Patrick Mahomes finds inspiration from teen battling rare disease amid recovery
Patrick Mahomes received heartfelt encouragement during his ACL recovery from a 14 year old Kansas teen battling Pompe disease. After meeting through Make A Wish, the teen shared words of resilience drawn from his own rehabilitation journey. The exchange offered Mahomes motivation beyond football as he begins a long road back to the field.
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Patrick Mahomes received heartfelt encouragement during his ACL recovery from a 14 year old Kansas teen battling Pompe disease. After meeting through Make A Wish, the teen shared words of resilience drawn from his own rehabilitation journey. The exchange offered Mahomes motivation beyond football as he begins a long road back to the field.
Patrick Mahomes entered unfamiliar territory this December, not just because of a serious knee injury, but because of the voices that rose around him far beyond the stadium. As the Chiefs quarterback begins a long recovery from ACL surgery, encouragement has come from an unexpected place.
It arrived quietly, without hype, and carried more weight than most locker room speeches.The message came from Kansas, where a 14 year old named Grady has been fighting a battle of his own. Living with Pompe disease, a rare genetic condition that weakens muscles over time, Grady understands rehabilitation in ways most people never will. His words reached Mahomes during a difficult stretch and offered perspective that statistics and timelines cannot provide.
Patrick Mahomes finds inspiration during ACL recovery
Grady met Mahomes through the Make A Wish Foundation of Missouri and Kansas earlier this fall. In a video later shared by Children’s Mercy, the two were seen tossing a football together, a moment Grady had worked months to earn through physical therapy. Despite his condition, he pushed himself daily just to walk independently and take part in that brief exchange.
ID@undefined Caption not available.After Mahomes suffered his knee injury, Grady sent a message that quickly resonated.
“Don’t doubt yourself! I had an injury kind of like yours, and I came back stronger than ever so you should too.” The words reflected lived experience, not optimism for show.Grady even joked about the pressure of the moment. “If I dropped that pass, I would never show my face again,” he said. The meeting nearly did not happen. The day before, Grady slipped and fell on his left hip, yet still showed up determined to meet his hero.Their conversation extended beyond football mechanics. “I asked Mahomes if he liked winning at home or away better,” Grady said. “He said he likes winning at home, obviously. When he’s away and scores a touchdown, the crowd gets silent. He said he feels like the villain but he doesn’t want to be the villain.”Mahomes underwent surgery on December 15 to repair a torn ACL and LCL and has since returned to Kansas City to begin rehabilitation. A nine month recovery window has been outlined, though the timeline remains flexible. As one young fan reminded him, recovery is not just about returning. It is about coming back stronger, in every sense.Also Read: