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While the biggest prize in college hockey clearly is the national championship trophy, in one corner of the sport's landscape, that accolade has a rival: the Beanpot.

The 72nd tournament, which features Boston College, Boston University, Northeastern and Harvard, concludes Monday at TD Garden with BC facing BU in the championship game (7:30 p.m. ET on ESPN+).

Both teams are ranked in the top 10 in the country (BC is No. 1, BU is No. 8 in the most recent polls), but even in years when the event doesn't have national implications of that magnitude, the energy, desire and hatred boils over for the schools and their fans.

This year's final has a different twist, however. Nine of the players -- six from BC, three from BU -- were teammates at the IIHF World Junior Championship, where they won the gold medal for Team USA in January. At least one member of the Eagles or Terriers scored or assisted on all but one of the 37 goals the U.S. scored in the tournament.

Any friendships will be on hold Monday night.

"It's just understanding that you can't have any friends out there," BC freshman James Hagens told the Boston Globe last month. "You might play with them for a while. They might be your best buddies, but you just have to understand it's a hockey game, and you have to go out there and win."

BU's Cole Eiserman expressed similar sentiments. "You battle with those guys, get close to those guys, but I think we're all competitive guys," he told the Globe. "We want to win for our own school."

The teams met in a home-and-home series in January, with BC sweeping by scores of 6-2 and 2-0. But BU will gladly accept those results in exchange for a trophy-lifting win Monday night. The Terriers last won the Beanpot in 2022, while BC's most recent championship was in 2016. Northeastern has won five of the last six tournaments.

While Monday's game will not count in the Hockey East standings, conference races are heating up around the country as the selection of the NCAA tournament field nears.

The NCAA field includes the winners of the six conference tournaments -- Atlantic, Big Ten, CCHA, ECAC, Hockey East and NCHC -- and 10 at-large teams based on the PairWise rankings.

Conference tournament championship games are scheduled for March 22, with the NCAA tournament selections to be announced March 23. Regionals will be held March 27-30, with the Frozen Four on April 10 and 12 in St. Louis. Every NCAA tournament game, including the selection show, will be on ESPN networks and streamed on ESPN+.

Here's a look at where the NCAA field stands, with teams listed in order of the PairWise rankings as of Feb. 9.

Dozens of men's and women's college hockey games, including games from Hockey East and the ECAC plus full coverage of the NCAA tournaments, are available to stream on . Subscribe here.

Frozen Four or bust

The head of the class this season, these teams are odds-on favorites to make it to St. Louis.

No. 1 Boston College

Record: 21-4-1, 13-3-1 Hockey East

Last week's results: Beat Northeastern 8-2; won at New Hampshire 4-2

Key games: Feb. 10 vs. BU (Beanpot championship)

No. 2 Michigan State

Record: 22-5-3, 13-4-3 Big Ten

Last week's results: Lost to Michigan 2-1; beat Michigan 6-1

Key games: Feb. 21-22 vs. Penn State

No. 3 Minnesota

Record: 21-6-3, 12-4-2 Big Ten

Last week's results: Did not play

Key games: Feb. 14-15 at Michigan; Feb. 21-22 vs. Ohio State


Safe and sound

These teams are all but assured a spot in the NCAA field as either a conference champion or via an at-large spot.

No. 4 Maine

Record: 18-5-4, 10-3-4 Hockey East

Last week's results: Tied at Providence 3-3; won at Providence 1-0 (OT)

Key games: Feb. 21 at UConn; March 7-8 at UMass

No. 5 Western Michigan

Record: 20-5-1, 13-2-1 NCHC

Last week's results: Beat St. Cloud State 4-0 and 6-1

Key games: Feb. 14-15 vs. Omaha; Feb. 21-22 at Arizona State

No. 6 Providence

Record: 16-7-5, 6-6-5 Hockey East

Last week's results: Tied Maine 3-3; lost to Maine 1-0 (OT)

Key games: Feb. 14-15 home-and-home vs. BU; Feb. 22 vs. UMass-Lowell

No. 7 Ohio State

Record: 18-8-2, 11-6-1 Big Ten

Last week's results: Won at Notre Dame 5-1 and 5-1

Key games: Feb. 21-22 at Minnesota; Feb. 27-28 vs. Michigan

No. 8 UConn

Record: 15-10-3, 8-8-3 Hockey East

Last week's results: Lost to UMass 5-4; beat UMass-Lowell 5-4 (OT)

Key games: Feb. 21 vs. Maine; Feb. 25 vs. BU

No. 9 Denver

Record: 20-7-1, 9-6-1 NCHC

Last week's results: Won at Arizona State 5-4 (OT); lost at Arizona State 6-5 (OT)

Key games: Feb. 14-15 vs. North Dakota; March 7-8 home-and-home vs. Colorado College

No. 10 Boston University

Record: 15-10-1, 10-6-1 Hockey East

Last week's results: Beat Harvard 7-1; lost at Merrimack 2-1 (OT)

Key games: Feb. 10 vs. BC (Beanpot championship); Feb. 14-15 home-and-home vs. Providence


In the field -- for now

UMass-Lowell has slipped a few notches with three losses in four games, while Michigan and Arizona State improved their standing this past weekend with splits against Michigan State and Denver, respectively.

No. 11 UMass-Lowell

Record: 14-10-3, 7-8-2 Hockey East

Last week's results: Lost to Vermont 5-3; lost at UConn 5-4 (OT)

Key games: Feb. 22 at Providence; Feb. 27-March 1 home-and-home vs. UMass

No. 12 Michigan

Record: 16-12-2, 10-9-1 Big Ten

Last week's results: Won at Michigan State 2-1; lost to Michigan State 6-1

Key games: Feb. 14-15 vs. Minnesota; Feb. 27-28 at Ohio State

No. 13 Arizona State

Record: 17-10-1, 12-6-0 NCHC

Last week's results: Lost to Denver 5-4 (OT); beat Denver 6-5 (OT)

Key games: Feb. 21-22 vs. Western Michigan; Feb. 28-March 1 at Omaha


One-bid league champs

It's looking more and more likely we'll have three one-bid leagues -- the ECAC, CCHA and Atlantic. Quinnipiac and Minnesota State are on the fringes of the at-large bubble, but if they fail to win their conference tournaments, the losses along the way seem likely to dash their at-large hopes.

Quinnipiac leads a tight ECAC race, with the top five teams within five points of each other, while Minnesota State has a solid hold on first place in the CCHA. So we're penciling the Bobcats and Mavericks in the NCAA field for now.

In the Atlantic, Sacred Heart, Holy Cross and Bentley are within one point of each other in the league standings -- although Holy Cross and Bentley have played two fewer games than Sacred Heart -- and are bunched together in the PairWise. We gave the nod to the Crusaders, who are one spot ahead of Bentley in the PairWise, but as with the other three leagues in this group, it will all come down to the conference tournament.

