In the NFL one of the toughest challenges for everyone, absolutely every player, isn’t winning a Super Bowl but staying healthy enough to even chase one. Injuries are everyday reality, whether they sideline you for a game, a couple weeks, or a whole season. The hits, collisions, speed bursts, and power these athletes unleash every snap is stuff few folks on earth could handle.
Nobody’s immune; legends of this era like Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, and Adrian Peterson missed full years to injuries but their disciplined rehab, sheer willpower, and love for the game brought ’em back-and in all three cases, even snagged MVP honors post-comeback.
Mahomes’ Season-Ending Blow Leaves Chiefs Scrambling
This season who suffered his first major injury was the 3x Super Bowl champion Patrick Mahomes in a disappointing campaign for the Chiefs who were coming off their third straight Super Bowl appearance and franchise-best 15-2 record.
His injury hit in the most pivotal game of the year, a Week 15 loss that mathematically knocked them out. Mahomes recently said he’s aiming to be ready for Week 1 of 2026 but that might not happen. If he’s not, the Chiefs, who right now lack a reliable backup QB, have to pivot their offensive game plan to the ground attack, and that’s where the team has looked worst the last two years.
Kansas City ranked 25th in rushing yards per game last season and their two RBs Isiah Pacheco and Kareem Hunt are set to be free agents, opening the door for a fresh start at the position or re-signing one of them. The team could either sign a veteran proven player like Jets’ Breece Hall who is coming off a season in which he tallied over 1,000 yards for the first time in his career despite playing on one of the league’s worst offenses.
Draft Darling Jeremiah Love: Chiefs’ Generational Ground Fix?
The other option is to pick Heisman nominee Jeremiyah Love from Notre Dame in the draft. The Chiefs hold the number 9 pick this year and Love could fall to them. The junior running back dazzled in 2025, rushing for 1,372 yards on 199 carries (6.9 average) with 18 touchdowns, adding 280 receiving yards on 27 catches and three more scores, totaling 21 TDs to break Notre Dame’s single-season record.
A unanimous All-American and Doak Walker Award winner, Love finished third in Heisman voting, flashing elite speed with a 94-yard scamper and six 100+ yard games. At 6-0, 214 pounds, his blend of power, vision, and receiving chops makes him a generational talent-perfect to anchor KC’s run game if Mahomes misses time, keeping the dynasty dreams alive.
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