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  • Celtics Drop Major Jayson Tatum & Jaylen Brown Update After Dominating the Knicks!

    Celtics Drop Major Jayson Tatum & Jaylen Brown Update After Dominating the Knicks!

    Celtics Drop Major Jayson Tatum & Jaylen Brown Update After Dominating the Knicks!

    With a 27-point blowout win against the New York Knicks on Saturday, the Boston Celtics improved to 37-16 on the season. Star forward Jayson Tatum had a monster performance in the win over New York, leading the team with 40 points, six rebounds and four assists.

    Tatum’s co-star and reigning Finals MVP Jaylen Brown played 32 minutes and finished the night with 12 points, three rebounds and five assists in the win against New York.

    Following this big win, the Celtics may be shorthanded heading into their next matchup against the Miami Heat, according to the team’s latest injury announcement.


    Boston Celtics forwards Jayson Tatum (0) and Jaylen Brown (7) Peter Casey-USA TODAY Sports© Peter Casey-USA TODAY Sports

    On Sunday, the Celtics announced via their official injury report that Tatum and Brown are currently listed as questionable for Monday night’s game due to knee injuries. This means the Celtics could be without their star duo when they face the Heat at Kaseya Center.

    The Celtics have yet to play a game without both of their stars this season and are 7-3 in games when either Tatum or Brown did not see the floor.

    This latest news adds to the Celtics growing list of injuries. Guard Jrue Holiday is set to miss his third straight game as he continues to recover from a right shoulder impingement, while new pickup Torrey Craig continues to work his way back from a right ankle injury.

    On the bright side, Kristaps Porzingis could return to the fold after he was a late scratch against the Knicks due to illness.

    While the final injury report could see Tatum or Brown upgraded, the Celtics will hope both players return to full health soon enough. Tatum currently averages 26.8 points, 8.6 rebounds, and 5.6 assists this season, while Brown sits at 22.9 points, 6 rebounds, and 4.8 assists.

  • Jayson Tatum Drops 40 in a Celtics Masterclass – 8 Takeaways from the Blowout Win Over the Knicks!

    Jayson Tatum Drops 40 in a Celtics Masterclass – 8 Takeaways from the Blowout Win Over the Knicks!

    Jayson Tatum Drops 40 in a Celtics Masterclass – 8 Takeaways from the Blowout Win Over the Knicks!

    Tatum moved to No. 9 on the Celtics’ all-time scoring list.

    Jayson Tatum dominated the Knicks on Saturday night. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)
    Jayson Tatum led the Celtics to an eye-opening 131-104 win over the Knicks on Saturday, as they bounced back loudly from a disappointing loss.

    Here are the takeaways.

    Jayson Tatum had one of those games.

    With 2:31 remaining in the third quarter and the Knicks waving their arms trying not to fall over the edge of a cliff, Jayson Tatum backed the ball out behind the 3-point line with Mikal Bridges defending him. The shot clock wound down, and Tatum took one dribble followed by an enormous side step to his right, which created plenty of space between himself and Bridges. He launched a 29-foot triple, which caught nothing but net and elicited one of the more despairing noises you will hear all season from the Madison Square Garden crowd.

    There was plenty of time left in the game, but Tatum’s three felt very much like a dagger – the Knicks had walked a lead that ballooned as high as 18 in the first half all the way down to three in the third quarter before a series of triples by the Celtics helped push the advantage back up to 16. Tatum played a huge role – he scored 19 points in the third quarter alone, part of a 40-point statline (13-for-26, 7-for-14 from three, six rebounds, four assists) that would have been gaudier if Payton Pritchard hadn’t ground his heel into the Knicks in the fourth after Tatum checked out, ending Tatum’s evening prematurely.

    Tatum was brilliant on Saturday – the kind of game that he plays every so often during a season that gives Celtics fans the ammunition they need to counter any argument made against him online. He opened the proceedings by rooting Karl-Anthony Towns to the floor with an in-and-out dribble and a monstrous two-handed slam over Precious Achiuwa on Boston’s first basket of the game. A few minutes later, he made Achiuwa do a stumbling two-step back into the paint with a cross behind his back before burying a 3-pointer.

    Spike Lee had the audacity to bark something at Tatum in the third, so Tatum hit several shots in a row and barked something back. And in the fourth quarter, Tatum scored five more points to ice things before taking a seat.

    “He was ready to play, and that was special,” Mazzulla said. “I just thought he did a great job of taking what the defense gave him, whether it was for him or his teammates.

    “But his ability to play vs. different coverages throughout the game, get the shot that he wanted and play with a sense of poise, that was a special performance.”

