Yuma Sun

Champions

Ex-AWC player helps lead Chiefs to Super Bowl win

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MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — For Damien Williams, the trip to the Super Bowl end zone was especially long.

Undrafted out of college, he made the NFL as a special teamer. Now, five years later, the former Arizona Western College running back was crossing the goal line while holding the ball aloft, which made him look like the exclamatio­n point he was to the game.

Williams’ 38-yard touchdown run — his second score in the final 2:44 — punctuated the Kansas City Chiefs’ 31-20 comeback victory over the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday night.

“You dream of this moment,” Williams said. “It

doesn’t feel real yet.”

Williams finished with 104 yards rushing on 17 carries, and added 29 yards on four receptions. The performanc­e came in the stadium of the Miami Dolphins, his team in his first four NFL seasons.

Miami signed Williams as an undrafted free agent in 2014 and decided not to re-sign him after the 2017 season.

No hard feelings, Williams

said.

“I still have a lot of relationsh­ips here,” he said. “They’re a great organizati­on. You think about the Super Bowl, and for it to be where I started my career, it means a lot.”

Still, Williams acknowledg­ed playing the game with a chip on his shoulder, as always.

“I entered the league undrafted,” he said. “I had to fight my way in. The Chiefs told me I had to work to make the team. Hearing the doubt, I bring a lot of attitude

to this game.”

Williams joined the Chiefs in 2018 and was a big factor in this year’s postseason run to the franchise’s first Super Bowl title since 1970.

He scored six touchdowns in three games, and helped Kansas City overcome a double-digit deficit in each win.

“He’s one of the hardestwor­king guys in the business,” teammate Travis Kelce said. “Doesn’t complain about a thing. He puts in the work, and when we hand him the ball we know he’s getting it in the end zone like he did today.”

Against the 49ers, Williams caught a 5-yard touchdown pass from Patrick Mahomes to put the Chiefs ahead 24-20 with 2:44 left.

After the 49ers lost the ball on downs, Williams sealed the win. He took a handoff, veered to the outside and sprinted to the end zone untouched.

He waved the ball at the crowd and then skipped happily toward his teammates to celebrate. The 100yard rushing effort was the fifth of his career, and his second in postseason play.

In two seasons at Arizona Western, Williams ran for 2,654 yards and 36 touchdowns. As a sophomore in 2011, when he helped the Matadors reach the national championsh­ip game, he was the NJCAA’s leading rusher with 1,931 yards.

After AWC, Williams played two seasons at the University of Oklahoma.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? KANSAS CITY CHIEFS RUNNING BACK DAMIEN WILLIAMS (26) scores a go-ahead touchdown against the San Francisco 49ers during the fourth quarter of Super Bowl LIV Sunday in Miami Gardens, Fla. Williams, who played at Arizona Western College from 2010-11, ran for 104 yards and scored two touchdowns in the Chiefs’ 31-20 victory.
ASSOCIATED PRESS KANSAS CITY CHIEFS RUNNING BACK DAMIEN WILLIAMS (26) scores a go-ahead touchdown against the San Francisco 49ers during the fourth quarter of Super Bowl LIV Sunday in Miami Gardens, Fla. Williams, who played at Arizona Western College from 2010-11, ran for 104 yards and scored two touchdowns in the Chiefs’ 31-20 victory.
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