Patrick Mahomes feels “perfectly fine” after an illness and said on Friday that he’s ready to move on from last week’s subpar performance when the Kansas City Chiefs face the Miami Dolphins on Sunday (9:30 a.m. ET). The QB had flu-like symptoms before losing a fumble and throwing two interceptions in a 24-9 loss to Denver.
“I’m feeling perfectly fine,” Mahomes said Friday at a press conference after the defending Super Bowl champions landed in Frankfurt and held a practice. “It was kind of just that night and a little bit that next day. I kind of got back pretty quickly.”
Mahomes also sustained a cut on his left hand, but said he’s not worried about it ahead of Sunday’s game. “The hand is fine, just have to cover it up for some practices, but I don’t think I’ll have much of anything on it for the game,” he said.
The Chiefs had key drops and five turnovers in the loss to the Broncos. “You find that stuff, you correct it, you talk about it with your coaches and your teammates, and then you move on,” Mahomes said. “The NFL is a long season. That stuff happens.”
Patrick Mahomes has (finally) arrived in Germany
Here’s what he said
VIDEO
— Joe Schad (@schadjoe) November 3, 2023
Running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire did not make the trip because of an illness.
Chiefs coach Andy Reid said they’ve done the Friday arrival — the Dolphins came to Frankfurt on Tuesday to get acclimated — twice before and won both games, one in London and another in Mexico City. “The guys seemed to respond to it,” Reid said. “Every team is different in how they go about it.”
Sunday will be a European debut for Mahomes, whose only other international game was in 2019 when the Chiefs beat the Los Angeles Chargers, 24-17, at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City.
The Chiefs had been scheduled to face the Los Angeles Rams in Mexico a year earlier, but the game was moved — on six days’ notice — to Los Angeles because of poor field conditions. Deutsche Bank Park recently replaced its natural grass with a newly installed hybrid surface that is mostly grass reinforced with synthetic fibers. The NFL pushed for the change a year after players and coaches complained about slipping on the natural grass at Allianz Arena in Munich.