WATCH: Crowd roars at Power & Light District after Chiefs’ touchdown to win Super Bowl LVIII

Fans in Kansas City’s Power & Light District erupted when Mecole Hardman scored the touchdown that won the #Chiefs Super Bowl LVIII.

Kansas City Chiefs fans at the Power & Light district erupted in cheers last night when wide receiver Mecole Hardman scored his game-winning touchdown in Super Bowl LVIII against the San Francisco 49ers.

Check out the amazing video of the crowd’s response to Hardman’s touchdown below to see just how excited Chiefs Kingdom was to earn its third championship of the Patrick Mahomes era:

Moments like this create memories for a lifetime, and while the Super Bowl may not have been played in Kansas City last night, the sea of red watching the game downtown made for an exceptional atmosphere to watch the Chiefs win their latest title.

The crowd’s reaction downtown should tell outside observers everything they need to know about what this team means to its fans.

Expect more raucous moments from the Kansas City faithful this week when the Chiefs participate in their Super Bowl parade downtown, and watch for more reactions to the team’s latest accomplishment to surface in the coming days.

WATCH: Chiefs HC Andy Reid breaks down play that won Super Bowl LVIII

Watch #Chiefs head coach Andy Reid break down the play called “Tom and Jerry” that won Kansas City Super Bowl LVIII.

The Kansas City Chiefs needed one final dagger to put away the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl LVIII, and Andy Reid knew exactly which play he had to call.

On the 49ers’ three-yard line, Reid decided to have Patrick Mahomes target veteran receiver Mecole Hardman on a flat route in the right side of the end zone. When Mahomes’ aim on the pass was true, Kansas City cemented its place as back-to-back Super Bowl champions, and the NFL’s newest dynasty.

Reid broke down the play he and his players nicknamed “Tom and Jerry Right” after the game. Take a look at his explanation behind his call below:

This play is sure to join the iconic “65 Toss Power Trap” and “Jet Chip Wasp” was the newest addition to Kansas City football lore after the Super Bowl win, and won’t soon be forgotten by fans who witnessed it bring the Chiefs their third championship of the Patrick Mahomes era.

The Chiefs keep winning Super Bowls with a play taken from the Jaguars

The Chiefs keep scoring Super Bowl touchdowns with “Corn Dog,” a play they took straight out of the Jaguars’ playbook.

For the second year in a row and the third time in five seasons, the Kansas City Chiefs are Super Bowl champions. On Sunday, the Chiefs beat the San Francisco 49ers by scoring a walk-off touchdown in overtime.

If the 3-yard pass to Mecole Hardman that ended the game looked a little familiar, it’s because it was essentially the same play-call that resulted in two Chiefs touchdowns against the Philadelphia Eagles last year in Super Bowl LVII.

“Believe it or not, we had ‘Corn Dog’ last year and that was ‘Corn Dog’ [this year],” Chiefs coach Andy Reid told ESPN’s Booger McFarland after the game. “This was ‘Corn Dog’ with a little mustard and ketchup.”

So what’s “Corn Dog”? Well, it’s a play the Chiefs snagged straight from the Jacksonville Jaguars’ playbook.

Shortly after Kansas City beat Philadelphia last year, The Athletic’s Rustin Dodd was told by then-Chiefs quarterback Chad Henne that offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy showed the team a play from the Jaguars’ October 2022 game against the Eagles.

On Saturday night, Bieniemy had put a play up on the screen for everyone on the Chiefs’ offense to see. It came from the Eagles’ game against the Jaguars earlier this season, and it featured Jacksonville receiver Jamal Agnew faking as if he were going in motion before stopping, reversing course and getting open for a touchdown.

“(Bieniemy) put it on tape and said: ‘Hey, like, if they do this, this guy is wide open. It’s man (coverage),'” Henne said. “They’re just trying to protect themselves from the jet sweep and trying to bubble over the top and get an extra player (on the other side of the field). But we faked the jet twice, and they didn’t figure it out.”

