Tom Brady is regarded as the greatest quarterback of all time, but is Patrick Mahomes going to overtake that title?
Julian Edelman gave his take on the ongoing debate over Tom Brady and Patrick Mahomes ahead of Super Bowl LIX.
The Kansas City Chiefs are looking to make NFL history as the first team to win three straight Super Bowls, but their quarterback, Patrick Mahomes, is already in the record books for his postseason prowess.
For just the fourth time in his career, Patrick Mahomes will be wearing white for a postseason game and if it goes anything like the other three games, that means the Kansas City Chiefs will be making history on Super Bowl Sunday.
Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Mahomes, 29, has become synonymous with the Super Bowl. He's set to make his fifth appearance in six seasons.
Quarterback Patrick Mahomes remains on the report with his lingering ankle injury. The Chiefs have had him on the report every week since Week 16 after he sprained his right ankle against the Browns in a Dec. 15 game. He has remained a full participant, though, in the entire postseason.
The Kansas City Chiefs quarterback wears a fitness tracker tucked into a custom sleeve on his left arm during games.
The Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes, will be squaring off against Bills quarterback Josh Allen in this championship game. Mahomes and Allen have developed a rivalry during the years they've led their respective teams—and with each passing season, that competitive dynamic seems increasingly intense.
However, Mahomes is far from the player with the most Super Bowl rings. That honor goes to Tom Brady. Brady has seven championship rings, having won Super Bowl XXXVI in 2002, Super Bowl XXXVIII in 2004, Super Bowl XXXIX in 2005, Super Bowl XLIX in 2015, Super Bowl LI in 2017, Super Bowl LIII in 2019 and Super Bowl LV in 2021.
Patrick Mahomes has proven to be a key player for the Kansas City Chiefs, leading them to five Super Bowl appearances since 2018.
Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs are back in the Super Bowl where they'll face the Philadelphia Eagles in New Orleans on Feb. 9. A win would make Kansas City the first franchise to ever win three straight titles,