Getty ImagesKANSAS CITY, Mo. - Lamar Hunt lobbied the NFL for 37 years to put a Thanksgiving game in Kansas City, but had to listen to his Chiefs beat Denver on Thursday night over the phone in his hospital bed.
“Lamar, I hope you’re feeling better,” an emotional Trent Green said moments after the Chiefs wrapped up a 19-10 victory in a key AFC West showdown.
“This win,” the Chiefs’ quarterback said, “is for you.”
The 74-year-old Hunt, who has missed only a handful of games since founding the franchise, was admitted to a Dallas-area hospital on Wednesday, bitterly disappointed he would not see Kansas City’s inaugurating the NFL’s new Thanksgiving tripleheader.
“He’s doing much better,” said his son, Clark Hunt, the chairman of the Chiefs. “He had a lung issue and needed to go to the hospital and let them take a look at it.”
Having the Chiefs dedicate the game to him was certain to be a great tonic, the younger Hunt said.
“This game has been important to him really going back to the AFL days. He’s worked since the merger to try to get the game back here.”
Like most NFL fans, Hunt was unable to view the game. His hospital is not hooked into the NFL Network, which broadcast the game to about 40 million of the country’s 111 million television homes. So his daughter held the phone near her television while he listened on the other end.
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NFL rushing leader Larry Johnson gouged Denver’s fifth-ranked run defense for 157 yards and Lawrence Tynes kicked four field goals for the Chiefs (7-4), who charged into a second-place tie with the Broncos (7-4) in the AFC West.
Johnson, raising his league-leading rushing total to 1,202 yards, consistently burned the Broncos with 8- and 10-yard gains, using his usual assortment of power moves and start-and-stop elusiveness. The Broncos came in giving up a shade better than 90 yards per game on the ground.
“I felt real good,” Johnson said. “Overall, it’s just your energy. You know that the whole nation is going to be watching you. It’s the only game at night and it feels like a Monday night football game.”
“There were a lot of crucial situations when we didn’t step up and make the plays when we should,” Denver cornerback Champ Bailey said. “One thing we’ve got to realize is we’ve got a lot of football left to play.”
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Making the night even more festive was an in-house standing-room-only crowd of 80,866, the largest since 1972, the year the Chiefs opened the facility that many call the loudest outdoor stadium in the league.
“Our fans were awesome,” Chiefs defensive end Jared Allen said. “We took energy from them all night.”
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