Quinnipiac

Record: 17-9-2, 11-4-1 ECAC (No. 15 in PairWise)

Last week's results: Beat St. Lawrence 6-1; lost to Clarkson 3-2 (OT)

Key games: Feb. 14 at Union; Feb. 28 at Clarkson

Minnesota State

Record: 20-8-2, 15-5-2 CCHA (No. 17 in PairWise)

Last week's results: Beat Augustana 4-1 and 2-1

Key games: Feb. 21-22 at Lake Superior State

Holy Cross

Record: 17-11-2, 16-4-2 Atlantic (No. 30 in PairWise)

Last week's results: Won at RIT 9-2 and 3-0

Key games: Feb. 20 vs. Bentley; Feb. 24 vs. AIC


On the bubble

Assuming there will be three conference champions outside of the top 16 in PairWise, teams below No. 13 will be out of luck in terms of grabbing an at-large NCAA bid. But the standings in this range are very tight, with positions changing with almost every result. These teams will have opportunities for key wins to gain critical PairWise capital, but the margin for error is slim.

No. 14 UMass

Record: 15-11-2, 6-8-2 Hockey East

Last week's results: Won at UConn 5-4

Key games: Feb. 14-15 home-and-home vs. BC; Feb. 27-March 1 home-and-home vs. UMass-Lowell

No. 16 Penn State

Record: 14-11-3, 5-10-3 Big Ten

Last week's results: Won at Wisconsin 2-0 and 6-2

Key games: Feb. 21-22 at Michigan State; Feb. 28-March 1 vs. Minnesota

No. 18 New Hampshire

Record: 11-12-3, 3-11-2 Hockey East

Last week's results: Lost to BC 4-2; lost to Merrimack 5-4

Key games: Feb. 14-15 at Maine; Feb. 28-March 1 home-and-home vs. BC

Guardiola plays down Ballon d'Or rift with Madrid

Published in Soccer
Monday, 10 February 2025 07:52

Pep Guardiola has said Manchester City have drawn a line under the Ballon d'Or controversy with Real Madrid ahead of their Champions League showdown.

The Spanish giants boycotted the ceremony in Paris in October in protest at City midfielder Rodri winning the award ahead of Vinícius Júnior.

The two teams face each other in the first leg of their Champions League play-off at the Etihad Stadium on Tuesday. And ahead of the game, Guardiola insisted there is no ill feeling between the clubs.

"Happy for Rodri," Guardiola said, when asked for his opinion on the fall-out. "Vinícius made an extraordinary year as well. He deserved it. Like in the past when [Lionel] Messi and Cristiano [Ronaldo] were fighting for that. The subject is over."

Rúben Dias, who travelled to Paris with Rodri for the ceremony, also attempted to play down the dispute. "Being very honest I didn't spend one second thinking if it was disrespectful or not," he said.

"I was there, I celebrated with him, I was very happy for him. I didn't spend my time thinking about it."

It's the fifth time in six seasons that City and Madrid have been drawn together in the Champions League. Carlo Ancelotti's side were victorious on penalties last season while City were comfortable winners in 2023 -- winning 4-0 at the Etihad -- on their way to the treble.

This time, Guardiola has the added complication of worrying about Kylian Mbappé, as well as Vinícius, Rodrygo and Jude Bellingham. The France international has scored 23 times in his first season in Madrid, including a goal in the 1-1 draw with Atlético Madrid on Sunday.

"I think it's impossible for 90 minutes or 180 minutes to control these four players," Guardiola said. "They are exceptional. So how they combine, the runners, the ability one against one, how they keep the ball. So all four, they are exceptional. Everybody knows it. So we have to reduce their involvement as much as possible. Knowing that is going to happen, accept it."

Dias, meanwhile, said Madrid should be wary of City's stars, including Erling Haaland.

"I think since I have been there the most difficult season but I am a firm believer, even in the most difficult situations, you can achieve something beautiful," the City defender said.

"We know how difficult it will be. But we have loads of guns in the dressing room and we just have to use them the right way."

Espanyol complain over Mapi León crotch touch

Published in Soccer
Monday, 10 February 2025 07:52

Espanyol have condemned Barcelona's Mapi León for touching Daniela Caracas in the crotch area during Sunday's Catalan derby in Liga F.

León and Caracas clashed in the 15th minute of the game as they lined up at a set piece, with the Barça centre-back saying something to her opponent while briefly touching her inappropriately.

"Espanyol wish to express total condemnation at events which took place during the game which we consider unacceptable and should not pass unnoticed," a statement from the club said on Monday.

"During the match, Barça player León, in a struggle with our player, Caracas, made a gesture which violated the privacy of said player.

"At the time, Caracas did not react because of the impact caused by the situation. Later, after assimilating what happened, she became aware of the seriousness of the gesture, but chose not to react angrily to avoid a disciplinary sanction and harming the team."

Espanyol added that the incident has led to Caracas receiving insults on social media and that they are "concerned that, instead of focusing on the act itself, the media attention has been diverted to other issues unrelated to the seriousness of the action."

The club also say they have offered Caracas the club's legal team should she wish to take any action against León.

ESPN reached out to the Spanish Football Federation for comment but have yet to receive a response. Liga F said any disciplinary action corresponds completely to the federation.

The game was goalless at the time of the clash, with league leaders Barça going on to win 2-0 through late goals from Caroline Graham Hansen and Salma Paralluelo.

Spain coach testifies Hermoso wasn't punished

Published in Soccer
Monday, 10 February 2025 07:52

Spain women's coach Montse Tomé told a judge Monday she was not trying to punish Jenni Hermoso by omitting her from the national team in the fallout of the kiss by former football federation president Luis Rubiales.

Rubiales is accused of sexual assault for kissing Hermoso at the 2023 Women's World Cup final presentation ceremony, as well as of coercion for allegedly trying to convince the player to support his version of the kiss. Hermoso says she did not consent to the kiss while Rubiales denies wrongdoing and says it was consensual.

Three other former federation members are also on trial for coercion for allegedly trying to get Hermoso to downplay the kiss.

Hermoso's brother had testified last week that former team coach Jorge Vilda, one of the accused of coercion, tried to threaten Hermoso by saying that her future could be in danger if she refused to record a video together with Rubiales to make light of the incident.

Tomé, a former assistant to Vilda who took over the main coaching job shortly after the World Cup, decided not to include Hermoso in her first squad. She said at the time that the decision was made to protect the player from the media circus surrounding the case.

"It wasn't a punishment," Tomé said a couple of times while testifying at the start of the second week of the trial in Madrid. "I did not include her in the first call-up because of sporting reasons. What I said about protecting her, because of the exceptional situation that we were going through, was also part of the sporting reasons."

Tomé claimed that the attention being given by the media to the case at the time could've affected Hermoso's performance.

"Everything affects the sporting performance," Tomé said.

The other two federation officials on trial for coercion are former sports director of the Spain men's team, Albert Luque, and former head of marketing Rubén Rivera.

Rubiales is expected to testify on Tuesday. He resigned under pressure three weeks after the scandal surfaced and was banned by FIFA for three years. Rubiales had said he was the victim of a "witch hunt" by "false feminists."

Hermoso testified on the first day of the trial last week and said she "felt disrespected" by Rubiales after winning the Women's World Cup final. She said that the kiss "stained one of the happiest days of my life."

