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Chiefs Put Heads Down to Complete Surreal Day
Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) is slow to get up after being tackled by Philadelphia Eagles linebacker T.J. Edwards (not pictured) during the second quarter in Super Bowl LVII at State Farm Stadium in Glendale on Feb. 12, 2023. Michael Chow/The Republic / USA TODAY NETWORK

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – George Karlaftis showed up to work Wednesday and noticed something peculiar. The organization’s perennial employee of the month wasn’t parked in his prime spot.

“Yeah, it's for sure, different,” said the fourth-year defensive end. “I got here today and it was the first time since I've been here that I haven't seen him or his car here. So, it's different.”

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That’s an understatement. Patrick Mahomes is facing his first prolonged injury rehabilitation and someone named Gardner Minshew will break the huddle when Kansas City visits Tennessee on Sunday (12 p.m. CT, CBS/KCTV, Channel 5, 96.5 The Fan).

While Mahomes will return from Dallas on Friday to continue his rehabilitation at Chiefs headquarters, he won’t return to that huddle on Sunday. Andy Reid also noted Mahomes wouldn’t travel with the team.

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Last time Mahomes missed a start due to injury

It’ll mark the first time he’s missed a game due to injury in six years. Matt Moore went 1-1 while Mahomes sat out two games with a dislocated kneecap, Oct. 27-Nov. 3, 2019. But he’ll be only a text away at all times.

And as to whether a team policy is the reason the quarterback is returning to Kansas City to continue rehab, Andy Reid said it’s more of a Mahomes policy.

“We can't kick him out of the building,” Reid said Wednesday. “So, the guy's always here. Yeah, that's how he is.”

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He’s more than omnipresent, though. Mahomes has proven diligent and focused through prior rehabilitation journeys, including the kneecap in 2019. He answered that adversity by leading the Chiefs to their first Super Bowl in 50 years.

Mahomes also battled through turf toe late in the 2020 season and a brutal ankle injury during the 2022 playoffs, still leading the Chiefs to Super Bowl berths each year. It all adds up to someone who wants to win rehabilitation as much as he wants to win a Super Bowl.

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A peek inside the training room

And while the ACL recovery is the steepest battle he’s faced, Mahomes won’t change according to people who know him best.

“His mindset is a little different than most,” said Rick Burkholder, vice president of sports medicine and performance. “He's so regimented at what he does. He's in here at 6 a.m. He's the last guy out at night. He'll take the rehab like that.

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“He and I talked about, ‘Listen, you have a schedule right now, in-season, where you get treatment at this time, rehab or film at this time, practice.’ That's how rehab has got to be, and that's how it's always been with him.

“And when you add up all the little things that allows the player to get back faster -- they don't heal up any faster -- they just get back to performance faster.”

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This article first appeared on Kansas City Chiefs on SI and was syndicated with permission.

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