FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — The Atlanta Falcons’ defensive players talk about Patrick Mahomes like he’s an actor, and the NFL’s leading man is coming to Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Sunday night.
“When the play breaks down and you’ve got it all covered and you’ve done it all right, there’s a second part to the play. There’s a second act,” Falcons linebacker Kaden Elliss said. “Being able to cover up not only the initial play that the great Andy Reid has drawn up falls apart, you’ve got Patrick Mahomes becoming Him.”
“Him” refers to the dominant figure in his environment, and few professional athletes have been more dominant in their environment than Mahomes.
In six seasons as Kansas City’s starting quarterback, he has never finished a season short of the AFC Championship Game. His three Super Bowl titles are tied for third among starting quarterbacks in NFL history, and everyone ahead of him on that list started for at least twice as many seasons as he has. Only Tom Brady and Joe Montana have more playoff wins than Mahomes’ 15, and he’s 29 years old. Since he joined the league in 2017, no quarterback has won more games (91) or won them at a higher rate (78.4 percent). The seven other quarterbacks drafted in 2017 have won 76 games combined.
These numbers go on and on and on, and they’re the reason Atlanta finds itself on a prime-time stage for the second straight week as the Falcons are preparing to host the Chiefs at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on “Sunday Night Football.”
With all due respect to Kirk Cousins and Bijan Robinson and the new-look Falcons, the stage will belong to Mahomes.
“It’s his improv, man,” Falcons safety Richie Grant said. “He can improv every single play, turn something that you think is a no gain into a touchdown.”
Mahomes is so good he even beats the oldest of NFL cliches — that every week has to be treated exactly the same no matter the opponent. Atlanta outside linebacker Matthew Judon faced Mahomes six times as a member of the New England Patriots. Mahomes Week is different, he said.
“There are special players in this league,” Judon said. “When you’ve got a guy like Patrick Mahomes on the schedule, you watch a little more film. You pay closer attention to the details because he’s a three-time champ, and there’s something in the margins to win the game. It’s going to be something in the details. It’s probably going to come down to a few plays.”
GO DEEPER
Falcons revel in their improbable comeback win but must turn the page quickly
The Chiefs (2-0) come into Atlanta as 3.5-point favorites, having won eight straight games dating to last postseason.
“As a competitor, you always want to make a play against one of the best competitors,” Grant said. “I would question you if you don’t have that mindset.”
“It definitely stokes your competitive fire,” Elliss said. “If you take anybody lax in this league, it’ll get you, but when you get to go up a team of this quality, it does stoke your competitive fire a little bit more. I’m excited.”
Falcons coach Raheem Morris compares Mahomes not to an actor but to an extraterrestrial.
“He’s an alien,” Morris said. “He’s smart. He’s unique. He can move around. He can buy time. He can play within the framework of the system. He knows what you’re doing on defense. He’s grown up to the point of seeing everything. He’s seen every trick, every gimmick, every gamut, whatever you want to call it. He’s been able to really go out there and be at the top of his game in just about everything, and he’s just one of the best.”
DOT. @PatrickMahomes | @Chiefs pic.twitter.com/a9lV4txNu3
— NFL (@NFL) September 15, 2024
Atlanta offensive coordinator Zac Robinson was charting draft-eligible quarterbacks as an analyst for Pro Football Focus in 2017. He said Mahomes had all those traits even then.
“Obviously, the ability that he has with his arm to really make any throw at any time was special, and then you just saw the instincts and the vision, and right away you’re saying, ‘There’s really no way that this shouldn’t work out,’ as long as he’s committed to the game, and he loves it,” Robinson said. “Obviously, he’s proven to be a football junkie.”
Sunday night will be the second time the Falcons have faced Mahomes. The first was in December of 2020 when Morris was Atlanta’s interim head coach after the firing of Dan Quinn. The Chiefs won 17-14, but the Falcons caused Mahomes enough problems (55 percent completion percentage, 79.5 passer rating) that other NFL teams briefly hoped they had provided a blueprint for slowing him down.
He’s been to three Super Bowls since then.
GO DEEPER
Kirk Cousins’ stunning game-winning drive shows why the Falcons paid him
Morris got another shot at Mahomes as the defensive coordinator of the Rams in 2022. Again, Mahomes didn’t play great (85.4 passer rating). Again, Mahomes won (26-10). In two matchups against Morris’ defenses, Mahomes’ passer rating and efficiency as measured by EPA per attempt are lower than his career averages (82.4 passer rating versus 103.3 and .04 EPA per attempt versus .26), according to TruMedia.
Those numbers don’t change how Morris talks about Mahomes.
“He’s certainly a problem no matter what,” the coach said, “and he’s one of the best that we’ve seen just in whatever generation you want to talk about.”
Falcons safety Justin Simmons, who spent the first eight years of his career in Denver, also has had some success against Mahomes. He’s intercepted the quarterback five times. No other player has done it more than twice. Like Morris, Simmons is smart enough not to brag about it.
“It’s not those first three seconds of the play, it’s those next four or five seconds that really matter,” Simmons said. “You can’t get frustrated when they make a big play. It’s a next-play mentality. They take a lot of shots and you have a lot of chances to go play the ball. We’ve got to be able to make plays on the football. It’s fun playing that cat-and-mouse game. This is going to be a big one for us.”
(Photo: David Eulitt / Getty Images)
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5779399/2024/09/20/patrick-mahomes-kc-chiefs-atlanta-falcons/