Patrick Mahomes
| Patrick Mahomes | |
| Patrick Mahomes | |
| Born | Patrick Lavon Mahomes II 9/17/1995 |
|---|---|
| Birthplace | Tyler, Texas, U.S. |
| Nationality | American |
| Occupation | Professional football player |
| Employer | Kansas City Chiefs |
| Known for | NFL quarterback; multiple Super Bowl championships |
| Spouse(s) | Brittany Mahomes (m. 2022) |
| Children | 2 |
| Awards | See Recognition |
Patrick Lavon Mahomes II (born September 17, 1995) is an American professional football player who serves as the starting quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs of the National Football League (NFL). Raised in Tyler, Texas, Mahomes grew up immersed in professional sports — his father, Pat Mahomes Sr., pitched in Major League Baseball for more than a decade, giving the younger Mahomes an early and formative view of life as a professional athlete. He went on to play college football at Texas Tech University before the Kansas City Chiefs selected him with the tenth overall pick in the 2017 NFL Draft. Since ascending to the starting role, Mahomes has led Kansas City to an unprecedented run of success, winning multiple Super Bowl championships and earning recognition as one of the defining quarterbacks of his generation. Known for his improvisational arm, sidearm throws, and ability to extend plays under pressure, he signed one of the largest contracts in professional sports history in 2020. Off the field, Mahomes is involved in philanthropic work and business ventures, and has become a prominent commercial figure in American sports culture.
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Early Life
Patrick Lavon Mahomes II was born on September 17, 1995, in Tyler, Texas, to Pat Mahomes Sr. and Randi Martin. His father, a right-handed pitcher, played in Major League Baseball from 1992 to 2003 for teams including the Minnesota Twins, Boston Red Sox, New York Mets, Texas Rangers, Chicago Cubs, and Pittsburgh Pirates.[1] Growing up around professional clubhouses gave Patrick an early exposure to elite athletic environments, competitive preparation, and the rhythms of a professional sports career.
Mahomes displayed multi-sport ability from a young age, excelling in football, baseball, and basketball. He attended Whitehouse High School in Whitehouse, Texas, where he was a standout athlete in all three sports. As a pitcher and shortstop in baseball, he attracted attention from college programs and professional scouts. As a quarterback on the football field, he demonstrated the arm talent and improvisational instincts that would later define his professional career. His performances on the football field drew significant recruiting interest from major college programs across the country.[2]
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Education
Mahomes enrolled at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas, in 2014, choosing to pursue football over a baseball career after the Detroit Tigers selected him in the 2014 MLB Draft but he declined to sign.[3] At Texas Tech, he played under head coach Kliff Kingsbury in the university's Air Raid offense, a system that prizes prolific passing and spacing that would prove well-suited to developing his talents.
In his sophomore season in 2015, Mahomes began to emerge as a notable college passer. His junior season in 2016 was particularly striking: he threw for 5,052 yards and 41 touchdowns, becoming only the second player in Big 12 Conference history at that point to throw for more than 5,000 yards in a season.[4] His performances elevated his NFL Draft stock considerably. Mahomes declared for the 2017 NFL Draft following his junior season, forgoing his senior year of college eligibility.
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Career
Kansas City Chiefs (2017–present)
2017: Rookie Season
The Kansas City Chiefs selected Mahomes with the tenth overall pick in the 2017 NFL Draft, trading up with the Buffalo Bills to secure his services.[5] In his rookie season, Mahomes spent the year largely as a backup behind starting quarterback Alex Smith, appearing in one regular-season game. The Chiefs used the year to develop Mahomes carefully within their offensive system under head coach Andy Reid, who would become a crucial mentor in Mahomes's development as a professional quarterback.
2018: Breakout Season and First MVP
Following the trade of Alex Smith to the Washington Redskins after the 2017 season, Mahomes assumed the full-time starting role in 2018. His debut season as starter was immediate and dramatic. He threw for 5,097 yards and 50 touchdowns against only 12 interceptions, leading the Chiefs to a 12–4 regular-season record.[6] The performance earned him the NFL Most Valuable Player Award for the 2018 season, making him one of the younger players to claim the honor. The Chiefs fell to the New England Patriots in overtime in the AFC Championship Game, ending their Super Bowl hopes that year, but Mahomes had established himself as the face of a franchise poised for sustained contention.