The kiss prompted outrage in Spain about the prevalence of sexism in sports and beyond.

Prosecutors, Hermoso and the Spain players' association want Rubiales jailed for two and a half years, fined 50,000 ($51,800) for damages, and banned from working as a sports official. They want the other three defendants sentenced to one and a half years in prison.

Arne Slot lost his FA Cup gamble against Plymouth Argyle, but the Liverpool manager might instead have edged closer to winning the trophies that really matter at Anfield this season by giving his star men the day off.

Make no mistake, Plymouth's giant-killing 1-0 win -- the bottom club in the Championship beating the Premier League leaders and ending all talk of a quadruple -- will be in the FA Cup highlights reel for years to come (stream a replay on ESPN+ in the U.S.). But nobody at Liverpool will worry too much about being on the wrong end of a cup shock if they conclude the season with the Premier League and Champions League trophies. They might also win the Carabao Cup, having booked a place against Newcastle United in the final on March 16.

Jürgen Klopp's Liverpool almost achieved a quadruple in 2021-22, but the heroics of that season -- Klopp's side played the maximum number of games by reaching three finals -- have already started to fade from memory because "almost" doesn't count at the biggest clubs. Klopp's side won the Carabao Cup and FA Cup, but Manchester City edged them to the Premier League title, and Real Madrid defeated them 1-0 in the Champions League final in Paris.

After an FA Cup fourth-round win against Cardiff City on Feb. 6 that season, Liverpool played 28 games up to and including the Champions League final against Real on May 28. Aside from the interruption of a March international break, Liverpool played a game every weekend and midweek from the beginning of February until the end of May. They won 21 of those games, losing two and drawing five.

Liverpool came close to winning everything. Indeed, a win against Madrid and a victory, rather than a 2-2 draw, against City in April would have ensured a clean sweep of trophies, but in the end the fatigue of pushing on all four fronts proved too much.

Slot's team, who return to Premier League action with a rearranged Merseyside derby against Everton at Goodison Park on Wednesday, will not have that to worry about now that they are out of the FA Cup. In fact, the defeat at Home Park brings more respite than you would think.

Liverpool now have a free weekend when the FA Cup fifth round is played March 1-2 -- there are no Premier League fixtures that weekend -- so they will go into their Champions League round-of-16 tie March 4-5 not having played for a week after facing Newcastle in the league on Feb. 26. Liverpool will have another free weekend on March 29, when the FA Cup quarterfinals take place. This means their star players will be able rest after international duty and will be fresh for the Merseyside derby at Anfield, which is scheduled for the following midweek.

Their home game against Tottenham Hotspur -- on semifinal weekend of April 26 -- also won't need to be moved to a vacant midweek. With Liverpool playing their match away to Aston Villa, which was displaced by the date of Carabao Cup final, next week, they are now sure to have a week off going into that game against Spurs. The midweek of May 13 will also be free, by which time, with two rounds to play, they may already have been crowned champions.

As a consequence of their fourth-round exit, Liverpool can now play a maximum of 23 games by the end of the season -- 15 in the Premier League, one in the Carabao Cup and seven in the Champions League -- so the benefits of losing at Plymouth are obvious. That is five games fewer than Klopp's team had to play in the final weeks of the 2021-22 season, but Slot's Liverpool could end up winning more trophies.

Slot made 10 changes to his starting lineup for the Plymouth tie and didn't include Virgil van Dijk, Mohamed Salah, Andy Robertson, Ryan Gravenberch and Alexis Mac Allister. The former Feyenoord coach said after the game that he had no regrets about his selection decision.

'Most of the things we do, we do for a reason," Slot said. "We just don't do it all of a sudden.

"The last few weeks we have played every single week two times. The upcoming weeks we have to play every single time two games. Therefore, it's not only for them good to once in a while have a week where they only play one game, but also for the ones that were here [at Plymouth,] they need the intensity of the game because you can keep on training with them, but once in a while they need a game as well.

"They had that as well against PSV [a 3-2 Champions League loss in Eindhoven on Jan. 29,] unfortunately we lost that one, and they had that today, and unfortunately we lost this one again as well."

Slot's reference to his fringe players losing both of the games in which they were selected to play also points to the reality that, beyond the first 14-15 names on his squad list, the Liverpool manager cannot rely on the club's second string to deliver when the star players are unavailable. But after being dumped out of the FA Cup, Slot and Liverpool now have the breathing space to take on the challenge of achieving a treble.

They are one win away from lifting the Carabao Cup and six points clear at the top of the Premier League, having played one game fewer than the chasing pack, so the path is clear for success in both competitions. And without the distraction of the FA Cup, success in the Champions League has become more attainable.

As embarrassing as it looks at first glance, losing against Plymouth could turn out to be Liverpool's best result of the season.

Sri Lanka have named a squad largely unchanged from the one that toured New Zealand in January this year for the two ODIs against Australia at home later this week. The one change is that seam-bowling allrounder Chamindu Wickramasinghe is out as the squad has been trimmed from 17 for that New Zealand series to 16.

From Sri Lanka's point of view, there is no real context to the series, since they failed to make the cut for the upcoming Champions Trophy. But the two games are important for Australia, who will go straight to Pakistan for the eight-team tournament after these games.

Sri Lanka wear a solid look, keeping in mind the venue for the games, R Premadasa Stadium in Colombo.

A lot of spin - and spinners with different skills - headlines the bowling continent: Wanindu Hasaranga, Maheesh Theekshana, Dunith Wellalage and Jeffrey Vandersay are the frontmen there, with Asitha Fernando, Lahiru Kumara, Eshan Malinga and Mohamed Shiraz the main fast bowlers, though how many of them will be required to play is anybody's guess.

Sri Lanka squad for ODIs against Australia

Charith Asalanka (capt), Nishan Madushka, Nuwanidu Fernando, Avishka Fernando, Kusal Mendis (wk), Pathum Nissanka, Wanindu Hasaranga, Janith Liyanage, Kamindu Mendis, Asitha Fernando, Lahiru Kumara, Eshan Malinga, Mohamed Shiraz, Maheesh Theekshana, Jeffrey Vandersay, Dunith Wellalage

Surrey have confirmed that they will be retaining their majority stake in Oval Invincibles, as they begin their period of exclusive negotiations with Reliance Industries Limited (RIL), the owners of Mumbai Indians, in the wake of last month's Hundred equity sale.

RIL secured a 49% stake in Invincibles, the reigning Men's Hundred champions and the most successful team across genders in the tournament's four-year history, after valuing the franchise at 123 million at a live auction on January 30.

That means they are expected to pay just over 60 million for their equity share when the team ownership transfers from ECB to Surrey County Cricket Club at the end of 2025. This will be undertaken through negotiations with RISE Worldwide, Reliance's subsidiary, which has been named as the club's preferred partner from the 2026 season onwards.