    Generally, teams force the ball out of Tatum’s hands, and he gives it up happily enough – content to let his highly talented teammates feast off the 2-on-1s created by his gravity.

    On Saturday, Tatum had a chance to remind a packed Madison Square Garden – as well as a national TV audience watching on ABC – why all of those teams would rather double him than let him cook: He is a punishingly great player who is great both because of his ability to let the game develop around him and to demolish teams when they give him the chance.

    “It’s always about making the right read,” Tatum said. “If it’s shooting the ball five times in a row, that’s what it’s got to be. If it’s hitting one of the bigs in the seam, if it’s hitting D-White in the dunker, or if the nail is helping, hit the guy in the corner or whatever, that’s what it has to be. So just living in that space, regardless of where you at, who you’re playing against. It’s not like I’m trying to prove anything out there. I’m just playing the game the right way.”

    Tatum hit a new milestone.

    Tatum moved into the Celtics’ top 10 scorers of all time, finishing the evening with 13,193 points to surpass both Dave Cowens and Jo Jo White.

    Next up? Bill Russell at No. 8 with 14,522.

    “I’m really grateful that I get to coach him, so I don’t take that for granted,” Mazzulla said. “But that’s big-time for him. He does it the right way. For him to be able to accomplish that while focused on winning and being a great teammate is really important.

    “And I think he’s still underrated. He’s one of the best players out there.”

    The Celtics are a really awful matchup for the Knicks.

    The Knicks are just 2.5 games behind the Celtics in the standings, but Saturday’s game felt like a statement by the Celtics that the distance between the two teams on the court is far greater.

    The Celtics feast on teams that have offensive juggernaut players who are also defensive liabilities, especially when those players are either A) undersized guards or B) slow-footed bigs, and especially when those undersized guards and/or slow-footed bigs are key parts of the team who can’t be easily subbed out.

    The Knicks have two such players, and against the Celtics, that might simply not be tenable.

    Jalen Brunson kept the Knicks alive in the first half and deep into the third quarter with his offensive brilliance. While he’s as grifty as a player can get, drawing fouls with a wide array of pump fakes and leaning jumpers, he’s also an incredibly talented scorer and pick-and-roll operator.

    Towns, the Knicks’ new offseason acquisition, is the prototypical modern offensive big man – equally a threat to hit threes, put the ball on the floor and post up effectively.

    But the Celtics’ secret sauce has a lot of flavors, and a big part of it is that all of their talented offensive players can also defend really well. Together, Brunson and Towns give the Celtics high-value targets on any given possession in the pick-and-roll, and the Celtics’ defenders hold up well enough against them to prevent their offense from making up the difference.

    Brunson – whose evening was very well summarized by his stat line of 36 points on 10-for-18 shooting, 13 free throws and a -19 in the box score – kept the Knicks alive in the first half and the third quarter, but the Knicks simply didn’t have enough for Tatum’s onslaught.

    Towns, meanwhile, finished with just nine points – his first time this season failing to reach double figures.

    “You tally up all the ways that they are able to score, and you take a few of those away,” Mazzulla said. “We didn’t do a great job at the free throw line – we have to do a better job of defending without fouling. But we were able to just take away a lot of the stuff that they get through some of the details, and the positioning and the details were on point.”

    Payton Pritchard slammed the door.

    If Tatum had the Knicks waving their arms at the edge of the cliff, Pritchard spin-kicked them over it.

    Pritchard scored 15 of his 25 points in the fourth quarter, burying three of his six triples in the final frame. As he put the Knicks away, Tatum roared from the bench – evidently more than content to sit tight on 40 points and watch Pritchard handle the rest.

    Pritchard finished 9-for-13 from the floor with four rebounds, four assists and one “too small” celebration against Josh Hart.

    “For me, it’s just about making the right reads every time,” Pritchard said. “I had two shots in a row I hit. The next two plays, I hit Luke. And it’s just making the right read. That’s how I judge my game. It’s not makes or misses or anything, it’s making the right reads, and I thought I did a good job of that.”

    Luke Kornet was cooking.

    Let chef Luke Kornet do your cooking this evening, and you won’t even have to wash the dishes.

    Starting in place of Kristaps Porzingis, who was a late scratch due to illness, Kornet finished a perfect 7-for-7 from the field with 14 points, 12 rebounds and three blocks. The Celtics started with Kornet and Al Horford on the floor in a double big lineup, and – not for the first time this season – Kornet gave them really excellent minutes in a starting role.

    “To me, it’s more about just having different ways that you can play,” Mazzulla said. “The season presents opportunities for that, and we need to be able to be flexible to be able to win the matchup at that particular time.

