Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hobbled Chiefs find way to win

Trainers get Mahomes, Kelce ready as injuries mount

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Patrick Mahomes certainly deserved a game ball from Sunday night’s AFC title game, when the All-pro quarterbac­k dashed off on his sprained right ankle in the waning seconds to help set up the winning field goal.

Travis Kelce probably did, too. With the Chiefs missing three wide receivers because of injuries, the All-pro tight end played through remnants of back spasms that nearly kept him out of the game entirely and finished with seven catches for 78 yards and a score.

The real MVP of the 23-20 win over the Cincinnati Bengals, though, might well have been longtime Chiefs trainer Rick Burkholder and his staff. It was Burkholder and fellow trainer Julie Frymyer who put together a plan to get Mahomes ready for the Bengals, then had to find a way to get Kelce ready when his back acted up 48 hours before kickoff.

“I didn’t expect to be able to run very much,” Mahomes acknowledg­ed. “The training staff, Julie, they did a great job of getting me enough range and mobility that I was able to protect myself, and then at the end of the game there, I had to run to get the first down and got us in field-goal range. So credit to them.”

Credit to them for Kelce, too.

“I wasn’t sure if I would be able to do it,” he said, “but we have the best training staff in the entire NFL. …

I’m just very thankful and appreciati­ve. I don’t know where I would have been, mentally, if I wasn’t able to play this game.”

One thing is certain: The Chiefs probably wouldn’t be preparing to face the Philadelph­ia Eagles in the Super Bowl.

The job is only beginning for Burkholder and his team, though.

Mahomes was limping badly by the end and will no doubt use the next two weeks to ready his ankle for one more game. Kelce will likewise use the time to rest his ailing back. Then there’s cornerback L’jarius Sneed, who is in concussion protocol; linebacker Willie

Gay Jr. with an injured shoulder; and wide receivers Kadarius Toney (ankle), Juju Smith-schuster (knee) and Mecole Hardman (pelvis), all of whom watched the dramatic conclusion Sunday night from the sideline.

The training room might be the busiest place at Arrowhead Stadium before the Chiefs head to Phoenix next week.

On the field, the Chiefs got plenty of big plays from their defense.

The Chiefs sacked the Bengals’ Joe Burrow five times, including one by Chris Jones that forced a final punt and gave Kansas City a chance to drive for the eventual winning field goal. That pressure helped a defensive backfield playing a trio of rookie cornerback­s and a rookie safety hang with one of the best groups of wide receivers in the league.

“My whole offseason was dedicated to this game,” said Jones, who had never has a postseason sack in 11 games before getting two Sunday night. “Making sure that when that moment calls, for me specifical­ly, that I’ll answer the call.”

 ?? Brynn Anderson The Associated Press ?? Kansas City’s Kadarius Toney is one of three Chiefs wide receivers forced out of Sunday’s championsh­ip game with injuries. Toney hurt his ankle.
Brynn Anderson The Associated Press Kansas City’s Kadarius Toney is one of three Chiefs wide receivers forced out of Sunday’s championsh­ip game with injuries. Toney hurt his ankle.

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