of himself. And guys all around him were like, we need to be better for you too, Patrick,” Chenal said.

But the anxiety of playing with or coaching a dynasty-building quarterback wasn’t enough to make up the first-half deficit. The Chiefs fell short of the NFL history that would have come with a third straight title, and wallowed in the shock of it.

Receiver DeAndre Hopkins slouched with his eyes closed as he rode down the concourse in a golf cart. Tight end Travis Kelce spoke to reporters for a quick two minutes before turning his back. Receivers JuJu Smith-Schuster and Hollywood Brown sat facing their lockers with their heads bowed, their upper bodies fully bent in half. Offensive lineman Joe Thuney wiped blood off his right calf.

As soon as Mahomes said it out loud last year after the Chiefs’ second consecutive Super Bowl win — “No one’s ever got three. I want to go back to back to back,” the NFL Films crew caught him saying to Chris Jones — a three-peat felt inevitable. But even the greatest quarterback can be rendered powerless when under siege by the league’s deepest pass rush.

How Mahomes recovers from arguably the most difficult loss of his career will become part of his legacy. Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Kansas City’s offensive line had held together until the most important game, when they faced the opponent whose roster is built around offensive and defensive line play. Thuney, one of the best guards in football, had filled in nobly at left tackle since Week 15, playing the role because Kansas City’s younger tackles needed more time to develop. When head coach Andy Reid suggested moving the All-Pro left guard over to left tackle, offensive line coach Andy Heck wasn’t sold on the idea. They’d be sacrificing on the interior, and asking Thuney to do a very different job, out in space battling the best edge rushers.

But Reid’s solution was another example of the Chiefs’ in-season problem solving, and it was enough to get them to the Super Bowl. But the Eagles defensive line made it clear that this was not a permanent solution, and the entire offensive line struggled to protect Mahomes. The Eagles defense never blitzed Mahomes, but generated six sacks for a loss of 31 yards and forced Mahomes into two uncharacteristic interceptions and a fumble.

“In order to make a team blitz, you have to be able to beat what they’re showing. And that’s what we didn’t do,” Mahomes said.

Mahomes 11.4 Total QBR is the second-lowest in a Super Bowl since ESPN introduced the metric in 2006. The Chiefs trailed 34-0 in the third quarter, which is their largest deficit in any game since Mahomes became starting QB in 2018.

Mahomes and Kelce missed each other twice in the first half, and Kelce didn’t get a catch until the end of the third quarter.

The Eagles won so decisively that they doused coach Nick Sirianni in Gatorade with 2:52 left in the game. After the Eagles recovered the Chiefs last-ditch onside kick attempt, Mahomes walked the length of the Chiefs bench, shaking hands with teammates. He hugged Kelce longer than the rest.


Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs came up short in a quest to become the first team to three-peat in the Super Bowl era. Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images

CHIEFS COACHES SAID Mahomes never talked about the three-peat in a team setting, but away from the Chiefs facility, in sessions with his personal trainer Bobby Stroupe, Mahomes did voice the prospect of a three-peat multiple times. “I get to hear unfiltered Patrick every Monday,” Stroupe said during Super Bowl week.

Stroupe has trained Mahomes since the quarterback was 10 years old, and typically Stroupe plays the role of the antagonizer. Remember Burrowhead. Don’t forget how the Bengals made you feel.

“Whatever is getting to him, that’s what I’m going to talk about when the workout is tough,” Stroupe says, like the time in 2022, the Super Bowl win that started the unfulfilled three-peat, when Mahomes had a severe high ankle sprain during the postseason and Stroupe said the quarterback was in excruciating pain and close to throwing up while he had him farmer-carry a 400-pound hex weight bar.

But that negativity-fueled bulletin board material felt “old hat” this year, Stroupe said. “Whatever the latest Bengal is saying, we’re just kind of over it. But you’ve got to grip something.”

So Mahomes gripped something weightier and more solid than a flimsy insult. Stroupe said Mahomes started talking about his goal of winning three straight during OTAs this past offseason. And specifically the idea of three-peating as a legacy.

“Everybody wants to win a Super Bowl when they get to it,” Stroupe said last week. “But this one, this means something, and it means something that for him is better than anything individual. I think he wants more than anything for this team to be known as the best team of all time.

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“When I’m whooping his ass, that’s the thing he’s been going to. This year, it shifted pretty quick to ‘We got a chance of legacy here with this team.'”

At one of his last workouts during the bye week before the Super Bowl, Stroupe says Mahomes told him that because no other team had ever three-peated, doing so would put them on a higher tier of NFL dynasty.

In past years, Stroupe finished a workout with Mahomes by reminding him to stay open-minded to the result with the goal of playing their best football. Not this year.

“For him to bring [the three-peat] up, it’s just really uncommon for him,” Stroupe said. “It was just a different response.”


Relentless pressure helped limit Mahomes’ difference-making opportunities against the Eagles. Brynn Anderson/AP

CONSTANT CHANGE IS is the main reason why quarterbacks struggle in the NFL. And that’s why the Chiefs dynasty is under no threat. Kansas City’s consistency with its coaching staff during Mahomes’ career has allowed him to become an NFL parity-buster, despite falling short of three in a row.

Since Mahomes became the Chiefs’ starter in 2018, Kansas City has 23 more wins than any other team, postseason included, the highest points per game (28.0) and most yards per game (386.1).