    “I thought tonight, that won the matchup for us. New York is one of the most physical teams in the league. They do a great job on both ends of the glass, and we were able to counteract that a little bit with our physicality. So it’s a credit to the guys for playing as hard as they did, especially defensively, they were really well connected.”

    “Big Luke played his ass off today,” Tatum added. “He kind of really set the tone to start.”

    The imperfect-but-useful Neemias Queta

    Nobody would accuse Neemias Queta of being a flawless basketball player – he finds himself in too many uncomfortable defensive positions, he swipes too often at defenders who already had him beat, and he can be prone to turnovers.

    But Queta is also just so long and athletic that he can often be a positive player despite the flaws. On Saturday, Queta (11 points, 4-for-7 shooting, eight rebounds) did a lot of little things to boost the Celtics. He set good screens, and he made the most of the ensuing rolls to the rim. He gobbled up rebounds. He made most of his free throws. He was a deterrent at the rim, and he held up relatively well even  He even knocked down a tough jump hook in the paint in the fourth.

    Queta hasn’t always had consistent minutes this year, but with Porzingis sidelined, he filled in nicely. That’s the power of a deep bench full of acceptable role players – they won’t be perfect, but they can give you what you need on a short-handed evening in February.

    Playing in New York

    The Celtics weren’t shy about what it meant to play in New York.

    “I saw Denzel Washington sitting court side, so I was excited about that,” Tatum said with a small smile.

    Tatum added that while Boston is the best place to play in the NBA, New York is “probably’ second.

    “They got all the celebrities, but they’ve also got that edge about them,” Tatum said. “They know basketball, they’re passionate, they’re chanting and cheering the whole time, so it is a special place to play.”

    Pritchard, an Oregon native, noted that he hadn’t been at a game at Madison Square Garden before he was in the NBA.

    “You dream of moments like this, and to come here and play, and the intensity of this game, it was definitely a dream to play here,” he said.

    Even Mazzulla, who rarely admits these types of things, conceded that the moment felt large.

    “I think once you get out there and you feel the energy of the Garden, and you feel the energy of the two teams, once you get out there, it’s obviously a game the guys wanted, and it should be that way,” he said. “At the same time, we have to do the same thing 36 hours from now, but it was a great environment, and I thought the guys kind of relished in that and stuck together.”

    Two more games, then the break.

    The Celtics have just two more games until the All-Star break. On Monday, they take on the Heat in Miami at 7:30 p.m. before returning home for a game against the newly improved Spurs with Victor Wembanyama and De’Aaron Fox on Wednesday before the NBA takes a week off.

  • VIDEO: Cameras Caught Chiefs Players Crying Their Eyes Out On The Bench During Blowout Loss To Eagles At Super Bowl 59

    VIDEO: Cameras Caught Chiefs Players Crying Their Eyes Out On The Bench During Blowout Loss To Eagles At Super Bowl 59

    VIDEO: Cameras Caught Chiefs Players Crying Their Eyes Out On The Bench During Blowout Loss To Eagles At Super Bowl 59

    Charles Omenihu crying on the bench.Charles Omenihu crying (Photo via FOX)
    The Kansas City Chiefs’ reign as the NFL’s kings has ended, with the Philadelphia Eagles dethroning them at Super Bowl 59 on Sunday night.

    The Eagles put on a dominant display, blowing the AFC champions out with a surprising 40-22 result. Having let the scores get close in the fourth quarter of their last meeting in the big game, Philly took no such chances this time around.

    Chiefs Player Inconsolable During Super Bowl Loss

    The Chiefs, who were chasing a three-peat and hoping to become the first NFL team to win three straight titles in the modern era, had their dreams shattered.

    And they were all feeling it, with cameras catching one of them crying on the bench.

    With the outcome inevitable, Chiefs defensive end Charles Omenihu couldn’t contain his emotions. Check it out in the video below:

     

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    Of course, there were tears on both sides of the Lombardi Trophy tonight, but a lot of them were joyful, with Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni also getting caught letting some escape as he soaked it in.

    We reckon the parties have already kicked off in Philly after their team’s vengeful showing.

  • VIDEO: Travis Kelce Looked Like He Wanted To Cry While Walking To Locker Room After Chiefs’ Super Bowl Loss

    VIDEO: Travis Kelce Looked Like He Wanted To Cry While Walking To Locker Room After Chiefs’ Super Bowl Loss

    VIDEO: Travis Kelce Looked Like He Wanted To Cry While Walking To Locker Room After Chiefs’ Super Bowl Loss

    Travis Kelce walking to locker roomTravis Kelce (Photo via Twitter)
    What an all-around terrible night for Travis Kelce and the Chiefs.

    In arguably the most stunning result of the NFL postseason, the Kansas City Chiefs got blown out against the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LIX on Sunday.