2019: Super Bowl LIV
The 2019 NFL season culminated in the Chiefs' first Super Bowl appearance in 50 years. Mahomes guided Kansas City through the playoffs, engineering fourth-quarter comebacks in both the AFC Divisional Round against the Houston Texans and the AFC Championship Game against the Tennessee Titans.[7] In Super Bowl LIV, played on February 2, 2020, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, the Chiefs defeated the San Francisco 49ers by a score of 31–20. Mahomes, who rallied Kansas City from a ten-point fourth-quarter deficit, was named Super Bowl MVP after throwing for 286 yards and two touchdowns.[8]
2020: Record Contract Extension
In July 2020, Mahomes signed a contract extension with the Kansas City Chiefs reported to be worth up to $503 million over ten years, at the time the largest contract in the history of professional sports in North America.[9] The deal reflected the franchise's conviction that Mahomes represented the cornerstone of their competitive window for the foreseeable future.
2021: Super Bowl LV
The Chiefs returned to the Super Bowl after the 2020 season, facing the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Super Bowl LV at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida, on February 7, 2021. Mahomes and the Kansas City offense struggled against Tampa Bay's defense, and the Chiefs lost 31–9 in a game that represented one of the few significant statistical disappointments of Mahomes's tenure as a starter.[10]
2023: Super Bowl LVII
After falling in the AFC Championship Game during the 2021 season, the Chiefs rebuilt and returned to championship form. In the 2022 NFL season, Kansas City won Super Bowl LVII, defeating the Philadelphia Eagles 38–35 on February 12, 2023, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. Mahomes, playing through a high-ankle sprain suffered earlier in the postseason, threw for 182 yards and three touchdowns and was again named Super Bowl MVP.[11]
2024: Super Bowl LVIII
The Chiefs made history in the 2023 NFL season by becoming the first team in NFL history to win three consecutive Super Bowls — commonly referred to as a "three-peat" — defeating the San Francisco 49ers 25–22 in overtime in Super Bowl LVIII on February 11, 2024, at Allegiant Stadium in Paradise, Nevada. Mahomes threw for 333 yards and was named Super Bowl MVP for the third time in his career, tying the record for most Super Bowl MVP awards by a quarterback.[12]
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Personal Life
Mahomes has been in a relationship with Brittany Matthews — now known professionally as Brittany Mahomes — since their high school years at Whitehouse High School. The couple became engaged in September 2020 and married on March 12, 2022, at a private ceremony.[13] They have two children together: a daughter, Sterling Skye Mahomes, born in February 2021, and a son, Patrick Lavon Mahomes III (known as "Bronze"), born in November 2022.
Brittany Mahomes is a former professional soccer player who played for the Iceland W Challenge League and is a co-owner of the Kansas City Current, a professional women's soccer club in the National Women's Soccer League.
Mahomes is also a part-owner of multiple professional sports franchises. He holds a minority ownership stake in the Kansas City Royals of Major League Baseball[14] and in the Kansas City Current alongside his wife.
Mahomes has spoken publicly about his faith and its role in his personal and professional life. He has been involved in charitable endeavors in the Kansas City region, including through the 15 and the Mahomies Foundation, which he established to support children's health, education, and communities affected by poverty.[15]
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Recognition
Mahomes has accumulated extensive individual honors in addition to his team accomplishments. His major awards and recognitions include:
- NFL Most Valuable Player: 2018, 2022 seasons
- Super Bowl MVP: Super Bowl LIV (2020), Super Bowl LVII (2023), Super Bowl LVIII (2024)
- AFC Championship appearances: Multiple, including consecutive appearances between 2018 and 2024
- Pro Bowl selections: Multiple selections across his career
- NFL passing yards and touchdowns: Named among the top statistical passers of his era by the NFL
- Associated Press All-Pro First Team: Selected multiple times
In addition to on-field recognition, Mahomes has appeared on the cover of the Madden NFL video game series — a widely recognized cultural honor in American football — and has been featured on the covers of publications including Time and Sports Illustrated. He has also been the subject of a documentary produced for broadcast, reflecting the broad commercial and cultural footprint he has developed.
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Legacy
Patrick Mahomes occupies a singular position in the recent history of professional football. His ability to win multiple Super Bowl championships across different supporting casts and under varying competitive conditions has distinguished him within the modern era of the sport. Head coach Andy Reid, himself a Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee and a figure with decades of NFL experience, has described Mahomes's football intelligence and competitiveness as exceptional even by the standards of elite professional quarterbacks.