Mumbai Indians, five-times winners of the IPL, are widely seen as the most powerful IPL franchise, while Surrey are the richest English county club. The Invincibles' men's and women's teams will become the sixth and seventh teams associated with RIL, after Mumbai Indians (in both the IPL and WPL), MI New York (MLC), MI Cape Town (SA20) and MI Emirates (ILT20).

RIL, owned by the Ambani family, had been widely linked with buying a stake in London Spirit, but that franchise was eventually secured by a Silicon Valley tech consortium that valued the Lord's-based franchise at 295 million.

Up to five IPL teams could be involved in team ownership when the sales process is completed later this month. Last week, Sun Group - owners of Sunrisers Hyderabad - secured a 100% stake in Northern Superchargers for 100 million, while Sanjiv Goenka's RPSG Group - owners of Lucknow Super Giants - expected to land a 70% stake in Manchester Originals when their negotiations are complete.

Southern Brave is widely expected to be secured by GMR Group, co-owners of Delhi Capitals, who last year bought a groundbreaking majority stake in host county Hampshire, while the owners of Kolkata Knight Riders and Rajasthan Royals are among those who are understood to have shown interest in Nottingham-based Trent Rockets.

Surrey, however, have reiterated their desire to keep hold of their controlling stake in Invincibles, while welcoming the chance to work with a franchise that has won 11 league titles across the globe, including at least one in each of the competitions they have competed in.

Oli Slipper, Chair of Surrey CCC, said: "We said at the outset that we wanted the best partner to ensure that Surrey continue to lead the way in English cricket and in Mumbai Indians that is what we have got.

"They share our passion for cricket, they own the biggest and most successful team in the IPL, the Mumbai Indians, and we believe this partnership will bring continued success to both Surrey CCC and our Hundred team.

"Beyond cricket, the huge success of RIL's global business will help Surrey to thrive off the field too. I couldn't be more excited to welcome Mrs. Nita Ambani, Akash and his team as our new partners."

Mrs. Nita M Ambani, Owner of Mumbai Indians, said: "Cricket is more than just a sport, it's a passion that unites people across geographies and cultures. Welcoming Oval Invincibles into our Mumbai Indians family is a proud and special moment."

"England, with its rich cricketing culture, has always been special to the game," Akash Ambani, Owner of Mumbai Indians, added. "To have the iconic Oval, which has witnessed some of cricket's greatest moments, as our home venue is truly special."

Shiffrin dealing with PTSD, won't defend GS title

Published in Breaking News
Monday, 10 February 2025 08:18

SAALBACH-HINTERGLEMM, Austria -- Mikaela Shiffrin says she is dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder following a crash in November and will not defend her gold medal in giant slalom at the Alpine skiing world championships.

The American holder of a record 99 World Cup wins suffered a deep puncture wound when she fell in a giant slalom race on Nov. 30 in Killington, Vermont, causing severe trauma to her oblique muscles.

"I'm mentally blocked in being able to get to the next level of pace and speed and putting power into the turns," Shiffrin said in an audio message shared with The Associated Press on Monday. "And that kind of mental, psychological like PTSD-esque struggle is more than I anticipated.

"I figured once we touched ground in Europe and we got a chance to get some repetitive training days, I would be able to improve step by step and sort of the passion and the longing for racing was going to outweigh any fear that I had," she added.

Whatever stabbed Shiffrin in her fall at Killington nearly punctured her abdominal wall and her colon. She told The Associated Press last month that her injury was "a millimeter from pretty catastrophic."

Shiffrin also had a high-speed crash in downhill in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, last season that kept her out for six weeks. She has discussed her fears with a psychologist, said Megan Harrod, Shiffrin's spokeswoman.

On Instagram, Shiffrin wrote: "Honestly, I really didn't anticipate experiencing so much of this kind of mental/PTSD struggle in GS from my injury."

Shiffrin won gold in giant slalom at the last worlds in France 2 years ago

The women's giant slalom is scheduled for Thursday and Shiffrin said it was "soul crushing" not to be able to defend her title.

"Two years ago I was at my top level I've ever skied in GS. It was the most fun I ever had skiing GS," Shiffrin said. "To be here now and not even be able to start, that's pretty heartbreaking."

Shiffrin returned to action last month when she placed 10th in a slalom in Courchevel, France, and is still planning to race the slalom -- her best event -- at worlds on Saturday.

The speeds in slalom are lower than those in giant slalom, so the danger level is not as high.

Shiffrin will enter team combined and pair with Breezy Johnson

By now abandoning the giant slalom, Shiffrin has decided to enter the new team combined event at worlds on Tuesday and will pair with freshly crowned downhill gold medalist Breezy Johnson.

The combined event entails one racer competing in a downhill run and another in a slalom run, with their two times added up to determine the final results.

"I'm not at full capacity, not in giant slalom and not in slalom either," Shiffrin said. "But I feel good enough in slalom."

The other U.S. teams for the event are super-G bronze medalist Lauren Macuga and Paula Moltzan; Lindsey Vonn and AJ Hurt; and Jacqueline Wiles and Katie Hensien.

Vonn wanted to pair with Shiffrin in a skiing 'dream team'

Vonn had campaigned to race with Shiffrin in a "dream team" featuring the two most successful female World Cup skiers of all time. But the U.S. coaching staff selected the pairings based on "season-best results" in both events.

"Why am I not surprised?" Vonn wrote on the social media platform X with a shrug emoji before erasing her posting.

Then Vonn added a new post on X that said: "Always been a team player and I support my team no matter what. I'm not surprised by the decisions made but at least now it's clear that it's not my decision. I have always been supportive and respectful and that will never change," Vonn said, concluding with a Go USA flag emoji.

Shiffrin has a special bond with Johnson

Johnson's downhill victory marked her first win anywhere at this level -- including the World Cup.

"Breezy and I have been racing together since we were 11. We were at Whistler Cup and Topolino together," Shiffrin said, referring to two prestigious junior events. "We've been roommates, competitors, friends... It will be so so cool to bring this full circle."

Johnson recently returned from a 14-month ban for three "whereabouts" violations in anti-doping protocol.

"She knows the mental challenges of this sport better than anyone," Shiffrin said. "She has fought tooth and nail to get here, and now she is World Champion... her journey and grit and determination has inspired the heck out of me."

Shiffrin added that the combined is "like this little glimmer of hope that we can do this and this can be fun. This just might not be so scary."

Shiffrin hopes to return to GS later this month

Shiffrin hopes to return to giant slalom the weekend after worlds on the World Cup circuit in Sestriere, Italy, where two GS races and a slalom are scheduled.

Shiffrin needs one more win to reach a record-extending 100 World Cup victories.

She said that by putting off her GS return off for now it "buys us just a little bit more time to get things a little bit more sorted."

Sirianni: '23 collapse 'shaped' Eagles for title run

Published in Breaking News
Monday, 10 February 2025 08:16

NEW ORLEANS -- The late-season collapse in 2023 was not fun at the time for anyone connected with the Philadelphia Eagles, and certainly not for coach Nick Sirianni.

But Sirianni said Monday he's happy for it now because it set up the Eagles for the 2024 season's Super Bowl championship run.