    If this is to be Kelce’s NFL curtain call, then he has left by finishing with four catches and 39 yards from six targets.

    Following the blowout, cameras caught the Chiefs headed to the locker room in stunned silence.

    Kelce looked as if he wanted to cry.

    Travis Kelce Set Career Record In Super Bowl

    Kelce previously teased that he may be retiring from the NFL after competing in Super Bowl LIX.

    If he does, he will go out with another record that was set.

    No player in 59 seasons has racked up as many receptions as the Kansas City Chiefs tight end has in the Super Bowl.

    On his third catch Sunday against the Philadelphia Eagles, Kelce would surpass Jerry Rice for the most catches in Super Bowl history.

    Earlier this postseason, Kelce broke another one of Rice’s playoff records as he broke a tie with Rice for the most all-time 100-yard playoff games.

  • VIDEO: Travis Kelce’s Ex-GF Kayla Nicole Ruthlessly Mocked Him From The Stands During Their Blowout Loss At Super Bowl 59

    VIDEO: Travis Kelce’s Ex-GF Kayla Nicole Ruthlessly Mocked Him From The Stands During Their Blowout Loss At Super Bowl 59

    VIDEO: Travis Kelce’s Ex-GF Kayla Nicole Ruthlessly Mocked Him From The Stands During Their Blowout Loss At Super Bowl 59

    Kayla Nicole making L gesture (left) and Travis Kelce sulking (right)Kayla Nicole and Travis Kelce (Photos via Page Six & Imagn)
    Travis Kelce’s girlfriend, Taylor Swift, did not have an enjoyable Super Bowl this year, but his ex, Kayla Nicole, appeared to have a good time at the game on Sunday.

    Kelce had a very quiet game, making four catches for 39 yards as the Kansas City Chiefs got blown out by the Philadelphia Eagles. They couldn’t get it going until garbage time, when the contest was already out of reach, losing 40-22 as Philly put on a defensive clinic.

    Kayla, who spent five years in a relationship with the Chiefs tight end, didn’t share his disappointment. She was seen cheering for the Eagles in the stands while holding up an “L” gesture.

    Check her out in the video below:

    Kayla Nicole Got Some Revenge On Sunday

    The sports reporter and social media influencer has had a tough time since Kelce started dating Swift and has spoken about the abuse she’s been getting from the pop star’s fans on a few occasions.

    She finally got one over them on Sunday and appeared to be pleased with herself.

  • Super Bowl LIX: Kevin Costner, Jay-Z, Bradley Cooper among stars at big game in New Orleans

    Super Bowl LIX: Kevin Costner, Jay-Z, Bradley Cooper among stars at big game in New Orleans

    Super Bowl LIX: Kevin Costner, Jay-Z, Bradley Cooper among stars at big game in New Orleans

    Taylor Swift attending Super Bowl to cheer on boyfriend Travis Kelce

    Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans, where the Kansas City Chiefs are taking on the Philadelphia Eagles, is star-studded.

    Kevin Costner, Jay-Z, Bradley Cooper and more have already been spotted at Caesars Superdome.

    Here are all the stars in attendance at the big game.

    Kevin Costner, Jay-Z and Bradley Cooper are at the Super Bowl.

    Taylor Swift

    Taylor Swift cheers

    Taylor Swift was spotted arriving at the big game ready to cheer on her boyfriend, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce.

    The singer was seen settling into her private suite to watch the game. She opted for an all-white ensemble, rocking a white suit jacket over a white tank top and sparkly denim shorts, as well as white knee-high boots.

    Kevin Costner

    Kevin Costner at the Super Bowl

    Kevin Costner was photographed on the field before the Super Bowl in a white button-down shirt and khaki pants.

    When asked ahead of the game if he thought the Kansas City Chiefs would become the first team in NFL history to win three Super Bowl titles back to back, the “Yellowstone” star told reporters, “There’s a very good chance, is there not?”

    Jay-Z

    Jay-Z, Blue Ivy and Rumi on the field at the Super Bowl.

    Jay-Z was photographed on the field with his two daughters, Blue Ivy and Rumi.

    The trio coordinated their outfits, with all three of them photographed in black. The recording artist rocked a black beanie and dark shades as well as a black shirt and pants, while both Blue Ivy and Rumi wore black tops with blue denim shorts.

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    Bradley Cooper

    Bradley Cooper at the Super Bowl

    WATCH: BRADLEY COOPER STANDING ON THE SIDELINES AT THE SUPER BOWL

    Lifelong Philadelphia Eagles fan, Bradley Cooper, was seen arriving for the Super Bowl with his daughter, Lea.

