INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Rashee Rice is feared to have suffered a torn ACL in his right knee, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter, after the Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver collided with quarterback Patrick Mahomes during Sunday’s victory against the Los Angeles Chargers.
“I feel terrible for Rashee,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said after the game. “… We will hope for the best.”
Reid said Rice will have an MRI on Monday.
He suffered the injury after colliding with Mahomes while trying to recover a Chargers fumble during an interception return. Both of Rice’s knees took an impact in his collision with Mahomes, and the receiver’s right knee appeared to hyperextend.
“It’s not good,” Reid told CBS at halftime when asked about the severity of Rice’s injury.
Rice was helped off the field and had his knee examined by medical personnel on the sideline before being taken to the locker room on a cart. He did not return.
He entered Week 4 leading the league in catches with 24 and second in yards with 288.
Mahomes overthrew Travis Kelce at midfield on the Chiefs’ second drive, and Chargers cornerback Kristian Fulton picked him off and returned it 29 yards with 6:06 to play. Rice caught Fulton from behind at the Chiefs’ 20 and punched the ball loose for a fumble, but Mahomes hit Rice’s legs while the star quarterback ducked down to attempt a tackle on Fulton.
Chiefs center Creed Humphrey recovered the fumble, but video review allowed the Chargers to retain possession.
Rice is awaiting trial on several charges after he allegedly caused a high-speed crash involving multiple cars last March on a freeway in Texas.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
The NFL Draft is usually a pretty simple process: A team picks a player and then that p
A big-time NFC East showdown on Thursday Night Football features the Philadelphia Eagle
Jon Gruden is back in the game — sort of. Three years after resigning from the Raiders over leaked emails in which he used racist and homophobic
Welcome to the 2024–25 version of my annual future head coaches list. You may have noticed this is coming a little later than in previous years. Normally, I s