For the first time in more than a decade, the Kansas City Chiefs are staring into unfamiliar darkness.
December football has arrived â and instead of cruising toward another postseason run, Patrick Mahomes and his teammates are clinging to hope in an AFC that suddenly feels ruthless, crowded, and unforgiving.
At 6â7, with playoff probabilities shrinking by the week, the Chiefs are no longer the hunters. Theyâre the hunted. And Mahomes knows it.
Rather than hide from the numbers, the two-time MVP has leaned into leadership â delivering a blunt, urgent message to the entire 53-man roster: fight like the season depends on it⊠because it does.
âI always want to win,â Mahomes admitted, via The Chiefs Wire. âI donât know what the percentages are â and honestly, I donât care. I know theyâre not high. But if we get into the playoffs and make a run? That would be special.â
Then came the line that defined the moment:

âWe have to handle our business first. Win the football games. Let everything else take care of itself.â
A Different Kind of December in Kansas City
For years, December has been Mahomesâ playground â a time when the Chiefs tightened their grip on the AFC West and quietly positioned themselves for another Super Bowl run.
This season? Nothing has come easily.
Injuries, roster turnover, and narrow margins have stripped away the comfort Kansas City once relied on. Close losses have replaced dominant wins. Mistakes that once felt survivable now feel fatal.
The Chiefs have already lost control of the division. And for the first time since 2014, missing the playoffs is no longer unthinkable â itâs dangerously real.
That reality has pushed Mahomes into an even more vocal role inside the locker room.
Mahomes Carries â But He Canât Carry Alone
Despite the turbulence, Mahomesâ standard hasnât slipped.
Heâs extended broken plays, delivered late-game drives, and kept Kansas City competitive in games they had no business being in. Around the league, thereâs quiet agreement: without Mahomes, this season could have unraveled completely.
But even greatness has limits.
The offense is evolving on the fly â younger receivers like Rashee Rice and Xavier Worthy are being asked to grow up fast. The offensive line has shuffled. Defenses are selling out to stop Travis Kelce, daring others to step forward.
And while Steve Spagnuoloâs defense has battled, injuries and inconsistency â particularly against the run â have left little margin for error.
Mahomes knows it canât be about heroics anymore.
This final stretch demands discipline, urgency, and collective accountability â from stars to special teams.
Not the End â But a Defining Moment
For a franchise thatâs lived at the top of the NFL for nearly a decade, this feels like a crossroads.
Is this simply a down year⊠or the beginning of something harder to accept?
Mahomes refuses to entertain the idea of decline.
His message to the locker room isnât nostalgic â itâs demanding. He believes the Chiefs can still flip the script. But only if everyone commits to playing with playoff-level urgency before the playoffs arrive.
The road ahead is brutal. The cushion is gone. The math is cruel.
Yet as long as Patrick Mahomes is under center, Kansas City is not done.
The real question now isnât whether Mahomes can rise â he already has.
Itâs whether the entire roster is ready to rise with him.