Sports
Chiefs guard Trey Smith is living his NFL dream. But it almost never happened
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — With perfect posture, the big man stands on the sideline, right hand over his heart.
The national anthem plays and Chiefs guard Trey Smith looks like he’s in a dream. A tear rolls down his cheek.
As the song concludes, fans at Arrowhead Stadium replace the final word. “And the home of the CHIEFS!”
“That,” Chiefs center Creed Humphrey says, “fires him up.”
Then with the smoke from fireworks still in the air, the game begins and Smith hits with such force and intensity that he could create sparks.
“On that first drive, he’s looking to send a message,” Humphrey says. “He’s putting people on the ground and letting them know it’s going to be a physical game.”
The passion is remarkable and rare.
Where does it come from?
It was destined that Trey Smith would be a Pro Bowler and Super Bowl champion. But he can’t stop thinking it almost didn’t happen.
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When Trey was 5, he decided he wanted to be a football player. But as a self-described “fat kid,” he knew he had to be a certain kind of football player. So he hit his knees every night and prayed he would grow to 6-foot-5.
It was a tall order, given that height did not run in his family. His father, Henry Jr., stood between 6-1 and 6-2. His mother, Dorsetta, was 5-6, and his only sibling, sister Ashley, is 5-6.
By the time Trey was 12, he was close to his current height of 6-5 1/2, his prayers answered and then some.
He was unusually strong, too, partly because of how he spent his weekends. His grandfather owned a farm in Bethel Springs, Tenn., and Trey helped as a farmhand.
In eighth grade, Trey was invited to a football camp at Mississippi. There, Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze offered him his first college scholarship. Trey and Dorsetta laughed at the offer, thinking Freeze was kidding, but it was no joke.
It wasn’t long before other universities followed Mississippi’s lead — Tennessee, Clemson, Georgia, Alabama, Notre Dame and on and on.
Artis Hicks played offensive line in the NFL for 11 seasons, and his first NFL coach was Andy Reid. His patio overlooked the field where Trey’s team practiced. When Trey was a sophomore in high school, he and Henry approached Hicks after a Sunday service at Love & Truth Church in Jackson, Tenn., wanting to know if Hicks would train Trey.
Hicks knew most kids didn’t have the mental fortitude to be worth his time. He agreed to put him through a workout, but it wasn’t what Trey expected — he took him on a run of nearly five miles.
“I wanted to see if I could break him,” Hicks says.
As they parted, Hicks thought he had heard the last of Trey. That evening, however, Trey texted asking if they could work out again the next day.
“Automatically, I knew I had something because he had the size already,” Hicks says. “Once I realized he wasn’t afraid to be uncomfortable, I literally opened up and dumped everything I had in me into him.”
Hicks took Trey to the gym after school where they lifted and conditioned. He taught him NFL techniques that he learned in Philadelphia from his line coach Juan Castillo and his teammates Jon Runyan, Hank Fraley and Jermane Mayberry. After high school games, and even sometimes during games, Hicks provided coaching tips.
Trey was thriving on the field when Dorsetta was hospitalized with congestive heart failure. He visited her in the intensive care unit at Vanderbilt Medical Center in early 2015. She was intubated and could not speak, but he had something he needed to say before it was too late.
He wanted his mom to know that he would graduate college and play in the NFL. He promised.
Dorsetta, at 51, died shortly after.
Not knowing how to let go of someone who means so much, 15-year-old Trey buried his grief in sport.
“He channeled the sadness and frustration and released it through football,” Ashley says. “Losing her motivated him to honor her legacy and fulfill his promise.”
As his sorrow grew deeper, his play became fiercer and his star brighter.
“He became like an alien on the field,” Hicks says. “He was a dog, he was skilled, he was technical and he was athletic. He didn’t look like anybody else in the nation.”
ESPN named him the No. 1 prospect in the country and Trey, with roughly 40 scholarship offers, announced his decision to attend Tennessee live on ESPN. A marquee in New York’s Times Square proclaimed the news.
