What on earth does Kyle Shanahan do now?

Kyle Shanahan is the greatest offensive mind of his generation, but that won’t matter anymore until and unless he can finally win a Super Bowl.

San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan is unquestionably the best offensive coach in the NFL. He’s got a list of acolytes that are also head coaches and other kinds of offensive play-callers that seems to paper half the league.

But right now, none of that matters. Because for the third time in a Super Bowl, Shanahan as either the offensive coordinator or head coach has blown a lead of at least 10 points.

That’s the toughest thing about getting to that many high-profile games — if you keep losing them, that’s the only way people will define you. And for Shanahan, it’s now losing Super Bowl LI as the Atlanta Falcons’ offensive coordinator, infamously blowing that 28-3 lead, and two Super Bowls (LVI and LVIII) in which he had 10 points on the Chiefs and couldn’t come through. Shanahan is also on the losing side of the only two overtime Super Bowls — LI and this one.

Sometimes, history really sucks.

“There’s nothing different to say,” Shanahan said after this particular srushing loss. “I mean I don’t care how you lose when you lose Super Bowls, especially ones you think you can pull off, it hurts. When you’re in the NFL, I think every team should hurt, except for one at the end. We’ve gotten pretty damn close, but we haven’t pulled it off. We’re hurting right now, but it doesn’t take away from how proud of our guys I am. I’m really proud of them today, too. As part of sports, as part of football, as part of life, as part of life. I’m glad we put ourselves out there. I love our team. We’ll recover, and we’ll be back next year strong.”

He’s not wrong about any of that but the cast this puts over one’s legacy is also undeniable.

Shanahan is hardly the only coach to face this crucible. Tom Landry couldn’t get past the Vince Lombardi Packers or Blanton Collier’s Cleveland Browns in the back half of the 1960s. John Madden’s Oakland Raiders went to three straight conference championships and lost them all to the eventual Super Bowl winner from 1973 to 1975. And the list of teams that had to take a back seat to Bill Belichick when Belichick was winning six Super Bowls with the New England Patriots was … well, rather long.

If you get over the hump eventually, the narrative goes away. It did for Landry and for Madden when they won their own Super Bowls. But in Shanahan’s case, we’re still left wanting when it comes to the biggest game, and that will invariably — and not unfairly — complicate his legacy over time as it does now.

Until he is able to change it.

This time around, it seemed like Shanahan had the guys to get it done. Brock Purdy had been the near-perfect distiller of his offense in ways that no other quarterback had been. Purdy’s targets are as talented as any in the league, and Steve Wilks’ defense completely dominated the Chiefs in this game … until they didn’t on the last drive. Patrick Mahomes threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to Mecole Hardman with three seconds left in the first overtime period, and the Chiefs won 25-22.

Belichick’s Patriots and now the Chiefs are the only teams in the new millennium to repeat as Super Bowl champions. With three championships in five years, they’re the new dynasty, and Mahomes is the unkillable force.

So, it’s Shanahan who’s on the wrong side of history and dynasty.

Shanahan’s bona fides are undeniable. No offensive play caller and play designer is better at displacing defenses, but all that statement will get now is, “Well, if he’s so great, why can’t he maintain it when it matters?”

And that’s a fair, if cruel, question.

As far as what Shanahan can do to erase that narrative? It might be up to making the Super Bowl in a year when the Chiefs somehow miss it. Or, to hope (quite possibly in vain) that things will turn his way if he has to face this juggernaut once again.

Right now, there’s only the pain of not only falling short, but falling short in the same way, over and over, in a Sisyphean struggle to roll that impossibly heavy boulder up the hill, feeling like you might be on the wrong end of the wrath of the gods.

More than any other in history, Super Bowl LVIII was about special teams

More than any other Super Bowl in history, Super Bowl LVIII was defined by two dominant, record-setting special teams units.

LAS VEGAS — When a Super Bowl ends, the temptation is to put a neat little bow on the whole thing. But when a Super Bowl is as uncertain and messy as Super Bowl LVIII was, it’s tougher to find the dominance that mattered in the end. The San Francisco 49ers’ defense, especially its defensive line, was about as good as any could be, but in the end, it wasn’t enough to contain Patrick Mahomes as the Kansas City Chiefs became the first team since the 2003-04 New England Patriots to repeat as Super Bowl champs.