"I look back on last year and how last year ended and I'm grateful. As crazy as this sounds, I'm grateful how last year ended because it shaped us to [who] we are today [with] the adversity of the beginning of the year and the adversity through the season, through injuries, through ups and downs, through everything,'' Sirianni said the morning after the Eagles beat the Kansas City Chiefs 40-22 in Super Bowl LIX.

"I think that when you embrace adversity, it does something to you, right? It does something to you personally, right? Each and every individual on that football team, the adversity does something to you, and it does something to you as a football team as well. So, our guys, I think that could be the biggest attribute. They worked their butts off to connect.''

The 2023 Eagles, after starting the season 10-1, lost six of their last seven games, including a wild-card round playoff matchup with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Sirianni said his pregame message to the Eagles was simple: "Tough, detailed, together.''

"We talked about that all year,'' he said. "My job is not to inspire them. It's just more to just remind them of the things they already know, and I keep it really short. I talk a lot all during the week so before the game, it pretty much is consistent. Week 1, Week 37, whatever, we're on 'tough, detailed, together.' That's our core value. That's what we talk about. And the toughest team wins, usually the most detailed team wins, usually the team the most together wins.''

Complete and utter dominance. On the biggest stage, with the Chiefs dominating the headlines in their attempt to win a third consecutive title, the Eagles comprehensively manhandled them in New Orleans.

The 40-22 final score in Super Bowl LIX seems unfair both to a Philadelphia defense that shut down Kansas City until a couple of garbage-time touchdowns in the fourth quarter and to a Kansas City defense that battled gamely before finally getting overwhelmed by short fields and the sheer volume of snaps it had to play.

Imagine being a Chiefs fan and getting to see pieces of the box score of this game in advance. The Chiefs did the best job any team has done all season against Saquon Barkley, who ran 25 times for 57 yards. The Eagles went 3-for-12 on third downs, failed to convert their only fourth down, turned the ball over in the red zone and averaged 5.1 yards per play -- fewer than the Chiefs. All of that sounds like the sort of game the Chiefs would expect to win given what they're capable of doing on offense.

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All of that is true and the Chiefs still fell behind 34-0 during the third quarter, precisely because of what they couldn't do on offense. This was the worst possible time for Patrick Mahomes to have what will likely go down as his worst big game as a pro. Before saving his numbers with those late fourth-quarter scores, he looked as flummoxed as we've ever seen him.

If you had told that same Chiefs fan that Mahomes was about to go 6-of-14 for 33 yards with two interceptions in the first half of the Super Bowl, that fan could have done more productive things with a free Sunday. Those 33 yards were the fewest Mahomes has ever posted in the first half of any NFL game. His 10.9 passer rating was the third worst from any quarterback in the first half of a game this season. By expected points added (EPA) per dropback, his minus-1.36 mark was the 10th worst by any quarterback in the first half of any game since the start of the 2018 season.

Even with his late scoring drives, Mahomes finished with a Total QBR of 11.4, his second-worst performance in 133 career starts. Let's assign credit appropriately: The Eagles did that. More specifically, the same Philadelphia defensive line that was tormented and torched so badly by Mahomes in Super Bowl LVII two years ago took over this game. While defensive coordinator Vic Fangio and his secondary will rightfully earn credit for a dominant performance, the front seven is the key to understanding why Mahomes & Co. were ground into dust.

Jump to a section:
Four ways in which Philly's D dominated
Five ways in which KC got it terribly wrong
How Hurts and the Eagles got here

How the Eagles took down Patrick Mahomes

They exploited and overpowered Kansas City's tackles. Go back to the last time Fangio coached against an Andy Reid-led offense. It was the wild-card round last season, with Fangio serving as defensive coordinator for the Dolphins. Without his top two edge rushers due to injury -- Bradley Chubb and Jaelan Phillips -- the normally conservative Fangio turned on the heat. The veteran coordinator blitzed Mahomes on more than 51% of the quarterback's dropbacks, his third-highest blitz rate in more than 220 games as a coordinator since 2007. Nobody wants to blitz Mahomes, who has lit up blitzes since entering the league, but Fangio surely felt like the alternative was sitting back and withering away on defense.

On Sunday, the Eagles didn't blitz once on Mahomes' 42 dropbacks. (They had a couple of plays that would technically qualify as blitzes when the Eagles sent Zack Baun, but they dropped a lineman off into coverage as part of the snap.) Fangio rushed four players 39 times and three players three times. The Eagles still managed to pressure Mahomes on nearly 45% of his dropbacks through three quarters before Fangio gave his backups some run in the fourth. They sacked Mahomes six times with a four-man rush, something that has never happened to the future Hall of Famer in his career. He had never been sacked more than four times by a three- or four-man rush in a single game.

When these two teams played in the title game two years ago, the Eagles managed to get pressure on Mahomes, but he wriggled and maneuvered his way out of danger. A dominant Philadelphia defensive line pressured him on 37% of his dropbacks then, but it failed to take him down for a sack on 11 pressures. Those 11 snaps produced just 35 yards, but a lack of negative plays helped keep the Chiefs afloat on offense in a shootout. This time, the Eagles finished the job. They ran a similar pressure rate to that Super Bowl (38%), but they turned six of those 15 pressures into sacks.

Those sacks didn't come from the player most would have expected. Jalen Carter had a solid game, but he didn't singlehandedly wreck opponents the way he had for much of the season. After much discussion about whether the Eagles would move him away from star guard Trey Smith, they decided to keep him there for the majority of his snaps, and the Chiefs double-teamed Carter on only a handful of snaps. Carter forced a holding penalty and had a couple of impressive plays, but he wasn't the most dominant player on the Philly line.

Instead, in their final game before free agency, this was the Josh Sweat and Milton Williams show. The two Eagles draftees combined for 4.5 sacks. Down the rotation, Jalyx Hunt and Moro Ojomo showed up with splash plays and quality snaps. Brandon Graham, a surprise activation during the week after recovering from what was expected to be a season-ending torn triceps, played 18 snaps and nearly bowled over right tackle Jawaan Taylor to draw a holding penalty.

Taylor had a rough game, but it didn't compare to what happened at left tackle. There's no way to sugarcoat it: Joe Thuney looked like a fish out of water on the edge in pass protection. It's one thing for a converted guard playing tackle out of desperation and a lack of better options to get beat by speed around the edge. It's another for Thuney to get driven backward into Mahomes' lap by Hunt, a 251-pound former college safety.

Charting the game through Williams' violent strip-sack of Mahomes in the fourth quarter, I have Thuney down for seven plays that led to pressures of Mahomes, including three that led to sacks. He was beaten straight up by Hunt and Sweat and on twists by Williams. He might have been a victim of unrealistic expectations after holding up for most of the postseason on Mahomes' blind side, but reality came crashing down Sunday.

Thuney wasn't the only one. Taylor was responsible for six pressures, including that play in which he was knocked a yard backward by Graham before being flagged for a desperate hold. Mike Caliendo, filling in at left guard for Thuney, struggled with twists and was steamrolled by Williams for the fourth-quarter strip-sack of Mahomes that took the last of the air out of Kansas City's sails.