After his freshman season, he was voted second-team All-SEC and was on his way to fulfilling his promise.
Then, in a practice after his first season, he passed out. In the coming days, he lost strength and weight. Trey was diagnosed with blood clots in both lungs.
He took anticoagulants for most of the offseason and was cleared to play but was told if there was a recurrence, he’d have to give up football. Everything was fine until a practice six games into his sophomore season when he couldn’t catch his breath. Tests indicated the blood clots were back.
All he had prayed for, dreamed of and promised seemed unattainable.
“I fell into a depression,” he says. “I felt like I didn’t have any worth. In my eyes, I failed my mom because I couldn’t keep the promises I made to her.”
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Lying in a hospital bed, Trey wondered why football had been taken away from him. That’s when Hicks called. They talked about what Trey’s future without playing might look like, and Hicks offered to put him in touch with friends who might help him get on a coaching path.
They hung up and Hicks stepped into the shower. It was there, he says, he had a vision.
“I saw him going on to becoming what he is now,” Hicks says. “And this would just be the beginning, that this would be a platform he uses to touch lives and glorify God.”
Hicks called him back.
“God didn’t bring you this far to let you down,” Hicks told him.
Trey believed him.
Shortly after, on New Year’s Eve 2019, Trey drove his GMC Sierra to Knoxville from their home in Jackson. The song “Something About The Name Jesus” by The Rance Allen Group played.
And then he had a vision of his own. It was his future, in shoulder pads.
He called Ashley, who is almost nine years older than him, and told her God told him he would continue playing football.
With his university providing the financial support and Henry and Ashley providing the emotional, he saw specialists at Cleveland Clinic, Harvard and Vanderbilt. Some of the testing cast doubts on whether he had blood clots.
He traveled to the University of North Carolina Hemophilia and Thrombosis Center, where Dr. Stephan Moll suggested an experimental plan. Trey couldn’t take anticoagulants while playing because an injury could cause uncontrollable bleeding. But Moll thought he could try intermittent dosing — taking blood thinners during the week while avoiding all contact drills in practice, then coming off the medication the day before the game.
Before the season opener, Trey was nervous.
“What if I go out there and get a concussion or something?” he wondered. “Am I going to die on the field?”
A friend texted him the Bible verse Jeremiah 29:11. Trey read it and said it over and over the day of the game. “For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord. “Plans to prosper you, and not to harm you.”
He eventually returned to doing what he had always done — making defenders go where they didn’t want to. That year, without ever practicing, he was voted first-team All-SEC. Trey maintained the routine as a senior and thrived on the field, being voted all-conference for a third time.
After his senior season, he was one of 10 student-athletes chosen for “The Big Orange Combine,” which provides behind-the-scenes experiences at major sporting events. That year, the destination was Super Bowl LVI in South Florida.
During the game, some Tennessee fans recognized him as he was serving as an usher/greeter and asked if he wanted to sit with them in an open seat. Trey watched as Patrick Mahomes led the Chiefs from a 10-point fourth-quarter deficit to a 31-20 victory over the 49ers. He heard the Chiefs chant and wondered what it would be like to wear that red and gold.
Trey had recently graduated from Tennessee, fulfilling half of what he promised his mother. But at the time, Trey’s NFL future was uncertain. Many scouts thought he had the qualities of a first-round pick. Many general managers thought he had the medical records of a reject.
ESPN sent a camera to his house for the first round — the round he thought he would be taken in. When he wasn’t picked, ESPN returned for Rounds 2 and 3. Trey stayed out of sight, playing Rocket League in his bedroom.
The network wanted to be with him for the third day of the draft, but Trey and his family, fearing the worst, declined their request. As the rounds passed, Trey “freaked out,” in his words, thinking he wasn’t destined for the NFL after all. He questioned himself. Was he good enough? Did he play well enough to justify a team taking a risk? Did he do all he could have to put himself in the best position he could have?
After 225 players had been chosen, the Chiefs picked Trey in the sixth round.