Here’s what that play looked like in action when the Jaguars used it:

And here it is all three times the Chiefs have used it for Super Bowl touchdowns:

Jaguars head coach Doug Pederson began his NFL coaching career as an assistant on Reid’s staff in Philadelphia and eventually worked his way up to quarterbacks coach. He then followed Reid to Kansas City and served as the Chiefs’ offensive coordinator for three seasons.

While it’s now been eight years since they’ve been on the same staff, it seems Pederson’s offensive designs are still helping Reid find ways to get his team into the end zone.

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What we learned about 49ers QB Brock Purdy in Super Bowl LVIII

Brock Purdy wasn’t perfect in the Super Bowl, but he was excellent in the biggest spots. At least for now it looks like the #49ers long-term answer at quarterback.

It’s hard to take away a lot of good from the 49ers’ 25-22 overtime loss to the Chiefs in Super Bowl LVIII. However, quarterback Brock Purdy’s performance gives some hope that San Francisco has a signal caller it can win a Super Bowl with.

Purdy finished Sunday’s game 23-of-38 for 255 yards and one touchdown with no turnovers. It was perhaps his cleanest game of the playoffs.

More important than that though was how Purdy and the 49ers offense adjusted throughout the game. He went 10-of-15 for 123 yards in the first half, helping San Francisco build a 10-3 lead.

Then things got sideways in the third quarter as a stingy Chiefs defense tightened the clamps after halftime. In that third quarter Kansas City loaded the box and forced the 49ers into an uncomfortable spot where they couldn’t lean on their run game.

Purdy in that third quarter was just 4-of-10 for 25 yards, with one of his completions accounting for 17 of the yards.

This is ultimately where an improvement from him will come into play. San Francisco can’t be in a spot where a team taking away the run completely stagnates their offense. Purdy making one or two more individually great plays to help loosen up the Chiefs’ defense might have been the difference in a lopsided third quarter that saw the Chiefs go from down 10-3 to up 13-10.

The reason there’s optimism that Purdy can grow into that type of player is how he responded in the fourth quarter and overtime.

After a dismal third quarter, Purdy bounced back by completing 5-of-7 throws in the fourth quarter for 57 yards and a touchdown. His 10-yard TD pass to wide receiver Jauan Jennings put San Francisco ahead 16-13 with 11:22 left. After Kansas City tied it at 16, Purdy led a drive that got the 49ers into field goal range and allowed them to take a 19-16 lead with 1:57 to go.

Then in overtime Purdy completed 4-of-6 tosses for 50 yards while getting the 49ers into field goal range again to take a 22-19 lead that would ultimately not hold up to Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs.

So there are two sides to this coin.

There’s the short-term response that Purdy wasn’t good enough to make the plays to keep up with Mahomes. The 49ers needed touchdowns and they got field goals. They needed to not get shut out in the third quarter and they needed more from their QB to get do that. That’s all true and anyone who wants to lay some blame on Purdy for that is justified in doing so.

But then there’s the long-term view where Purdy, in his first year as a full-time starter and second year as an NFL QB, coming off of major elbow surgery that cost him his entire offseason, went 9-of-13 for 107 yards and a touchdown in the fourth quarter and overtime of his first Super Bowl. That gives plenty of optimism that there’s more growth ahead for the 49ers’ QB.

Since Purdy was the final pick in the 2022 draft and has defied all logic since he became San Francisco’s starter in Week 13 last season, there’s been some people waiting for the other shoe to drop. There’s been a wait for him to slip up and be exposed as a bad quarterback winning via smoke and mirrors.

That wasn’t the case in the biggest game of his life. He had one rough quarter and figured out a way to move the ball in the game’s highest-pressure moments. He wasn’t perfect. Surely there are plays and throws he wants back. But there were plenty of signs Sunday to suggest that there’s more growth ahead for Purdy and that this Super Bowl trip wasn’t the result of some magic spell that let an inept QB participate on  the NFL’s biggest stage.