Not that the Chiefs were anything special on offense. Mahomes was better in the stat sheet than he was on the field — 34 of 46 for 333 yards, two touchdowns, one interception, and a passer rating of 99.3. Beyond his frantic final drive to win the game 25-22 in overtime… well, there were issues.

Kansas City’s defense was equal to the 49ers’ challenge, limiting San Francisco quarterback Brock Purdy to 23 completions in 38 attempts for 255 yards, one touchdown, no interceptions, and a passer rating of 89.3. Receiver Jauan Jennings was the best passer on the day, completing one pass on one attempt for a 21-yard touchdown to running back Christian McCaffrey.

So, it was a weird game without an obvious winner… except for two. The special teams units of the Chiefs and 49ers. Per the Elias Sports Bureau, here were all the Super Bowl records set in this game:

  • Most Field Goals Made, Career – 9, Harrison Butker
  • Longest Field Goal Made – 57, Harrison Butker
  • Most 50-Yard Field Goals Made, Game – 2, Jake Moody
  • Highest Average Punting, Game – 50.8, Tommy Townsend & Mitch Wishnowsky
  • Most Fumbles Recovered, Career – 4, Patrick Mahomes
  • Most Field Goals Made, Both Teams – 7, Kansas City (4) vs. San Francisco (3)
  • Highest Average Punting, Team – 50.8, Kansas City & San Francisco
  • Fewest Kickoff Returns, Both Teams – 0, Kansas City vs. San Francisco
  • Fewest Kickoff Return Yards, Both Teams – 0, Kansas City vs. San Francisco

And here were all the records tied in this game:

  • Most Field Goals Attempted, Career – 10, Harrison Butker
  • Most Field Goals Made, Game – 4, Harrison Butker
  • Most Fumbles, Career – 5, Patrick Mahomes
  • Most Consecutive Games Won – 2, Kansas City
  • Most Points Overtime Period, Team – 6, Kansas City
  • Most Field Goals Attempted, Both Teams – 7, Kansas City (4) vs. San Francisco (3)
  • Most Field Goals Made, Team – 4, Kansas City
  • Fewest Rushing Touchdowns, Both Teams – 0, Kansas City vs. San Francisco
  • Fewest Kickoff Returns, Team – 0, Kansas City & San Francisco
  • Fewest Kickoff Returns Yards, Team – 0, Kansas City & San Francisco

The common thread, for the most part? Special teams on both sides. 49ers kicker Jake Moody set a Super Bowl record with a 55-yard field goal with 14:48 left in the first half, and he held that record for less than two game quarters, as Harrison Butker outdid him with a 57-yarder with 5:01 left in the third quarter.

So, when the defenses were spinning, and the offenses were sputtering, it was really the special teams that stood out more than just about anything else — and for the Chiefs, it really helped to win the day.

Who woulda thunk it?

Taylor Swift chugs a beer in suite at Super Bowl 58

Taylor Swift and friends were having fun in a Super Bowl suite

What can’t she do?

Taylor Swift was at Super Bowl 58 and in the second quarter of the game, she had some un with her friends.

Ever seen a pop star chug a beer?

Watch below and you will say you have.

The most important plays of Super Bowl LVIII

At the first half of Super Bowl LVIII, here are the most important plays that have done the most to define the game.

Every football game comes down to a series of moments that flip things in one direction or another. That’s the most true in the Super Bowl, where everything is magnified beyond all reason.

Through the first half of Super Bowl LVIII between the San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs, here are the most important plays that have made the biggest difference in this particular game, which has the 49ers leading the Chiefs, 10-3.

Christian McCaffrey’s first-quarter fumble could have been a big deal, but wasn’t

The 49ers dodged a bullet when the Chiefs couldn’t capitalize on Christian McCaffrey’s first-quarter fumble.

The Kansas City Chiefs won the coin toss to start the Super Bowl, and perhaps they wished they hadn’t deferred. Immediately, the 49ers — mostly led by running back Christian McCaffrey — matriculated the ball down the field in ways that had to be disconcerting for Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo.

With 12:24 left in the first quarte, though, McCaffrey took the ball again, and this time, the structure of the game changed when linebacker Leo Chenal tackled McCaffrey, forcing a fumble at the Kansas City 29-yard line that edge-rusher George Karlaftis picked up.