Analysts and historians of the sport have noted that Mahomes's combination of statistical production — including multiple seasons with 40 or more touchdown passes — and postseason success places him in extended conversations about the trajectory of the quarterback position and the standard for sustained excellence in the NFL. The Kansas City Chiefs' run of Super Bowl appearances under Mahomes, beginning in the 2019 season, has no direct precedent in the post-merger era of the NFL in terms of consistency at the championship level.
Beyond the field, Mahomes's commercial presence — through endorsements with major brands including State Farm, Adidas, Hy-Vee, and others — has made him one of the most recognizable athletes in the United States. His business investments in professional sports franchises reflect a broader engagement with the economics of sport that extends beyond his playing career. The 15 and the Mahomies Foundation represents his most direct philanthropic commitment, focusing resources on food security, youth education, and community development in the Kansas City metropolitan area.
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References
- ↑ KerchevalBenBen"Pat Mahomes Sr.'s MLB career: A timeline of the Chiefs QB's father".CBS Sports.2020-07-06.https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/pat-mahomes-srs-mlb-career-a-timeline-of-the-chiefs-qbs-fathers-baseball-career/.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ TrotterJimJim"How Patrick Mahomes became one of the NFL Draft's most intriguing prospects".NFL.com.2017-04-27.https://www.nfl.com/news/how-patrick-mahomes-became-one-of-the-nfl-draft-s-most-intriguing-prospects-0ap3000000805399.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ SanchezRobertRobert"The Making of Patrick Mahomes".ESPN.2018-10-04.https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/24826802/the-making-patrick-mahomes.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ HarigBobBob"Patrick Mahomes II impresses in Texas Tech's Texas Bowl victory".ESPN.2017-01-02.https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/18383124.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ ReuterNateNate"Chiefs trade up to select Patrick Mahomes at No. 10".NFL.com.2017-04-27.https://www.nfl.com/news/chiefs-trade-up-to-select-patrick-mahomes-at-no-10-0ap3000000805330.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ ReissMikeMike"Patrick Mahomes wins NFL MVP award".ESPN.2019-01-29.https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/25866345/patrick-mahomes-wins-nfl-mvp-award.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ BreerAlbertAlbert"Patrick Mahomes leads Chiefs to Super Bowl with comeback win over Titans".Sports Illustrated.2020-01-20.https://www.si.com/nfl/2020/01/19/chiefs-titans-afc-championship-game-recap.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ BattistaJudyJudy"Mahomes leads Chiefs to first Super Bowl title in 50 years".NFL.com.2020-02-03.https://www.nfl.com/news/mahomes-leads-chiefs-to-first-super-bowl-title-in-50-years.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ RapoportIanIan"Patrick Mahomes signs record 10-year, $503M extension with Chiefs".NFL.com.2020-07-06.https://www.nfl.com/news/patrick-mahomes-signs-record-10-year-503m-extension-with-chiefs.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ SesslerMarcMarc"Buccaneers dominate Chiefs to win Super Bowl LV".NFL.com.2021-02-08.https://www.nfl.com/news/buccaneers-dominate-chiefs-to-win-super-bowl-lv.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ SchefterAdamAdam"Patrick Mahomes wins Super Bowl MVP as Chiefs defeat Eagles".ESPN.2023-02-12.https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/35574321.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ FlorioMikeMike"Chiefs defeat 49ers in overtime to win Super Bowl LVIII".NBC Sports.2024-02-11.https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2024/02/11/chiefs-defeat-49ers-in-overtime-to-win-super-bowl-lviii/.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ WangTiffanyTiffany"Patrick Mahomes and Brittany Matthews are married".People.2022-03-14.https://people.com/sports/patrick-mahomes-brittany-matthews-married/.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ CastrovinceAnthonyAnthony"Mahomes joins Royals ownership group".MLB.com.2023-04-10.https://www.mlb.com/news/patrick-mahomes-joins-kansas-city-royals-ownership-group.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ↑ McMahanDoriDori"Patrick Mahomes' foundation donates $500K to combat food insecurity".The Kansas City Star.2020-09-17.https://www.kansascity.com/sports/nfl/kansas-city-chiefs/article245750985.html.Retrieved 2026-02-26.
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