    Both Cooper and his daughter were dressed head to toe in Eagles green, with Cooper making it clear he’s raising the next generation of Eagles fans. At the start of the game, Cooper introduced the Eagles onto the field with Declan LeBaron, an 8-year-old Philadelphia Eagles super fan suffering from juvenile arthritis, who he surprised with tickets.

    Miles Teller

    Miles and Keleigh Teller at the Super Bowl.

    “Top Gun” star Miles Teller was at the Super Bowl to cheer on his favorite team, the Philadelphia Eagles.

    He and his wife, Keleigh Teller, were photographed on the sidelines dressed head to toe in Eagles gear, making their allegiances clear.

    Paul Rudd

    Paul Rudd at the Super Bowl

    Paul Rudd was spotted on the sidelines wearing Chiefs colors prior to the start of the big game, getting ready to cheer on his favorite team.

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    The “Ant-Man” star has been a lifelong Kansas City fan, having grown up in the area. He has been present at many games, cheering the team on, including the 2024 Super Bowl, where he celebrated the Chiefs win with the team.

    Adam Sandler

    Adam Sandler was spotted greeting former Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce prior to the game.

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    Jason famously went up against his brother, Travis, in the Super Bowl in 2023, the last time the Eagles played the Chiefs in the championship game.

    Paul McCartney

    Paul McCartney on stage

    Sir Paul McCartney was spotted sitting in the stands at the Ceasars Superdome during the Super Bowl.

    Fans watching the game were quick to point out that McCartney was enjoying the game in the same suite as Adam Sandler and Paul Rudd.

    Pete Davidson

    Pete Davidson posing with cheerleaders at the Super Bowl.

    Pete Davidson was photographed ahead of the big game, posing with the Philadelphia Eagles cheerleaders on the sidelines.

    The former “Saturday Night Live” star gave the camera a thumbs-up as he posed for photos in an Eagles shirt and hat, making it clear who he plans on cheering for during the game.

    Brenda Song and Macaulay Culkin

    Brenda Song and Macaulay Culkin were seen making their way to their seats as they arrived for the 2025 Super Bowl.

    The former Disney actress wore an all-black outfit, while Culkin was seen sporting an L.A. Rams jacket, making it clear which team he supports even though they didn’t make it to the Super Bowl.

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    Anne Hathaway

    Anne Hathaway at the premiere of "The Apprentice."

    Anne Hathaway was seen cheering for the Philadelphia Eagles during the Super Bowl, dressed in a white tank top and a green jacket.

    Jon Hamm

    Jon Hamm was spotted at the 2025 Super Bowl, where he announced the Kansas City Chiefs as they ran out onto the field ahead of the game.

    Terry Crews

    Terry Crews and his wife, Rebecca at the Super Bowl

    Terry Crews and his wife, Rebecca King-Crews, walked the red carpet together at the Tubi Red Carpet ahead of the Super Bowl.

    “I love fitness, and the thing is, to see the world’s greatest athletes going at it at their best, at the top of their game, so young, so fresh, so ready to go, inspires me, man,” he told Fox News Digital. “I was working out before I got here, so I’m trying to tell you, it makes me feel young again, and it’s exciting to be around the players this week.”

    WATCH: TERRY CREWS SAYS THE SUPER BOWL IS NEEDED TO BRING AMERICANS TOGETHER

    He continued, “The excitement is just palpable. I can’t wait to see a great game. We need this. America needs this to come together and just enjoy this time and have a good time.”

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  • Why Blake Shelton Just Made an Unexpected Appearance on The Voice

    Why Blake Shelton Just Made an Unexpected Appearance on The Voice

    Shelton’s physical body may not have been in the Voice studio — but his literal voice and sharp humor were. Find out how.

    Why Blake Shelton Just Made an Unexpected Appearance on The Voice | NBC Insider

    Blake Shelton may be gone on The Voice, but he’s never forgotten.

    The country star left his longtime gig as a Coach on The Voice a couple years ago, but in the Season 27 premiere, it was like he was back. Well, almost. Read on to find out how he made a surprise appearance.

    Kelsea Ballerini has a Blake Shelton button on her red chair

    For her first season as a Coach, Kelsea Ballerini decided she needed some reinforcements to go up against returning Coach and multi-season winner Adam Levine. So she enlisted Levine’s friendly rival, Shelton. As she demonstrated during the episode, Ballerini seems to have a button on her red chair that she can press to play an insult Shelton lobbed at Levine in years past. “I have it for when I really need some backup,” Ballerini explained.

    In fact, there are four quotes: “Adam’s a big baby,” “Adam…won’t shut up,” “Adam, you say a lot of stupid stuff,” and “Adam’s a crappy Coach.” All said with love, of course. Mostly.

