Pederson's fingers were slightly damp. His heartbeat, rather than quickening, seemed to slow to an unnerving crawl. He could hear the sound of blood rushing in his ears, and the heightened tension sharpened his senses until even the faintest movement felt deafening.
The pressure was suffocating.
The smooth sailing of the first half had lulled him into a brief sense of security, but the relentless counterattack in the second half shattered that illusion. Now, he was fully aware:
This was the real test.
When faced with a fierce comeback that forced him to reveal his aces early, what should he do next?
Standing on the sideline, Pederson glanced across the field at his mentor, Andy Reid. It was like staring up at a mountain.
As previously mentioned, before coaching the Chiefs, Reid had been the Eagles' head coach. But that brief summary hardly captured the depth of Reid's connection to Philadelphia.
From 1999 to 2012, Reid had spent his forties with the Eagles. Starting in 2005, he served not only as head coach but also as executive vice president and general manager. He had near-total control over the team's direction.
Though their split hadn't been entirely amicable, Reid had left with grace, recommending his successor and maintaining good relations with the organization.
For Pederson, Reid wasn't just a mentor—he was the one who gave him his first NFL coaching job. Pederson had shadowed Reid both in Philadelphia and later in Kansas City, where he spent three years as the Chiefs' offensive coordinator. It was only with Reid's encouragement that Pederson took the Eagles' head coaching job, his first in that role.
Now, for the first time, Pederson was standing across the field from his teacher.
In the first half, Pederson had successfully outmaneuvered Reid. His defensive tactics consistently anticipated the Chiefs' moves—
In 2015, after Kansas City started the season 1-5, Reid had ceded play-calling duties to Pederson, who orchestrated a remarkable ten-game winning streak. That success had paved the way for Pederson's rise in Philadelphia and demonstrated his ability to adapt in real-time, even outshining his mentor in moments of crisis.
That adaptability had been the key to the first-half stalemate.
But as the game shifted in the second half, and Kansas City's offense and defense each found their rhythm, Pederson knew he was staring down the ultimate challenge.
The Eagles had to stop the Chiefs' offense.
Above all else, they couldn't allow Lance to break free again. His explosive 75-yard touchdown had shattered their morale.
Steeling himself, Pederson huddled with defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz to make adjustments.
On the Field.
The two sides lined up for battle, and the tension crackled like static electricity.
Lance appeared at ease, stretching his neck and shoulders as if he were warming up for practice. Behind his visor, his face was unreadable, but the upward curve of his mouth guard betrayed his confidence.
No words were necessary. His calm, composed demeanor radiated pressure, keeping the Eagles' defense on edge.
First and ten.
"Set. Hike!"
At the snap, Lance immediately went into motion.
From his initial position on Smith's right, he cut across the quarterback's backfield, moving horizontally toward the left sideline.
Smith turned his back to the defensive line and handed the ball off to Lance in a smooth exchange.
But Lance didn't slow down. Instead, he continued his lateral movement, skirting past the left slot toward the sideline.
What's going on?
In an instant, the field's alignment became clear.
The Chiefs had lined up with two wide receivers stacked on the left and a lone tight end on the right. At the snap, the offensive line shifted slightly to the left, creating the impression that they were setting up for a run along the left edge.
And there was Lance, bolting toward the sideline like a guided missile.
Damn it!
Realizing the play too late, the Eagles' linebackers, safeties, and defensive linemen all swarmed to their right, intent on bottling Lance before he could gain traction.
Crash!
Pads collided violently as the line of scrimmage erupted into chaos. The Eagles' defenders surged forward, aiming to cut off Lance's route.
But then—
The unexpected happened.
Smith, who had handed off to Lance, kept spinning. Completing a full 360-degree turn, he raised his right arm and flicked a short pass over the scrum.
A perfect arc soared into an empty pocket of space, aimed directly at a single target:
Travis Kelce.
The decoy worked. While Lance drew the defense toward the left sideline, Kelce slipped unnoticed into a soft spot in the coverage.
By the time the Eagles' defenders realized the deception and scrambled to close in, it was too late.
Kelce snagged the pass effortlessly and rumbled ahead for 15 yards before being swarmed by three defenders.
The Chiefs had secured another first down.
The balance of power on the field was shifting.
When the running game becomes a credible threat, it opens up the passing game. When the passing game finds success, it creates space for the run.
This was the balance Reid had been chasing all game. Though the first half had been a struggle, Lance's third-quarter heroics had finally broken the Eagles' defensive scheme wide open.
With each play, Reid's offensive strategy unfolded like clockwork.
Over the next drive, the Chiefs alternated between three passes and three runs, distributing the ball between multiple receivers and splitting rushing duties between Lance and Hunt. While the gains weren't massive, they were consistent, and the Eagles' defense began to feel the strain.
Four minutes and 33 seconds ticked off the clock. Three penalties—two against the Eagles and one against the Chiefs—slowed the tempo, but Kansas City steadily marched downfield, finally reaching the Eagles' 30-yard line.
The tension rose with every snap. Bodies collided with increasing ferocity, and tempers flared as both teams pushed their limits. The cumulative wear and tear began to show as penalties and minor skirmishes multiplied.
Then came another setback.
A holding penalty against the offensive line negated a first down, forcing Kansas City into a challenging third-and-five situation.
The Chiefs were within field goal range, and taking the three points would extend their lead. But a touchdown here could break the Eagles' spirit entirely.
Lance jogged back onto the field.
Was Reid betting on another miracle from his rookie? Or was Lance simply the ultimate decoy?
The moment Lance took the field, the atmosphere turned electric. The Eagles' defense zeroed in on him, their collective gaze smoldering with intensity.
If Lance dared to take the ball, they would tear him apart.
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Powerstones?
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