He went 17 for 22 for 221 yards and two touchdowns, and ran for 72 yards and a touchdown in a 40-22 win over Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs that avenged a Super Bowl loss two years ago against Kansas City.
“Dealing with everything that came with the last Super Bowl, still leaving empty a little bit because as great as the performance was, it wasn’t enough to win,” Hurts said. “Going through those emotions, and processing those emotions and processing those things lit a great flame in me. It enhanced my desire to win significantly.”
Hurts was outstanding in that game, throwing for 304 yards and a TD and rushing for 70 yards and three more scores but could only watch as Harrison Butker kicked a go-ahead field goal with 8 seconds left for a 38-35 win.
Hurts turned that year into a $255 million, five-year contract the following offseason, but it didn’t quiet the critics who questioned whether Hurts was holding back the Eagles offense at various points the past two years.
Outside of an early interception against the Chiefs — his first since Week 10 against Dallas — Hurts was nearly flawless against Steve Spagnuolo’s defense.
“The criticism of him blows my mind, because I think he’s so special,” coach Nick Sirianni aid. “I mean he won so many games and works his butt off and just continues to get better and block out everything and just focus on the task at hand of getting better, putting himself in a position to win each week.”
He converted scrambles when he faced pressure and kept finding open receivers, with his 46-yard deep shot to DeVonta Smith making it 34-0 in the third quarter, providing an exclamation point to a lopsided Super Bowl win.
“In the biggest moments, when there’s the biggest haters or doubters, this man just, I don’t know, just outshines and takes command,” left tackle Jordan Mailata said.