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That Should End the Debate: Josh Allen Isn’t in Patrick Mahomes’ Class

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At some point, comparisons stop being discussion and start becoming noise. That point has arrived with Josh Allen and Patrick Mahomes.

Josh Allen is a very good quarterback. He is physically gifted, tough, and capable of spectacular plays. But Patrick Mahomes exists on a completely different plane — and the gap between them is not shrinking. It’s widening.

Mahomes isn’t defined by highlights. He’s defined by solutions.

When defenses take away explosive plays, Mahomes adapts. When his receiving corps is stripped down, he still wins. When protection breaks down, he doesn’t panic — he diagnoses. When the game tightens and mistakes become fatal, Mahomes becomes surgical. Allen, by contrast, still relies heavily on chaos: broken plays, arm strength, and risk tolerance that consistently backfires when margins shrink.

The postseason tells the truth better than any regular-season stat sheet ever could.

Mahomes turns playoff football into routine. Conference championship games are expected. Super Bowl appearances are standard. Even in seasons labeled “down years,” Mahomes is still playing deep into January with rosters that would cripple most quarterbacks

Allen’s story is different. For all his talent, his postseason résumé is defined by missed opportunities, costly turnovers, and games that spiral out of control at the worst possible moments. The margin between greatness and frustration is thin — and Allen keeps falling on the wrong side of it.

The defining difference is processing under pressure.

Mahomes doesn’t need perfection around him. He creates it. He manipulates defenses before the snap, after the snap, and even mid-collapse. He wins from the pocket, on the move, injured, and undermanned. His game ages well because it’s rooted in vision and intellect, not just arm strength.

Allen, for all his brilliance, still plays like someone trying to overpower the moment rather than control it.

And this isn’t about rings alone. It’s about inevitability.

When Mahomes has the ball late in a close game, the outcome feels decided. Defensive coordinators know it. Teammates know it. Opponents feel it. That sense of inevitability is something you either have or you don’t — and no amount of talent can manufacture it.

Josh Allen may win an MVP. He may even win a Super Bowl if everything aligns perfectly. But Patrick Mahomes doesn’t need alignment. He is the alignment.

So yes — this should wrap it up.

Josh Allen is not near Patrick Mahomes. He never has been. And at this point in their careers, he never will be.

Mahomes isn’t Allen’s peer.

He’s the standard everyone else is chasing.

In a league that is always searching for the next big thing, the Kansas City Chiefs already have the one thing every franchise wants and almost none can sustain: the right head coach at the right time, with the right quarterback. Andy Reid isn’t just the best option for the Chiefs — he’s the foundation holding their entire operation together.

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