    Kelsea Ballerini smiling and posing in her coach chair on The Voice Season 27, Episode 1.

    Kelsea Ballerini on The Voice Season 27, Episode 1. Photo: Trae Patton/NBC

    Carson Daly pokes fun at Blake Shelton

    Shelton may knock Levine, but Host Carson Daly is known to lob a joke at Shelton from time to time. In November 2024, The Voice’s most decorated champion posted an Instagram picture to promote his new single, and Daly quickly chimed in with a jab: “You look like a real man for once 😂.” But don’t worry: Shelton and Daly are actually very good friends, and this was all in jest.

    Why did Blake Shelton leave The Voice?

    Why Did Blake Shelton Leave The Voice? Surprise Appearance in S27 Explained

    Clearly, the Coaches are missing Shelton a bit, but he had a good reason for stepping away from The Voice in May 2023. “I think being a stepdad has changed my perspective in that I’m not the first person that I think about anymore,” he told Access Hollywood of his role to wife (and fellow former Coach) Gwen Stefani’s three sons. “Even to the small little things when you go, ‘I think I’ll do this,’ the very next thought is always, ‘Well, wait a minute. How’s that going work?’ Or, ‘What will they think?’ Or, ‘How will that affect a schedule?’”

    “I think the only way for me to really do that right is to step away from being committed to something like The Voice that demands a lot of your time,” he continued. “There’s no way around it. If you’re going to do it and do it right, you have to be 150 percent in. And I just feel like those days are behind me for now. I got a more important job.”

  • BREAKING : Why a Chiefs Three-Peat Would Be Bad for the NFL

    BREAKING : Why a Chiefs Three-Peat Would Be Bad for the NFL

    BREAKING : Why a Chiefs Three-Peat Would Be Bad for the NFL

    TOPSHOT - Kansas City Chiefs' quarterback #15 Patrick Mahomes celebrates with the trophy after the Chiefs won Super Bowl LVIII against the San Francisco 49ers at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada, February 11, 2024. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP) (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)

    Yet another Super Bowl is upon us, which means it is time to discuss, in an incessant loop, the Greatest NFL Teams of All Time. Specifically, as the Kansas City Chiefs shoot for their third straight championship, we must analyze the meaning of their dynasty. Debate where they stand in the pantheon of football excellence. Is Patrick Mahomes the best quarterback the game has ever seen? Is Andy Reid — who’s won three of the last five Super Bowls with Kansas City and leads all active coaches in postseason victories — on par with Vince Lombardi himself? We must do this because, well, this is what it means to be an NFL-worshiping American in the Lord’s year of 2025.

    And yet, the Super Bowl is a perennial letdown. Especially where dynasties are concerned.

    Let’s go back to the 1980s. You’re me — Jeffrey Pearlman, spending your early teens at 8 Emerald Lane in Mahopac, New York. You’re a football diehard, and every Super Bowl Sunday your parents allow you to throw a big-ass party for your friends. So you order a 48-inch hoagie from Rodak’s Deli. You pick out six or seven two-liter bottles of that (normally) forbidden liquid, soda. You switch on the 21-inch Zenith six hours before the game and absorb the banal analysis while dreaming of last-minute drives, field goals with one second on the clock, a Hail Mary plummeting from heaven into the arms of some plucked-out-of-Division-II-obscurity third-string flanker who, within a week, is doing late-night shows and a Cheerios commercial.

    Then the game starts, and your pals leave midway through the third quarter. Because, once again, it blows.

    In the 12-year span between Super Bowl XVIII (held on Jan. 22, 1984) and Super Bowl XXIX (Jan. 29, 1995), only two of the matchups were even slightly competitive. Instead, we were gifted such enthralling nail-biters as the Bears’ 46-10 destruction of New England in Super Bowl XX and Washington 42, Denver 10 in Super Bowl XXII.

    Có thể là hình ảnh về 8 người, mọi người đang chơi bóng bầu dục và văn bản

    Thanks to all the routs and blowouts, however, we began to adjust our expectations and hang our hopes on a singular factor that could save the sport: dynasties. Though San Francisco played in two of the dullest Super Bowls on record (they beat the Dolphins by 22 in XIX, then the Chargers by 23 in XXIX), the 49ers won four titles between 1982 and 1995. It felt like we were witnessing a run that sports history would never forget. In the mid-1990s, the Dallas Cowboys picked up the thread, scoring three Super Bowl championships over a four-year span. Troy Aikman! Michael Irvin! Emmitt Smith! These were epic figures having their legends cast in bronze before us.

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    But ultimately, it all got stale. The 49ers dynasty led to the Cowboys dynasty. The Cowboys dynasty led to the Patriots dynasty. And now, with Super Bowl LIX upon us, we are on the verge of watching the dynastic Kansas City Chiefs emerge, in this golden age of football parity, as perhaps the greatest reign of them all.

