Patrick Mahomes Credit: NFC/NFC Game Pass |
Cincinnati and Joe Burrow are coming to town.
The Bengals beat the odds Sunday by also beating … no, by
burying … Buffalo to reach the AFC championship game for the second straight
season vs. top-seeded Kansas City. That’s good for Cincinnati; not so good for
Mahomes or the Chiefs.
The reason: Simple. Burrow and the Bengals are 3-0 vs. Mahomes.
Plus, they won all three in the same calendar year when the Chiefs’
quarterback wasn’t playing on one leg … and that’s more than unusual. It’s
downright extraordinary. It makes Burrow the only quarterback to face Mahomes
multiple times and not lose. It also makes him one of only two quarterbacks to
win three games vs. the presumptive league MVP.
The other is Tom Brady (3-3).
I think you get the idea. This is no ordinary Joe we’re
talking about. It’s Mahomes’ kryptonite, and more on that later.
First, the central question in front of everyone is: How
damaged is Mahomes? Answer: No one really knows how much of St. Patrick we get
now. High-ankle sprains are serious, normally sidelining injured players
several weeks. Nevertheless, Mahomes insists he’ll play next Sunday.
That should come as no surprise. But how comprised will he
be? Stay tuned.
In the meantime, there are no mysteries about Burrow and the
Bengals. They just dominated a Bills’ team that also beat Mahomes & Co.
this season, and they did it from start to finish – outscoring, outplaying and
outcoaching their overwhelmed opponent.
That wasn’t supposed to happen, not only because Buffalo
hadn’t lost a home playoff game with Josh Allen at quarterback (4-0), but
because the Bills seemed driven by the Jamar Hamlin story. But it did, and it
did because the Bengals had the better quarterback, the better offensive line,
the better defensive line and the better game plan.
In short, the better team.
“If this was a boxing match,” former quarterback and CBS analyst Phil Simms said, “we’re not
going to the scorecard. This was a knockout.
Oddsmakers make the Chiefs a 1-point favorite next Sunday,
and that doesn’t make sense. Mahomes is hurt. Burrow is not. History isn’t with
the Chiefs. It’s with the Bengals. Plus, Kansas City’s not the hottest team in
the AFC. Cincinnati is. The Bengals won their last 10 and are 14-2 over their
last 16 starts.
Oh, and one more thing: Cincinnati also won its last three
road playoff games. One was at Arrowhead.
“Anyone who doubts this team needs to have his head
examined,” said Bengals’ offensive line coach Frank Pollard.
I’d pay attention. This marks the fourth time in franchise
history the Bengals advanced to the AFC championship game. They won the
previous three.
SUNDAY SCHOOL: FIVE THINGS WE LEARNED
THIS WEEKEND
1. Jalen Hurts is more than OK. He went
into last weekend saying he was “less than 100 percent” with an injured right
shoulder. OK, well … tell that to the New York Giants. Hurts sliced, diced and
spliced what was supposed to be a decent defense, throwing for two TDs and
running for a third in a game that was over by the half. Bottom lin: He looked
like the MVP candidate that he is. “To have him out there,” said coach Nick
Sirianni, “it’s like having … I know I shouldn’t even go there … but is like
having Michael Jordan out there.” He’s right. He shouldn’t go there. Jordan won
six league titles. Hurts hasn’t been to one … yet.
2. Playoff seeds held. Three of the top
four seeded teams (Kansas City, San Francisco and Philadephia) advanced to conference
championship games, with Cincinnati the only outlier. But full disclosure: The
Bengals were the AFC’s third seed and were last year’s champion. Now, good luck
to top-ranked Kansas City and Philadelphia … because history tells us they’re
going to need it. Only two of the last eight No. 1 seeds advanced to the Super
Bowl (Kansas City in 2020 and San Francisco in 2019).
3. Don’t sleep on Chad Henne. Jacksonville
did, and you saw what happened. He led the Chiefs on a 98-yard TD drive, the
longest in franchise playoff history. With Mahomes hurt, there’s a chance …
maybe even a likelihood … we see his backup again. All I know is the last two
times Henne made playoff appearances, he saved a victory two years ago vs.
Cleveland and helped win Saturday’s game vs. the Jags.
