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Nzoner's Game Room>Mahomes audibles on 3rd down
O.city 09:25 AM 04-16-2024

On the biggest play of the season, Patrick Mahomes frantically went to an audible — for a play the Chiefs hadn't run all season.

Here's the rest of the story on how a "head-scratching" call helped the Chiefs win Super Bowl 58.

“It was really cool."https://t.co/clZTOiRuXc

— Jesse Newell (@jessenewell) April 16, 2024


Good read. It's behind a paywall I think, I'll try to post the version.
[Reply]
Rausch 02:18 PM 04-16-2024
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
But one thing I notice in real time is that they seldom make bonehead mistakes. Every player always has their head in the game and knows what's going on. I have to conclude that that's something they consider in the draft and free agency process.
Hardman has fairly consistently made really stupid mistakes.
I think for the price he's worth bringing back for a limited role but I no longer think he'll mature beyond making stupid mistakes...
[Reply]
Dunerdr 02:20 PM 04-16-2024
Quickly becoming a fan of this kid. Hope we can extend him.
[Reply]
wazu 02:20 PM 04-16-2024
Originally Posted by Rausch:
Hardman has fairly consistently made really stupid mistakes.
I think for the price he's worth bringing back for a limited role but I no longer think he'll mature beyond making stupid mistakes...
Hardman is basically free because 31 other teams won't have him.
[Reply]
excessive 03:06 PM 04-16-2024
Here's the interview where he talks about the play:



8:02 is the where he answers the question about the audible.
[Reply]
tredadda 03:28 PM 04-16-2024
They also won the SB on a version of corndog. It's wild to think that they have three TD's off essentially the same play in the last two SBs, all of which were critical to the win. And what's even wilder was those three TDs were caught by Toney, Moore, and Hardman.
[Reply]
DJ's left nut 03:30 PM 04-16-2024
Tony, Moore, Hardman and MVS are the 4 Chiefs WRs to catch TDs in the last two SBs (along with one for Kelce).

That's just nuts.
[Reply]
RealSNR 04:33 PM 04-16-2024
Wallcrawler drinks his own pee
[Reply]
WilliamTheIrish 04:34 PM 04-16-2024
Originally Posted by RealSNR:
Wallcrawler drinks his own pee
:-)
[Reply]
Hammock Parties 08:25 PM 04-16-2024
So do we have any idea what they checked out of?
[Reply]
KCFalcon59 08:47 PM 04-16-2024
Originally Posted by O.city:
On the biggest play of the season — and in the final minute of Super Bowl LVIII — Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes made his decision in an instant. With millions watching on television and in a legacy-defining moment, Mahomes was about to change the play-call. And switch to something the Chiefs hadn’t run all year. “It was really cool,” Mahomes said Monday with a smile. The Chiefs might not be back-to-back Super Bowl champs without this audible — or if Mahomes’ teammates weren’t ready for the chaos of the next few seconds. This was third-and-2 at the San Francisco 43-yard line, with 48 seconds left in regulation of Super Bowl LVIII. The Chiefs trailed 19-16, and if they were stopped on this down, they’d have to decide between a potential game-tying 60-yard field-goal attempt or a fourth down on offense with the season on the line. KC had its play-call set. Mahomes lifted his leg to survey the defense, then noticed something in his peripheral vision. The 49ers, who hadn’t blitzed most of the game, had extra defenders on the line of scrimmage. They were about to bring pressure. In short, the Chiefs’ play from the huddle was not going to work. Mahomes still knew he had a check he could go to. The team had discussed using it if he ever saw a particular blitz. The only problem? Mahomes had no in-season evidence — over 21 games — that this play was going to work. “All year long, we never got the look that we wanted,” Mahomes said. “And then all of a sudden you get in the Super Bowl — a third down, in a huge moment in the game — and of course, you get the exact look you’re thinking about.” The Chiefs had practiced this audible in training camp, then maybe twice a month during the regular season, just in case. Coaches also showed a picture of the play in meetings before each game, just as a refresher in case the Chiefs needed to break glass in case of emergency.

