As Patrick Mahomes’ contract grows, the Kansas City Chiefs’ team-building strategies need to change.
Over the past two years, the Chiefs have heavily invested in the present when building out their roster. Resulting in a Super Bowl win and another Super Bowl appearance, it s hard to argue against this strategy up to this point. These moves consisted of aggressive moves like the trade for defensive end Frank Clark, high-dollar signings like the acquisition of wide receiver Sammy Watkins, and an organizational desire to keep the band together.
That team-building strategy might not work quite as well going forward.
This is not to say the Chiefs can t sign expensive free agents or make aggressive trades in the years to come, but the margin of error for any of these moves is going to be much tighter than it was when Mahomes was making roughly $5 million per year.
If Kansas City Chiefs Quarterback Patrick Mahomes wins his second Super Bowl in three years as a starter, the possibilities for his career are endless.
Time of Possession Doesn t Impact the Chiefs and It Won t Help the Browns
The Cleveland Browns won t be able to keep Patrick Mahomes on the sidelines on Sunday. The Kansas City Chiefs will have their chances, and time of possession will not be a factor.
Author: To win this game, they need to keep Patrick Mahomes on the sideline.
A football adage as old as time, keeping the elite quarterback on the sideline has been a go-to line for many announcers over the years. Recently, however, there has been pushback on this line of thinking, and for good reason.
The primary goal against elite quarterbacks should be to score early and often.