Perhaps that growth never comes and the 49ers in a couple years find themselves in the hunt for a QB once again. That will all play out in time though. Right now, immediately following Super Bowl LVIII, it appears the 49ers have a long-term answer at quarterback.

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Why 49ers players not knowing playoff OT rules does and doesn’t matter

49ers players didn’t know the new playoff OT rules. Here’s why that does and doesn’t matter:

Super Bowl LVIII was a rarity, becoming only the second Super Bowl to ever go to overtime. It was also the first playoff game to go to OT since the NFL altered the rules for the extra time. Both teams under the new rules get a possession regardless of how the first possession goes. The stadium scoreboard explained the new rules for the fans, but it turns out the 49ers players needed the explainer too.

While the lack of knowledge of the OT rules is certainly a preparatory oversight, it didn’t ultimately affect the outcome of Sunday’s game.

Defensive lineman Arik Armstead after the game told reporters he was unaware of the new rules.

“I didn’t even know about the new playoff overtime rule, so it was a surprise to me,” Armstead said via ESPN. “I didn’t even really know what was going on in terms of that.”

Fullback Kyle Juszczyk was also unaware.

“You know what? I didn’t even realize the playoff rules were different in overtime,” Juszczyk said. “I assume you just want the ball to score a touchdown and win.”

There’s an obvious, glaring problem with this.

The NFL changed its rules for the most important games of the year and the 49ers as an organization didn’t take the time to go over it with its players. They didn’t discuss the strategy or ensure the players knew what was at stake with each OT possession.

That is not good and displays a lack of attention to detail that may serve as at least a partial explanation for head coach Kyle Shanahan’s continued shortcomings in the postseason, particularly when juxtaposed against what Chiefs head coach Andy Reid said about his team’s preparation for the rules.

“We’ve talked about it all year,” Reid said. “We talked about it in training camp about how the rules were different in regular season versus the playoffs. Every week of the playoffs we talked about the overtime rule.”

However, lack of awareness of the rule isn’t the reason the 49ers came up short in Sunday’s OT loss. They got the ball first and tried going down to score a touchdown. They came up short and settled for a field goal. Then they needed a stop and didn’t get one. It’s pretty cut and dry.

It would be a different story had Shanahan not known the rules. Had he taken the ball first because he thought he could win the game with a TD, there would be a major problem for San Francisco.

After the game Shanahan explained though that the club deemed it prudent to receive in OT in the event there was a third possession. That would set the 49ers up to win with a field goal.

The strategy for that can be debated, but there’s ultimately no good answer. In overtime, no matter what the rules were, the team needed a score and a stop. Even under the most recent old OT rules their field goal on the first possession wouldn’t have been enough to win it and they’d still have needed to keep the Chiefs out of the end zone.

Moving forward the 49ers should probably dedicate at least a little bit of offseason time to ensuring players know the rule changes. The players not knowing the playoff OT rules isn’t great from a big picture standpoint, but it’s hardly the reason they fell short in OT against Kansas City in the Super Bowl.

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Marshawn Lynch had a special message for 49ers fans at the Super Bowl

Easily one of the most beloved Seattle sports icons is former Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch.

Easily one of the most beloved Seattle sports icons is former Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch. Known for his punishing running style, Lynch went from not exactly being a talkative player, to one of the most unique personalities in all of American pop culture. Every so often Lynch pops up on social media to remind everyone that he is a truly one-of-one kind of man.

This brings us to Super Bowl LVIII in Sin City, where Lynch gave a reminder to the 12th Man about his loyalty to Seattle. With the San Francisco 49ers in yet another Super Bowl, Sunday may not have been the easiest game to stomach for the 12’s, who were desperate to avoid the 49ers from winning it all. Fortunately for them, Lynch was in town to give a special message to San Francisco fans who showed up for the big game.

Disclaimer: Lynch’s message was NSFW. It can be viewed in the tweet below, but watch with caution.

