For the first time in a decade, January feels unfamiliar in Kansas City.
No playoff countdown.
No Super Bowl runway.
Just reflection — and resolve.
After a painful 6–11 finish that ended the Kansas City Chiefs’ postseason streak for the first time since 2014, chairman and CEO Clark Hunt has finally broken his silence — offering reassurance, belief, and a glimpse at what comes next.
🏈 “This is not who we are”
Appearing on Good Morning Football, Hunt was clear: the Chiefs don’t see 2025 as a collapse — just a detour.
“We’re excited about the challenge of getting back,” Hunt said.
“We still have a great roster. We still have Andy Reid and an outstanding coaching staff. We’re going to work very hard in 2026 to be back in the playoffs — and hopefully the Super Bowl.”
It was calm.
It was confident.
And it sounded like an organization refusing to panic.
🩺 Inside Patrick Mahomes’ rehab
Everything, however, hinges on one man.
Patrick Mahomes, sidelined since December with a torn ACL, remains the axis around which the Chiefs’ future turns.
Hunt revealed he recently visited Mahomes in the training room — and what he saw left him encouraged.
“Nobody works harder than Patrick,” Hunt said.
“He has a goal of being back for the beginning of the season. I wouldn’t put it past him.”
While the team is careful not to rush the timeline, Mahomes’ history of fast recovery — paired with his relentless work ethic — has quietly boosted optimism inside Arrowhead.
No promises.
But no doubts either.
⏳ The Travis Kelce question — still unanswered
The other looming storyline?
Whether Travis Kelce comes back for a 14th NFL season.
At 36, with a Hall of Fame résumé already secure, Kelce has yet to announce his plans. Hunt admits the organization is hopeful — but patient.
“As an organization, we certainly hope he’ll come back,” Hunt said.
“He still had over 800 yards and was one of the leaders on offense for us. There’s no doubt in my mind that he can still play.”
What makes this offseason different is timing.
Kelce is also planning a wedding to Taylor Swift, and Hunt made it clear the team intends to give him space.
“We want to be respectful and let him have the time he needs to make a decision.”
No pressure.
No deadlines.
Just trust.
🧠 Why this moment matters
Under Andy Reid, the Chiefs have built a culture of continuity — not overreaction.
Missing the playoffs stung.
But leadership believes the foundation is still intact.
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Mahomes rehabbing with urgency
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Reid steady as ever
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Veterans weighing one more run
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A front office already planning for 2026
This isn’t an ending.
It’s a pause.
🏁 A quiet message to the league
Clark Hunt didn’t make bold guarantees.
He didn’t promise titles.
He didn’t rush timelines.
But his message was unmistakable:
Kansas City is not going anywhere.
The road back may start in the rehab room — and with one difficult personal decision — but belief inside the building remains unshaken.
And for the Chiefs, that belief has always been the first step toward something bigger.




