Super Bowl contender index, Week 1: Cowboys among 5 teams who can win it all

Whose Super Bowl dreams are justified?

Week 1 of the NFL season is almost always a dice roll. That sentiment probably goes tenfold when it comes to picking championship-caliber squads.

Picking Super Bowl contenders before seeing one meaningful snap can be a fruitless exercise. As tempting as it is, running back the top contenders from last season isn’t going to be as seamless as everyone believes (hopes?). So much changes in one NFL offseason, from roster turnover in free agency and adding impact playmakers in the draft to some established stars and difference-makers just getting flat-out old. It’s an unspoken rule, but NFL time may as well be measured in dog years: everything is on an accelerated clock, and you have less time to cherish the present than you think.

At the same time, star quarterbacks and great coaches provide a guiding compass. Few other professional sports leagues can boast continuity of the same heavyweights fighting it out near the top year after year like the NFL. That’s because this is a league built on top signal-callers and teams who don’t step on rakes in pivotal moments.

As Week 1 of the 2023 NFL season looms on the horizon, let’s take an early look at five teams that have justifiable expectations of winning Super Bowl 58 in February.

Rihanna turned Salomon into a big name at the Super Bowl but this sneaker is going to keep the party going

The XT-6 is the perfect entry point for the Salomon wave you’ve been itching to be part of.

Without fail, every time an artist performs for the Super Bowl’s halftime show, their streams blow up. It’s essentially a big commercial.

Just ask Rihanna. Her streams skyrocketed across platforms, according to Billboard. And that’s Rihanna. She was already popular. The Super Bowl made her an even bigger star.

The same can be said for Salomon after the popstar wore the Salomon x Maison Margiela MM6. It’s a sneaker the brand created in collaboration with luxury retailer Maison Margiela. Just that moment boosted Salomon’s search traffic on Google Trends by 4000%.

If you want in on the Salomon trend, you’re probably not going to want to buy a huge collab like the one she wore to get started.

Instead, we brought the perfect starter pair to the set of Special Delivery — the XT-6.

This trial sneaker is both functional and fly and has the sneaker world buzzing right now. You can check it out on the latest episode of SD.

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Patrick Mahomes looked like he was having so much fun at the Chiefs Super Bowl parade

Patrick Mahomes is having a blast, as he should

Obviously, when you win a Super Bowl, the events in the aftermath are always going to be a blast. That’s just how it goes — especially for the Super Bowl MVP. This year, that’s Patrick Mahomes.

He already had the MVP Disneyland visit, which is a pretty cool perk in itself. But then there’s also the parade that comes after the win. We know how that gets. Just ask Tom Brady.

Now, it’s Mahomes’ turn to enjoy the parade once again for the second time in his career. And, boy, did he ever.

The parade has barely gotten started and Mahomes is already vibing out there with the people. You absolutely love to see it.

Beer in one hand, Super Bowl MVP in another. The boy is having a great time. He’s even dancing.

He’s even chugging beers with his WWE title belt on. This is just awesome stuff. Forget about the part where he nearly falls off the bus, because that definitely just happened.

He’s even out there touching the people. It’s such a cool scene.

My guy is having the time of his life right now and he absolutely deserves it. Everyone loved to see it.

Travis Kelce’s underdog narrative for the Chiefs makes no sense because Patrick Mahomes exists

Sorry Travis Kelce, but the Chiefs will never be underdogs with Patrick Mahomes.

This “nobody believed in us” narrative in sports has gotten out of hand. The New England Patriots championed it before their last Super Bowl win with Tom Brady. Kirby Smart said the same thing of Georgia after the team went back-to-back at the College Football Playoff National Championship. And now, Travis Kelce is trying to peddle the same nonsense.

On Sunday, the Kansas City Chiefs bested the Philadelphia Eagles 38-35 in Super Bowl 57. The win is the Chiefs’ second championship in four years, with Kansas City participating in three of the last four Super Bowls. In case you’ve forgotten.

And yet, as the confetti was raining down upon the Chiefs’ celebrations, Kelce couldn’t help but parrot the “no one said we could do it” angle amidst his — admittedly — epic WWE-style postgame interview.

“Not one of y’all said the Chiefs were gonna take it home this year. Not a single one!”

As expected, the rant drew hilarious comparisons to Georgia and Smart from just one month ago. That being said, it’s laughable to even consider this narrative that the Chiefs are plucky underdogs that no one believed in.

Why? Because Patrick Mahomes exists.

Mahomes is a pretty good quarterback! Perhaps, even, the best in the NFL. After all, Mahomes just gutted out an all-timer of a performance on an injured ankle that he clearly re-injured before the end of the first half. And Mahomes won his second Super Bowl MVP off an incredible effort after he, once again, left it all out there on the football field.