Thankfully, the Kansas City Chiefs made sure a sixth Lombardi would not be making its way to the Bay Area. The 49ers squandered an opportunity to end their now-30-year championship drought when they lost 25-22 in overtime.

The 12th Man may not have much to say to the 49ers when it comes to head to head matchups, as San Francisco has won the previous five meetings. But sometimes in sports, rooting for your rival’s downfall can be a decent consolation prize. Having this video from Marshawn Lynch will surely bring a chuckle around the Pacific Northwest today.

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From @ToddBrock24f7: The TD pass thrown Sunday by Juaun Jennings made him the newest member of an exclusive club started by Robert Newhouse in 1978.

Apart from the satin jacket Post Malone was sporting from the luxury suites at Allegiant Stadium, Super Bowl LVIII was awfully thin for Cowboys fans hoping their team might catch some stray shout-outs.

But the game’s first touchdown (and the only touchdown until late in the third quarter) did dig up an all-but-forgotten asterisk that recalled one of the most memorable plays in the history of America’s Team… that was also made on the biggest stage of them all… and also by a rather unlikely character.

After a scoreless first quarter and toward the end of a mostly dull second frame that featured a long field goal as the lone highlight, the 49ers found themselves knocking on the door of the red zone. On 2nd-and-10, quarterback Brock Purdy turned and ripped a lateral dart to wide receiver Juaun Jennings, who had retreated nearly 10 full yards to collect the pass. Jennings used that cushion- and just enough blocking from his teammates- to lob the ball back across the field to running back Christian McCaffrey, who streaked 27 yards into the end zone.

The pass from Jennings was his first attempt as a pro. His last throw came in 2016 while at the University of Tennessee, a 4-yard connection to Joshua Dobbs versus Texas A&M.

CBS play-by-play man Jim Nantz pointed out of Jennings’s rainbow, “It felt like it took forever to get there.” Sidekick Tony Romo added, “It was scary.”

Unexpected, too, in the moment. But the Super Bowl, especially in recent years, has actually become the testing ground for wild and wacky play calls- especially, it seems, for random players chucking the rock around for scores.

The play marked the third time a non-quarterback has tossed a touchdown pass in the past seven Super Bowls and just the sixth time it’s ever happened in the big game.

The man who founded that exclusive club? None other than Cowboys fullback Robert Newhouse. In January of 1978, his 29-yard touchdown throw to wide receiver Golden Richards served as the dagger to seal a championship victory win over Denver and made Newhouse the first non-quarterback to ever throw for a touchdown in a Super Bowl.

Newhouse was perhaps the last man the Broncos would have thought of as a deep passing threat. Already a six-year veteran when that Super Bowl XII contest in New Orleans kicked off, the 5-foot-10-inch bruiser with the famed 44-inch thighs had started his NFL career getting minimal work behind ballcarriers Calvin Hill and Walt Garrison. He put together a 930-yard rushing season in 1975 but then saw his touches decrease once Tony Dorsett joined the team in 1977.

As for letting him put the ball in the air, Dallas had tried it just twice before. Over the first three weeks of the 1975 season, Newhouse went 1-for-2 passing. And although one of those attempts did go for a 46-yard touchdown to Drew Pearson, the Cowboys didn’t try a halfback pass again for their next 45 games (including playoffs).

Some of Newhouse’s teammates didn’t believe head coach Tom Landry should go back to it at all, based on how the play had looked in practice leading up to Super Bowl XII.

For starters, the play was designed to be run to Newhouse’s right, making a more natural throw for the right-handed back.

“We ran it to his right 10 times, which is a lot easier, and he went 0-for-10,” remembered Cowboys exec Gil Brandt. “He threw the ball wide, short, underthrown like you couldn’t imagine, sideways, it was a disaster. There was no way Tom was calling that play, never mind to his left.”

