“When I came into the NFL, everyone said you just couldn’t run the ball anymore because the defenses had gotten too big and too fast. They forgot that everything in football as in physics is relative, and an offense could be every bit as big and just as fast.” – Vince Lombardi
Plenty of pundits saw the Super Bowl 54 match-up between San Francisco and Kansas City coming down the pike long before the bout was scheduled. From a broader point-of-view, however, the first NFL title tilt of a new decade would have been thought impossible 10 years ago, or perhaps even 5 years ago.
Patrick Mahomes of the Chiefs is foremost among a new breed of dual-threat QBs running “NCAA”-style playbooks in the National Football League. But while a college team might have a grand total of 25 running plays and 50 pass plays to choose from, Kansas City’s offense looks more like something out of the 22nd century. Mahomes can run like a tailback, rifle deep balls to a talented WR corps, and scramble out of the pocket like Fran Tarkenton. As if that’s not enough, he’s got a tight end in Travis Kelce who might become known as a great Super Bowl pass-catcher…depending on how things go at Hard Rock Stadium.
Meanwhile, at a glance the San Francisco 49ers’ offense is ordinary. Runs off-tackle to a committee-style backfield and drop-back passes from QB Jimmy Garoppolo don’t look all that different from what NFL clubs have been doing for decades. But look again at the 49ers’ play-selection and a different picture emerges. San Francisco attempted 8 passes – 8 passes! – in the NFC Championship Game and whipped Green Bay 37-20 in a scrum that wasn’t even as close as the score suggests.
Every analyst on TV and the internet has an opinion on the Super Bowl, which is handicapped with a tight (-1.5) point spread (in favor of the Chiefs) in Las Vegas. But they’re the same people who have yelled “it’s a passing league!” for entire careers. To profit from a Greatest Show on Earth between a pair of teams going against the grain, the shark must also buck the norm and think about the NFL in brand new terms.
That might just go for the head coaches too.
How Perceptions of February’s Matchup Are Changing…Or Not
There are valid reasons to like the “sexy” underdog San Francisco on 2/2. For starters, the 49er offensive line is so powerful that it almost doesn’t matter who’s running the ball behind it. Raheem Mostert is the latest San Francisco running back to dazzle crowds in the NFC playoffs, rushing for 220 yards and 4 touchdowns on just under 30 carries against the Packers. Matt Breida remains a go-to option in the backfield, though RB Tevin Coleman has had injury problems and may not play in the Super Bowl. In a sense, though, San Fran’s most effective running-game weapon is All-World tackle Joe Staley, who leads an OL that overcame an injury of its own when center Ben Garland stepped-in for the ailing Weston Richburg.
Garoppolo isn’t a bad downfield passer despite rarely getting the opportunity these days. If Kyle Shanahan decides to air it out against the Chiefs for whatever reason (not unprecedented, considering his Super Bowl past with the Atlanta Falcons) then WR Emmanuel Sanders and TE George Kittle could be rewarded for their patience through a playoff run that has involved a whole lot of perimeter blocking and not a lot of catches.
Meanwhile, yards are hard to come by against a resurgent San Francisco front-7. Nick Bosa and Dee Ford are 2 of the premier QB hunters in the sport, and the 49ers have posted an amazing 44 sacks in 2019-20 without blitzing often. That means a secondary led by Richard Sherman is blessed with extra hands while opposing passers struggle to avoid the rush.
The Chiefs could be faced with some tactical headaches. Kansas City’s offense fared uncommonly badly at times against the Los Angeles Chargers this season, and the “Cover 3” defense employed by the Bolts’ defensive backfield is also a favorite call of San Francisco DC Robert Saleh. (He can’t score goals like Mohamed Salah, but his 11-man unit has been the most dominant in the league save for an injury-addled track meet vs New Orleans.)
In spite of all of the above, I’m leaning toward Kansas City. Not because I’m from Missouri…and not because any of the analysis above is necessarily flawed. Rather, the idea that the 49ers will run for 5+ yards per carry, complete play-action passes for touchdowns, and stuff the KC offense for a large chunk of 4 quarters is factored-into the Las Vegas odds already despite the Chiefs standing as a slender favorite.
In normal circumstances an AFC quarterback who’s already been a league MVP would be a 10-point favorite on the spread if paired against an NFC-representative QB who tossed 6 completions in the conference title game. We can all agree that if Super Bowl 54 turns into a shoot-out, the Chiefs have the advantage of snapping to 1 of the top quarterbacks in the NFL. It’s the match-up at other positions that’s keeping the odds so tight, but some of the assumptions being made by pro handicappers could be dubious at best.
