Texarkana Gazette

Mahomes continues to rewrite record books

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Patrick Mahomes walked off the field at Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday with another record on his resume and the Kansas City Chiefs another win toward earning the No. 1 seed in the AFC playoffs.

He didn’t have much chance to savor any of it.

Mahomes quickly learned that the stepfather of his longtime girlfriend, Brittany Matthews, had died after a medical emergency during the game. Mahomes quickly skipped out on the postgame celebratio­n and joined Matthews, who posted the sobering news on her social media accounts that evening.

“Today is a day I will never forget,” she wrote in the caption of a photo. “Directly after this picture I sprinted to the front entrance to see my stepdad passed out! He did not come back from this and he was called to heaven today! I KNOW 100 (percent) he is so happy up there with his kids looking down on us, cheering loud that his Chiefs won today!”

Mahomes is not expected to miss any preparatio­n for Monday night’s showdown with the Rams in Los Angeles, though Chiefs coach Andy Reid said he would be fine if it happens.

The Chiefs were off Tuesday and Wednesday, giving Mahomes and his family time to cope.

“We’re sorry to hear about what took place,” Reid said. “Prayers and blessings are with the family. I talked to Patrick and they’re doing well for the circumstan­ces that took place. As they go through this mourning period our thoughts and prayers are with them.”

This season has already been a whirlwind for Mahomes, who was thrust into the starting job after the trade of Alex Smith to Washington and whose ability was justifiabl­y questioned.

He was a product of the Texas Tech offensive system. His big arm was tempered by problems with his accuracy. He had leadership abilities, but could they translate from college to the NFL?

Mahomes has answered all those questions every week.

He threw six touchdown passes in a game. He led the Chiefs to tough road wins over the Chargers and Steelers, and went toe-totoe with Tom Brady in New England. He has thrown so few intercepti­ons that any questions about his decision-making have been left in September.

With two more TD passes against the Cardinals, he broke the franchise single-season record of 30 that Hall of Fame quarterbac­k Len Dawson set during the 1964 season—with six games to go.

“Pat is just a competitor,” Chiefs running back Kareem Hunt said, “and a great guy and he’s always trying to win. We needed all 31 of those touchdowns and he got them.”

Well, the Chiefs probably didn’t need all of them.

The Chiefs have scored 353 points through their first 10 games, the most in club history, and have been held to fewer than 30 only twice. Three times they’ve scored more than 40, including their 43-40 loss to the Patriots that remains the only blemish on their record.

To put into perspectiv­e just how good Mahomes has been this season, consider this: He threw for 249 yards against the Cardinals for a passer rating of 125.4, the eighth time this season he’s been over 100.0—the third most in a single season in franchise history.

Yet some people considered the end of his streak of eight consecutiv­e 300-yard passing games to be a relative disappoint­ment, as if he failed to live up to some otherworld­ly expectatio­n.

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