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Chapter 652 - Midseason Champions

Compared to the 2017 season, when uncertainty and parity reigned all the way through to the Super Bowl, the 2018 season had unfolded differently.

As soon as the season kicked off, two teams immediately established dominance, cutting through fierce competition and carrying their momentum forward, leaving no doubt that they were the frontrunners of the league:

The Los Angeles Rams and the Kansas City Chiefs.

The league couldn't have asked for a better scenario—Roger Goodell himself toasted this "new era" with a glass of wine.

These two teams were perfectly matched:

One from the NFC, the other from the AFC—perfect symmetry.

Both led by young star quarterbacks: third-year standout Jared Goff for the Rams and second-year phenom Patrick Mahomes for the Chiefs. Both pocket passers, reflecting the league's pass-happy evolution.

One boasting last season's Defensive Player of the Year Aaron Donald; the other led by last season's Offensive Player of the Year Lance. A direct clash of defense versus offense.

One guided by the league's youngest-ever head coach Sean McVay; the other by veteran coaching legend Andy Reid. A generational showdown between youth and experience.

Even more compelling, these teams shared a historical rivalry:

From 1995 to 2015, the Rams were based in St. Louis, making them in-state rivals with the Kansas City Chiefs. For two decades, whenever these teams met, it was a heated, bitter battle fueled by Missouri pride.

During that period, the Chiefs won all six matchups, utterly dominating a struggling Rams franchise. For the Rams, Kansas City was a haunting nemesis.

Now, after relocating to Los Angeles three years ago, the Rams and Chiefs were set to face off again—both transformed, both reborn—but their old animosities hadn't vanished in just three years. Old grudges and new ambitions would intertwine.

Even before kickoff, the atmosphere was electric—tension already in the air.

It was perfect.

The matchup was everything the NFL could have dreamed of—so perfect it felt almost impossible to have been scripted.

From historic rivalry to current standings; from stars on both sides of the ball to opposing coaching philosophies; from fans to media, every element promised fireworks.

Not just Goodell, but the entire media landscape was abuzz—and social media was no exception.

Collective frenzy.

The Chiefs' story needed no retelling: as defending Super Bowl champions, they were steamrolling through the season at 9-1, leading the AFC.

There were worries that the narrow loss to the Patriots might haunt this young team—but Kansas City had quickly put those doubts to rest, demonstrating growth and resilience while continuing to improve.

Meanwhile, the Rams were no less impressive—

In fact, they were arguably even more dominant.

When Kansas City's opening five-game win streak ended, the Rams kept rolling.

6-0. 7-0. 8-0.

After a nail-biting two-point win over the Packers in Week 8, the Rams had set a franchise record for their best start since 1969—dominating both offensively and defensively, conjuring memories of the legendary 2007 New England Patriots.

That year, the Patriots went 16-0 in the regular season—the first perfect season since the NFL-AFL merger—only to be shocked in the Super Bowl by the New York Giants.

Now, the Rams looked poised to challenge history.

Explosive on offense, suffocating on defense. No weak links. Total mastery.

They were even given a nickname befitting their new stature: "The Galactic Rams," echoing Real Madrid's "Galácticos."

But perfection is hard to maintain.

In Week 9, the Rams fell by ten points to the New Orleans Saints, snapping their unbeaten run.

The parallels with Kansas City were striking:

The Chiefs lost to the Patriots—Bill Belichick and Tom Brady's veteran brilliance—and New England now sat right behind Kansas City at 7-2.

The Rams lost to the Saints—Sean Payton and Drew Brees' veteran excellence—and New Orleans leapt to 8-1, overtaking LA for the NFC's top seed.

"Veteran vs. upstart," "Old guard vs. new stars," "Tradition vs. challenger."

The 2018 season had become a theater of contrasts—a compelling portrait of the NFL's landscape.

And now:

The two top-seeded teams from each conference were set to collide.

A "Midseason Super Bowl."

Pure drama. No one would miss this. No one should miss this.

And there was another twist:

The NFL had been pushing to expand globally—holding games abroad as part of its "International Series."

Since 2007, the London Games had established a foothold in rugby's and soccer's heartland, growing American football's reach overseas. Asia and South America remained ambitious targets for expansion.

Plans for a game in Beijing had been delayed due to logistical and sponsorship hurdles—but Mexico had emerged as the next frontier.

After two successful years in Mexico City, Goodell was energized. Lance's emergence had only strengthened the league's confidence.

The Chiefs vs. Rams clash was scheduled as this year's Mexico City Game.

When the schedule was drawn up in the offseason, even Goodell couldn't have imagined both teams would rise to the top of their conferences—but fate delivered this perfect matchup.

A Midseason Super Bowl on foreign soil.

Perfect timing. Perfect storylines. Perfect opportunity to ignite the international market.

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Powerstones?

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