Mahomes went for that here. He frantically started flicking his hand and wrist to signal the call to his teammates. The message, in essence: “Don’t run the previous play. Let’s go with this man-to-man killer instead.” via GIPHY Chiefs center Creed Humphrey said something to right guard Trey Smith next to him, then motioned with his arm to make sure he received the message. And after the snap, it became clear: The Chiefs were plenty ready for the unexpected. The screen pass to Jerick McKinnon worked as intended. The Chiefs’ offensive line left the correct defender on the right side unblocked, allowing Mahomes to know exactly where the pressure was coming from. McKinnon also faked a block on that player — the Chiefs had shown cross-protection like this most of the game — before bluffing and running around him to the vacant space that was supposed to be there. Mahomes backpedaled to buy time before lofting the ball to McKinnon, who followed a group of Chiefs blocking receivers for a seven-yard gain and critical first down. On the CBS broadcast, analyst Tony Romo shared his amazement at the timing of the Chiefs’ screen. “What a play-call,” Romo said. “It was almost like they expected (the 49ers) to go against themselves and pressure.” In this case, it was Mahomes who outfoxed the defense, though perhaps the most underrated part is how easily this could’ve gone wrong. And we have an example of that from a few months earlier.

Go back to Week 13 and a Thursday Night Football showdown between Seattle and Dallas. The Seahawks ran essentially the same play as the Chiefs on their fourth-and-2, trying to beat pressure with a screen pass to running back Deejay Dallas. There was one issue: The running back Dallas — unlike McKinnon — was hesitant coming out of the backfield. He eventually got caught up in traffic, and quarterback Geno Smith ran out of time before throwing an incomplete pass. via GIPHY The defender who pressured Smith — Cowboys defensive end Micah Parsons — was the one intentionally left unblocked. That fact led to plenty of second-guessing afterward. The New York Post labeled the sequence a “head-scratching final play ‘design.’” No one could’ve known then, but the same basic scheme would help the Chiefs win the Super Bowl three months later. And even Mahomes reflected on the craziness of the moment afterward. In a sequence shared on the Chiefs’ video series “The Franchise,” Mahomes is walking with wife Brittany on the field after the Super Bowl while talking to the team’s VP of communications, Brad Gee. “I checked to something on the second-to-last drive that we have literally never ran,” Mahomes said. “We ran in it practice and training camp. I checked to it, and it freaking went out the gate.” The third-down conversion led to a game-tying field goal, followed by a Chiefs overtime touchdown in a 25-22 Super Bowl victory. When remembering the play Monday, Mahomes credited teammates and an organization that emphasizes the small details. Ones that matter, Mahomes said, in times you might not expect. “Everybody was prepared and ready for the moment, and that comes with those tedious fundamentals from Day 1,” he said. “We do this stuff to prepare ourselves for the Super Bowl.”

Read more at: https://www.kansascity.com/sports/nf...#storylink=cpy
Football Jesus.
[Reply]
GabyKeepsMeWarm 09:12 PM 04-16-2024
Wow... Between the coaching staff, and Mahomes' uncanny ability to recall the "little things" from practice/training camp, and then relay it to the troops is remarkable. And I don't think it can be stressed enough: DURING THE FINAL MINUTE OF THE SUPER BOWL. As if things aren't chaotic enough, this happened with the team down by three, and a minute left in THE SUPER BOWL. You know the players can barely hear shit on the field with all the crowd noise, plus the adrenaline, the fatigue, all of it... How easy would it be for one guy to miss it, and foul things up? Or the center to freak out and muff the snap?

Pretty next level shit all the way around.
[Reply]
Jewish Rabbi 10:10 PM 04-16-2024
Originally Posted by RealSNR:
Wallcrawler drinks his own pee
KNIBB HIGH FOOTBALL RULES!
[Reply]
Bob Dole 03:46 AM 04-17-2024
Originally Posted by GabyKeepsMeWarm:
Wow... Between the coaching staff, and Mahomes' uncanny ability to recall the "little things" from practice/training camp, and then relay it to the troops is remarkable. And I don't think it can be stressed enough: DURING THE FINAL MINUTE OF THE SUPER BOWL. As if things aren't chaotic enough, this happened with the team down by three, and a minute left in THE SUPER BOWL. You know the players can barely hear shit on the field with all the crowd noise, plus the adrenaline, the fatigue, all of it... How easy would it be for one guy to miss it, and foul things up? Or the center to freak out and muff the snap?

Pretty next level shit all the way around.
Can we please stop it with the FINAL MINUTE shit? If the clock expires, it just goes to a second OT.
[Reply]
BigRedChief 06:31 AM 04-17-2024
Originally Posted by Bob Dole:
Can we please stop it with the FINAL MINUTE shit? If the clock expires, it just goes to a second OT.
they should just get rid of the game clock in overtime. What’s the point of it? You are playing till we have a winner regardless of time.
[Reply]
ThaVirus 07:02 AM 04-17-2024
Originally Posted by Hammock Parties:
how about some vidya

patrick manning

#92 and #48 look pretty confused when Mahomes checks.

That Greenlaw injury really fucked them. Probably can’t be overstated.
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