The Denver Post

Cilegs’ Faiooes cneated to rnay

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, MO.» Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes was cleared Friday from the league’s concussion protocol after his third consecutiv­e day of practice and will be under center when Kansas City plays the Buffalo Bills in the AFC championsh­ip game.

Mahomes was hurt in the third quarter of the Chiefs’ divisional­round win over Cleveland. He returned to take the majority of snaps in a light workout Wednesday, then did the same during the longest practice of the week Thursday, before team doctors and an independen­t neurologis­t gave him the green light following Friday’s workout.

“The week has been a bunch of testing, a bunch of different things, to make sure I’m good to go and there’s no lingering effects and things like that,” Mahomes said. “Everything has been good. I went through everything; three or four different doctors have said everything is looking good.”

The reigning Super Bowl MVP was hurt when he was tackled around the head by Browns linebacker Mack Wilson while running a quarterbac­k option. It never appeared that Mahomes hit his head on the turf — and if he did, it was not the kind of impact that usually leads to a concussion — raising the possibilit­y that he had actually compressed a nerve.

Either way, Mahomes immediatel­y showed the symptoms of a concussion. He remained on the turf for a couple of minutes, then nearly collapsed when he got to his feet. He was still wobbly as trainers helped him to the sideline and into the blue injury tent, though he looked more steady when he ran into the locker room a few minutes later.

The Chiefs wasted little time

ruling Mahomes out, though. Chad Henne wound up finishing off the 22-17 victory.

“We had an option play called we ran a little earlier,” Mahomes recalled Friday, “and I ran out to the right. I got hit. I tried to get up, felt my legs go out and knew that wasn’t a good thing.”

Still, Mahomes had enough wits about him to tell the trainers to let him remain on the turf so that Henne would have a chance to warm up — “because I knew we were going to go for it on fourth down,” Mahomes said.

“You want to be out there, but you have to go through the protocol and do everything the right way. You have to look at everything long term as much as short term,” said Mahomes, who signed a 10-year contract in the offseason that could pay him close to a half-billion over the course of the deal. “We have the belief there will be no lingering effects and I’ll be able to go out there and be myself and be who I am every single week.”

Mahomes was second in the NFL with 4,740 yards passing this season, despite skipping the regularsea­son finale with the Chiefs already assured of the No. 1 seed and a first-round bye. The long layoff between Week 16 and last Sunday wasn’t a problem, either, as Mahomes threw for 255 yards with TDs running and passing before he was hurt.

“I mean, he’s flying around as much as he can,” Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce said. “I know that guy is a tough son-of-a-gun, and he’s going to go out there and try to get ready the way he knows how, which is take every rep as if it’s a game rep. And his attention to detail, his preparatio­n throughout the week, that hasn’t changed. Just him playing within the guidelines he was given knowing he’s in the concussion protocol.”

His injury status doesn’t just provide some clarity for the Chiefs, who otherwise would have started Henne with Matt Moore as the backup. It also provides some for oddsmakers and the gambling public. The opening line Sunday night varied widely depending on the sportsbook, with those confident Mahomes would play listing Kansas City as a 4-point favorite and those thinking he might not play giving the Bills a 2 ½-point advantage. The line had settled on the Chiefs as 3-point favorites by Friday afternoon.

 ?? Charlie Riedel, The Associated Press ?? Kansas City quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, who was hurt in the Chiefs’ divisional-round win over Cleveland, is expected to start in Sunday’s AFC championsh­ip.
Charlie Riedel, The Associated Press Kansas City quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, who was hurt in the Chiefs’ divisional-round win over Cleveland, is expected to start in Sunday’s AFC championsh­ip.

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