Current:Home > Scams'I blacked out': Even Mecole Hardman couldn't believe he won Super Bowl for Chiefs -Wealth Nexus Pro
'I blacked out': Even Mecole Hardman couldn't believe he won Super Bowl for Chiefs
View
Date:2025-04-11 14:26:32
LAS VEGAS – Mecole Hardman scored the game-winning touchdown of Super Bowl 58. It took some time before that registered.
On the game’s final play, the fifth-year receiver of the Kansas City Chiefs motioned toward the offensive line before pirouetting back to the right, looking back at quarterback Patrick Mahomes at the snap. The three-time Super Bowl MVP delivered a quick pass to the receiver, Hardman gathering the ball in and heading toward the pylon for a short 3-yard score that will be long remembered as the play that cemented K.C. as the NFL’s newest dynasty.
Not that Hardman knew.
“I knew I was going to get the ball, caught the football, and I blacked out,” said Hardman after the game. “I’m not going to lie, I blacked out. I (saw) Pat running towards me, and I'm thinking, ‘We just won.’ I understand now and after that.
“The rest is history.”
SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.
Hardman can be forgiven for the lapse after a season that must have seemed like a fever dream.
After spending his first four seasons in Kansas City, he signed a one-year deal with the New York Jets last March. He appeared on “Hard Knocks,” fawning over new teammate Aaron Rodgers and giddy at the prospect of playing with the legendary quarterback. Yet Hardman’s impact with the Jets turned out to be on par with injured Rodgers, the wideout catching one pass in six games before being traded back to the Chiefs in October. Yet even reunited with his former team and an even better QB1, injuries kept Hardman off the field for much of the season.
“This was a roller coaster,” he said. “It was a lot of ups and downs. I was going through a lot, especially with the injury, trying to start over with a new team and didn't really play. Kansas City welcomed me back with open arms.”
Did they ever.
When healthy, Hardman adds speed to the passing game – an attribute that both makes him a deep threat and opens up room for players like tight end Travis Kelce to operate underneath the coverage. Hardman’s 52-yard catch in the second quarter seemed destined to set up Kansas City’s first touchdown, but a fumble on the next play nullified that opportunity.
Still, it’s not how you start.
“Man, I couldn’t be happier for my guy,” Kelce said of Hardman after the game. “It brought me to tears seeing that he was the man that got us there.
“Mecole, he’s one of my favorite teammates ever, because he just keeps showing up. … Found a way to win the game for us – when everybody counted him out, even the Jets counted him out. Man, we were so excited when we got him back in the building, because he’s the kind of guy that brings everybody together.”
Said Mahomes: “I've played with Mecole for a long time. He's always ready for the moment … and he was he was ready for that moment in a couple (of) big plays.”
Even if Hardman didn’t necessarily process those moments in the moments, he was fully self-aware by night’s end.
“(T)o get here to the Super Bowl, and the end, and got to end how it ended," he ended. "I don’t think I want it any other way.”
***Follow USA TODAY Sports' Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter @ByNateDavis.
veryGood! (34123)
Related
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Sunday NIT schedule: No. 1 seeds Indiana State, Wake Forest headline 5-game slate
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Primetime
- 1 person killed and 5 wounded including a police officer in an Indianapolis shooting, police say
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- William Byron wins from the pole during road-course race at Circuit of the Americas
- Kenya Moore, Madison LeCroy, & Kandi Burruss Use a Scalp Brush That’s $6 During the Amazon Big Sale
- Kristin Cavallari Jokes Boyfriend Mark Estes Looks Like Heath Ledger
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Laurent de Brunhoff, ‘Babar’ heir and author, dies at age 98
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- NBC’s Chuck Todd lays into his network for hiring former RNC chief Ronna McDaniel as an analyst
- Former Filipino congressman accused of orchestrating killings of governor and 8 others is arrested at golf range
- Women’s March Madness live updates: Today’s games and schedule, how to watch and stream
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Wyoming governor vetoes bill to allow concealed carry in public schools and meetings
- 2024 Ford Ranger Raptor flexes its off-road muscles in first-drive review
- MLB's 100 Names You Need To Know For 2024: Dodgers' Yoshinobu Yamamoto tops the list
Recommendation
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
Fulton County DA Fani Willis says despite efforts to slow down Trump case, ‘the train is coming’
Mining Companies Say They Have a Better Way to Get Underground Lithium, but Skepticism Remains
Patrick Mahomes and Brittany Mahomes Bring Their Kids to Meet Bluey in Adorable Photo
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Stock symbols you'll LUV. Clever tickers help companies attract investors.
Women’s March Madness live updates: Today’s games and schedule, how to watch and stream
Patrick Mahomes and Brittany Mahomes Bring Their Kids to Meet Bluey in Adorable Photo