The Chiefs have the best seven-season run (.781, 107-30 regular season and postseason) in the modern era (since 1966), better than any seven-season stretch of the Patriots dynasty. As highlighted by Peter King, Mahomes’ pre-age 30 playoff game stats are better than Brady’s — by a lot. He’s thrown 26 more touchdown passes and won two more conference titles with a passer rating almost 20 points higher.

“We all have a fixed set of resources, draft picks, cap room, and we get to decide how to play with it,” Eagles general manager Howie Roseman said last week. “That’s what makes this really fun as a GM, that you really get to choose the direction that you want your team to go in.

“You talk about the Chiefs, and you’re talking about maybe the greatest coach of all time, with an unbelievable Hall of Fame quarterback, so it’s pretty easy to see why they’re in this position year after year, and we’re striving to be a team like that that plays like them. Playing for a three-peat is unbelievable.”

Chiefs owner Clark Hunt said last week that Reid, who signed an extension last offseason, will be back next season. Mahomes is under contract until 2031, a 10-year deal that is rare in length, and allows general manager Brett Veach a long runway. Most NFL general managers can’t rely on their starting quarterback remaining in place for six more seasons. Mahomes’ contract length and the rare security it provides to both sides allows him to be part of roster management conversations.

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Mahomes rocked on strip sack for 3rd turnover of game

Milton Williams gets to Patrick Mahomes, who takes his sixth sack of the night and fumbles, giving Philadelphia the ball back in the fourth quarter.

“When you have a young franchise quarterback, you open a window to have success for an extended period of time,” Hunt said. “And we knew we had that back in 2020 and Patrick was [25] years old at the time … And so then the exercise became, how do we keep building the team around Patrick? Because we know he’s going to be here for a while, and that’s going to give us a chance to win every year.”

ESPN analyst Troy Aikman fell short of three-peating as the Cowboys quarterback. “I’ve always been asked a lot about why is it that we have so few teams repeated? It’s hard to win, it’s hard to win one Super Bowl. It’s hard to win a Super Bowl and then to have it all come into alignment again.”

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“I was proud of how my team fought this entire season with the expectations that we had on us,” Mahomes said postgame. “But we did, we came up short.”

Aikman, like Mahomes, won three Super Bowls before age 30. But unlike Mahomes, his head coach left after their second Super Bowl win, and the Cowboys lost in the NFC Championship Game the next year. “There’s a lot that can derail a franchise,” Aikman said during Super Bowl week. “He’s still got the staff.”

Kelce’s NFL future is uncertain, but Mahomes pointed out Sunday that Kansas City has a young nucleus, several of whom have never lost in the postseason until this Super Bowl. Like Chenal, who was experiencing something entirely unfamiliar.

“I’m struggling to even process it,” Chenal said. “I’m just thinking about getting back with my family and just hugging them.”

“It’s going to hurt for a while, but how can you respond from it?” Mahomes said. “… And how can you get better? How can you not be satisfied with just getting here and taking your game to the next level?”


Mahomes remains surrounded by a strong young core, but the Chiefs will have offseason decisions to make. Brynn Anderson/AP

TOM BRADY — THE quarterback who Mahomes is compared to most — told Fox Sports Radio’s Colin Cowherd during Super Bowl week that because he won championships early in his career, he didn’t realize how difficult it was until he went 10 years without winning one. He said a Super Bowl loss on the résumé, “matters more than any other loss that you will ever be a part of.”

Mahomes figures to dwell on this one too. It’s in his makeup. His dad, Pat Sr. has seen it since he began watching his son compete at age 4.

“I’ve been around professional athletes since I was 17 years old,” the former major league baseball pitcher told ESPN last week. “And I played forever. And I really have never seen a person that’s that dedicated to not lose.”

Brady said when he goes to Philadelphia, fans yell at him about the Philly Special, and when he was at the Knicks game with his son, he threw the ball at Spike Lee, who caught it against his head like the Helmet Catch.

“That was 17 years ago and I am still living that thing down,” Brady said. “No one remembers the loss I had to Peyton [Manning] in the 2015 championship game.

“They all tell me about the losses in the Super Bowl though. So I think the challenging thing, if you look at Patrick, you want to win this game if you are Patrick because if you don’t you are 3-2 in Super Bowls and it is not a great feeling. So there is a lot of pressure from my standpoint as I got older and I realized the enormity of this game and how important it is to actually win this game.”

Mahomes has learned that lesson.

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“These will be the two losses that will motivate me to be even better the rest of my career, because you only get so few of these, and you have to capitalize on these,” he told reporters postgame. They hurt probably more than the wins feel good.”

Mahomes doesn’t have an infamous singular play that’s taken place in his two Super Bowl losses, not in the way Brady did. But now there’s 34-0, the Eagles’ largest lead in the game, when there was talk of the first Super Bowl shutout.

Stroupe has already seen Mahomes use three prior losses — two AFC title games and one Super Bowl — to become the first quarterback to ever lead a team to three consecutive Super Bowls.

“Those losses changed him,” Stroupe said. In other seasons, Mahomes would take a full two weeks off after the season ended before getting back to training, but after the Bengals loss Stroupe said he was back in the gym a week later. That was as long as he could bear to stay away.

This time will be even more amplified. Stroupe knows he’ll be lucky to get a week off.



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