Patrick Mahomes walked into his weekly press conference expecting football questions — not a history lesson. But when a reporter asked whether he knew about the Preston Road Trophy awarded to the Chiefs–Cowboys winner, Mahomes froze for a moment.
Then, with a grin, he fired back the answer no one saw coming.
“I didn’t,” he laughed. “I know there’s a Turducken. Is that the trophy?”
It wasn’t the trophy.
But it was the perfect answer.
Because for Mahomes — and for most of America — Thanksgiving football isn’t about silverware.
It’s about John Madden.
About laughter, grease-covered fingers on live TV, and a three-bird Frankenstein feast that somehow became as iconic as pumpkin pie.
And now, for the first time in 19 years, the Kansas City Chiefs are back on the Thanksgiving stage. Mahomes knows the stakes — not just for playoff position, but for tradition, legacy, and a chance to join the goofy, glorious Turducken mythology that Madden created.
Mahomes Isn’t Chasing Nostalgia — He’s Chasing Connection
“When I think of Thanksgiving football, I think of Turducken. John Madden,” Mahomes said softly.
“A legend. I talked to him a few times with Coach Reid… being part of that tradition would be special.”
This isn’t some PR line.
Mahomes means it.
Back in 2022, he even had his personal chefs make him a Turducken for Thanksgiving — and immediately tweeted his review:
“Turducken = 🔥🔥🔥.”
Even Andy Reid kept one in his fridge that year.
Both men were honoring Madden, who died the previous December.
The Chiefs’ Long-Awaited Return Adds an Emotional Punch
The Chiefs haven’t played on Thanksgiving since 2006.
They haven’t faced the Cowboys on Thanksgiving since 1995.
This week isn’t just a football game.
It’s a homecoming.
It’s Mahomes stepping into a spotlight he’s watched since childhood.
And if he wins, that Turducken waiting afterward will taste a whole lot sweeter.
How Madden Accidentally Created the NFL’s Craziest Tradition
The year was 1996.
A Saints PR staffer brought a Turducken into the broadcast booth during Rams vs. Saints.
Madden took one look at it… and devoured it with his bare hands on live TV.
No fork.
No plate.
Just pure Madden chaos.
After the game, he called the Louisiana butcher who made it — Glenn Mistich — and had one shipped to California. From then on, the Turducken became Madden’s Thanksgiving co-star.
One year, he was mid-bite when Saints owner Tom Benson walked into the booth.
Madden shook his hand anyway — gravy and all.
“He hasn’t spoken to me since,” Madden joked.
It was messy.
It was real.
And fans loved every second of it.
The NFL Honors Madden With a Six-Legged Tribute
This year marks the league’s fourth straight “Madden Thanksgiving.”
Every detail is a nod to him:
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Players wear Madden silhouette patches.
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The coin toss uses a coin with Madden on one side and a six-legged Turducken on the other.
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Each game names a Madden Thanksgiving MVP, who receives:
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A pylon-style trophy
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A $10,000 NFL Foundation donation to give to youth football
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A place in one of football’s most beloved traditions
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Game-used items will be auctioned to benefit the John Madden Foundation.
For Mahomes, It’s Not Just a Game — It’s a Moment
Thursday isn’t about stats or standings.
It’s about stepping into a legacy that felt larger than the sport itself.
It’s about joining the messy, joyful ritual John Madden created in one bite of a chaotic, delicious dish.
For Mahomes, this is the chance to bite into history — literally.
And if the Chiefs win?
The Preston Road Trophy is nice.
But the Turducken will be the real prize.
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