4. In a passing game, running still matters.
The NFL is supposed to be all about the quarterbacks, and it usually is. But
not so much in the playoffs. An effective running game still makes a difference
… and this weekend’s winners were the proof. Philadelphia shredded the Giants
for 268 yards. Cincinnati had 172. Kansas City dissected Jacksonville for 144,
while San Francisco put up 113 on Dallas -- including 86 in the second half. The
four averaged 4.97 yards per carry, with only one more TD passing (6) than
rushing (5).
5. Cincinnati’s offensive line is deeper than
advertised. The Bengals were supposed to be crippled up front by the loss of
three starters. They weren’t. In fact, they dominated both sides of the line of
scrimmage from beginning to end. But the surprise was how well Burrow was
protected by his subs. A year ago, the Bengals’ offensive line was a major headache,
with Burrow sacked 70 times (including the playoffs). On Sunday, he was sacked
only once and hit three times. Time for Frank Pollack, Cincinnati’s offensive
line coach, to take a bow.
THIRD AND 20
1. According
to reports, the NFL is considering neutral sites for future conference
championship games. Please tell me they’re wrong. As former Packers’ exec Andrew
Brandt pointed out on Twitter, “it sounds preposterous and a money grab by
owners.” Check. Not only is it a poke at hometown fans; it’s a competitive
disadvantage for higher seeds. There should be a reward for finishing with the
best regular-season records, and home-field advantage is that reward. That
makes sense. This idea does not. However …this is the same league that ships
games overseas each year, another blow to competitive advantage and hometown
support. So don’t say you weren’t warned.
2. Key
number for San Francisco rookie quarterback Brock Purdy: Zero. He’s had no
turnovers in the playoffs and none in his past three starts. But now comes the
hard part. “There’s no tougher place to play than playing in Philadelphia,”
said Hall-of-Fame quarterback and FOX analyst
Terry Bradshaw. He’s right.
3. As
shaky as Brett Maher was, the kicker wasn’t the story for Dallas. The quarterback
was. For the sixth time this season, including the fourth time in the last
seven games, Dak Prescott threw multiple interceptions. He had two, including
one at the San Francisco 12 that not only short-circuited a sure Dallas scoring
drive but led to a Robbie Gould field goal.
4. Tell
me again why Joe Burrow couldn’t start for Urban Meyer at Ohio State.
5. Don’t
let people tell you there’s no place for defense in today’s NFL. The NFC’s top
two defenses this season were San Francisco and Philadelphia.
6. When
the NFL went to replay as an officiating tool it was never meant to overrule
something like that Ja’Marr Chase “touchdown” catch. In most universes where
they play football, that’s a score. Replay was supposed to correct egregious
calls, not dissect minutiae. So do it.
7. George
Kittle or Travis Kelce?
8. Now
you know why coaches emphasize ball security. The weekend’s four winners
committed one turnover (San Francisco). Their opponents had six.
9. Look
at it this way, Cowboys’ fans: You now have time to join owner Jerry Jones on
Terry Bradshaw’s Getaway Vacation.
10. I’m
beginning to get the feeling that Lamar Jackson will push Aaron Rodgers for
Best Actor in an Offseason Drama.
11. Coming
soon to FOX’s “Alert: Missing Persons
Unit:” The entire Buffalo Bills defense.
12. Quote
of the day goes to Cincinnati’s Joe Burrow. Asked what he thought of last
week’s sale of tickets for a Buffalo-Kansas City neutral site, he said: “Better
send those refunds.”
13. How
come we don’t hear more about Lou Anarumo? He’s Cincinnati’s defensive
coordinator, and he just put the kibosh on Josh Allen. Of course, that begs the
question: If the Bengals can hit Allen eight times, what happens when they attack
Patrick Mahomes on one leg?
14. You
gotta feel for Tony Pollard. That might be the last time we see him in a
Cowboys’ uniform.
15. What’s
the deal with Kansas City’s Chris Jones? One of the game’s fiercest pass
rushers, he still doesn’t have a sack in 13 playoff games. You can look it up.
16. Stefon
Diggs left the locker room in a huff, and I don’t blame him. He had one
second-half catch for 8 yards Sunday and only four receptions and no scores for
the afternoon. That makes it no TDs in Diggs’ last five playoff games. Stefon. Diggs. Hard to believe.
17. Just
wondering: Is “Knock at the Cabin” a movie about the Pro Football Hall of
Fame’s incoming Class of 2023?
18. Now
more than ever, Minnesota’s playoff loss to the Giants looks worse.
19. The
NFL’s definition of delay of game should be canned. This isn’t exactly rocket
science, fellas. If the clock strikes zero, it’s a penalty. Pretty simple.