However, the Chiefs went three-and-out on their subsequent drive.

Andra Day, Post Malone deliver stirring performances before Super Bowl 58

Andra Day and Post Malone excelled on songs before Super Bowl 58

Andra Day and Post Malone were among those who shared honors singing before Super Bowl 58.

Day sang the Black national anthem “Lift Every Voice and Sing.”

Malone handled “America The Beautiful.”

Reba McEntire sings national anthem at Super Bowl 58 in Las Vegas

The national anthem before Super Bowl 58 was sung by country great Reba McEntire

Country star Reba McEntire handled the honors of singing the national anthem before Super Bowl 58 on Sunday in Las Vegas.

The big question: Did she go over or under, right?

How the Chiefs have solved their receiver drop problems at the perfect time

The Chiefs appear to have solved their formerly massive receiver drop issues, which bodes well for Patrick Mahomes in Super Bowl LVIII.

LAS VEGAS — Several members of the Kansas City Chiefs’ organization have talked this week about how the team’s 20-17 Week 16 Christmas Day loss to the Las Vegas Raiders as a turning point for the rest of the season. It was a wake-up call for a lot of people, not least a receiver group that had let Patrick Mahomes down more than once with iffy routes and infuriating dropped passes.

In that game, Mahomes couldn’t even trust Travis Kelce, his best buddy, who had two killer drops. Both were on simple short passes, and while both came on first down so they didn’t kill any drives per se, it would have been better if Kelce had caught them.

There was this drop with 11:21 left in the first quarter on an easy flat route…

…and this one with 10:38 left in the game, which probably prevented a touchdown.

The Chiefs were down 20-7 at the time, and were unable to get any points on the drive when Mahomes failed to connect with receiver Rashee Rice from the Las Vegas seven-yard line. There, cornerback Amik Robertson was all over Rice, but it could be argued that the rookie still could have taken the ball in.

This may have been the nadir of the Chiefs’ offense through the season, and those drops personified a serious problem that had reared its ugly head over and over. Per Fantasy Points Data, Mahomes had lost a league-high 386 passing yards to receiver drops in the regular season.

However, through the Chiefs’ three playoff games, the Chiefs have “robbed” Mahomes of just 40 passing yards on drops — which means that things have changed in the right way at the right time.

What’s changed?

“If you watch the receivers every single day, they’re catching on the side when the defense is up, they’re catching after practice, they’re catching before practice,” Mahomes said this week. “I remember I was walking to lunch one day and Skyy [Moore] was out there catching by himself. Those guys have that mindset that they’re going to continue to get better. That’s been throughout the whole entire team. We’re not wasting any moments in practice, guys are working on the side, we’re trying to get better, and we’re not going to let that slide this week either, we’re going to try to do the same thing going into the Super Bowl.”

Well, it’s trending up when the Chiefs need it the most.

Taylor Swift arrives at Super Bowl 58 with Ice Spice, Blake Lively

Taylor Swift has landed at the Super Bowl in Las Vegas

Forget whether the teams arrived at Allegiant Stadium on Sunday. Taylor Swift was at the Super Bowl.

Fresh from four sold-out shows in Japan, a whirlwind trip back to the States, the pop star extraordinaire appeared at Super Bowl 58 with Blake Lively and Ice Spice.

Now, that is over. It’s time to play the game.

National reaction to Jason Kelce hanging out with Taylor Swift, Ice Spice during Super Bowl LVIII

Philadelphia Eagles All-Pro center Jason Kelce is wearing Chiefs Overalls and hanging out with Taylor Swift and Ice Spice prior to Super Bowl 58 between Kansas City and San Francisco

Jason Kelce is enjoying the 2024 NFL offseason and had a blast in Las Vegas during the Chiefs-49ers Super Bowl; the All-Pro center looks closer and closer to retirement.

Front Office Sports reported that Kelce has met with ESPN and FOX Sports as he gauges a potential post-retirement career in television.

The New York Post reports that Amazon, NBC, and CBS also might express interest in Kelce.

Kelce was in Las Vegas for Super Bowl LVIII, and nothing says he’s arrived as a media star better than this moment with Taylor Swift and Ice Spice, which has gone viral.