Patrick Mahomes’ high school classmate predicted he’d win a Super Bowl

At least one person saw Mahomes’ awesome potential, though.

Patrick Mahomes is the best quarterback on the planet, and whoever is in second place isn’t very close behind. Yesterday Mahomes won his second Super Bowl ring in his just fifth season as the starting quarterback for the Chiefs. At just 27 years old, Mahomes has plenty of time to add more to his collection – setting him up to be in the Greatest of all Time conversation someday.

At first, it wasn’t clear to everybody that Mahomes was special. Back in high school (Whitehouse, Texas), he was only ranked No. 398 in his recruiting class and 21 other pro-style quarterbacks were ranked ahead of him.

At least one person saw Mahomes’ awesome potential, though. One of his high school classmates wrote in their yearbook that the thing he was most excited about at their class reunion was seeing Mahomes’ Super Bowl ring:

Not bad.

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Patrick Mahomes redefined his greatness in this AFC Championship victory

Patrick Mahomes’ performance in the AFC Championship game may have been the most impressive of his NFL career. Here’s why.

In his five full seasons as an NFL starting quarterback, Patrick Lavon Mahomes II has proven just about everything a young quarterback can prove in the NFL. He has one AP Most Valuable Player award, and the odds are pretty good that he’s about to pick up his second. He has one Super Bowl ring, and the odds are pretty good that he’s about to pick up his second. He has torched most NFL defenses to a thermonuclear degree, and any level of adversity he’s faced has usually been beaten back at some point by Mahomes’ rare athletic gifts and superb football acumen.

Sunday’s AFC Championship game was a very different story. It takes a while for quarterbacks to develop situations in which opponents just have their number, and Mahomes had developed one in the Cincinnati Bengals, and defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo. Mahomes’ previous three games against the Bengals — all Chiefs losses — had been nightmare fuel for Mahomes, especially in the second halves and overtimes of those games.

In those three losses, through the second halves and overtime (this included last year’s AFC Championship game), Mahomes had completed 25 passes on 44 attempts for 503 yards, no touchdowns, two interceptions, and a passer rating of 54.5. In the second half of this game, with his body and his receiver corps falling apart, Mahomes completed 16 of 24 passes for 161 yards, a touchdown, no picks, and a passer rating of 99.5.

It was a remarkable performance to exorcise those former demons, and big plays were all over the place. Perhaps the most important one that might slip under the radar was this 11-yard completion to receiver Mecole Hardman with 9:10 left in the third quarter. The Bengals had just tied the game at 13 with Joe Burrow’s amazing touchdown pass to Tee Higgins…

…and now, Mahomes had third-and-4 from his own 29-yard line against that same tricky opponent who had scored the last 10 points in the game.

Mahomes’ response was to roll to his left against yet another of Anarumo’s defensive packages in which the Bengals got pressure with three or four (four in this case), and this case, he had linebacker Germaine Pratt bearing down on him. With that high ankle sprain, throwing against his own momentum, Mahomes threw this dart to Hardman, with three defenders converging on his receiver in Cover-2.

Mahomes’ 19-yard touchdown pass to Marquez Valdes-Scantling at the end of that drive with 4:21 left in the third quarter was overall his most impressive, and it wasn’t just because Mahomes made a perfect timing and velocity throw to Valdes-Scantling. It was also because Mahomes showed top-tier pocket movement — the ability to shift inside the pocket and extend the play that way.

I mean, what are you supposed to do against this?

On that same sprained ankle, Mahomes attempted five passes outside the pocket to his right, and he completed all five for 58 yards. All five throws came in the first half, when it appeared that whatever Mahomes had taken to manage the pain was more prevalent in his body. The first four throws were against different kinds of zone coverage. No shot plays; just Mahomes going full Steph Curry and exploiting defensive voids.

