đŸ”„ “We Need to Slow This Down”: Mike Florio Sends Chilling Warning on Patrick Mahomes’ Comeback Timeline

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) speaks during a...Patrick Mahomes has built a career on ignoring limits.

Playing through pain.
Escaping the impossible.
Beating timelines other quarterbacks don’t even attempt.

But after the most serious injury of his career, even Mahomes’ trademark confidence may be running headfirst into reality.

The Kansas City Chiefs superstar tore both his ACL and LCL late in the 2025 season and underwent reconstructive surgery in December — a devastating blow that officially ended Kansas City’s playoff hopes. Since then, Mahomes has made one thing clear: his goal is to be ready for Week 1 of the 2026 season.

That goal, however, is now being publicly questioned.

Mike Florio Gives a Reality Check to Patrick Mahomes Amidst 18-Game Season  Chatter - The SportsRush“We Need to Temper Expectations”

NFL analyst Mike Florio delivered a dose of cold water this week, warning that Mahomes’ desired timeline may be far more optimistic than realistic.

“Mahomes wants to be ready for Week 1,” Florio said on Pro Football Talk. “And the later in the year that you suffer an ACL tear, the harder it is to be ready.”

The concern isn’t just the injury itself.

It’s how Mahomes plays the game.

Patrick Mahomes 2024 Player Profile | Reception PerceptionWhy This Injury Is Different for Mahomes

Mahomes isn’t a classic pocket quarterback who can survive on timing and arm strength alone. His greatness is built on improvisation — sharp cuts, sudden stops, lateral movement, and extending plays when everything breaks down.

According to Florio, that style dramatically raises the risk of rushing the recovery.

“When you consider how much of his game is premised on lateral movement and putting unique pressure on the knee ligaments,” Florio explained, “you want to be damn sure that thing’s healthy before he starts doing all those special things we’ve seen him do.”

The injury occurred in the fourth quarter of Kansas City’s Week 15 loss to the Chargers. While extending a play, Mahomes absorbed a hit and his left knee buckled awkwardly. An MRI later confirmed the nightmare scenario: torn ACL and LCL.

It marked the first true long-term injury of his NFL career.

Patrick Mahomes Gets Stern Warning on Week 1 Return After Chiefs QB Shared  Injury Update - Yahoo SportsProtecting Mahomes From Himself

Veteran broadcaster Michael Holley echoed Florio’s concerns, suggesting the Chiefs may need to save Mahomes from his own competitiveness.

“Patrick Mahomes is going to say, ‘Physical pain? No problem, I’ll deal with it,’” Holley said. “Kansas City is going to have to go above and beyond to make sure he’s not doing too much — even if he thinks he’s ready.”

That may be the hardest part.

Because Mahomes still believes.

The Chiefs Need Patrick Mahomes to Return to MVP FormMahomes Isn’t Backing Down

Speaking on a Zoom call January 15, Mahomes struck a confident but cautious tone.

“I want to be ready for Week 1,” he said. “The doctors said I could. But I can’t predict what will happen throughout the process. That’s the goal — to play Week 1 and have no restrictions.”

He’s currently rehabbing under the supervision of Chiefs head athletic trainer Julie Frymyer and hopes to participate in OTAs and training camp in some capacity.

Florio acknowledged that early returns can happen, pointing to Adrian Peterson’s legendary 2012 comeback — but stressed how rare those cases truly are.

Mahomes throws 2 TD passes, leaves with ankle injury in Chiefs' 21-7 win.  X-rays negative on star QB | KRQE News 13The Real Question Isn’t Can — It’s Should

After missing the playoffs for the first time since 2014, Kansas City is entering a critical reset year. And that’s why the biggest decision looming over the franchise isn’t whether Mahomes can return by Week 1.

It’s whether rushing him back is worth the risk.

Holley believes the Chiefs must seriously prepare for the possibility that Mahomes misses early games in 2026 — investing in a legitimate backup through free agency or the draft.

Because as desperate as fans are to see No. 15 back under center, the truth is harsher and simpler:

The Chiefs don’t need a fast Patrick Mahomes.

They need a fully healthy one.