CELEBRITY
Patrick Mahomes is unlikely to secure the NFL MVP this season, given his performance in the regular season. However, this may not bother him much, considering the Kansas City Chiefs’ successful journey back to the Super Bowl.
Patrick Mahomes won’t win NFL MVP this season. He didn’t deserve it based on his regular season. That’s probably OK with him since the Kansas City Chiefs are going back to the Super Bowl.
It doesn’t matter anymore if the Chiefs and Mahomes show out in the regular season. When they get to the playoffs, they have Mahomes and that makes them tough to beat. The Chiefs are going to their fourth Super Bowl in the last five seasons after
Mahomes had an excellent first half and Kansas City’s defense did the rest in a 17-10 win over the Baltimore Ravens. The Chiefs had not played a true road playoff game with Mahomes before this season. This postseason, the Chiefs went on the road and beat the Buffalo Bills and Ravens in consecutive weeks, adding even more chapters to Mahomes’ legacy and their own growing dynasty.
The Ravens weren’t overrated and neither was Lamar Jackson. The Ravens were great all season and Jackson deserves the MVP he’ll get in two weeks. But Mahomes is the one current quarterback you want if you absolutely need to win a big game. The Chiefs looked like less than themselves most of the season.
They lost six games, including losses to the Denver Broncos and Las Vegas Raiders. The offense was questioned for not having enough star power. But in the end, it didn’t matter what happened in the regular season. Kansas City was great when it needed to be.
For Jackson and the Ravens, it’s a disappointing end to a fantastic season. But that’s life in the AFC during the Mahomes era. If you’re trying to get to a Super Bowl when Mahomes is still in his prime, you’re going to be disappointed more often than not.On the Chiefs’ first drive of the game, it was clear that Mahomes was locked in.
Mahomes completed all five of his passes on the first drive, including a great fourth-down throw back to the middle of the field to Travis Kelce, and a finely tuned back-shoulder throw to Kelce for a 19-yard touchdown.
Mahomes didn’t miss in the first quarter. He hit all 10 of his passes in the quarter, and his first in the second. The 11 straight completions to start a conference championship game were the most since Rich Gannon in 2002, according to CBS. It wasn’t just the completions but the degrees of difficulty.
Mahomes was excellent on third and fourth down, often turning absolutely nothing into a big play.Jackson will win his second MVP, which will tie Mahomes, but he couldn’t keep up with the Chiefs’ quarterback. Jackson was just 5-of-12 for 67 yards in the first half, and 13 yards came on a crazy completion to himself. The Chiefs had 221 yards before halftime and the Ravens had just 110.
Mahomes was against a Ravens team that was the best in the NFL in the regular season and he completely dominated the first half. The Chiefs led 17-7. Baltimore had chances to come back in the second half, but it couldn’t make winning plays like its opponent.