Patrick Mahomes, we know already, is a transformative phenomenon that the Chiefs never quite have had before. Even more happily, hes the sort of soul-crushing presence some other guy, some nemesis or another, always seemed to have in the lineup to inflict on the Chiefs.
Now … hes your very own, to have and to hold and to cherish.
Then theres the swiftest and most elusive and exhilarating player in the NFL, receiver Tyreek Hill, perpetually on the verge of breaking away and playing with a contagious joy. And heres gravity-defying tight end Travis Kelce, who at 6-foot-5, 260 pounds simply shouldnt be able to accelerate into a tightrope down the sideline.
Oh, and then theres running back Kareem Hunt, whose whirling, hurdling run punctuated by lugging multiple Bengals was the tone-setting highlight of the Chiefs 45-10 romp over Cincinnati on Sunday at Arrowhead Stadium.
This is what might be known as an embarrassment of riches that also includes the likes of Sammy Watkins and Sunday touchdown scorer Demetrius Harris, plus Chris Conley and Demarcus Robinson, whom Hill says is the second-fastest player on the team.
Shoot, at times it almost seems like an unfair advantage.
Its also part of a harmonic convergence for coach Andy Reid, who choreographs and animates all these dynamics and deep inside has to know something hell never say out loud:
Worrisome defense (but not Sunday!) and all, this mesmerizing team is the sort of group Reid has been building toward coaching his entire career the type you think can only stop itself … but wont.
Yes, hes had his hand-chosen guys at quarterback before, good ones like Donovan McNabb and Alex Smith. But the beautiful offensive mind never has had a once-in-a-generation talent like Mahomes to mold and meld with. (Per NBC, no quarterback since 1960 has led his team to more points than Mahomes through his first eight career starts).
And combined with a brilliant and young supporting cast in a game prevailingly contoured toward offensive opportunities, well, the next few years figure to be the good old days of the 60-year-old Reids already sterling career.
Speaking of which, after this emphatic and revealing response to a 43-40 loss at New England last week, the Chiefs are 6-1 this season and provided Reid on Sunday with his 200th career win (including 189 regular season victories and 11 in the postseason) and a game ball presented by owner Clark Hunt to commemorate it.
Just as Reid in the locker room instantly took the ball from Hunt and held it aloft and said, Hey, how bout those Chiefs? he predictably downplayed the milestone afterward.
Thats an individual thing, and Im not real good with that. Were about team, he said, smiling and adding that he appreciates it but that the distinction speaks to everybody involved.
Think about this a minute, though: 200 NFL wins. Topped by Don Shula with 347, only nine men have more and with 10 more wins only five will have more. Among active coaches, only New Englands Bill Belichick (283) stands before Reid.
More to the point, Reid essentially administered CPR to the franchise albeit in the figurative sense like tackle Eric Fisher pantomimed it with Hill after Hill sprawled out after a fourth-quarter touchdown.