Patrick Mahomes Has Telling Admission On Not Being 100 Percent Healthy.
Questions surrounding the stability of Patrick Mahomes’ ankle certainly lingered heading into Saturday’s matchup with C.J. Stroud and the Houston Texans, but the two-time MVP quickly put a lot of those concerns to rest.
Mahomes opened the scoring with a 15-yard touchdown run on Kansas City’s first drive, which eventually led to a 27-19 win to inch his team one game closer to locking up the one-seed in the AFC playoffs.

After the victory, Mahomes opened up about the injury and why it meant so much for him to be able to gut it out for his teammates.
“I ask a lot from the guys around me and, so, I feel like if I’m going to ask them to play through pain, if I’m going to ask them to play through little nicks and bruises and stuff like that, I’ve got to do it,” the three-time Super Bowl champ admitted.
“That’s something that I pride myself on, is being out there with my guys and playing football. I’m not going to put us in a position to be in a bad spot or lose a football game, but if I feel like I can compete and win, I’ll be out on that football field.”
Mahomes was 28-of-41 in the game for 260 yards and a second TD through the air. His coach, Andy Reid, couldn’t say enough about the QB’s performance and how tough Mahomes is in all aspects.

“He’s so tough and mentally and physically,” Reid said at his postgame press conference. “You just get used to it, but most guys don’t come back from that like he did. But he set his mind to it, then jumped in that training room and stayed there.
They worked on him, and they did a great job with that, our trainers. Most guys don’t do that. It sends a message to the whole team. Our guys, our leaders, are good in that way. They try to play through things like that.”
Mahomes and the Chiefs are in good position to pull off something that’s never been done before and that’s win three straight Super Bowl championships — something that would almost certainly cement the 29-year-old as one of the greatest to ever do it (if he hasn’t already).
News
The Viral Story of an Iranian Scholar ‘Leaving Islam for Jesus’ — What’s Confirmed and What Isn’t
Viral Claim: “Iranian Scholar Linked to Khamenei Abandons Islam for Jesus” — What We Actually Know I never knew a day would come when I would declare Jesus not as a prophet but as the son of God, as God…
German Women POWs’ Stand Against Undressing Sparks Shocking Mercy from American Guards
Defiant Refusal: German Women POWs’ Stand Against Undressing Sparks Shocking Mercy from American Guards The Unyielding Stand: German Women Prisoners Refuse to Undress, Stunned by British Guards’ Compassionate Response The Mercy Brew Ashes of Arrival In April 1945, across northern…
Nicki Minaj holds Donald Trump’s hand, says ‘god is protecting him’
Nicki Minaj holds Donald Trump’s hands, calls herself his, ‘No. 1 fan’, netizens react in shock Donald Trump and Nicki Minaj Photograph: (X) Story highlights: Nicki Minaj and Donald Trump were hand-in-hand at the Accounts Summit in Washington DC. Giving a…
SHOCKING: Brady Tkachuk calls for Nathan MacKinnon’s 4 Nations Face-Off MVP award to be revoked, claiming, “MacKinnon has an entitled look on his face.”
Ottawa Senators captain Brady Tkachuk has publicly called for the removal of Nathan MacKinnon’s recently awarded MVP honors at the prestigious 4 Nations Face-Off hockey tournament. The reason? According to Tkachuk, MacKinnon’s apparent “entitled expression” overshadowed his achievements on the…
“What Montgomery Said When Patton Freed 15,000 POWs Without Orders”
April 6th, 1945. Reigns, France. Shave forward headquarters. Field marshal Bernard Montgomery is reviewing intelligence reports over morning tea. The ritual is methodical, precise, very British. His aid, a young captain named Williams, enters the room carrying a dispatch folder…
“What Bradley Said When Patton Ran Recon 150 Miles Behind Enemy Lines”
August 7th, 1944. Neiho, France. 12th Army Group headquarters. General Omar Bradley is reviewing daily situation reports with his intelligence officer, Colonel Benjamin Monk Dixon. It’s early morning. Coffee steams on the desk. Maps spread across the table show Patton’s…
End of content
No more pages to load