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By Scott Kacsmar
The 2023 NFL season ended in spectacular fashion in Super Bowl LVIII with the Kansas City Chiefs ending the longest repeat drought in NFL history by winning their third championship in the last five seasons. You can officially call them a dynasty now. If the Chiefs win the Super Bowl again next year, that will make it wins in 4-of-6 Super Bowls, something only the 1974-79 Steelers have done.
But perhaps more importantly, it would be the NFL’s first Super Bowl three-peat.
The 1965-67 Green Bay Packers technically had a three-peat, but they won the 1965 NFL Championship Game before the first two Super Bowls in 1966-67. This was all before the merger, so it is understandable why it is not viewed in the same light as post-merger achievements.
Unsurprisingly, odds are already available on who will win Super Bowl LIX. The Chiefs (+650 at FanDuel) have the best odds of any AFC team, but they trail the 49ers (+500), who they just defeated again.
Three-time Super Bowl MVP Patrick Mahomes is a one-of-a-kind talent for the Chiefs. We know he’ll have head coach Andy Reid and tight end Travis Kelce back for this three-peat attempt in 2024. But what can stop the Chiefs from pulling off even more history? Are they still their own worst enemy, or is there another challenger lurking in the NFL for 2024?
We look at the history of three-peat attempts in the NFL, the way the Chiefs continue to defy the odds, their internal challenges for next season, and the outside challengers who can dethrone the defending back-to-back champions.
Staying on top of the mountain for three years is extremely hard to do, especially in the era of expansion and deeper playoff fields. The NFL’s one-and-done playoff format is a tough spot to always deliver as you don’t get a series like the other leagues, so upsets should be more common. The 2022-23 Chiefs have already gone 6-0 in playoff games decided by 1-to-7 points.
But the three-peat has also been rare in other professional sports leagues with only 6 of them occurring since 1975:
In the NFL’s Super Bowl era, the 2022-23 Chiefs are the ninth team to repeat as champion. Here is how the last eight fared in their three-peat bid:
No one made it back to the Super Bowl. Only three teams (1976 Steelers, 1990 49ers, and 1994 Cowboys) reached the Conference Championship Game, and only those 49ers had a fourth-quarter lead, making them the closest to pulling off the three-peat if not for that Roger Craig fumble.
In an interesting twist, half of these teams were closer to the three-peat when we look back in time instead of forward, meaning we focus on the year before their repeat instead of the year after when the three-peat was possible.
But maybe the team with the best argument are these Chiefs, who blew a 21-3 lead at home in the AFC Championship Game against Cincinnati. If they hung onto that one instead of losing in overtime, they would have been favored to beat the Rams in the Super Bowl that year, and maybe this is already a three-peat team.
But the butterfly effect is a huge problem with going back in time like this. If the 49ers didn’t choke in 1987 or if the Chiefs didn’t blow it in 2021, then you never know if they would have finished the job in the other years. Maybe the Chiefs don’t get rid of Tyreek Hill in 2022 if they won another ring with him in 2021. The butterfly effect would create a lot of ripples we could only speculate about.
The fact of the matter is no one has come closer to a three-peat than the 1990 49ers, and the Chiefs are looking to fix that by getting to the Super Bowl again in 2024.
In our 2023 team preview for the Chiefs, we had a list of stats that showed how unique it was for the Chiefs to win the Super Bowl in 2022 despite having a quarterback take up 17% of the salary cap, the team having a negative turnover differential, and a below-average defense that allowed 25 points per game in the playoffs.
Not sure if this year’s list is as impressive, but the Chiefs found another unique path of history to carve out to win another Super Bowl:
This was supposed to be a down year for the Chiefs with their wide receiver issues, and they had their worst record (11-6) and lowest seed (No. 3) in the Mahomes era. He had his worst individual stats for a regular season too as the offense slipped out of the top 10 in some key categories.
Yet they still won the Super Bowl, armed with a great defense and a receiving corps that did a better job of not screwing up games in the playoffs.
For years, people wondered how the Chiefs would fare in a road playoff game away from Arrowhead. They won in back-to-back weeks as underdogs in Buffalo and Baltimore before beating the 49ers in another Super Bowl with a crowd, Taylor Swift aside, that was heavily leaning towards San Francisco.
The thing about repeating is you always have to do it differently. The Chiefs had the No. 1 offense and a subpar, young defense in 2022 when they won. This year, the offense regressed and struggled while the defense was elite and so consistent.
What kind of team does Kansas City field in 2024? That might depend on who is staying.
Another reason it is so hard to stay on top these days is the way you lose players and key assistant coaches. The Chiefs are no strangers to this. They won the Super Bowl in 2019 with quite a few different players than the 2022 team had, and they even made more changes in between the last two seasons.