But Landry did call the play, with just over seven minutes remaining in the game. The Cowboys had just recovered a Broncos fumble at the Denver 29. With the score 20-10, one more touchdown would almost assuredly put the game out of reach. And Landry called Newhouse’s number.

“When Tom called the play, I said, ‘I can’t believe he called this play,'” Newhouse once stated. “I was nervous about throwing the ball. In practice the ball had been wobbling, but Danny [White, Cowboys backup quarterback] told me to get my hip around it. I kept thinking about that when I got the ball.”

Newhouse was so unprepared to pass that he had previously covered his hands in Stickum. Dorsett had gone down with a knee injury earlier, leaving Newhouse to take over in the backfield, and he wanted to be sure he didn’t fumble.

But with a halfback-option play coming, the now-banned gluelike goo was going to be a problem.

“I was shocked. I panicked,” Newhouse would say later. “I’ve never eaten so much Stickum in my life. I started wiping it off my pants and started licking my fingers.”

Once in the huddle, Newhouse could be seen wiping his hands on teammates’ towels and even loosening his arm and cracking his knuckles in preparation for his big pass.

“We were working on that play for two weeks, and ‘House didn’t throw a spiral once,” safety Charlie Waters said. “I’m honestly not sure I ever saw him throw a spiral before that pass in the Super Bowl. He threw wounded ducks. But he was a gamer, an absolute gamer.”

Quarterback Roger Staubach took the snap and immediately pitched it to Newhouse, who took a long backward angle on his run to the left side. He had good blocking- perhaps because half the Broncos defense had also seen him prepping to throw while in the huddle and had backtracked into coverage- and floated a high, arcing, even “scary” bomb to Richards.

Denver cornerback Steve Foley was actually in good position downfield, but Newhouse’s pass was perfect. Richards snatched the ball away from Foley’s outstretched hands, and the Cowboys’ second world title was all but secured.

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Newhouse would play another six seasons- all in Dallas- but he would never attempt another pass in the NFL.

The first non-quarterback to throw a touchdown pass in a Super Bowl was also the first former Cowboys player to be brought back to the organization by Jerry Jones after he purchased the team in 1989. A universally-loved personality, he worked for several years in the team’s player relations department. Robert Newhouse passed away of heart disease in 2014 at the age of 64.

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Former SEC stars shine during Super Bowl LVIII

Jennings, Bolton among former SEC players who shined in Super Bowl LVIII

On Sunday night, the Kansas City Chiefs defeated the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl LVIII, 25-22.

In a game that went to overtime as well, numerous former SEC players took the field Sunday night on football’s biggest stage, with some of those names also among the biggest takeaways from the game itself.

One of the biggest of that group was former Tennessee wide receiver Jauan Jennings, who had four receptions for 42 yards and a touchdown. Jennings also made an impact in the passing game, completing his lone pass for a 21-yard touchdown to Christian McCaffrey.

In addition to Jennings, former South Carolina wideout Deebo Samuel made an impact having three receptions for 33 yards, as well as rushing for eight yards on three attempts, while former Georgia receiver Chris Conley also had a catch for the 49ers with two tackles. Defensively, former South Carolina defensive lineman Javon Kinlaw had four tackles for San Francisco, while Dre Greenlaw (Arkansas) had three tackles and Charlie Woerner (Georgia) had one.

For the Chiefs, former Missouri linebacker Nick Bolton had a game-high 13 tackles to lead Kansas City’s defense, along with one TFL and two QB hits. Former Kentucky safety Mike Edwards also had a big game, amassing seven tackles and one PD.

Mecole Hardman, a former Georgia wide receiver, also had three receptions for 57 yards and a touchdown, while a few others also made an impact on defense. A pair of former Mississippi State defenders, Willie Gay and Chris Jones, each had four tackles (Jones also had two QB hits), while Malik Herring (Georgia) had one tackle.

Former Florida punter Tommy Townsend also had a big day on special teams by averaging 50.8 yards per punt, as well as placing two punts inside the 20-yard line.