Chiefs Could Justify Their Favorite’s Status..and Then Some
Think about what the Chiefs need to do to win this Super Bowl. First and foremost, they’ve got to stop the 49er ground game which has torn-up so many opponents in the regular season and the playoffs. If we’re speaking as historians, there’s just no way that will happen. Kansas City’s defense has been soft against the run in more big games than you can count during the Andy Reid era.
I wouldn’t even be confident that Reid would understand why his defense should change anything this time. The portly KC skipper is a disciple of late San Francisco coach Bill Walsh, who would not be happy about what Shanahan is doing with the 49ers now. Walsh believed that trying to run 50+ times per game and control the LOS with brute force was a fool’s errand. It’s easy to imagine the 49ers rushing for 1st down after 1st down on Sunday while Reid stands on the sideline with a detached look on his face, thinking that his balanced offense will prove superior in the end no matter how many pancake blocks the 49ers make in the opening quarters.
But past is past – and the 2020 Super Bowl is happening now, not 3 years ago. Kansas City dealt with the same conundrum against the Tennessee Titans in the AFC Championship Game less than 2 weeks ago, made worse by the fact that Tennessee jumped out to an early lead. That’s the perfect scenario for a run-heavy team to punish a high-flying opponent and control the ball. KC’s defense turned it around on the front lines, doing a low number on superstar RB Derrick Henry and leaving the door open for Mahomes and company to take over the contest in the 2nd and 3rd quarters. The 49er ground game has enjoyed the benefit of a terrific defense in 2019-20, giving Mostert and the now-injured Coleman plenty of carries in comfortable field-position, and allowing Shanahan – a nervous and impatient coach in his worst moments as exemplified by the awful 4th quarter of Super Bowl LI – to stick with the game plan. Tennessee had no such luxury this season. Henry and his blockers simply controlled games by themselves. Maybe the Chiefs can’t explode for 35 points at a time against the 49ers, but they’ve already shut down a ground game on-par with that of San Francisco’s, and arguably an even-better one if you consider what Henry’s been up-against while nearly leading the Titans all the way to the grail.
Secondly, the angle that the 49ers will simply rush 3 or 4 men at Mahomes successfully while leaving Sherman and 7 other coverage-men to blanket the KC receiving corps is also an incomplete analysis. Mahomes is a phenomenal rusher whose epic dash from the 35-yard line for a TD was the knockout blow against Tennessee. The 49ers will need spies to watch him. Ford and Bosa can’t simply rush headlong to the pocket like the Patriots’ front-7 did against Jared Goff last season. Pressure from San Francisco is just as likely to lead to explosive plays from Kansas City as Mahomes escapes the pocket and finds only a couple of linebackers to beat in a footrace.
Last but not least, as much as the 49er kicking game has improved as Robbie Gould rebounds from a mid-season injury, the Chiefs have an even more-deadly special teams unit led by PK Harrison Butker and speedy kick-return threat Mecole Hardman. An 11-MPH breeze is currently predicted on Super Bowl Sunday in Miami, making it less likely that Gould will simply boom kickoffs over Hardman’s head and into the end zone all night.
Speaking of special teams, the kicking game could play a big role in whether the Over/Under total pays-off on the high or the low side of the market.
An Over/Under Pick from the WagerBop Team
Of course there’s a chance the 49ers will ground-and-pound and win the game by a TD or more. But at the same time, the Chiefs have shown that they won’t settle for a 3 or 7 or 10-point lead if Mahomes’ offense breaks through and starts to do damage. Tyreek Hill is a potential game breaker, but KC has plenty of other weapons through the air, and the NFC representatives can’t simply rely on Richard Sherman to take away 1 side of the field and consider the job done.
Kyle Shanahan may be an offensive genius but he’s as prone to play-calling foibles as Reid when coaching under the brightest lights, and I wouldn’t want to be on the 49er sideline when the Chiefs’ irrepressible attack gets vroom! vroom! revved-up again in the 2nd half. We’ve seen Reid’s teams blow a lot of leads in a lot of huge football games. But we saw a Shanahan team blow a gigantic lead at the Super Bowl not very long ago.
All due respect to Vince Lombardi – the 2019-20 season has proven The Pope correct that football is and always will be a running sport. But the KC quarterback can do some running of his own, and a student of Bill Walsh is more likely to win a battle of styles in Magic City.
Kurt has authored close to 1000 stories covering football, soccer, basketball, baseball, ice hockey, prize-fighting and the Olympic Games. Kurt posted a 61% win rate on 200+ college and NFL gridiron picks last season. He muses about High School football on social media as The Gridiron Geek.
Twitter: @scorethepuck
Email: kurt@wagerbop.com
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