Toronto Star

Winning Hunt Trophy is personal for the Chiefs

- DAVE SKRETTA

KANSAS CITY, MO.— The evenkeeled executive with the crisp suit and winning smile stood inside the mostly empty Kansas City Chiefs locker room, his team having just won a home playoff game for the first time in 25 years.

He talked about how much it meant to their long-suffering fans. He spoke glowingly about coach Andy Reid, and his young superstar quarterbac­k, Patrick Mahomes. He praised the rest of a team that captured its third straight AFC West title before knocking off the Colts in the playoffs.

It wasn’t until Clark Hunt was asked about winning the AFC title game that he became emotional.

You see, the Chiefs were founded by his father, the late Lamar Hunt, who along with seven others in what would be called the Foolish Club founded the AFL.

The personable Texas entreprene­ur’s importance to establishi­ng the modern NFL was honoured in 1984, when the league renamed the silver trophy awarded to the winner of the AFC championsh­ip game the Lamar Hunt Trophy.

So it’s easy to understand why his son, now the team’s chair and the most visible face of the ownership family, would have tears in the corners of his eyes at the thought of holding it for the first time with a win over the New England Patriots on Sunday night.

“It’s been a long time coming,” Hunt said. “Since Andy came here we’ve had a lot of shots, but we finally have a chance to win the AFC championsh­ip, and to do it at home is so special for us.”

The Chiefs have never played an AFC title game at Arrow- head Stadium. They won at Buffalo to reach the first Super Bowl, and in Oakland on their way to their lone Super Bowl triumph in 1970.

They lost their only other appearance in Buffalo in January 1994.

Indeed, the opportunit­y to return to the NFL’s biggest stage for the first time in 49 years has been a long time coming.

The Chiefs lost eight consecutiv­e post-season games during one maddening stretch, squanderin­g the No. 1 seed along the way. They had great individual players — Tony Gonzalez, Priest Holmes, Joe Montana — yet never managed to hoist the AFC championsh­ip trophy.

Former coach Dick Vermeil, who took the Eagles to the Super Bowl and won it with the Rams, said this week his “biggest regret” was failing to deliver it during his five seasons in Kansas City.

“It would be great. I mean, when your name is on it, that’s a pretty big thing,” said Reid, who still remembers meeting Lamar Hunt during an ownership meeting years ago.

Hunt died in December 2006 at the age of 74.

“To have the opportunit­y to work with his kids and Clark in particular, I understand the importance of that,” Reid said. “Not that he has to tell me. He doesn’t have to say anything.”

In fact, the Chiefs make sure everybody knows the importance.

“One of the awesome things we do with our player developmen­t team is that they take us through the whole history,” Mahomes said. “We come over to the museum that we have in the stadium and they take us through how he made the AFL, pretty much from scratch, and had this vision for what is now the AFC and combined it with the NFL and made this beautiful league.

“It truly is special for someone like that who has created your franchise,” Mahomes added. “You want to do whatever you can to bring honour to him and that family.”

The Patriots are no strangers to hoisting the Lamar Hunt Trophy, of course.

They are playing for it for the eighth consecutiv­e season, and the coach-quarterbac­k combinatio­n of Bill Belichick and Tom Brady have succeeded in hoisting it eight times since 2001.

But despite a perennial juggernaut standing in the way, there is a profound sense of confidence that surrounds the Chiefs these days, an unabashed optimism that can be felt all around town.

Still, Hunt knows better than to plan for parades before games are won. The Chiefs have come up short many times, and the sting of those disappoint­ments still lingers after all these years.

Yet the franchise is also on the precipice of something great, a potential salve to make that pain go away.

“It’s very special, obviously, for our entire family,” Hunt said.

 ?? DAVID EULITT GETTY IMAGES ?? Chiefs coach Andy Reid, left, and CEO Clark Hunt would love to hoist the Lamar Hunt Trophy at Arrowhead Stadium in K.C.
DAVID EULITT GETTY IMAGES Chiefs coach Andy Reid, left, and CEO Clark Hunt would love to hoist the Lamar Hunt Trophy at Arrowhead Stadium in K.C.

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