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Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera

Super Bowl: Eagles deny Chiefs historic three-peat in thumping win

Philadelphia Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni and Jalen Hurts celebrate with the Vince Lombardi Trophy after winning Super Bowl LIX [Mike Segar/Reuters]

The Philadelphia Eagles obliterated the Kansas City Chiefs’ bid to become the first NFL team to win three consecutive Super Bowls with a blowout 40-22 win in New Orleans.

The Eagles’ defence was simply immense on Sunday, smothering the Chiefs’ creative maestro Patrick Mahomes, and on offence, their own quarterback, Jalen Hurts, led the way, throwing for two touchdowns and running for another as Philadelphia brutally avenged their 2023 loss to the Chiefs at Super Bowl 57.

The Eagles’ dazzling running back, Saquon Barkley, grabbed 31 first-half rushing yards to break the all-time NFL record for most rushing yards in a regular season plus playoffs, to add icing to the Eagles’ championship cake.

The thumping victory delivered a second Super Bowl win for the Eagles franchise, whose other title win was in 2018.

It was a commanding performance throughout by the Eagles who totally dominated the championship match in front of a crowd that included United States President Donald Trump and pop superstar Taylor Swift.

United States President Donald Trump salutes his country’s national anthem ahead of the game [Kevin Lamarque/Reuters]

It marked the first time a sitting president had attended a Super Bowl. Trump watched the first half before leaving.

The Eagles set the tone for the contest by opening the scoring in the first quarter with their signature play – a goal line move they call the “brotherly shove” – with Hurts ploughing into the end zone behind his powerful offensive line as his teammates forced him forward.

Eagles’ rookie defensive back Cooper DeJean picked off a poor pass from Mahomes in the second quarter to score Philadelphia’s second touchdown, and Hurts then found AJ Brown with a 12-yard pass to go into halftime at 24-0 ahead.

Kansas City Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes is hit in the face by Philadelphia Eagles’ Jalen Carter on a night to forget for the quarterback [Brian Snyder/Reuters]

Mahomes struggled mightily in the first half, throwing two interceptions while being sacked three times and completing just six of 14 passing attempts.

Things went from bad to worse in the second half for the Chiefs when Hurts found DeVonta Smith with a 46-yard pass for a fourth touchdown to take a 34-0 lead.

The Chiefs finally got on the scoreboard late in the third quarter through Xavier Worthy, but the game was sliding away at breakneck pace.

Philadelphia Eagles’ DeVonta Smith scores a touchdown [Brian Snyder/Reuters]

A DeAndre Hopkins touchdown, and a second for Worthy, added some respectability to the score but it was cosmetic, and would have come as little consolation to the battered Chiefs whose tilt at history was devastatingly denied.

Nobody had predicted the one-sided nature of the game – not Trump, not Swift, not Argentinian World Cup winner Lionel Messi, hip-hop mogul Jay-Z or Beatle Paul McCartney who were all in the crowd – but the Eagles’ defence was awesome throughout, never giving the Chiefs a chance.

It was nothing short of a blowout to end a week when football took on a Mardi Gras flavour, with New Orleans hosting the game for a record-tying 11th time.

Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts runs with the ball [Adam Hunger/AP]
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