A muffed punt changed Super Bowl LVIII; it also changed the 2005 Orange Bowl for USC

A muffed punt changed a title game, you say? It happened for USC and Oklahoma 19 years before Super Bowl LVIII.

So, a muffed punt changed the course of a championship football game. That’s what happened in Super Bowl LVIII on Sunday in Las Vegas. The Kansas City Chiefs were outplayed by the San Francisco 49ers for the first two and a half quarters of the big game. Then the Niners muffed a punt in their own territory. The Chiefs recovered and immediately scored a go-ahead touchdown. Older USC fans can relate to having a championship game turn on a special teams mistake, and more specifically, a muffed punt.

If you’re a USC fan and you’re under 25 years of age, you might not remember the 2005 Orange Bowl in which USC won the national championship with a beatdown of Oklahoma.

Special teams, special teams, special teams. Let’s relive a USC national championship memory and connect it to both the Super Bowl and the Kansas City Chiefs:

Anatomy of a Play: How the Chiefs won Super Bowl LVIII with ‘Tom and Jerry’

“Corn Dog” or “Tom and Jerry?” Whatever you want to call it, it’s the play that won the Chiefs two straight Super Bowls, and here’s how it worked.

We all remember “Corn Dog” — the reverse motion play the Kansas City Chiefs used to score two touchdowns against the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LVII. The Chiefs love to use that motion, because it tells Patrick Mahomes everything he needs to know about what red zone defense he’s going to see, what the coverage is, and how he can beat it.

There was this five-yard touchdown pass to Kadarius Toney with 12:08 left in the game, and the Chiefs down, 27-20. The Eagles were in Cover-1… until they weren’t.

Then, with 9:26 left in the game, it was time for Skyy Moore to hit the Eagles’ Cover-0 with the same basic concept to the left side.

“Corn Dog” won the Chiefs one Super Bowl, and it was back — with a new name — at the best possible time for Andy Reid and his team in Super Bowl LVIII.

With six seconds left in overtime, Kansas City had the ball at the San Francisco 49ers’ three-yard line, down 22-19. One play later, that same return or zipper motion thing placed another Lombardi Trophy in the Chiefs’ facility. This time, it was to the right again, and Mecole Hardman as the target. Hardman was wide open on the return, with defensive back Logan Ryan wondering what just happened.

Same play, new name, per Peter King of NBC Sports.

So here came Mecole Hardman—whose KC career ended when he wasn’t re-signed last year, and whose Jets career ended when he was traded back to Kansas City for a bag of footballs in October. Reid called the play into Mahomes’ helmet and Mahomes said to the huddle: “Tiger 12, Tom & Jerry right, Gun trips, right bunch, F shuttle.” That last part was the Corn Dog motion from last Super Bowl—speed in, speed out. Hardman ran the precise jet motion, right to left, into the formation, and then quickly turned around to catch the game-winner. This year, instead of colling the play Corn Dog, Reid called it Tom and Jerry. (Reasons unknown and unexplained.) “We built Corn Dog saying, ‘Well for sure they’ll cover Corn Dog because we called it twice. They’ve seen it.’” Nope. Hardman wasn’t wide open, but he was open. Really open. And KC had its third Super Bowl in five years.

After the game, Mahomes explained the logistics of the name change.

“I think it started because Clyde [Edwards-Helaire] was the first one to run it and Trav [Kelce] was the other guy part of it, so it was like Tom and Jerry — you know, that that whole thing, but that’s the concept of the play. And then the motion was the exact same motion that we ran in the Super Bowl last year, and they actually covered it pretty well at first. Then I went back to them, and that’s a little risky always. So I was like, ‘Hey, let me make sure it’s open’. But obviously coach Reid knows when to call those plays at the right time.”

Yes, Coach Reid does. And for the second straight season, “Corn Dog,” or “Tom and Jerry,” or whatever you want to call it — we’re sure the Eagles and 49ers have some NSFW names for it — was the go-to play to help secure the NFL’s next dynasty.