The Chiefs never had answers for dealing with the pass rush besides hoping the offensive line played better. They spent most of the game blocking with five linemen before mixing in chips from tight ends and running backs, which didn't necessarily help; a Travis Kelce chip prevented the future Hall of Fame tight end from getting into his route quickly on a play that ended with a Mahomes sack, while a chip from Isiah Pacheco disengaged Sweat from Taylor and allowed him to take down a scrambling Mahomes. They tried moving the launch point for Mahomes by using built-in scrambles, but one of those plays led to the pick-six by Cooper DeJean.

They took away Mahomes' escape hatch. In Super Bowl LVII and just about every other big game since, Mahomes has managed to make a difference with his legs. While that has included the occasional designed run, the thing that scares opposing defensive coordinators is what he does as a scrambler. It's tough to spy him when a defense is usually committing so many coverage resources to Kelce, and if the coordinator uses twists and games up front to try to create pressure, any sort of misstep or over-aggression from the line opens up a lane for him to exploit. The Eagles know it all too well, given that Mahomes scrambled for 26 yards to set up the game-winning field goal two years ago.

This time, the big scramble never came. In addition to winning one-on-one, Philadelphia's edge rushers did a great job of walling off the edges and forcing Mahomes to try to escape pressure by stepping up into the pocket as opposed to escaping through the sides and extending plays. And once he stepped up, the Eagles' defensive linemen were simply too big and too fast to run past. There were too many moments in which Mahomes attempted to scramble, changed his mind then did a full turn to try to gain some acceleration and get away, only to be sacked or forced into a wild throw.

Mahomes didn't scramble for a first down all game, the first time that has happened in a playoff game since the loss to the Patriots in the 2018 AFC Championship Game. He didn't have a single scramble attempt until midway through the third quarter and didn't run for more than 8 yards on any of his attempts. Hunt made a nice play with an ankle tackle to stop what could have been a bigger scramble. Taking away those conversions made Mahomes one-dimensional.

They won over and over again on third down against the league's best third-down offense. While the Chiefs struggled on first and second down consistently throughout the season, Mahomes usually bailed them out by converting on third downs. The Chiefs picked up 50% of their third downs during the regular season with Mahomes on the field, the best rate of any offense, and were at 45% during the postseason before this game.

On Sunday, they failed to convert on their first nine attempts on third down through three quarters, before finally picking up a third-and-7 with 1:25 to go trailing 34-0. It's just the fourth time in the Mahomes era the Chiefs have gone an entire first half without converting a third down. (One of the other three was Super Bowl LVII against the Eagles, but that was on only three attempts.) Reid's offense finished 3-of-12 on third and fourth downs.

Through those first nine third-down attempts before the initial conversion on a throw to Kelce, the Eagles won with pressure on six. The three that didn't include pressure were a quick snap in which Mahomes threw low to Kelce, a designed rollout on the pick-six to DeJean and a quick third-and-13 throw to Kelce for 9 yards to set up a manageable fourth down. Six of those nine plays came with 9 or more yards to go, and as good as Mahomes is, the Chiefs didn't want to live in third-and-long against this defense.

play
0:29
Cooper DeJean houses Mahomes' INT for pick-six on his birthday

Eagles rookie Cooper DeJean celebrates his 22nd birthday in style, picking off Patrick Mahomes and returning it for a touchdown in Super Bowl LIX.

Unlike the AFC title game against the Bills two weeks ago, when the Chiefs were able to successfully use picks and crossing routes, Reid never seemed to find short-to-intermediate solutions to attack Philadelphia's zone defense. NFL Next Gen Stats marked the Eagles down for just two snaps of man coverage on 42 dropbacks all night. Mahomes picked up a first down on his opening snap of the game with a triple-option RPO, but the Chiefs didn't find a non-RPO passing solution to consistently create space. They tried flooding the zones with multiple receivers, but Philadelphia did a great job of passing off routes and matching to Kansas City's concepts.

It was clear Mahomes didn't want to test Quinyon Mitchell and Darius Slay. the Eagles' outside cornerbacks. In the first half, he threw outside the numbers three times for a total of 2 yards. The Chiefs wanted to attack the middle of the field, but he went 4-of-11 for 30 yards and two picks throwing there in the first half. He had more success throwing to the sideline in the second half when he had no alternative, but it was too little, too late.

Mahomes didn't play well. It's important to make this distinction. This game will be lumped in with the last time he lost in the Super Bowl, and there's an obvious similarity. In both games, he was seemingly running for his life on every down behind a porous offensive line that wasn't capable of blocking the opposing defense. That Bucs defense under Todd Bowles in Super Bowl LV was dialing up exotic pressures and blitzing defensive backs, while Fangio was rushing three and four linemen all night, but that's not really important in the big picture. Blitz or no blitz, the story seems to be that if defenses can put pressure on Mahomes, he can struggle.

In that Buccaneers loss, Mahomes was phenomenal. He wasn't perfect, but under impossible circumstances, he was extending plays and making unreal throws, only for those passes to be dropped or come up just short. There was a reason clips of Mike Evans and Chris Godwin calling him "unbelievable" and "a magician" during the game went viral.

Even after accounting for the pressure put on by the Eagles in this game, Mahomes simply didn't play well. In the first half, he went 6-of-9 for 33 yards out of clean pockets with a minus-12.1% completion percentage over expectation (CPOE). He threw a painful pick-six to DeJean without pressure on a play in which the two-time MVP simply didn't see DeJean in his throwing lane, the sort of mistake a rookie might be expected to make. His second pick came on a play in which Thuney was deposited in his lap, but he didn't reset and his throw was subsequently short and nowhere near his receiver, a carbon copy of the pick he threw to Roquan Smith against the Ravens in Week 1.

It's fair to suggest the pass rush wore on Mahomes as the game went along, and I would suspect there's some truth to that. Even on the first possession of the game, though, he seemed jittery. On the opening third down of the game for the Chiefs, he scrambled under a modest amount of pressure, ran his way into trouble and then, while scrambling, attempted a dangerous pass that was lucky to not be intercepted. He uncharacteristically missed a fourth-and-4 speed out to DeAndre Hopkins from a clean pocket, leaving the pass too far inside and allowing Avonte Maddox to knock the ball away.

Is there anything the Chiefs could have done? Maybe not, given how dominant the Eagles' front was. But there were likely a few mistakes they would take back or try to approach differently with hindsight.


Where did the Chiefs go wrong?

They let the left tackle problem linger until it was too late. This loss can be traced back to Week 2. The Chiefs entered the season with second-year lineman Wanya Morris and rookie second-round pick Kingsley Suamataia competing for the starting job protecting Mahomes' blind side at left tackle. Suamataia won the camp competition, but after he struggled against Trey Hendrickson and the Bengals, the Chiefs benched him for Morris. Suamataia saw meaningful snaps in only two games the rest of the way, filling in for an injured Morris before spending Week 18 at guard alongside backups in a loss to the Broncos.

