A mic’d-up Patrick Mahomes was already talking about a Chiefs’ three-peat while celebrating on the field

Patrick Mahomes started talking about a Chiefs’ three-peat before he even left the field!

Patrick Mahomes’ Kansas City Chiefs are already one of the greatest dynasties in NFL history. They won’t, but they could theoretically stop playing winning football and still be remembered for their unprecedented dominance at the top of the NFL.

Based on a new video, Mahomes and the Chiefs aren’t content. At all.

In a new capture from Inside the NFL, a mic’d-up Mahomes is recorded already talking about the Chiefs completing a vaunted “three-peat” while still standing on the Super Bowl 58 celebration stage in Las Vegas. (Note: Our Christian D’Andrea explained what they have to do in the coming months to achieve that.) The man literally just won his third-ever championship and should, conceivably, be basking in the glow of his latest success.

Instead, Mahomes is talking about winning three straight before he even gets his shoulder pads. Maybe that’s why he’s so great:

No NFL team has ever won three straight Super Bowls. Not the Tom Brady-Bill Belichick New England Patriots. Not the Joe Montana-Bill Walsh San Francisco 49ers. And not the Chuck Noll Pittsburgh Steelers.

If Mahomes gets his wish, the Chiefs may genuinely stand alone with unprecedented pro football glory.

Former Bills kicker Steve Christie had Super Bowl record broken… twice

Boooooooooooooo

Poor 49ers. They lost 25-22 in over to the Chiefs in Super Bowl 58.

In western New York, most of the sad tears were probably shed for Steve Christie.

The former Bills kicker previously held the NFL’s record for the longest kick in Super Bowl history. That one was from 54 yards.

Unfortunately, that 31-year record was not only snapped, but it was twice in Las Vegas. First, Niners rookie Jake Moody took the honor for about an hour. He converted from 55 yards.

Later on in the Super Bowl, the Chiefs’ Harrison Butker decided 57 yards sounds good too. He converted.

At least Christie’s record stuck around for a little longer than Moody’s…

All three attempts can be found below:

NFL news: Shooting near Chiefs’ Super Bowl parade sees 8-10 injured

Scary situation in KC:

Two people have been detained following an active shooter situation near the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl parade on Wednesday in which 8-10 people were injured, police have told multiple sources.

The incident happened at Union Station near the parade that started at 11:00 a.m.

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Notre Dame’s Drue Tranquill at Super Bowl (Photos)

Congrats to Drue!

Notre Dame was represented on both sides of Super Bowl 58 with linebacker Drue Tranquill on the Kansas City Chiefs and offensive guard Aaron Banks on the San Francisco 49ers.

The classic game went to overtime where the Chiefs won on a walk-off touchdown pass to cap a thriller which wound up being their third Super Bowl title in five seasons.

Tranquill recorded a pair of tackles in the Chiefs victory and became the 46th former Notre Dame player to win a Super Bowl as a player all-time.

Check out the best photos of Tranquill from his time at Super Bowl 58 below:

NFL fans roast Kyle Shanahan for declaring ‘we wanted the ball third’ for Super Bowl overtime

This Kyle Shanahan quote is getting rightfully roasted.

Oh no. Oh nooooo. Kyle Shanahan, what are you doing?

The San Francisco 49ers head coach has addressed why he wanted his team to start overtime in the Super Bowl with the ball — his idea was, if they scored and the Kansas City Chiefs matched, the Niners would get the football in a sudden-death situation.

Now, that’s all fine and good in theory (if your team knows the new-ish playoff overtime rules, and some of his players admitted they didn’t). But the team that possess the ball second has some advantage — they know if they need a field goal to tie it back up or a touchdown to win. It’s four-down territory all the way, too, which means play calls can be more diverse.

It’s one quote in particular that has Shanahan being roasted after the Super Bowl: “We wanted the ball third.”

Here’s a sampling:

Bills legend Bruce Smith (& Terrell Owens) were in Super Bowl 58 commercial

#Bills legend Bruce Smith, Terrell Owens were in a Super Bowl 58 commercial (video):

Did you catch a glimpse of Bruce Smith or Terrell Owens during Super Bowl 58?

They appeared side-by-side in a commercial for M&M’s candy.

Titled “Almost Champions Ring of Comfort,” the advertisement pokes fun at their inability to win a Super Bowl during their careers. But this isn’t some kind of Bills bashing.

In addition, Miami Dolphins legend Dan Marino and even Hollywood actress Scarlett Johansson make appearances.

On USA TODAY’s Ad Meter rankings, the commercial earned a 5.39 overall score from voters.

Check out the ad below:

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3 things the 49ers must do in 2024 to break through for a Super Bowl win

Reinforcements are needed on both sides of the trenches; who should the Niners target?

2023 ended like every San Francisco 49ers playoff run since 1994 has; with heartbreak. Kyle Shanahan earned the chance to avenge his Super Bowl 54 loss against the Kansas City Chiefs. Just like four years earlier, he saw an early lead dissipate into a cloud of red-and-orange confetti.

That was a brutal finish, but it’s not the end of the road for the Niners. San Francisco will bring back most of the foundation that pushed it to Super Bowl 58, from Brock Purdy and Christian McCaffrey to Nick Bosa and Charvarius Ward. While teams like the Detroit Lions, Dallas Cowboys and Los Angeles Rams may be coming up in their rear view, the rest of the NFC remains a spilled bag of Superballs, bouncing off each other with few predictable patterns.

That leaves a clear path back to prominence. But the 49ers will have to address these three problems first.

