The 49ers defense shut down the Chiefs the same way the Eagles did in Super Bowl LIX

The 49ers defense shut down the Chiefs the same way the Eagles did in Super Bowl LIX
Niners Nation Niners Nation

The difference is what each team did with their turnovers and how one offense was able to pad the lead

Scrolling social media on Monday morning, you’ll read how the Philadelphia Eagles defense dominated the Kansas City Chiefs.

Vic Fangio did not blitz Patrick Mahomes once. According to Next Gen Stats, the Eagles' defense became the fourth defense not to blitz in a game during the NGS era.

Instead, Fangio and the Eagles relied on a homegrown front four to generate pressure. Philadelphia generated 16 pressures and sacked Patrick Mahomes six times, the most in a game in his career.

There’s no way to quantify how valuable it is to hit a quarterback early. Sure, we can chart stats from the first time a quarterback gets hit, but you have to see how they're affected to fully grasp the difference. Super Bowl LIX is the perfect example.

The Eagles played bully ball in the trenches. The Chiefs' offensive line looked outmanned, and Mahomes dropped his eyes and flushed from the pocket out of fear of being hit. Arguably, the greatest quarterback of all time looked human.

Think about what makes a quarterback accurate. They play on time, have their feet underneath them, and get to play with rhythm. A poised quarterback is the most dangerous player on the field. But the threat of getting hit tends to speed QBs up, which affects everything, from balance to poise.

We must also acknowledge how sacks end drives and pressures do not. In last year’s Super Bowl, the San Francisco 49ers generated 20 pressures on 46 dropbacks but only sacked Mahomes three times. Those three extra Eagles sacks ended the drive or led to a punt.

The more I think about Super Bowl LIX and the Eagles blowout victory, the more I think that’s what last year’s game looks like if you simulated it another nine times.

Both the 49ers and Eagles went 3-for-12 on third downs. Nobody beats Steve Spagnuolo on third downs, but that would never be the path to victory for either team. Let’s focus on the other side of the ball.

It took Kansas City nine possessions to score a touchdown against Philadelphia. The (correct) narrative is that the Eagles put on this historic performance and shut down the greatest signal-caller of this generation.

In the same game a year ago, Steve Wilks called a defense that held Mahomes out of the end zone until its tenth possession. And the only reason Kansas City scored on that tenth drive was due to a short field that was courtesy of a 49ers special teams catastrophe. The Chiefs didn’t pick up a first down on six of those drives, and the Niners forced two turnovers.

The biggest difference that was ultimately the deciding factor in each game was what each offense did after those turnovers. The Eagles’ defense had a pick-six, and their second interception gave the offense the ball at Kansas City’s six-yard line. The 49ers weren’t as fortunate.

The...