Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Gary Davis's avatar

Stats are great but sometimes context is needed.

Ok. My food is ready. I’ll stop now.🤓😂

Expand full comment
Gary Davis's avatar

I have to respond on the Patrick Mahomes section.

First, 2 questions: 1) Are you basing this opinion completely on analytics/advanced stats? and 2) Did you watch every Chiefs game (in its entirety) last year?

The reasons those are important questions are many but I’ll boil it down. (And I will also give you one point: his defense did carry the team in a lot of their games. Best defense he’s had in his career.) Saying he had two top 40 receivers is a little misleading, though.

If you look purely by the numbers Kelce was still mostly his old self, but nearly a third of his 984 receiving yards (303) were piled up in just two games (Weeks 6 & 7) and he didn’t catch any TDs after Week 11 vs Philly, with only 5 TDs on the season (his average TDs during the Mahomes era is 9.4/season).

Rice started slowly, but got better as the year went on. He didn’t have his first 100+ yard game until Week 12 (11/26) vs the Raiders and before that he only topped 60 yds once- he had 72 vs Denver in Week 6 (10/12). In the 10 games he played before the Raiders game he only averaged 42 yards/game with 4 TDs- not world beating numbers. From Week 12 through the Super Bowl (10 games also), he averaged 78 yards/game with another 4 TDs. By the end of the season and on into the playoffs Patrick and Coach Reid were able to lean on (read trust) him much more.

Now the real reason for the dip in Patrick Mahomes’ numbers: The other receivers. If you watched all the games then you know what he was working with. Guys who couldn’t separate and were rarely open. But more importantly, guys who had a very hard time catching the ball. I’ve been a Chiefs fan since around 1990-91 and I’m not sure I’ve ever seen so many of their receivers struggle so much, at the same time.

Patrick Mahomes in that offense is at his best spreading the ball around to whomever is open. Whatever type of route they run- short to deep. Of course he’ll lean on Kelce (I suspect Kelce is wide open more than any TE in NFL history) and as the season progressed he leaned on Rice, but he’s a great at making the correct read.

When he had the “Legion of Zoom” with Tyreek Hill, Sammy Watkins, Mecole Hardman, and DeMarcus Robinson, he had guys who were great at getting open downfield and mostly caught the passes thrown their way. More importantly, he trusted them.

This group of receivers was not that. Really the biggest downfield threats were Justin Watson and Kelce. Rice was better at short/intermediate routes. I remember him catching a lot of crossers and taking them for extra yards. The other guys weren’t nearly as dependable as they needed to be and Patrick was having a hard time making the offense (especially deep) work. Deep routes were mostly abandoned or not thrown because they had become wasted downs, and this impacted the entire offense and, in turn, Mr. Mahomes stats.

It’s a credit to Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes for adapting on the fly to the personnel they actually had as opposed to what they thought they had before the season started. Not only that, he (Mahomes) adapted his play-style to a boring “take what they’ll give you” type of offense that you know was driving him crazy. I saw the frustration on his face all season long, but he kept at it and look where they ended up.

If you think that the Chiefs QB1 isn’t a big reason (granted, not the entire reason) they were hoisting that SB trophy at the end of the year (and will again soon), you are welcome to your opinion.

I respectfully disagree.

(This took forever to write and I’m hungry. I hope it makes sense.)

Expand full comment
5 more comments...

No posts