Then, the fifth such throw — this time, the Bengals went with Cover-0 from their own 14-yard line with 3:59 left in the first half. If you’re going to throw Cover-0 at Mahomes, whether you’re blitzing or mush-rushing behind it, Mahomes is going to roll around and play “Find the Huckleberry” with Travis Kelce. In this case, the Huckleberry was safety Jessie Bates, who was clearly trying to communicate with safety Vonn Bell pre-snap, but had to follow Kelce up the chute in single coverage.

Whoops.

Even the Chiefs’ final offensive play — Mahomes’ five-yard scramble to set up Harrison Butker’s game-winning 45-yard field goal, accentuated as it was by Joseph Ossai pushing Mahomes when he was already out of bounds and adding 15 yards to the Chiefs’ endeavors — was a case of emptying the quiver with everything he had left from a physical perspective.

“I didn’t expect to be able to run very much, just from the way it felt,” Mahomes said after the game. “I just battled through. I was able to do enough on that last play. I knew I was going to do whatever I could to get us in field goal range.”

It is not recency boas to suggest that this was the best game of Patrick Mahomes’ NFL career. You can point to other performances, but given the situation, opponent, and injury adversity, this may have been the one game in which Mahomes proved beyond all doubt that he is, indeed, him.

Patrick Mahomes wants to be even better. Here’s how it’ll happen in 2021

Patrick Mahomes has vowed to eliminate his problems in the pocket under pressure. Good luck, defensive coordinators.

Since he became the Chiefs’ full-on starting quarterback in 2018, Patrick Mahomes ranks fifth in the NFL in passing attempts (1,652). sixth in completions (1,092), second to only Matt Ryan in passing yards (13,868), and first in passing touchdowns — 114. and Russell Wilson is second with 106. Mahomes has been a big play waiting impatiently to flip the switch since he met the NFL head-on, and it’s tough to come up with other quarterbacks who have been as dynamic or effective in their first three full seasons.

But as Mahomes recently told Kevin Clark of The Ringer, he is looking for more, and the improvements he seeks seem to be a refutation of one of the things that makes him so spectacular — the ability to create plays outside of structure. There was no greater (though unsuccessful) example than this pass he tried to complete in the Chiefs’ 31-9 loss to the Buccaneers in Super Bowl LV. Down by that same score in the fourth quarter, and desperately trying to make anything happen, Mahomes defied gravity after breaking the pocket, and made a miracle throw that fell incomplete against a brilliantly-designed Bucs defense that was able to generate consistent pressure, and still solve all problems in coverage.

After this throw, you can see it on Mahomes’ face: “I have now done this miracle [expletive] to the highest level any human possibly can, and there are times when even the miracle [expletive] doesn’t work.”

Mahomes was pressured a Super Bowl-record 26 times on 56 dropbacks, completing nine of 26 passes for 78 yards, no touchdowns, one interception, and a passer rating of 27.4. When he left the pocket under pressure in that game, Mahomes completed two of 10 passes for 10 yards, minus-5 air yards, his one interception, and a passer rating of 0.0. He would have been much better off hurling the ball into Section 250 over and over than doing what he did.

Thus, an offseason in which the Chiefs completely redefined their offensive line (there is not one projected starter who was a starter last season), and a sea change in Mahomes’ philosophy.

“I kind of get back to that backyard-style football a little bit too much,” Mahomes told Clark. “And you could definitely see that in the Super Bowl. I mean, there were times that pockets were clean and I was still scrambling,”

This was true, and it happened right from the start. It was as if Mahomes went into the Super Bowl estimating that his depleted offensive line would be overwhelmed by Tampa Bay’s excellent pass rush, and reacted accordingly from the first play.

“I’ve been going back [working] on that,” Mahomes continued. “Making sure that I trust the guys around me and trust the pocket, make the read within the pocket, and not try to make the big play happen.”

The problem with the miracle [expletive], even when practiced by such a dangerous purveyor as Mahomes, is that you can’t build an entire passing game out of it. Quarterbacks still have to win in the pocket under pressure, and that’s just as true now as it was for Sammy Baugh, Johnny Unitas, Joe Montana, and Peyton Manning. Whether you’re mobile or not, and capable of creating magic out of havoc or not, that’s the frosting. What you do in the pocket is the cake.