Zulgad: Vikings shouldn’t be scared of losing Kirk Cousins, even if they have to turn to bridge quarterback

Judd Zulgad explains why the Minnesota Vikings shouldn’t be scared to lose Kirk Cousins because of a bridge quarterback like Sam Darnold.

The Minnesota Vikings have avoided quarterback tumult since signing Kirk Cousins as a free agent in March 2018. This isn’t to say Cousins hasn’t been a polarizing figure among fans, but there was no uncertainty about who would be starting at quarterback for the Vikings until Cousins suffered an Achilles injury in late October.

It appears that stability is about to come to an end.

The NFL season concluded on Sunday with the Kansas City Chiefs’ overtime win against San Francisco in the Super Bowl, and that means the offseason frenzy is about to begin. The new league year will begin a month from Tuesday, and Cousins is expected to be one of the most pursued free agents on the market.

The Vikings reportedly are interested in bringing back Cousins, but it seems they want it to be on their terms. Last March, the two sides couldn’t come to an agreement on an extension, in part because the Vikings reportedly wanted a shorter-term deal than what the Cousins camp was pursuing. It was agreed talks would be shelved until the offseason. But the closer Cousins gets to free agency, the more likely it becomes that a guy who turns 36 in August is going to see what the market has to offer.

The hope has to be that the Vikings have spent the past 11 months preparing for life after Cousins. The 2023 season helped his cause in part because his absence resulted in the Vikings playing three backups (Josh Dobbs, Jaren Hall and Nick Mullens) who couldn’t take hold of the job. But the Vikings’ 3-6 record also put on display many other shortcomings that need fixing.

Super Bowl week is the perfect place for rumors and rumblings to be bandied about, and Tom Pelissero of NFL Network linked the Vikings to San Francisco backup Sam Darnold.

This resulted in some not-so-favorable reactions. Darnold spent three seasons with the New York Jets after being the No. 3 pick in the 2018 draft. He had a two-year stop in Carolina and was Brock Purdy’s backup with the 49ers this season.

Is Darnold a name that should excite fans? No. What needs to be remembered is that Darnold would be a bridge to a QB the Vikings are likely to draft this April. That could be Michigan’s J.J. McCarthy or Washington’s Michael Penix Jr. The Vikings also could trade into the top of the draft and grab North Carolina’s Drake Maye or LSU’s Jayden Daniels.

Watching the Chiefs and 49ers on Sunday, it became clear just how far the Vikings are from competing at that level in the playoffs. Minnesota general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah needs to improve several areas of his team, especially on defense, and overall the Vikings need far more quality depth than they currently have.

This isn’t the time to run things back, but rather to move on from veterans and hit a reset that will set up the Vikings for the future. Cousins was brought to Minnesota in 2018 because he was considered the final piece of what the Vikings thought was a Super Bowl puzzle. That team was coming off a loss at Philadelphia in the NFC title game and wanted to upgrade from a backup who had a career year, Case Keenum, to a long-term replacement.

Cousins proved to be exactly that — the season-ending Achilles injury marked the first time in his nine years as a starter he missed time because of injury — but he fell well short when it came to being the final piece of a Super Bowl puzzle. The Vikings missed the postseason in 2018 and made only two playoff appearances in Cousins’ six seasons. They won one game.

Cousins deserves the opportunity to get one more big contract in free agency and go to a team that believes the same thing the Vikings did in 2018 — that it is on the verge of hoisting a Lombardi Trophy.

Maybe Cousins will surprise us and decide he likes Minnesota so much that he will stay on a short-term, discount deal that will put him in a position to start for one more season and, just as importantly, serve as a mentor to a guy like McCarthy.

That, however, seems like a long shot, and the Vikings have to know it.

That puts the Vikings in a position to pursue Darnold or Jacoby Brissett or Gardner Minshew and draft the future starter. ESPN’s Dan Graziano reported over the weekend that the New England Patriots may be open to trading the third overall pick and that the Vikings and Falcons were teams to “keep an eye on” as far as potential trade partners.

Graziano also reported that some in the Vikings organization liked the idea of moving up and trying to get Daniels to pair with another LSU alum, wide receiver Justin Jefferson. Of course, if the Vikings get Maye or Daniels, odds are good he will be the Week 1 starter and the bridge quarterback will be there only in case of emergency.

While there is risk in taking this route, the Vikings are in the ideal position to do it. If it backfires, that could cost Adofo-Mensah and Kevin O’Connell their jobs. If the Vikings bring back Cousins at a significant price tag and keep running it back, both the GM and coach are likely to be shown the door sooner rather than later.

Judd Zulgad is co-host of the Purple Daily Podcast and Mackey & Judd podcast at www.skornorth.com.

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3 things the Chiefs must do in 2024 to expand their Super Bowl dynasty

The Chiefs have the tools to make it a three-peat — but there are a few glaring holes they need to patch first.

The Kansas City Chiefs are Super Bowl 58 champions. This doesn’t mean their work is done.

Andy Reid’s team will enter the offseason with a massive target on its back as the rest of the NFL looks to separate a budding dynasty from its throne. The Chiefs will bring back stars like Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce, L’Jarius Sneed and Trent McDuffie for 2024, ensuring their status as favorites in the AFC West. But they can’t afford to rest on that foundation as they journey toward a perpetually shifting horizon.

What comes next for Kansas City as a three-peat looms? There’s one massive free agent who takes priority — and from there, it’s all about maintaining one of the league’s finest-oiled machines.