“This isn’t about football. It’s about my daughter.”
That was the first thing Patrick Mahomes said when he walked into the team’s medical facility one quiet afternoon in the middle of the season.
The medical staff expected something serious. When a star quarterback like Patrick requests an unscheduled checkup—especially during the heart of the NFL season—people take notice. Was it a hidden injury? A lingering tightness in his throwing arm? A post-game complication he didn’t tell the coaches about?
Nope.
Patrick sat down, took a deep breath, and looked at the team doctor.
“I think I need a full cardiovascular check. I’ve been getting winded. Like, really winded.”
The doctor blinked. “You mean… during games?”
Patrick shook his head.
“No. At home. With Sterling.”
It took a moment for the doctor to register what he’d just heard.
“You’re short of breath… playing with your daughter?”
Patrick nodded, looking slightly embarrassed but mostly determined.
“She’s in this phase where she loves to play chase. Every evening when I get home, she runs through the living room, around the kitchen, up the hallway, and back—and she insists I chase her. Not once. Not twice. I swear she had me running five laps around the house the other day.”
He paused, then added with a sheepish grin:
“And after the third lap, I was done. I had to pretend I was tying my shoe just to catch my breath.”
The doctor chuckled. Mahomes, one of the most elite athletes in the world, unable to keep up with a toddler.
“You realize this is normal, right?” the doctor said. “You’re not 22 anymore, and toddlers don’t pace themselves.”
But Patrick wasn’t joking.
“I need to be able to keep up with her. Not just now, but when she’s five… ten… even fifteen. I don’t want to be the dad sitting on the sidelines because I can’t breathe after five minutes of tag. I want to be in the game—with her.”
So the doctor ran the tests. Heart rate, blood pressure, lung function, endurance. Everything came back perfect. In fact, better than perfect. Mahomes was in peak condition, even by NFL standards.
When he returned to hear the results, Patrick leaned forward and asked, “Be honest with me. Can I still outrun a four-year-old?”
The doctor laughed.
“Physically? Absolutely. But in terms of energy? Sterling’s got you beat by a mile.”
Patrick leaned back, relieved. But he wasn’t done.
“I’ve spent years training to win Super Bowls,” he said. “But this? Keeping up with Sterling? That’s the real championship. And I want to be able to play at the highest level… as a dad… until I’m forty. At least.”
That line stayed with the doctor long after Patrick left the room.
It’s easy to think of athletes like Mahomes as warriors built for Sunday nights, adrenaline, and stadium lights. But sometimes, their biggest motivation isn’t the next touchdown—it’s the little voice calling “Daddy!” from the other room, waiting with a mischievous smile and boundless energy.
And for Patrick, no trophy could ever mean more than being able to say yes to his daughter when she says, “Wanna race again?”