It’s not that Mahomes was terrible from the pocket last season — quite the opposite. Including the postseason, per Sports Info Solutions, he attempted 545 passes from the pocket, completing 379 for 4,499 air yards, 2,091 air yards, 26 touchdowns, six interceptions, and a passer rating of 110.4. But in the pocket with pressure added? That’s where things got dicey. In those instances, Mahomes completed 71 of 141 passes for 832 471 air yards, six touchdowns, three interceptions, and a passer rating of 78.4.

You may argue the point that most quarterbacks are far less efficient in the pocket under pressure, but that’s not always the case, and certainly not always to that degree. Russell Wilson had a 101.8 passer rating in such instances. Kirk Cousins? 104.7. Matthew Stafford? 96.8. Chargers rookie passer Justin Herbert completed 94 of 157 passes under pressure from the pocket for 1,203 yards, 664 air yards, eight touchdowns, two interceptions, and a passer rating of 102.3.

As Mahomes’ team faces Herbert’s team twice a season, Mahomes had a front-row seat to stuff like this. In Week 17, Chargers tight end Donald Parham Jr. motioned from right to left pre-snap, made himself available for the backside quick read, and watch how Herbert moved around to avoid pressure, made an off-platform throw, but stayed (just barely) in the pocket as opposed to bailing and having to re-set everything.

Again, folks, this is a rookie.

Now. Mahomes did have reasons to believe in his ability to create artistry outside the pocket. So, let’s not throw this out entirely. Under pressure outside the pocket last season, he completed 43 of 94 passes for 568 yards, 392 air yards, seven touchdowns (the most in the NFL), one interception, and a passer rating of 101.8. Mahomes is able to create shot plays out of chaos consistently because he’s a brilliant on-the-run passer, and his offense is set up for big plays outside of structure. So, it would be easy enough for Mahomes to stand on all that and say, “This is who I am — like or lump it, take it down the road and dump it.” The fact that he has no interest in doing so is an encouraging sign for a player who is already slamming previous quarterback performance marks against the wall.

And it’s not like you want to eliminate this kind of wizardry when your quarterback can actually pull it off.

Mahomes mentioned to Clark what he’s trying to learn from Tom Brady, the winning quarterback in that Super Bowl. It’s relevant, because while nobody will ever mistake Brady for Michael Vick, Brady is the best in-the-pocket mover in NFL history — capable of ripping defenses to bits under pressure by employing subtle and correct movement in the pocket and keep everything in front of him. In Brady’s case, it’s made him vulnerable to interior pressure right in his face, but it’s easy to see Mahomes imagining what he could be with his already-established gifts, AND the ability to dance in the box.

“The way he’s able to move within the pocket and find those lanes and still make those big time throws downfield is something that I think I need to get better at and something that I need to continue to grow with. And so that’s definitely one thing I take from him.”

Mahomes also mentioned Aaron Rodgers as an evolutionary example, and Rodgers provides perhaps the ultimate paradigm for Mahomes. Rodgers has become an amazing example of a quarterback who can do everything you want in structure, and still blow things up in a positive sense when the play falls apart.

“I think the biggest thing with Aaron is you see how he’s evolved throughout his game. It’s kind of like what I’m talking about, where he used to scramble a lot more, make all the different throws, and now he can just completely dice you up through the pocket,” Mahomes said. “And then when those opportunities come and he starts scrambling, he makes the throws, and he can still do all that stuff. So, I really watch that.”

The perfect quarterback has yet to be created, but if Patrick Mahomes can put it all together in the pocket, he may be as close to that ideal as we’ve seen to date.

What skills would Tom Brady and Patrick Mahomes like to steal from each other?

Tom Brady and Patrick Mahomes couldn’t be more different on the field, but here’s how they’d like to be more alike.

