KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kids have been drawing up plays in the playground dirt as long as football has been played, their audacious designs usually featuring creative reverses, multiple laterals and even tight ends throwing passes back to the quarterback.
Wait a minute — those are the plays Patrick Mahomes has been drawing up.
For the second time this season, the Chiefs used a play dreamed up by their quarterback in Sunday's win over Tampa Bay.
It was called "The Black Pearl" because, well, they were playing the Buccaneers, and it began with Mahomes pitching to Tyreek Hill on a standard end-around. The speedy wide receiver then pitched to Travis Kelce on a reverse, and the tight end — and former quarterback — had the option of running the ball or throwing it back to Mahomes in the end zone.
The play almost worked, too. Kelce had Mahomes open, but had his wobbly pass batted into the turf.
It still left the Chiefs sideline smiling, and perhaps that was the point: In a stressful season made even more trying by the looming specter of COVID-19, the Chiefs have found a way to keep things light-hearted and fun.
Just like kids on a playground.
"It keeps the guys alive," Chiefs coach Andy Reid said this week. "It keeps everybody involved and so they get into those, and Kelce has taken a beating over it, his maneuvering with the football, but that's part of it. We have a wrinkle here and there that we have fun with. Hopefully it works."