Jason McCourty, cornerback.
Twin brother to Devin McCourty, the Patriots' safety. The difference? Devin had been with New England his whole career; Jason, however, began with the Tennessee Titans.
Jason spent eight seasons in Tennessee—neither outstanding nor disappointing. While he didn't make headlines, the fact that he survived in the league without being cut spoke volumes about his ability.
Last season, Jason moved to the Cleveland Browns, where his performance was lackluster. This year, he joined the Patriots to reunite with his brother Devin.
His speed—undeniably exceptional. Whether lining up against wide receivers or running backs, Jason could stick like glue, using his tight coverage to disrupt plays.
Originally, Belichick intended to use Jason in tight coverage against receivers, replicating the Steelers' strategy to limit Mahomes' passing lanes. But unexpectedly, they discovered Jason's speed was just enough to track Lance's initial burst.
Thus, the plan evolved.
In pure foot races, Lance still had the edge. But football isn't just about raw speed—it's about timing, positioning, and teamwork.
Lance quickly realized Jason could stick to him like flypaper, his clingy coverage severely limiting any advancement.
Belichick, of course, didn't rely solely on Jason. The Patriots rotated speed, power, and double-teams, overwhelming Lance at every turn.
It was relentless—Lance faced trial after trial on every carry.
Now, here they were again.
Jason didn't simply shadow Lance with speed; instead, he closed the distance and launched a brutal, waist-level hit, his strength detonating on contact.
Danger!
At the last second, Lance did the unthinkable—he retreated a step.
Jason froze, confused. So did Bentley.
Lance, with that unconventional move, flipped the situation on its head, colliding into Bentley just as Jason lunged forward and missed entirely.
Bentley scrambled to react, twisting and shoving toward Lance, but was a heartbeat too slow.
Lance seized the moment, creating a small window of space. His right hand flicked the ball into a delicate arc, sailing it over Bentley and Jason's heads.
Gasps rippled across the stadium.
Even Mahomes was stunned: What the hell…?
It wasn't a designed trick play—just a standard run.
But under duress, Lance improvised, showcasing his second-read abilities, processing the defense on the fly, and adjusting his tactics.
A pass.
Under NFL rules, only one forward pass is allowed per play, and the passer cannot cross the line of scrimmage before releasing the ball.
On the sidelines, Clark clenched his fist: Lance could no longer be called a rookie.
Lance's awareness of Bentley and Jason collapsing on him triggered the decision—he hadn't crossed the line yet, so he boldly stepped back, launching the ball, catching everyone off guard.
It was high-risk, high-reward—plucking victory from the jaws of chaos.
But… who was the target?
Without a receiver syncing to Lance's vision, the defense would win regardless.
Lance never threw blind.
Second-read awareness demanded scanning all moving pieces, recognizing defensive tendencies, and exploiting gaps.
He had seen it—Kelce was wide open.
Jason's blitz left Kelce uncovered. The moment Lance spotted Jason crashing down, he knew Kelce was the option.
With precise judgment, calm under pressure, and courage, Lance delivered.
Mahomes lifted his chin as the ball spiraled in a rough, awkward arc… then a figure appeared.
Kelce.
Though a beat late, Kelce's instincts kicked in. He dove forward, snatching the ball inches off the turf like a fisherman scooping treasure from the sea.
Rolling, springing to his feet, Kelce spiked the ball with force.
It wasn't a clean play—the impromptu nature affected timing, preventing further yardage—but the catch stood.
Six-yard gain.
Second and four.
The crowd roared, stunned by the creativity, courage, and execution.
"The relentless fourth-quarter grind continues. Both teams teeter on the edge, yet the Chiefs find reserves of energy, improvising under pressure to shift momentum."
"Is this… 'Chiefs Special' in action?"
Mahomes looked at Lance with newfound belief—his faith burning bright.
Lance, chest heaving, body aflame with exertion, stayed locked in. He fist-bumped Kelce and Mahomes before lining up again, eyes sharp, unfazed by fatigue.
What Lance learned from Bell and Lynch in the offseason was simple yet vital:
Patience.
As a running back, brute force wasn't enough. Impatience led to dead ends. Patience, discipline, and persistence opened doors—repeating, probing, enduring, until opportunity arrived.
Even tonight, feeling stifled by relentless defense, Lance held to that principle.
"Hike!"
Second down—Mahomes handed off to Lance once more.
This time, Lance didn't hesitate—rocketing forward like a missile, using sheer speed to punch through the defense before they could react.
It was clean. Decisive. Total commitment.
Bentley met him head-on—Lance didn't care.
Driving, pushing.
Driving, forcing.
Step after pounding step, Lance bulldozed forward, dragging Bentley along like dead weight.
Bentley scrambled, his footing gone, arms latched around Lance for dear life. His legs skidded uselessly across the turf, conjuring images of Titanic's Jack clinging to the ship:
"Jack, I'm flying!"
Damn. Damn, damn, damn!
Bentley couldn't stop it. Teammates swarmed—second, third, fourth defenders finally dragged Lance down.
Face buried in the turf, Bentley heard the referee's call:
"First down."
Lance had bulldozed over four yards—with Bentley in tow.
"Damn it!" Bentley pounded the grass in frustration.
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Powerstones?
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