For 2023, the Chiefs again let go of their No. 1 wide receiver (JuJu Smith-Schuster) and replaced him with a rookie (Rashee Rice), they let left tackle Orlando Brown Jr. walk to Cincinnati and brought in a couple of vets in Donovan Smith and Jawaan Taylor, and they lost offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy, replacing him with Matt Nagy.
Most of the moves worked out fine, and with Bieniemy unemployed after a year in Washington, it wouldn’t be surprising if he rejoined the staff for 2024.
But with the salary cap in mind, you can guarantee some Chiefs played their final game with the team on Sunday night. According to Over the Cap, the Chiefs have about $22 million in cap space for 2024, and some things are going to change this year:
Even if the Chiefs bring back Jones and Sneed, there is a good chance the defense will take a step back just because of how hard it is to sustain success on that side of the ball from year to year. The offense is more consistent. But there is a chance the Chiefs lose one or both of those players too. Jones is such a crucial part of that great pass rush and he had another big Super Bowl even without getting a sack. He prevented Brock Purdy from throwing multiple touchdowns. He is pretty much the AFC equivalent of Aaron Donald.
We’ll see what the Chiefs do in free agency and the draft, but finding some long-term weapons for Mahomes needs to be a priority. They should feel good about Rashee Rice going into his second year, but Kelce will be 35 years old, which is quite old for a tight end.
You could say for years the Chiefs have been their own worst enemy with the obligatory fumble, the dropped passes, and the careless penalties in their losses. They rarely ever lose by more than one possession, so they are usually in every single game.
The Chiefs don’t have a true rival. They have been played tough by teams like the Bills and Bengals, but they are still 4-1 in the playoffs against them. Mahomes certainly does not have an equal at quarterback in today’s NFL.
So, where does the challenger come from that is going to stop this three-peat from happening in 2024?
The Division
I guess we have to do it again. We have to hype up the AFC West as if the Chiefs won’t win it for the ninth year in a row. We tried the best we could to make it sound like a real battle these last few years, but the Chiefs still outclassed the other teams.
Sean Payton did not in fact fix Russell Wilson in Denver, and while the Broncos were able to end their long losing streak (16 games) to the Chiefs, they still missed the playoffs again and Wilson may already be out of a job there.
The Raiders were the last team to beat the Chiefs on Christmas day, but that proved to be a wake-up call for Kansas City after that awful showing by the offense. The Raiders won that game despite Aiden O’Connell not completing a pass after the first quarter. Good luck getting two defensive touchdown returns in 7 seconds next time. The Raiders are excited about the Antonio Pierce hiring, but who is the quarterback? This team also lost 3-0 at home indoors to the Vikings, so I’m not convinced this is a challenger in 2024.
But maybe hyping up the Chargers pays off this time as they made a great head coach by hiring Jim Harbaugh, who has won everywhere he’s gone, he was 44-19-1 (.695) in San Francisco with three NFC Championship Game appearances, and he just won a national title at Michigan. If he can give Justin Herbert a defense and running game and improve his efficiency, then they can be a real contender in the division for the Chiefs.
Harbaugh changing the Chargering brand might be the only hope for the AFC West in slowing this dynasty down. Good luck to him, because this franchise seems cursed to always be blowing leads and suffering injuries to key players.
The Rest of the AFC
Who else in the AFC can keep the Chiefs from going right back to the Super Bowl? We can probably eliminate a few teams right now:
That leaves the Four Horsemen of the Kansas City Apocalypse: Bills, Bengals, Ravens, and Texans.
Buffalo has had so many shots already and has been so close to dethroning the Chiefs. Josh Allen is 3-1 against the Chiefs in the regular season but 0-3 in the playoffs. He just needs his defense one time to step up in January and make Mahomes look mortal. If his defense played the way the Ravens and 49ers played the Chiefs, he would have won the game as he had by far the best offensive performance against the Chiefs in the playoffs. But Buffalo just seems cursed to ever get it done in January, and we’ll see if they bring Stefon Diggs back or make big changes there.
The Bengals have some issues with slow starts to the season, a tough division to battle, and Joe Burrow has already ended 2-of-4 seasons on injured reserve. That makes it hard for them to finish with a higher seed than the Chiefs and avoid going to Arrowhead in January. The defense also declined this past year and they have some decisions to make with wide receiver Tee Higgins, a key weapon who could leave in free agency.
The Ravens seemed to have the best team in the AFC this year with Lamar Jackson staying healthy, the No. 1 defense, a No.1 running game, the best starting field position, a Hall of Fame kicker in Justin Tucker, and it all led to a No. 1 seed. But you can’t trust Jackson in the playoffs as he’s now led the Ravens to their season-low in points in all four of his postseason trips. His defense did a fair enough job against the Chiefs, but he turned it over multiple times and scored just 10 points at home in the AFC Championship Game loss. This team has fared worse against Mahomes and the Chiefs than the Bills and Bengals have. The Chiefs also get to host the Ravens (and Bengals) in 2024.