The time to find and bring in a veteran tackle was then, because once Reid lost faith in Suamataia, they had to start preparing for a scenario in which they needed one. Morris had been a problem filling in for Donovan Smith as a rookie in 2023, and he had lost the camp battle to Suamataia in August. Smith was still a free agent and never ended up signing anywhere, but the Chiefs elected to hold the line.

It wasn't until late November when the Chiefs finally signed a veteran tackle, inking D.J. Humphries to a one-year deal for $2 million. The former Cardinals starter made his debut three weeks later against the Chargers, only to suffer a hamstring injury and miss the next three games. Reid gave him another trial at left tackle in Week 18, but the coach apparently didn't like what he saw.

Instead, after pushing Thuney out to left tackle, the Chiefs kept him there for the remainder of the season. With Caliendo stepping in at guard, Reid now had subpar starters at two spots as opposed to one. The offense did fine with Thuney during postseason wins over the Texans and Bills, but the three-time Pro Bowler was badly overmatched in the Super Bowl.

With Morris inactive, the only options the Chiefs had at halftime were kicking Thuney back to guard and putting in Suamataia or Humphries at left tackle, both of whom Reid clearly didn't trust. Humphries was active during the postseason but played only on special teams. Neither player got on the field Sunday. It's tough to find a left tackle in-season, but the Chiefs would have had a better shot if they had started seriously looking around before the trade deadline as opposed to waiting until late-November to bring in a veteran.

They completely abandoned the run. When Reid was coaching the Eagles, a common criticism was that he got away from running the ball. Reid's pass rates would look almost quaintly conservative now, but before the 2007 Patriots, his Philadelphia offense leaned more heavily into the pass than just about any other team.

On Sunday, as those same fans were likely celebrating an Eagles victory, I agreed with that criticism. The Chiefs simply didn't run the ball early in a situation in which they desperately needed to take some of the pressure off Mahomes. While they used some RPOs and threw the ball early, they ran the ball just once on their first four possessions. Sure, that's only 13 plays, but a 12-1 pass-run ratio is a little extreme by anybody's standards. Throwing the ball that often is fine if it's working, but they weren't scoring or moving the ball.

Reid did run the ball twice to start the next drive, but when they gained only 1 yard, the Chiefs went back to passing. Pacheco started the third quarter with a run for 6 yards, but the next four plays were all passes. Kareem Hunt ran for 10 yards on the next drive, but after a holding call, Kansas City then ran for 1 yard on a second-and-14 draw.

The run game wasn't going to win this for the Chiefs, and their backs turned seven carries into only 24 yards, which isn't exactly beautiful football. But the threat of the run might have kept them out of third-and-long in a game in which the Eagles brutalized them in those spots. It could have slowed down the pass rush or given the offensive line a chance to attack the line of scrimmage. Frankly, it couldn't have been much worse than what they did on their dropbacks.

play
1:05
How adversity fueled Nick Sirianni to Super Bowl title

Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni discusses dealing with adversity early in the season and how he overcame it.

They needed to go bigger. One of the ways the Chiefs could have tried to gain an advantage while running the ball would have been to go with bigger personnel groupings. Since the Tyreek Hill trade, Reid has leaned into 12 (one back, two tight ends) and even 13 (one back, three tight ends) personnel groupings, using Noah Gray alongside Kelce. In addition to adding more blockers on the field for run concepts, the Chiefs use the personnel groupings to try to dictate personnel and create potential mismatches in the passing game.

Instead, they went with 11 personnel (one back, one TE, three receivers) on 74% of their snaps Sunday, using 12 personnel just 26% of the time. There's an argument to be made that's a product of playing from behind, but Reid actually used 12 personnel slightly more in the second half (28%) than the first (25%). The Chiefs weren't great in either personnel grouping, but Mahomes did hit a 50-yard touchdown pass against Philadelphia's backups in the secondary out of 12 personnel late in the game.

They couldn't avoid sloppy mistakes. This isn't where the Chiefs lost this game: The Eagles won it by imposing their will. But it's also fair to mention that the Chiefs made uncharacteristic blunders that might have steered the game closer to becoming a contest.

They extended Eagles drives with penalties. After appearing to get a stop on a third-and-5 throw that Jalen Hurts sailed to Dallas Goedert, the Eagles were given a new set of downs because Trent McDuffie struck Goedert in the head. (Chiefs fans probably didn't love the call, but it felt a little like a makeup whistle after incidental contact to the face mask from A.J. Brown wiped off a fourth-down conversion for the Eagles' offense on the prior drive.) The Eagles scored a touchdown three plays later.

With 2:28 to go in the first half trailing 17-0, the Chiefs appeared well on their way to getting off the field when they sniffed out a second-and-26 screen to Barkley. After the pass fell incomplete, though, Nick Bolton knocked Barkley over. He was flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct, turning a third-and-26 into a first-and-10. The Eagles didn't score on the drive, but the penalty took time off the clock and shifted field position. Kansas City eventually took over from its own 6-yard line, at which point Mahomes was backed into the end zone under pressure and threw a pick.

And after the Eagles scored, the Chiefs appeared to have a brief glimmer of hope to get some points on the board. Facing a third-and-11, Mahomes stepped out of the pocket, scrambled and found a wide-open Hopkins on a busted coverage. Mahomes' throw was on time, but Hopkins dropped what could have been a massive gain:

NFL Next Gen Stats estimates that pass gets completed 82.2% of the time and should generate a whopping 26.6 yards after the catch, which would have given the Chiefs the ball at the Eagles' 26 with one timeout. They would have probably come away from that scenario with at least three points. It didn't swing the game, but it's the sort of opportunity the Chiefs don't often miss. It was that sort of day.

The defense allowed explosives in the passing game. Given how well the Chiefs tackled and slowed down Barkley, they can't be too upset with how they played on defense. Forty points is a lot, but that includes a pick-six, three drives that started on Kansas City's side of the field and two more that started beyond the Philadelphia 40-yard line. The Eagles had two drives with more than 50 yards all game, only the fourth time that happened all season.

As good as they were against the run, though, the Chiefs weren't as effective stopping the Eagles from picking up chunk plays through the air, and it wasn't always from their star receivers. On the second drive, Hurts hit Goedert on a blown coverage for a 20-yard completion, with no defender matching in zone to the tight end's crossing route. Later on the same drive, the Chiefs blitzed on second-and-11 and Jaylen Watson was beaten by little-used third wideout Jahan Dotson, whom Hurts found for what appeared to be the opening touchdown of the game. While Dotson was ruled to be just short of the end zone on review, his 27-yard catch set up the opening score on a Hurts tush push.

Hurts continued to find big plays. On a third-and-7, he went back to Brown against McDuffie on a back-shoulder for 22 yards. McDuffie lined up against Brown on 18 of his 24 routes per NFL Next Gen Stats, and while that was the only big completion the star cornerback allowed, it easily could have been two if a 32-yard gain on fourth-and-2 on the opening drive hadn't been called back on a questionable offensive pass interference penalty.

