Houston Chronicle Sunday

Mahomes, KC gut out victory

QB plays second half on injured ankle to clinch team’s 5th straight spot in conference title game

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Patrick Mahomes pleaded with Chiefs coach Andy Reid to let him stay in the game on Saturday.

He argued with trainers, assistant coaches and anyone else within earshot on the Kansas City sideline to let him play through an injured right ankle.

“I’m not coming out of a playoff game,” Mahomes said later, “unless they take me out.”

Well, the Chiefs did, forcing him to get X-rays late in the first half of their divisional game against Jacksonvil­le.

But when they came back negative, and Mahomes proved he could protect himself in the halftime locker room, Reid decided to let his All-Pro quarterbac­k back on the field — and he gamely led them to victory.

Mahomes finished with 195 yards passing and two touchdowns, the second capping a 75-yard drive late in the fourth quarter, and lifted Kansas City to a 2720 victory over the Jaguars and a spot in a fifth straight AFC championsh­ip game.

Mahomes also vowed to be ready for next week against the winner of Sunday’s game between Cincinnati and Buffalo. If the Bengals win, they will be back at Arrowhead Stadium; if the Bills win, they’re headed to Atlanta.

Chad Henne led a 98yard touchdown drive while Mahomes was out. Travis Kelce had a careerhigh 14 catches for 98 yards and two scores. Marquez Valdes-Scantling hauled in the eventual clinching TD pass with about 7 minutes left in the game.

“It’s a credit to the team I have around me, the coaches around me and the organizati­on in general,” Mahomes said. “We try to do whatever we can to be in this position, to get to the AFC championsh­ip game and find a way to the Super Bowl.”

The Jaguars, who rallied from a 27-0 deficit to beat the Chargers in the wildcard round, squandered two chances to mount another late rally. The first ended when Jamal Agnew had the ball pop loose inside the Chiefs’ 5-yard line with about 5½ minutes to go, and the second came when Jaylen Watson made a leaping, one-handed intercepti­on near midfield.

The Jaguars’ last-gasp chance ended when Kansas City recovered an onside kick with 24 seconds to go.

Trevor Lawrence finished with 217 yards passing with a touchdown toss to Christian Kirk, who was briefly hurt midway through the fourth quarter but returned to finish the game. Travis Etienne Jr. added 62 yards rushing and a touchdown.

“When you get this far, you don’t want to only go this far,” the Jaguars’ Foyesade Oluokun said. “You want to keep going.”

“I don’t really have the words right now,” Lawrence added. “The Chiefs did more today than we did.”

Long before Mahomes hobbled to the sideline in pain, he was at his creative best, driving the Chiefs downfield on their opening possession.

There was a shortstops­tyle sidearm sling to JuJu Smith-Schuster, a key third down pass to Kelce as he was being dragged to the turf and a flip pass to his tight end that gave Kansas City a 7-0 lead.

The Jaguars came right back, taking advantage of a big kickoff return and a short field.

Lawrence proceeded to hit Kirk for the matching touchdown.

Then, the complexion of the game changed.

Mahomes was moving up in the pocket when Arden Key brought the full weight of his body down on the quarterbac­k’s ankle. Mahomes hobbled to the huddle and managed to get through five plays before Harrison Butker kicked a 50-yard field goal.

During the Jaguars’ ensuing possession, Mahomes got into a heated argument with Reid and the training staff. He then threw down his coat and headed to the locker room, forcing Henne to take over midway through the second quarter, just as the 37year-old journeyman did two years ago in a playoff win over Cleveland.

“Yeah, I did not want to go, and they kind of gave me the ultimatum that I wasn’t going back in unless I went in there,” said Mahomes, who cheered on Henne’s 98-yard drive from the sideline, wearing a puffy winter coat on a cold, sleeting night.

As the second half began, though, that familiar red No. 15 jersey was trotting back onto the field.

His right ankle heavily taped, Mahomes struggled to move around, but simply his presence seemed to calm the Chiefs. Butker added a second 50-yard field goal late in the third quarter to extend the lead to 20-10, and when the AFC South champs answered with a touchdown of their own, so did the Chiefs.

Mahomes drove them downfield for one last score that proved to be the margin of victory.

“We know that if it’s up to Pat, he’s going to be in there. I’m sure he had some words with everyone on the sideline that he wanted to be in there as fast as possible,” Kelce said afterward.

“It’s just a different feeling when one-five is in there. He can make anything happen, even on one ankle.”

 ?? Jeff Roberson/Associated Press ?? Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes, second from right, battled through an ankle injury in his team’s 27-20 win.
Jeff Roberson/Associated Press Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes, second from right, battled through an ankle injury in his team’s 27-20 win.

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