    Yet what was once novel and football-redeeming has turned dull and unimaginative. This Super Bowl in particular feels like a spear to the spleen of any gridiron-loving American who craves originality and spark and, well, funky fresh helmets. At the start of the playoffs, we were presented with a string of enticing, never-before-witnessed potential matchups. The sad-sack Minnesota Vikings (0-4 in Super Bowls) vs. the sad-sack Buffalo Bills (0-4 in Super Bowls). The Detroit Lions, birthed in 1929 and plagued by a century of incompetence, meeting the Los Angeles Chargers, 1960-made and the poster children for ineptitude. We could have had Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson slashing through an overwhelmed defense; Bills gunner Josh Allen throwing darts across the field. The Denver Broncos have an out-of-nowhere signal caller, Bo Nix, who would have been the flavor of the month. The Los Angeles Rams feature a rookie pass rusher named Jared Verse who evokes memories of the KC great Derrick Thomas.

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    There were so many terrific possible matchups featuring so many breathtaking teams. This isn’t the 1980s, where a small handful of franchises dominated, and the rest were liquid crap. The 2024 Lions won a league-high 15 games. The Vikings won 14, the Bills 13. These are elite clubs with dazzling stars and fan bases that travel. That would have gifted us with a wonderfully fresh and enticing Super Bowl combatant.

    Instead, we again have the Chiefs.

    Có thể là hình ảnh về 10 người, mọi người đang chơi bóng bầu dục và văn bản cho biết '69 KCLO o Kc --- 2:41 27 3RD GRD 1ST 10 PHI 14/19 155Y'

    To be clear, there is nothing wrong with Kansas City. What the franchise has accomplished is beyond impressive — maybe even more impressive than New England’s recent run. Throughout the season, it routinely felt as if the Chiefs were on the verge of falling apart. They nearly lost to the lowly Panthers and (twice!) to the equally lowly Raiders. They often looked sluggish and unmotivated. Other clubs seemed to have caught up. We, as a sports collective, felt convinced they were old product, ready to be replaced.

    And yet … Mahomes is the best quarterback most have ever witnessed (apologies, Steve Pisarkiewicz) and Reid has earned his spot on the coaching Mt. Rushmore. The team plays hard, plays fast, makes precious few mistakes, and owns the fourth quarter. The Chiefs deserve to be in New Orleans, and when they (inevitably) beat the Philadelphia Eagles, it’ll be hard to begrudge the best team winning the biggest game.

    But, unless you live in Missouri or otherwise love the Chiefs, what’s to actually like about this? If the Chiefs win the Super Bowl, the sports media will rave about history being made and “the drive for five.” There will be trips to Disney World (that’s still a thing, right?) and headache-inducing Stephen A. Smith GOAT diatribes and ceaseless Mahomes vs. Tom Brady arguments and every single member of the paparazzi spontaneously climaxing as Travis Kelce kisses Taylor Swift atop a float.

    The 510,704 residents of Kansas City, Missouri, will once again revel in their giddiness and thank the good lord for making them Chiefs fans.

    I and countless other football fans across the country, on the other hand, will have fallen asleep by halftime.

  • Eagles win Super Bowl LIX, denying Chiefs history in dominant fashion

    Eagles win Super Bowl LIX, denying Chiefs history in dominant fashion

    Eagles win Super Bowl LIX, denying Chiefs history in dominant fashion

    Eagles have won their 2nd Super Bowl for the franchise

    Tom Brady on how Super Bowl XXXVI changed his life | The Herd

    The Philadelphia Eagles halted NFL history in its tracks, as they dominated the Kansas City Chiefs, 40-22, to win Super Bowl LIX at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans on Sunday night.

    The Chiefs were looking to be the first team in NFL history to win three straight Super Bowls, but the Eagles, a team who lost to the Chiefs two seasons ago in the “Big Game,” made sure to enact revenge.

    Philadelphia now has its second Lombardi Trophy for the organization, having defeated Tom Brady and the New England Patriots in 2018.

    Jalen Hurts and DeVonta Smith celebrate

    Those that believed the Eagles would win this game didn’t see it coming in this fashion, as they dominated the Chiefs in all three phases from the beginning of this game right until the end.

    The Chiefs, one of the best offenses in the NFL this season, and a team that has obvious history in this game over the past two years, had just 34 total yards of offense in the first half as the Eagles defense was thriving against the offensive line.

    Mahomes was never comfortable, and it showed as they punted their first three possessions. Meanwhile, despite punting on the first possession, the Eagles were able to get in the end zone the second go-around.