The dagger came in the third quarter. Most teams will warn their defenders to be ready for a shot play around midfield after a turnover, and after the Chiefs failed on fourth-and-4 from their own 47, the Eagles showed why. With the Eagles in 12 personnel and showing a run look, they feigned a power play and dropped Hurts back to pass. The Chiefs showed a single-high shell and then spun to quarters coverage, giving an ideal opportunity to throw the deep post. With Bolton and Drue Tranquill desperately trying to run back after the play-fake to get in coverage, Justin Reid was occupied by Goedert underneath, which freed up DeVonta Smith over the top on the post. Smith beat Watson at the snap and ran free downfield for a 46-yard score.


Jalen Hurts, Super Bowl MVP, and how the Eagles got here

With Barkley quieted for the first time in months, this was the sort of game skeptics of the Eagles (like myself) would have seen as a real concern. While Hurts was excellent in the NFC Championship Game and threw just five interceptions all season, there was a two-month span in which the passing attack wasn't much more than an afterthought. While acknowledging there's no easy way to beat a team that was two drops away from winning 20 of its 21 games this season, the best way seemed to be putting more of the load on Hurts' shoulders and seeing if the 26-year-old was up to the task.

It turns out he was. While Hurts threw an ugly interception against the blitz on a play in which Bolton came untouched through the A-gap, the Eagles did just fine with their quarterback as the focal point of the offense. He went 17-of-22 as a passer for 221 yards and two touchdowns, generating a plus-12.6% CPOE. He added 11 carries for 72 yards and that "tush push" score on the ground.

In the previous Super Bowl matchup between these two teams, one of the few things Hurts wasn't able to do was consistently make the Chiefs pay with downfield throws; he went 2-of-7 for 90 yards on deep pass attempts. He was lights-out Sunday, going 3-of-4 for 95 yards and a touchdown on those throws, with the pick by Bryan Cook as his only blemish. Hurts was 2-of-3 for 42 yards on throws in the intermediate range (10 to 19 yards) as well. In that same area, Mahomes was 0-for-4 with two picks.

While Hurts was only 2-of-5 for 36 yards and that pick on the blitz, I wouldn't put that on him. There was no sight adjustment by Brown on the interception, even though the corner on his side (McDuffie) blitzed from the field, which would typically convert his route to a hitch or something easier than the go route he ran. When the Chiefs ran Cover 0 later in the game and the Eagles had again dialed up four vertical routes, Hurts threw a back-shoulder route to Brown, clearly expecting his star wideout to turn around and break off his route. But Brown continued downfield and the pass fell incomplete, leading to some mild discontent on the sideline for a few moments after the series.

While Mahomes' scrambling in big moments has become legendary, Hurts was the one who made a difference there. He set up a fourth-and-2 (and the big play to Brown that was wiped off) by scrambling for 9 yards on third-and-11 on the opening drive. In the second half, he had scrambles of 14, 16 and 17 yards, all for first downs. The Chiefs tried spying him at times with Leo Chenal, but against four-man rushes and the blitz, Hurts was able to break Kansas City's spirit with his legs.

play
1:36
Jalen Hurts reflects on journey to SB victory

Jalen Hurts talks about experiencing the highs and lows en route to the Super Bowl and what Saquon Barkley has meant to the Eagles.

The title win and Hurts' MVP performance is the final bit of vindication for one of the most controversial draft decisions in recent memory. The Eagles choosing Hurts with their second-round pick in 2020 seemed to send the organization into an immediate tailspin. Quarterback Carson Wentz collapsed the following season and fell out with then-coach Doug Pederson. They essentially fired both their head coach and quarterback, trading Wentz to Indianapolis, while retaining the guy who drafted Hurts, general manager Howie Roseman.

Roseman, coming off a disastrous 2020 draft in which he chose Jalen Reagor over Justin Jefferson at wide receiver, moved down from No. 6 to No. 12 in the 2021 draft before jumping back up to select DeVonta Smith. The extra first-rounder they got for moving down allowed the Eagles to be flexible the following season, when they basically extracted a premium for swapping their 2022 first-rounder with the Saints' first-rounder in 2023. All of those maneuverings eventually landed them Carter, their cornerstone defender.

If there's a lesson we can take away from the Eagles and their title run, it might be one that's hard to follow in the modern NFL: Be patient and don't get overwhelmed by recency bias. Philadelphia ownership didn't fire Roseman when Chip Kelly pushed him out of power in 2015 or when the fans were chanting "Fire Howie" in 2021. He has proceeded to build what has to be considered the league's best roster over the past three seasons.

Hurts was a mess in 2020, completing 52% of his passes and posting a 38.5% success rate as a passer. He was also playing with Reagor and Greg Ward as his top receivers and stuck behind a disastrous offensive line. The Eagles gave him a clear path to the starting job in 2021 with more auspicious surroundings, and he has rewarded them for doing so ever since.

This even extends to the Eagles' fateful 2024 free agent class, and the two coordinators they added. Fangio was all but run out of Miami by his own players, who were celebrating his departure on social media. Kellen Moore had essentially been let go by the Cowboys and Chargers in back-to-back seasons amid concerns that he was more focused on "lighting up the scoreboard" and throwing the ball than producing winning offenses. Moore is now expected to become the Saints' new coach, while Fangio is never going to buy a drink in Philadelphia again.

Barkley just finished what was probably the best season by a running back in league history. Advanced metrics were more optimistic about him than traditional numbers, but he averaged 3.9 yards per carry last season, and the Giants spent the past two years indicating they didn't want to give their own star back a multiyear guaranteed contract. Mekhi Becton was a bust as an offensive tackle who was cast off by the Jets before Philly offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland turned him into a mauling guard. Baun, who was involved with his fifth turnover of the postseason by picking off Mahomes, was a backup edge rusher for the 2023 Saints. The Eagles put each of these players in the right spots to succeed and won Super Bowl LIX.

And then there's the guy Eagles fans have grown to love to hate. This time last year, Nick Sirianni's job was genuinely in question. Even one year removed from a Super Bowl appearance and weeks removed from a 10-1 start, the team had fallen so quickly and so precipitously during the second half of 2023 that it seemed to raise questions about Sirianni's competence. Sirianni essentially fired defensive coordinator Sean Desai during the season, replaced him with Matt Patricia and got only worse on defense. After an embarrassing 32-9 loss to the Bucs in the postseason, it almost felt like a surprise that Sirianni returned to the job in 2024, albeit with new coordinators on both sides of the ball.

And now, 21 games later, Sirianni's Eagles have won 18 of their 21 games. They've lost one game in four months, and that required a drop from Smith and a last-minute touchdown drive from Jayden Daniels. They have routinely been the better-prepared and better-coached team week in and week out, and there are veterans on both sides of the ball who have leveled up and massively improved upon the players they were in prior stops. Roseman, Moore and Fangio all deserve credit for their efforts in making that happen, but it seems impossible and unrealistic to deny Sirianni his fair share of those plaudits.

Sirianni is now 54-23 in his career as an NFL coach. He has more playoff wins (six) than any coach in franchise history besides Reid. And now, he has the one thing on his mantle that Reid failed to achieve during the legendary coach's 14-season run in Philadelphia: the Lombardi Trophy.

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