đŸ”„ “Football Ends — The Pain Doesn’t”: Patrick Mahomes’ Former Teammate Demands the NFL Change Its Healthcare Rules

Chiefs Safety Tyrann Mathieu Signing With SaintsThe 2025 season didn’t just break expectations in Kansas City — it broke bodies.

For the Kansas City Chiefs, the year unraveled the same way it began: with injuries piling up and hope slowly draining away. By Week 15, the nightmare was complete. Patrick Mahomes, the face of the franchise and the league, went down with a torn ACL against the Denver Broncos, officially ending Kansas City’s postseason dreams.

Patrick Mahomes begins rehab with hope of returning for opening of next  seasonMahomes has already begun rehab and has promised fans he’ll be ready for Week 1 of the 2026 season — reassurance for a shaken fanbase.

But for one former Chief, relief isn’t enough.

Mahomes' former teammate is urging the NFL to change a policy to ensure  player health | MarcaTyrann Mathieu Speaks — From the Other Side of the Game

Former Kansas City safety Tyrann Mathieu has seen how these stories end — not just during a career, but after it.

And now, he’s calling on the NFL to change a policy he believes quietly fails the very players who built the league.

Speaking on his podcast In the Bayou with Tyrann Mathieu, the former All-Pro didn’t mince words about life after football.

“Once you retire, you have about a five-year window where you can still use the same healthcare you had while playing,” Mathieu said. “I played ten years in the league, and I never really thought about healthcare until I retired. That’s when it hits you — especially when you’ve got a family and kids depending on you.”

His message wasn’t emotional for effect.
It was matter-of-fact.
And that made it heavier.

Mahomes' former teammate is urging the NFL to change a policy to ensure  player healthThe Policy — And the Problem

Under current NFL rules, retired players who meet certain service requirements are granted Continuing Veteran medical benefits for five years after retirement. The coverage includes medical, dental, vision, and prescription care.

On paper, it sounds generous.

In reality, Mathieu says, it isn’t enough — and it isn’t always accessible when players need it most.

“I don’t think five years of healthcare is enough,” he said. “If you played eight, ten, twelve seasons, you should have lifetime healthcare. The average career is only three or four years, but the guys who last longer should be taken care of. That shouldn’t even be an argument.”

Tyrann Mathieu, Three-Time Pro Bowl Cornerback, Announces Retirement  DecisionA Body That Paid the Price

Mathieu isn’t speaking hypothetically.

As a rookie with the Arizona Cardinals in 2013, he tore both his ACL and LCL while returning a kick. A year later, he required thumb surgery. In 2016, a serious shoulder injury sent him back to the operating table once again.

Each injury was treated.
Each recovery was rushed.
Each scar stayed.

Now retired, Mathieu understands what many players don’t consider until it’s too late: the damage doesn’t stop when the career ends.

Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes out of concussion protocol, is cleared to play  against Bills - The Boston GlobeA Question the League Can’t Ignore Forever

The NFL has never been more profitable.
The games have never been faster.
And the hits have never been more violent.

Mathieu’s plea isn’t radical — it’s preventative. A call to prioritize long-term health over short-term savings, especially for players who sacrificed a decade or more of their bodies for the league’s success.

Whether the NFL will revisit the policy remains unclear.

But the warning has been issued — not by an outsider, but by someone who lived it, survived it, and is now speaking for those who no longer can.