When a Super Bowl combines the greatest quarterback in NFL history and the greatest young quarterback in NFL history, comparisons abound. You could argue that it happened when Joe Montana about to win his second of four — faced off against second-year man Dan Marino in Super Bowl XIX.

Of course, in Super Bowl LV, we have a GOAT in Tom Brady who has proven that title beyond all argument, and a young gun in Patrick Mahomes who has already won a Super Bowl, and is now trying to become the first quarterback to go back-to-back since Brady himself did it in Super Bowls XXXVIII and XXXIX.

The stylistic contrasts between the two quarterbacks are as wide as possible, which makes the game even more fascinating. Brady as the perfect pocket passer and pocket mover who will carve up any defense you throw at him, and Mahomes as the perfect mixture of quarterback and athlete.

On Monday, both Brady and Mahomes were asked which skills they’d like to steal from each other if they could. As one would expect, and justifiably so, it came off like quite the mutual admiration society.

“Oh, there’d be a lot of them,” Brady told Kay Adams of the NFL Network. “You kidding me? I love how he drifts back in the pocket and takes it about six yards deep, and then drops back to about 19, 20 yards… probably 15 yards… right foot in the ground, and then he flicks the ball 60 yards on a dime to Tyreek [Hill] or something like that. He just has a great awareness of the pocket. Incredible vision of the field, and he knows just when to get rid of the ball. Great poise in the pocket, and he’s got that sweet little whippy arm I used to have when I was a little bit younger. He’s got the athletic ability to extend plays… he’s got all the physical tools, and he’s got all the mental tools. He’s gonna be in this game quite a few more times, in my opinion.”

“Yeah there’s a ton,” Mahomes said Monday of the things he’d like to steal from Brady’s skill set. “I mean, the way he’s able to dissect defenses before the snap is something that I truly admire. I’m trying to get to that level. The way he’s able to move within the pocket and to be able to reset his feet and to be completely calm and still make the throw right on the money no matter who’s around him, is something that I’ll have continue to work on. As I continue in my career, I’m going to try to do whatever I can to watch tape on him, because he’s doing it the right way and you can tell by the Super Bowl championships he has and rings on his fingers.”

Mahomes with Brady’s ability to diagnose? Could happen over time. Brady doing what Mahomes does? Not quite as likely, though it hasn’t hurt him much.

The 3 best records set or tied in Super Bowl LIV

After leading the Chiefs to their wild win over the Niners in Super Bowl LIV, Patrick Mahomes became the youngest quarterback in Super Bowl history to win SB MVP. Cowboys Hall of Famer Emmitt Smith, who also won the regular-season MVP award and was …

After leading the Chiefs to their wild win over the Niners in Super Bowl LIV, Patrick Mahomes became the youngest quarterback in Super Bowl history to win SB MVP. Cowboys Hall of Famer Emmitt Smith, who also won the regular-season MVP award and was named the MVP (at 24 years, 233 days) of Super Bowl XXVIII in 1994.

The NFL MVP is the third-youngest player to win the Super Bowl MVP, behind just Marcus Allen (23 years, 301 days, Super Bowl XVIII in 1984) and Lynn Swann (23 years, 315 days, Super Bowl X in 1976).

Wise beyond his years, clearly, this seems like a prophetic tweet, from 2013, about  what he was dreaming about:

And then this tweet seven years later, almost to the day:

Where does Patrick Mahomes rank among youngest starting Super Bowl QBs?

Patrick Mahomes will be 24 years and 138 days old when he starts Super Bowl LIV for the Kansas City Chiefs

Patrick Mahomes will be 24 years and 138 days old when the Kansas City Chiefs play in Super Bowl LIV on Feb. 2 in Miami. Where does that rank the Chiefs’ superstar when it comes to youngest starting quarterbacks?

11. Vince Ferragamo (25, 271)

Manny Rubio-USA TODAY Sports

Vince Ferragamo faced the Steelers with the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl XIV. He was 15-of-25 for 212 yards and a pick in a 31-19 loss.