That leaves the Houston Texans as the possible Kansas City stopper in the AFC, or at least a team that hasn’t had their crack yet. The last time we viewed Houston as a roadblock for Kansas City, it was in the 2019 AFC divisional round when the Texans blew a 24-0 lead to the Chiefs. Nothing went right for that team again until 2023 when they hired DeMeco Ryans and drafted C.J. Stroud and Will Anderson, who won the Rookie of the Year awards.
The Chiefs host Houston this season too, so we’ll hopefully get to see that first matchup between Mahomes and Stroud. The other good news for Houston is offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik is returning instead of getting poached by another team, so that should give Stroud consistency, and maybe his wide receivers will be healthier this year with Tank Dell and Noah Brown injured late in 2023. If Stroud improves on his game as he no doubt can, he could be that MVP candidate and rival to Mahomes in his second year.
Someone needs to be that quarterback and team in the AFC to slow this dynasty down. Even the Patriots during their championship drought in 2005-13 struggled mightily with Peyton Manning’s teams (Colts and Broncos), and the occasional elite defense from the Ravens (2009-12) and Jets (2009-10).
The NFC Challenger
The Patriots also had their kryptonite in Eli Manning and the Giants back in the day, losing both Super Bowls to them. It appears the 49ers are not that team against the Chiefs as Kyle Shanahan is 0-4 against Andy Reid and Mahomes, including 0-2 in the Super Bowl.
That’s part of the reason why the 49ers being favored to win Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans does not feel like a great bet today. The other part is the NFC loves a new flash in the pan every season as the 2013-14 Seahawks are the only team since 1998 to go to consecutive Super Bowls for the NFC.
We mean flash in the pan too as these teams usually found success quickly with a lack of experience. The last eight Super Bowl teams from the NFC all went into that season with a quarterback who had no more than 16 starts with the team’s current head coach:
Only Jimmy Garoppolo was in his third season with the team, and that’s a stretch since he was traded late in 2017 and tore his ACL just 3 games into 2018.
Your best bet is someone new represents the NFC next year after San Francisco has blown so many chances already in championship games. Who might that new team be?
You have to figure the NFC South is still the weakest division, and the Chiefs get to play it in 2024 which could help their record.
The Seahawks will probably take a step back in the NFC West without Pete Carroll. The Cardinals have a lot of work to do. The Rams made the playoffs behind a strong run by Matthew Stafford, but they do not have the studs to fill out the roster they had in 2021 when they won the Super Bowl. But a Rams-Chiefs Super Bowl, which we almost had in 2018 and 2021, could be fun.
The NFC East turned out to be a massive disappointment with the Eagles and Cowboys both getting bounced in the wild-card round. You just can never trust Mike McCarthy and a Dallas team that has not been to the NFC Championship Game since the 1995 season. The Eagles also have some major internal issues as Nick Sirianni may not be the long-term coach there after the team’s epic implosion following a 10-1 start. The Commanders and Giants are far away from a Super Bowl.
As for the NFC North, we’ll see what the Bears do with the No. 1 pick and what the Vikings do with Kirk Cousins, and if he goes elsewhere. But he’s not the kind of quarterback that is going to take down a dynasty. He was 0-13 against teams that reached the Super Bowl that year before beating the 49ers this past season.
The Lions had a great year, but they may have blown their shot with that blown 17-point lead in the NFC Championship Game. We’ll see if the defense can take more strides forward and the young offense looks to be in a solid place. But you just wonder how they’ll rebound from the devastation of losing that big lead the way they did.
That leaves the Green Bay Packers, who are +2500 at FanDuel to win the Super Bowl just like the Houston Texans are right now. It is absurdly early in the process, but this would be my dark horse pick to take down the Chiefs and the three-peat in 2024. Maybe it will even be the Super Bowl LIX matchup.
Just think of the headlines. The Chiefs going for the three-peat in a rematch of Super Bowl I between the Packers and Chiefs, which was the middle year in Green Bay’s overlooked three-peat in 1965-67. It would be historic and probably a great game too.
We’ll have 7 months to build up this season and up to 12 months to see if the Chiefs pull off the three-peat. Either way, this team is already a historic dynasty that has provided many special moments and records in Mahomes’ career, and we should acknowledge when we are witnessing greatness.
But this success is no doubt making the Chiefs the villain for many NFL fans, so they will root even harder for their downfall next season. You need a hero for that role.
Maybe Harbaugh gets the Chargers to end the AFC West streak for Kansas City, but given that team’s playoff history, it might have to be the Bills or Ravens finally breaking through and beating the Chiefs before the Super Bowl. Maybe Houston is that next AFC contender with C.J. Stroud taking big strides in his second year after an impressive rookie debut.
If all else fails in the AFC, maybe Love and Green Bay is the team to take down the Chiefs in the Super Bowl.
In the end, I think the Chiefs and Chris Jones work something out, the offense improves, the defense declines a little, and Mahomes still gives this team the best shot yet at a three-peat.
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