Super Bowl repeat or revenge? Whatever happens, history will be made

Super Bowl repeat or revenge? Whatever happens, history will be made
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Super Bowl repeat or revenge? Whatever happens, history will be made
Author: Bryan Armen Graham in New Orleans
Published: Feb, 08 2025 12:00

Patrick Mahomes can become the first quarterback to win four titles before turning 30 while Saquon Barkley has a shot at breaking the postseason rushing record. A spectre of inevitability hangs over New Orleans in the final run-up to America’s high holy day. The Kansas City Chiefs, having spent the past half-decade as the National Football League’s most dominant force, are on the verge of something never before seen: a third successive Super Bowl title.

 [Bryan Armen Graham]
Image Credit: the Guardian [Bryan Armen Graham]

Theirs is a kind of supremacy that feels almost unnatural in the modern NFL, an era defined by salary caps and roster churn and parity-by-design, where success is intended to be fleeting in the best interests of the revenue-sharing collective. Yet here they are again, winners of 17 games so far and one more from a three-peat no team in the six-decade Super Bowl era has even come within 60 minutes of accomplishing.

 [The Louisiana national guard and Louisiana state police are out in force to patrol Bourbon Street before Super Bowl LIX]
Image Credit: the Guardian [The Louisiana national guard and Louisiana state police are out in force to patrol Bourbon Street before Super Bowl LIX]

Standing in their way is a team they know well. The Philadelphia Eagles, with 17 wins of their own, are back in the Super Bowl for the second time in three seasons, still nursing the scars of their first meeting with Kansas City. That game ended in heartbreak: a heart-stopping 38-35 Chiefs win in which a hobbled Patrick Mahomes orchestrated a near-perfect second half to overturn a 10-point deficit.

 [Philadelphia’s running back Saquon Barkley]
Image Credit: the Guardian [Philadelphia’s running back Saquon Barkley]

It was the first Super Bowl in which both teams scored at least 35 points, and a rematch so soon after – the ninth in Super Bowl history – only lends to the gravity of the occasion. The Eagles have spent much of the past year trying to convince themselves and their rabid supporters they are built to go the distance after last year’s spectacular late-season collapse raised doubts about whether they are the ascendant power they once seemed. The Chiefs, on the other hand, have long since arrived and have given no signal they are ready to exit the stage.

New Orleans, hosting a joint-record 11th Super Bowl but for the first time since 2013, remains a fitting stage for football’s annual bacchanal of conspicuous consumption. The Superdome has long been a site of NFL mythology, the backdrop to Joe Montana’s legendary game-winning drive in Super Bowl XXIII, Tom Brady’s first ring in Super Bowl XXXVI, and the surreal 34-minute blackout that nearly derailed the Baltimore Ravens’ title run a dozen years ago.

Even a French Quarter that has come to resemble a demilitarized zone in the weeks after the New Year’s Day terror attack has done little to dampen the visiting fans’ enthusiasm. This is particularly felt on Bourbon Street, where bag searches of pedestrians entering the area started on Wednesday and national guardsmen armed to the hilt patrol barricades at every entryway, a heightened security presence that makes the Paris Olympics seem like a county fair.

There is also no shortage of personal stakes. Andy Reid, coaching in his fifth Super Bowl, will break Bill Belichick’s record for most postseason games coached (45) and, with a win, join a select group of head coaches with four or more Super Bowl victories. For Mahomes, already a three-time Super Bowl MVP at 29 years old, a win would move him into a category all his own: no quarterback has ever started five Super Bowls before turning 30, and none have won four before reaching that milestone. He already has thrown 43 postseason touchdown passes, three shy of surpassing Joe Montana and Aaron Rodgers for second-most all-time.

The Eagles, meanwhile, are fighting to assert their own legacy. Their stormy head coach, Nick Sirianni, only 43 years old, is making his second Super Bowl appearance in his first four seasons, a feat previously accomplished only by Joe Gibbs and Mike Tomlin. Dual-threat quarterback Jalen Hurts, due to become the eighth quarterback to start multiple Super Bowls in his first five seasons, returns to the biggest stage with unfinished business. The 26-year-old played arguably the best game of his career against Kansas City two years ago, setting Super Bowl records for scrambling (70 rushing yards) and rushing touchdowns by a quarterback (three), and this time he has a new weapon alongside him: Saquon Barkley, the league’s leading rusher amid perhaps the best ever season by an NFL running back.

Barkley’s presence has transformed Philadelphia’s offense into a bruising, old-school machine, one that has produced 39 rushing touchdowns this season – including many by Tush Push, the trademark short-yardage play that has been parsed by Neil DeGrasse Tyson and hailed as unstoppable. Barkley, who turns 28 on Sunday, himself has rushed for 442 yards in the postseason, putting him within reach of John Riggins’s record for most rushing yards in a single playoff run. If he gets to 500, he will join Terrell Davis and Riggins as only the third player to do so.

Of course it wouldn’t be the Super Bowl without an excess off-field spectacle, and coming off an election year, the presence of Donald Trump at the game is sure to add a layer of political theatre. America’s once and restored king has long co-opted sports as not merely a proxy battle in the culture wars but the primary spectacle, and while his appearance will be largely symbolic in a city only 90 miles from the freshly rebranded Gulf of America, the response to him – cheers or boos – will inevitably become a talking point. It is an unwelcome distraction for the NFL, which prefers to focus on safer narratives: the enduring greatness of Mahomes, the redemption arc of the Eagles, or even the sheer absurdity of ticket prices, which soared past $8,000 on the resale market earlier in the week.

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