Sure, Kelce’s rant may have been in reference to Fox’s entire NFL crew picking the Eagles to win Super Bowl 57 right before kickoff, but there weren’t an insignificant number of folks that had the Chiefs winning out the night either.

Not only that, before the 2022 schedule reveal, the Chiefs had the third-best Super Bowl odds of all 32 teams. Oh, and if you want to get a head start on the 2024 Super Bowl, it’s not too early to place your bets on the favored Chiefs to repeat next season.

Look, Kelce is a two-time Super Bowl champion so he can say whatever he wants. But that doesn’t mean NFL fans have to buy what he’s selling when he’s got a future Hall of Fame quarterback slinging him touchdowns every week.

Patrick Mahomes winning the Super Bowl on an injured ankle proves it’s his world and we’re just living in it

The Mahomes Era in the NFL may have only just begun.

We’ve seen Patrick Mahomes pull off the incredible before.

He’s made the creative out-of-nowhere flips to running backs and receivers, resembling more sorcerer than quarterback. He’s mortified defenders with his rocket arm and, when he’s had to, made them pay as a runner in the open field. There’s a reason he has the reputation of being the NFL’s best player. The now two-time MVP and Super Bowl MVP could perhaps even be the face of football as a sport itself.

But what the Kansas City Chiefs superstar just pulled off in Super Bowl 57, in an instant classic 38-35 win over the juggernaut Philadelphia Eagles, might be his greatest magic trick yet. To win football’s greatest prize is one thing. It’s impressive and a difficult feat to accomplish for anyone. But to do it while reinjuring your ankle and essentially be weighed down by the ailment throughout the entire postseason is unfathomable.

Well, it’s probably an inconceivable feat for everyone except Mahomes. That also makes one fact clear: We are now in his pro football era, and his alone.

Bear with me for a moment. Imagine you hadn’t watched the Super Bowl.

If you came to me asking for a recap, among the various noteworthy tidbits, one of my first thoughts would undoubtedly center around Mahomes. With no other context, if I had told you that the Chiefs’ dynamo would aggravate the very same high-ankle sprain that’s bothered him since mid-January, you’d likely have only two questions on your mind:

  1. What was the final score of the Eagles’ win?
  2. When is their parade in Philadelphia?

Instead, after Eagles linebacker T.J. Edwards brought Mahomes down awkwardly on the Chiefs’ final possession of the first half, he soldiered on. Against what might have been the NFL’s most complete team, while down by a historically significant 10 points at the break, Mahomes somehow kept going.

This was his moment, and not even the stacked Eagles could stop him.

The Chiefs had four possessions in the second half of Super Bowl 57. They didn’t punt, scored three touchdowns, and, in the final moments, notched the game-winning field goal on the last drive. Mahomes was at the heart of their 24-11 storm back to Super Bowl glory.

Not only did Mahomes have just one second-half incompletion (a throwaway), he threw for 107 yards, ran for another 40, and threw two touchdown passes. This closing-possession 26-yard gem, where it’s apparent his ankle is making him labor around much more than he’d like, was emblematic of his legendary performance.

While seemingly down and out, with the Chiefs chasing unfortunate Super Bowl losing failure, Mahomes was virtually perfect. Because he had to be, and no one wearing green could stop him.

After the glow of victory wears down and everyone has appropriately basked in the championship limelight, the immediate discussion after a team’s Super Bowl win shifts rather quickly. The conversation moves from celebrating the pinnacle of a sport to wondering whether the victor can make the same arduous journey back. It’s almost jarring, but it’s entirely reasonable in a climate where we’re hard-wired to ask, “what’s next?”

With the Chiefs, this sentiment has been made largely irrelevant.

They’ve played in three of the last four Super Bowls. They’ve traveled this path multiple times now and mostly came out unscathed. This general thought process has already taken place with them, as they’ve established their own standard of excellence. While people will understandably credit Andy Reid for his steady hand, offensive coordinator Eric Bienemy for being the guiding partner of a dynamite attack, and GM Brett Veach for retooling the Kansas City roster, the Chiefs have made these challenging treks first and foremost because they have Mahomes. None of this is a coincidence with him involved.

I implore everyone to ask two different questions about Chiefs in the weeks and months ahead, specifically regarding Mahomes. Rather than wonder about their seemingly inevitable chances of returning to February’s main event, ask:

  1. If Mahomes can win a title and notch three playoff wins with an injured ankle, can anyone be expected to topple Kansas City in the 2020s?
  2. Can Mahomes, who won’t even turn 28 until this September, actually challenge Tom Brady’s Super Bowl glory?

To answer the first question right now, I know the AFC is stacked and has plenty of other elite quarterbacks, but it’s hard for me to envision any of Mahomes’ peers pulling off his Herculean task of the last five weeks. He took it to another level.

