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Baseball is like first love but….Patrick Mahomes reveals why he abandoned the Detroit Tigers in the 2014 MLB Draft. ttmd
Patrick Mahomes confesses that baseball is his “first love.”
Getting drafted so early in his life by a major league baseball franchise must’ve been an enticing offer. Moreover, the QB was surrounded by professionals from the sport, his father being a pro pitcher himself. Recently clip of a young Mahomes scoring a 16-strikeout no-hitter against present MLB star Michael Kopech resurfaced. It is interesting to think how different the NFL would’ve been if the Chiefs star had chosen to follow in his father’s footsteps.
So why did the Texas native choose the NFL despite confessing that baseball was his “first love.” In a recent conversation with Time, the Super Bowl champion opened up about his journey balancing the two sports before ultimately entering the league. Even while entering college, Mahomes ‘plan A’ was the MLB draft.
“My goal was to go to college, play three years of football, three years of baseball, and go [back] into the MLB draft.” However, juggling the two heavy-practice sports proved to be more difficult than the freshman had expected. His head coach at Texas Tech, now offensive coordinator of the Washington Commanders, Kliff Kingsbury, gave him advice that proved to be a turning point for the future NFL star.
Kingsbury asked the QB to dedicate an entire year to football, and surely a league team would draft him in the first round. As for Mahomes, he had a simple answer. “I was like, ‘Let’s do it,’” he said. “I want to see where this takes me.”
Mahomes’ ultimate choice led him to the shiny football career we all are witnessing. However, the lessons from his time with baseball stayed with the star in his pursuit of two back-to-back Super Bowls.
Lessons from baseball Mahomes carries in his NFL journey
As a high schooler pitcher and having role models like Pat Mahomes Sr. to look up to, the future footballer had an early exposure to baseball. Despite disliking some aspects of the sport initially, Mahomes realized the importance of the diligence that would help him in his NFL pursuit.
“I hated when my dad made me hit off a tee,” said the Chiefs’ QB. Mahomes further added, “I’m like, ‘I just want you to throw it to me.’ I go watch Alex Rodriguez. He’s leading the league in home runs, and he’s hitting off the tee every single day. It taught me that even whenever I get to where I want to get to, I can’t let the fundamentals slip. I can’t stop working and doing the little things. That’s what makes people great.”
Be it his signature no-look passes or unparalleled throws, hours of practice on the baseball pitch helped shape Mahomes into the quarterback he is today. His father echoed the same emotion in a conversation with the LA Times. “You can tell by the way Patrick plays quarterback that he took pieces of his basketball, the jump throws and no-look passes, and pieces of his baseball, the different arm angles, and he put it all together in a package in football,” Said Mahomes Sr.
Today, Patrick Mahomes has 28,424 passing yards, 219 touchdowns, and 63 interceptions in his seven seasons with Kansas City. Having lifted the Lombardi Trophy and achieved the MVP status thrice, a three-peat in the 2024 season is the only item on the QB’s checklist this year.