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Danger!

Danger, danger, danger—completely surrounded!

As the quarterback, Mahos had a clear view of the whole field and instantly sensed the crushing pressure bearing down on him. He was like a fragile wooden boat adrift in a raging storm, tossed about rcilessly, the world spinning chaotically, feeling every bone-rattling impact.

And yet—

Mahos remained perfectly calm, razor-focused, dancing through the chaos on light, nimble feet—

Lateral step, dodge, pivot, retreat.

A flurry of agile footwork let him barely evade the barrage of danger, clawing out a sliver of breathing room amidst the bullets and thorns. Finally, he had just a fleeting mont to scan the field again, processing the state of play with clarity.

Compared to the chaotic lee on the line, the patterns unfolding downfield were starkly defined.

Man-to-man coverage across the board.

Four eligible receivers, each tightly marked by defenders.

Left sideline: Watkins, sprinting deep toward the end zone.

Right slot: Hunt, also streaking deep downfield.

Center field: Kelce up front, Hill trailing slightly behind, crisscrossing through the heart of the defense. Kelce hovered between short and interdiate range; Hill lurked in the seam between interdiate and deep coverage.

Regardless of the trench warfare up front, Kansas City's receiving routes stretched the defense thin, layered and deceptive, even Belichick couldn't imdiately decipher the true target.

So, who was Mahos throwing to?

All signs pointed to Kelce having the matchup advantage—size, strength, positioning, he had it all over Jason McCourty. Coupled with Kansas City's need to manage the clock and control possession—a simple field goal could win the ga—there was no reason to force anything risky.

Kelce seed the obvious choice.

In the blink of an eye, Mahos made his decision—

Plant, step forward.

Van Noy surged toward him.

Swing the arm, release the pass.

Van Noy, off-balance, lacked power in his tackle attempt.

Mahos wobbled slightly under the impact, but his core strength held firm. His throwing motion, unaffected.

Snap. Push.

"Ahh—ahhh!"

Mahos fully committed, channeling every ounce of strength into the throw. The football rocketed from his hand like a cannonball.

BOOM!

Slicing through the air.

A heartbeat later, Van Noy's tackle dragged Mahos to the turf, the two crashing down together.

But all eyes were on the football.

The entire Gillette Stadium collectively held its breath, thousands of pairs of eyes tracking the spiraling brown missile, locked in.

Sailing through the sky, cutting the air—a breathtaking arc aid deep down the middle.

Ten yards.

Twenty yards.

Accelerating toward the end zone—

The target revealed: the electrifying Hill, already with three touchdowns on the day.

Not Kelce, but Hill.

No conservative check-down—Mahos was gunning for the dagger.

The young quarterback again showing his audacity.

As Kansas City's top wide receiver, now in his third season, Hill had cented himself as a core pillar of the team. With the Patriots focusing their defense heavily on Lance, Hill had stepped up, proving Kansas City's offense was more than just a one-man show.

Now, once again, it was his mont.

Matched up with Devin McCourty, the veteran safety.

Initially, Hill had tempered his speed, biding his ti, observing, waiting for the perfect mont to break away and for Mahos to unleash the pass.

The pass ca.

Hill instantly recognized Mahos targeting the end zone.

Spin, disengage, accelerate.

Hill's movent was fluid, seamless, surging past Devin with ease.

Devin startled.

Lean. Bump.

In one smooth motion, Devin adjusted—pressing into Hill's body, using his own weight to disrupt Hill's acceleration, sacrificing his balance to throw off Hill's timing.

Experience—adaptability in the mont.

Sure enough, Hill's rhythm broke. His initial burst hampered, the acceleration couldn't fully ignite.

A heartbeat later, Devin completed his turn, seamlessly reattaching himself to Hill as they closed in on the end zone.

Devin and Hill both looked skyward—the football descended toward them.

Thirty yards.

Thirty-five yards.

Mahos's deep shot arced toward the end zone, a strike that could put the Patriots on the ropes if completed.

Devin and Hill wrestled, pushing and jostling for position.

Hill leapt first, carving out space, gaining the high ground.

Arms stretched wide, fingers splayed, he reached for the ball, only to notice the spiral was wobbling, irregular. Van Noy's hit had impacted Mahos's chanics, warping the trajectory—Mahos's throws weren't textbook spirals like Brees's anyway.

Holding his breath, Hill extended fully, fingertips grazing the ball, securing the catch—

Gravity yanked him down.

Devin rose.

Slipping his right hand between Hill's arms, from underneath, a subtle jab before Hill could fully control the ball, leveraging the contact to disrupt the grip.

The football slipped free, tumbling skyward.

Hill fell.

Devin ascended.

In a split-second tangle, Devin, like a basketball player boxing out for a rebound, tapped the ball, altered its path, then shielded Hill with his body, snaring the football cleanly.

"Interception!"

"My God, interception!"

"McCourty! Devin McCourty picks off Mahos, denying the deep shot to Hill!"

The words had barely left the announcer's mouth—

"McCourty's returning it—Hill's trying to tackle him, but clearly, tackling isn't Hill's strength!"

Montum swung violently.

Devin clutched the ball, sprinting back upfield.

Hill whiffed on the tackle attempt. Kelce rushed in to block the return, but Jason McCourty—twin brother, impeccable timing—turned his back into Kelce, subtly impeding him, freeing Devin to break loose.

Kelce and Hunt gave chase, but they were already behind.

Devin sprinted.

Speed wasn't his forte, but light, nimble footwork and a head start turned the open field into his playground.

Like a dagger plunging into the heart of the Chiefs.

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