To clarify the second question: Brady’s extended longevity at the highest level of football is unprecedented. It should be insurmountable for even the most ambitious soul around. The key word there is should. What Mahomes achieved to capture his second career Super Bowl title is so special I suddenly wouldn’t be shocked if he’s at least eventually putting himself in the conversation alongside Brady’s accolades.

Patrick Mahomes is accustomed to achieving the unthinkable. After winning Super Bowl 57 with an injured ankle, who’s to say he doesn’t have plenty of mind-boggling tricks left up his sleeve?

Welcome to the Mahomes Era of the NFL.

You should probably get comfortable and buckle up. It might be a while.

NFL fans had their hearts melted by Travis and Jason Kelce’s brotherly love after the Super Bowl

It doesn’t matter who won or lost when it’s your beloved brother.

For almost two weeks, we heard so much about the “Kelce Bowl,” with brothers Travis and Jason Kelce being forced to square off in Super Bowl 57. We saw their parents — Donna and Ed Kelce — making clear who they were rooting for and explaining how they had already won no matter the game’s outcome.

With Super Bow 57 officially in the books, along with a second Kansas City Chiefs’ title in the last four years, the postgame had abundant opportunities for the two brothers. Would the winner playfully taunt the loser? Would they share an emotional hug after such a battle?

Let’s be honest: the latter was always going to be true:

Look at Jason’s smile at Travis. His Philadelphia Eagles just lost the Super Bowl, but he’s clearly still happy for his brother’s success. If that doesn’t scream love, then I don’t know what possibly could.

Patrick Mahomes and his father shared an emotional hug after the Chiefs QB won the Super Bowl

What a special moment for the Mahomes family.

Patrick Mahomes is building quite a luminous NFL career.

After his Kansas City Chiefs dispatched the Philadelphia Eagles 38-35 in Super Bowl 57, with an injured Mahomes capturing his second career Super Bowl MVP Award, he could’ve celebrated with any number of people. But once the initial madness settled and the confetti stopped falling, the superstar found a familiar face: Patrick Mahomes Sr.

Given the ensuing long hug the two shared, you could tell this was a special moment for father and son after the latter was victorious America’s biggest sporting event for the second time.

And really: does it get any better than that?

That’s just special. When a family can celebrate such a tremendous accomplishment together, you’re instantly reminded of what comes first in life’s most significant moments.

Something tells me this might not be the last emotional hug between Mahomes and his after a Super Bowl.

Roger Goodell’s quote that officiating has ‘never been better’ backfired after an awful Super Bowl holding call

NFL officiating has never been better, eh?

Days before Super Bowl 57, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell stated — with absolute certainty — that the league doesn’t have an officiating problem.

Specifically, that the officiating has never been better in the NFL.

Funny Goodell said that, just days before an all-timer of a Super Bowl between the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles was decided on a ticky-tacky holding call. Below the two-minute warning, James Bradberry got tagged for holding that turned an incomplete Chiefs’ third down in the red zone to a first down, effectively ending the game.

The Chiefs then kicked the game-winning 38-35 field goal to ice the game and the Super Bowl victory.

If this is the NFL’s officiating at its best, I’d truly hate to see it at its worst.

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NFL fans totally loved Kevin Burkhardt and Greg Olsen’s announcing during Super Bowl 57

Burkhardt and Olsen were lights out during their first Super Bowl.

With an instant classic Super Bowl in the books, we’re likely going to look back on the Kansas City Chiefs’ 38-35 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles fondly. (So will Travis Kelce.)

Calling the game on FOX were Kevin Burkhardt and Greg Olsen as the play-by-play and color commentator, respectively. It was the announcing duo’s first time calling the big game, and judging by the moment — they were absolutely terrific in the booth. Burkhardt built suspense well on big plays, while Olsen offered insightful analysis in between.

In reality, it was nothing different from any of the duo’s usual called games. As the saying goes: if it isn’t broken, don’t fix it.

NFL fans really appreciated Burkhardt and Olsen’s announcing during Super Bowl 57.

Patrick Mahomes wins 2023 Super Bowl MVP after battling through ankle injury

What bad ankle?

Patrick Mahomes will be taking home two trophies on Sunday.

After Kansas City defeated Philadelphia Eagles, 38-35, Mahomes was named MVP of Super Bowl 57 and it wasn’t hard to understand why.

The quarterback battled through an ankle injury and still finished with 182 yards passing, three touchdowns and 44 yards rushing while leading his team back from a 10-point halftime deficit.

Mahomes was the odds-on favorite to win MVP at +130 with Jalen Hurts right behind him at +150. Travis Kelce (+1100) and AJ Brown (+1600) had the next best odds, respectively.

Mahomes also broke a streak of eight straight NFL regular season MVPs who went on to lose the Super Bowl.

Los Angeles Rams wideout Cooper Kupp won the award last year after quarterbacks won the previous two MVPs. No other position has won MVP since linebacker Von Miller was named Super Bowl 50 MVP in 2016.

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