Kansas City's 30-6 victory at Denver Broncos overshadowed as star quarterback Mahomes suffers dislocated kneecap, according to reports
Friday 18 October 2019 08:23, UK
Reigning MVP Patrick Mahomes injured his right knee in the Kansas City Chiefs' 30-6 victory over the Denver Broncos.
Mahomes injured his right knee in a pileup near the goal line before his team-mates rallied around their fallen superstar for a 30-6 thrashing of Denver on Thursday night.
According to reports from NFL Network's James Palmer, Mahomes suffered a dislocation of his right patella - effectively a dislocated knee-cap - but he managed to walk from the field and back to the locker room.
Chiefs coach Andy Reid said after the game that did not know how serious the injury was, but added: "We're good with whatever direction this thing goes."
Backup Matt Moore threw a 57-yard touchdown pass to Tyreek Hill and the Chiefs (5-2) had nine sacks, gave up a season-low 71 yards rushing and snapped a two-game skid in beating the Broncos (2-5) for the eighth straight time.
His balky left ankle heavily taped, Mahomes completed 10-of-11 passes for 76 yards and a touchdown, before getting injured on a successful sneak on fourth-and-inches at the Denver five-yard line early in the second quarter.
"Not too many people get hurt on a sneak," Reid said. "It's a freak thing."
One by one, players peeled off the pile but when Mahomes did not get up, the stadium grew quiet, Broncos players knelt and some Chiefs stormed away in anguish as their quarterback ripped off his helmet and covered his face.
As players milled about nervously, the Chiefs' medical personnel appeared to pop Mahomes' right knee back in place before he was helped from the field and taken into the locker room. The Chiefs announced minutes later that Mahomes had a knee injury and would not return.
"Excited for the win," Moore said after completing 10-of-19 passes for 117 yards. "At the same time, a guy like Patrick goes down it can be deflating."
Before he got hurt, Mahomes became the fastest player in NFL history to throw for 7,500 yards, in his 25th game.
"You feel for anybody that has something that looks like it may be pretty serious," Broncos quarterback Joe Flacco said.
"That's not just other quarterbacks; that's everybody. But man, a young guy like that who's starting off his career the way he has and starting off this season the way he has, it's definitely not easy to watch guys go down with injuries like that. I hope that he's all right."
Mahomes did not speak with reporters after the game but he did lead the team's post-match 'breakdown', when he praised Moore and the defense.
The Broncos had won two straight games after a winless September and were hoping to turn the AFC West upside down by handling the Chiefs their third straight loss.
Coming in, the Chiefs were ranked 24th in the league with 11 sacks and they had allowed an average of 190 yards rushing over their previous four games.
But the Chiefs sacked Flacco a career-high eight times, drew three holding flags on grabby left tackle Garett Bolles, held Denver to 1-of-13 on third downs and benefited from Denver's poor special teams play and curious calls by coach Vic Fangio that backfired spectacularly.
When Flacco did stay upright to deliver deep passes, they fell incomplete. Rookie tight end Noah Fant dropped three passes that would have totaled more than 100 yards.
At one point, Fox NFL analyst Troy Aikman exclaimed, "This is about as bad an offense as I've seen. I'm shocked there's as many people still here at the game."
There were not for very much longer as the fans streamed to the exits with the never-ending bungled plays by the Broncos, especially the porous offensive line that was jeered by frustrated fans.
The Chiefs even sacked punter Colby Wadman, who had nowhere to throw the ball on a failed fake punt that gave Kansas City the ball at the Broncos 38 on the drive that ended with Mahomes' injury.
After Mahomes got hurt, Moore could not get the Chiefs into the end zone on three plays from the three-yard line, and Harrison Butker's 20-yard field goal gave KC a 13-6 lead.
Flacco, who was sacked five times and knocked down eight more times in 15 first-half drop-backs, was sack-stripped by linebacker Anthony Hutchins on the next series and linebacker Reggie Ragland scooped up the loose ball at the five-yard line and rumbled into the end zone for a 20-6 half-time lead.
Brandon McManus missed a 45-yard field goal that sailed well above the top of the right upright.
The Broncos scored first after getting a reprieve on a three-and-out when Frank Clark's face mask gave Denver a first down and Royce Freeman took it in from a yard out seven plays later. But Fangio decided to take the extra point off the board and go for two points when Alex Okafor was whistled for encroachment.
Instead of handing the ball off to Freeman again, Fangio had Phillip Lindsay, who is about 50 pounds lighter, pound the ball up the middle and he was stuffed, leaving the Chiefs celebrating instead and the crowd no longer buzzing.
Their 6-0 lead was short-lived as Mahomes somehow escaped the clutches of Von Miller and fired a pass that safety Will Parks tipped but Mecole Hardman reigned in anyway before avoiding sidestepping safety Kareem Jackson for a 21-yard score.
Hardman added a 37-yard punt return that led to a 33-yard field goal.
The Chiefs host the Green Bay Packers in Week Eight on Sunday Night Football on October 27.
Denver visit the Indianapolis Colts on the same day.