Jalen Hurts and Patrick Mahomes With Miserable Week 14 Performances
Ten months ago, Patrick Mahomes and Jalen Hurts were standing on the confetti-covered turf in New Orleans, the absolute kings of the football world. They were the faces of the league, battling it out on the biggest stage imaginable in Super Bowl LIX. Fast forward to Week 14 of the 2025 season, and life has come at them fast.
If you thought you were having a rough week at the office, just be glad you aren’t an NFL quarterback right now. In a weekend that can only be described as a comedy of errors, the league’s two premier signal-callers combined for stats that look like typos: eight turnovers, zero touchdowns, and a passer rating that wouldn’t even pass a school zone speed limit.
Mahomes Struggles Against Houston
It started on Sunday night. Mahomes, usually the magician who pulls rabbits out of hats, looked like he was pulling grenades out of his helmet instead. The Houston Texans defense didn’t just contain him; they bullied him. Mahomes went 14-of-33 for a measly 160 yards.
But the real kicker? Three interceptions. No touchdowns. The Chiefs fell 20-10, dropping to a worrying 6-7 record. You could see the frustration on the sidelines—this isn’t the Kansas City machine we’re used to. It is a team fighting for its playoff life, and right now, they are losing that fight.
Monday Night Hurts the Eagles
Just when we thought the quarterback play couldn’t get any uglier, Monday night rolled around. Jalen Hurts took the field against the Chargers, and things went from bad to worse. If Sunday was a stumble for the Super Bowl vets, Monday was a face-plant.
Hurts had a night he’ll want to scrub from his memory banks immediately. He coughed up the football five times—four interceptions and a lost fumble. It wasn’t just bad luck; it was a total systemic breakdown. The Eagles clawed their way into overtime, only for it to end in the most heartbreaking way possible: a Hurts pass intercepted by safety Tony Jefferson to seal the 22-19 loss.
Watching Hurts walk off the field at SoFi Stadium, you didn’t see the swagger of a Super Bowl MVP. You saw a guy searching for answers. He threw for 240 yards, sure, but when you turn the ball over five times, yardage is just a number on a losing stat sheet.
What This Means For the Playoff Picture
The reality is setting in: there is a legitimate chance that neither of the last two Super Bowl quarterbacks makes the playoffs this year. The Chiefs face a steep uphill climb to salvage their season, and the Eagles are currently spiraling with a three-game losing streak.
The NFL is unforgiving. It doesn’t care about your resume, your commercials, or what you did last February. Right now, both Mahomes and Hurts look human, vulnerable, and frankly, a little lost. If they don’t figure it out soon, they will be watching the postseason from the same place as the rest of us—the couch.
