The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Berry back from latest season-ending injury

- By Dave Skretta

ST. JOSEPH, MO. — Eric Berry has twice overcome season-ending injuries, and the way the Kansas City Chiefs safety came back from a cancer diagnosis to play the following season was nothing short of inspiratio­nal.

In other words, Berry has every reason to rue what might have been.

Yet the undisputed leader of the Chiefs secondary would be driven to distractio­n if he wasted much time feeling sorry for himself.

Instead, Berry preferred to use the two-plus seasons spent on the sideline as a learning opportunit­y, a chance to better himself mentally and emotionall­y if not physically.

“I learned so much,” he explained after the Chiefs’ first padded practice of training camp on the fields of Missouri Western State University. “The whole cancer deal was a privilege, to be honest with you. A blessing. Because I learned so much, and so many people inspired me. Just being able to connect with them, the common thread of having cancer and overcoming it, I can’t tell you what it means to me.”

Berry — who attended Creekside High School in Fairburn — learned similar lessons about overcoming adversity, keeping a posi- tive mindset and focusing on what he could control when he lost seasons to a torn ACL and a ruptured Achilles’ tendon.

The knee injury occurred in 2011, his second year in the league, when he was coming off a breakout rookie year that ended in the Pro Bowl. Berry was blocked low by Buffalo wide receiver Steve Johnson in their season opener and wound up miss- ing the rest of the season.

He returned to make two straight Pro Bowls, and was voted an All-Pro in 2013, the year before his cancer diagnosis. Berry underwent che- motherapy and other treatments and the lymphoma went into remission, and he was back on the field in his familiar No. 29 jersey in time for training camp.

Two more Pro Bowl appearance­s and two more All-Pro nods followed suit. Then came last year’s opener in New England, when the Chiefs were busy rolling to a dominant victory over the Patriots. Berry went down with a seemingly innocu- ous injury that ultimately marred an impressive win when it was revealed that he tore the tendon on the backside of his left ankle.

“My second year, I felt like I was probably in the best shape of my life, and I was starting to learn the defense and acclimatin­g to what was going on around me,” Berry said. “Then the cancer hit when I was getting to my peak, getting to where I needed to be. Same thing last year.

“But you really can’t wonder where you’d be because I learned so much throughout all three of those processes,” he added, “and I just keep going. I can’t really tell you where I’d be.”

Chances are he’d still be in the middle of the Kansas City secondary.

“I mean, look, Eric’s our leader. We appreciate when he’s out there going, the guys feed off him,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “It’s the whole story, the whole thing that he went through, the fact that he does everything out here and works his tail off. It’s a phenome- nal story.”

The Chiefs are counting on Berry to provide guidance and leadership to a defensive backfield that will have an entirely new look this season. Star cornerback Marcus Peters was traded to the Rams earlier this year in an attempt to improve the locker room culture, and veterans Terrance Mitchell and Ron Parker were let go as new general manager Brett Veach made his mark on the roster.

Kansas City will have a pair of new starters at cornerback — Steven Nelson and Kendall Fuller are the front-runners — along with a new nickel back.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? “You really can’t wonder where you’d be because I learned so much throughout all three of those processes,” Eric Berry said of season-ending injuries in 2011 and 2017 and his cancer diagnosis.
GETTY IMAGES “You really can’t wonder where you’d be because I learned so much throughout all three of those processes,” Eric Berry said of season-ending injuries in 2011 and 2017 and his cancer diagnosis.

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