20. Saquon
Barkley says he can’t “envision” Saturday’s game as his last with the Giants.
Maybe that’s because the Giants can’t either.
SUNDAY’S GOLD JACKET STATS
n
Robbie Gould hasn’t missed a field-goal attempt
in the playoffs. Ever. He’s 29 for 29.
n
Cincinnati coach Zac Taylor is 5-1 in the
playoffs.
n
The 49ers haven’t lost a game since Christian
McCaffrey took over as a starter. They’re 12-0. According to ESPN, three of the previous four teams to enter conference
championship games on winning streaks of 12 or more won the game.
n
This is the fifth straight year that Kansas City
hosts a conference playoff game, the longest streak in NFL history.
n
Mike McCarthy is 0-4 vs. the 49ers in his playoff
history.
SUNDAY’S GOLD JACKET QUOTES
n
“No excuses. They beat us. They ‘out-physicaled’
us.” – Buffalo coach Sean McDermott.
n
“Our goal is to win a Super Bowl or world
championship, and we didn’t accomplish that. So everything that happened in the
season is kind of null and void in our minds, and it sucks.” – Buffalo quarterback Josh Allen.
n
“Joe started 9-for-9 in his sleep. What more
could you ask for?” – Cincinnati’s Ted
Karras on Joe Burrow.
n
“Go win it.” – Buffalo cornerback Tre’Davious White to Burrow after the game.
n
“We’re sick. Just sick.” – Dallas owner Jerry Jones.
n
“Playoff football is never easy, but we’re
moving on.” – San Francisco quarterback
Brock Purdy.
From Brian wolf ...
ReplyDeleteThe Purdy story is writing itself. Can the Niners win 13 games in row and put the first rookie QB into the SB?
Philly has the pass coverage to stop them.
To me, Chase scored his second TD with possession because the ball never touched the ground. Didnt matter, Mixon ran with authority to put the game away.
Bad day to be named Diggs. One has a frustrating second half in Buffalo, the other one for Dallas drops an interception that could have helped the team win the game.
Note to Giants, if you keep Barkley and Jones, better find a real wide receiver to help them out.
So glad there is no game in Atlanta next week ... Throw out the neutral site conference championship game idea, NFL. You owners arent starving ...
Yes, I’m sure I’m not the only Vikings fan that feels worse after Philly’s beat down of the Giants than we did after last week’s loss.
ReplyDeleteFrom Brian wolf ...
ReplyDeleteThat non-fumble call on Josh Allen that was ruled incomplete was one of the worst calls I have ever seen in a playoff game. Almost as bad as the tuck rule call in 2001/02. Ask the Titans and Joshua Dobbs what he thought of that star treatment call ?
nice job as always Clark....a couple comments: 1. why oh why does the NFL continue to muck up what constitutes a "catch" or "interference"? why? I'm no Bengal fan, but THAT Chase catch was a td? back in the 60s it was simple and everyone understood both...."catch" when receiver has control" (subjective but clear using the "reasonable man" standard.....defense? no contact once the ball is in the air.....thoughts? 2. CIncy bullied Buffalo, no question, but I submit you're commen a little unfair to the Bills D...it's "next man up" in an unforgiving sport, but what was out there on Sunday was about half the real Bills on the defensive side of the ball 3. thrilled that Jerry's just sick....why don't you give back the yellow jacket that you so clearly don't deserve?
ReplyDeletemisstyped.....should read: THAT chase catch WAS a td. (that thing at the end of the sentence? Period.
ReplyDelete49ers lost first game after McCaffery joined them, to KC
ReplyDeleteThank you, UR correct. made change
DeleteFrom Brian wolf ...
ReplyDeleteCall me crazy but I think Henne should start this sunday and here is why ...
As Clark said, Henne has proven himself in the playoffs.
If the Bengals prepare for Mahomes, the Chiefs can go with Henne and emphasize ball control while keeping Burrow and that offense off the field. If Henne plays well and wins the game, save Mahomes for the SB. However, if Henne struggles and the game starts to slip away, put in Mahomes not only to rejuvenate the team but the crowd as well. The Bengal's defense will be more tired at that point and not be as fresh to face him.
Yes, you go with what got you there but the Chiefs have to be smart with their QB. Further injury would put Henne in the game anyway but like Reich did with Buffalo in 1992, trust your backup to get the job done.