    After moving downfield, Jalen Hurts found Jahan Dotson for a 28-yard strike, which was initially believed to be the first touchdown of the game. But, after review, Dotson was spotted down at the one-yard line.

    But you know what happens there.

    Hurts was tush-pushed into the end zone to put the Eagles up 7-0, and they didn’t look back after that.

    It was clear throughout both halves how uncomfortable Mahomes was, as the Eagles’ pass rush continued to get home no matter how many players were sent by defensive coordinator Vic Fangio.

    Jalen Hurts and DeVonta Smith celebrate

    Mahomes was sacked at most five times in a single game in 2024, and the Eagles tallied six on the night, showcasing their domination. But it wasn’t just the defensive line – the secondary was putting in work, too.

    It came in the first half when rookie cornerback Cooper DeJean, who celebrated his 22nd birthday, picked off Mahomes on a scrambling throw and ran it all the way back for a 38-yard pick-six, which put the Eagles up 17-0.

    Mahomes would throw yet another interception on the first play of a drive already deep in their own territory late in the second quarter. Two plays later, Hurts found A.J. Brown, which he did in Super Bowl LVII as well, for a touchdown that almost felt like a dagger at 24-0.

    When the second half kicked off, the Chiefs were already in desperation mode, and five plays into the first drive, they were forced to punt. And after the Eagles kicked a field goal, Mahomes saw his fourth-and-short pass knocked down as he turned it back over to the Eagles.

    Then, the true dagger was seen in this game, as DeVonta Smith, who grew up an hour from New Orleans in Amite City, Louisiana, broke out a 46-yard touchdown catch on a perfectly thrown ball from Hurts.

    At 34-0, the deficit was insurmountable for Mahomes and the Chiefs, even if rookie Xavier Worthy found the end zone on a 24-yard pass from Mahomes.

    But ultimately, the Chiefs were never close to a comeback as the Eagles kept making plays, and never let the classic “Mahomes Magic” get put to work.

    DeVonta Smith celebrates touchdown

    History wasn’t made in New Orleans on Sunday, but the Eagles will forever be the team that halted what seemed to be the unstoppable Chiefs.

    The Eagles are not just flying — they’re soaring as Super Bowl champions yet again.

  • Travis Kelce emotional on Chiefs sideline after Patrick Mahomes’ pick-six changes Super Bowl 2025

    Travis Kelce emotional on Chiefs sideline after Patrick Mahomes’ pick-six changes Super Bowl 2025

    Travis Kelce emotional on Chiefs sideline after Patrick Mahomes’ pick-six changes Super Bowl 2025

    The Chiefs are used to trailing in Super Bowls.

    But it may be getting late early.

    Kansas City’s sideline featured “a lot of emotion” after falling in a 17-0 hole to the Eagles in the second quarter of Super Bowl 2025 after Patrick Mahomes threw a pick-six, per Fox sideline reporter Erin Andrews.

    “As you can imagine, a lot of emotion on the Chiefs’ sideline,” Andrews said on the Fox broadcast. “Of course, Travis Kelce with a couple of drops that he’s had today. The sideline was pretty calm and cool when they were down 10-0, then, of course, the pick-six, and we’re seeing different emotions.”

    Travis Kelce had zero catches in the first 28 minutes.
    Travis Kelce had zero catches in the first 28 minutes. @NFLonFOX/X
    Fox then cut to Mahomes, who reportedly tried to calm down Kelce.

    “This was Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce was trying to talk to him on the sidelines and he said over and over, ‘I got it. I got it,’” Andrews said. “Creed Humphries screaming at the offensive line.”

    The Chiefs have shown resiliency during this dynasty era, falling behind by at least 10 points in each Super Bowl of the Mahomes era and rallying three times to win.

    Chris Jones talking to the Chiefs defense.
    Chris Jones talking to the Chiefs defense. @NFLonFOX/X
    Kansas City trailed 24-14 at halftime in Super Bowl 2023 before they ultimately triumphed, 38-35.

    As Andrews mentioned, the tone of this game seemed to shift after Mahomes’ costly throw.

    While 10-0 is not a great spot, the Chiefs had the ball and a chance to make it a one-score game.

    Mahomes then made an ill-advised throw that Cooper DeJean picked off and took the house with 7:03 remaining in the half to put the Chiefs in a three-score hole.

    Mahomes and the Chiefs are struggling.
    Mahomes and the Chiefs are struggling. @NFLonFOX/X
    The star quarterback made another awful throw with less than two minutes remaining in the half when Zack Baun intercepted a pass over the middle to give the Eagles the ball inside the red zone.

    Jalen Hurts found A.J. Brown two plays later for a touchdown to boost the lead to 24-0.