By his first training camp practice, he was running with the first team. He didn’t have any of the usual rookie homesickness, given some of the friendly faces around him. He and Humphrey, the team’s second-round pick that year, had been tight since they met at an Arkansas football camp when they were high school freshmen.
That summer, the Chiefs began the Norma Hunt Player Personnel Fellowship Program. Ashley had worked in various roles at Tennessee when Trey was there, starting as executive assistant to the head coach and ending up as assistant athletic director for football. She applied for the fellowship with the Chiefs without telling anyone who her brother was.
Chiefs general manager Brett Veach interviewed her in a video conference. Veach told her she was overqualified and asked if she was sure she wanted the position, which entailed watching tape, onboarding, offboarding and transporting players. Ashley wanted the job, and she surprised the general manager by telling him if he picked her, she wouldn’t be the only member of the family he chose that offseason.
After spending training camp with the Chiefs and her brother, Ashley became a player engagement manager for the NFL. Trey, meanwhile, was voted to the all-rookie team.
Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce has called the 328-pounder “the enforcer” of the offense. NFL Network analyst and former guard Brian Baldinger goes further.
“When you’re looking at the best guards in the NFL, do they get any better than Trey Smith?” he asked in a video posted on X.
In Trey’s second year, the Chiefs ran a screen pass in Denver. When linebacker Josey Jewell tried to shoot the A gap, Trey, with a cross-body swat from his right arm, gave him a taste of the dirt. Then Trey sprinted straight at safety Justin Simmons, obliterated him and cleared the space for running back Jerick McKinnon to take the ball into the end zone.
In subsequent seasons when the Chiefs have installed the play, they have shown that clip, which invariably has gotten an enthusiastic reaction from Trey’s teammates. “It’s always fun to watch it,” Humphrey says.
Trey finds inspiration watching tape of guards known for pushing the boundaries, such as Richie Incognito, Ryan Jensen and Quenton Nelson.
“I want to play the game with bad intentions but within the confines of the rulebook,” he says. “I play to be violent and to release my emotions.”
He tied for the team lead in snaps this season and in his career has missed only one game because of injury out of 78. He has not taken blood thinners for the most part since he’s been in the league, and he hasn’t had any more clots.
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Chiefs fans have taken to him, understandably, and he feels like an adopted son of Kansas City.
Trey and Humphrey recently used their collective force to push a car out of a snow bank after a Sunday morning church service in town.
On a shelf in his downtown apartment is an impressive collection of bottles of barbeque sauce — enough sauce, it seems, to fill a hot tub. A plaque commemorating his championship in a wings-eating contest hangs on the wall. A tray of burnt ends is on the countertop.
In some ways, he is the quintessential Chief.
But he might not be for long. Trey’s rookie contract will expire after the season. Pro Football Focus rates him as the No. 2 upcoming free agent at any position. The expectation is the 25-year-old will become the highest-paid guard in the league. The question is who will be writing the checks?
The lens he looks through is more fisheye than telephoto, so Trey says he is less concerned about where free agency may lead than he is about his next snap, his next opponent and the opportunity to three-peat.
But it’s in the back of his mind. Trey would like a family someday and contemplates how money could enable future generations. He also thinks about opportunities to make an impact philanthropically and inspirationally.
It’s not as if he’s planning to buy a yacht or a jet.
“I’ll be honest with you,” he says. “I’m just a country boy from Tennessee and there’s not a whole lot I necessarily want. I just need a little land where there is quiet space.”
He may have that already. He and Ashley, who are believed to be the only brother and sister ever employed by the NFL, inherited their grandfather’s 150-acre farm. It’s been vacant for nearly a decade, and he plans to clear the land and use the property for turkey hunting and off-roading.
It’s a dream he does not take for granted. He doesn’t take anything for granted. How could he?
The Chiefs trailed the 49ers late in Super Bowl LVIII last February, as they had in the Super Bowl that Trey attended when he was in college. He could do something about it this time, and he did, throwing dominating blocks that helped the Chiefs win in overtime.
After, as his teammates hugged and ran around like little boys, he sat in the end zone alone, helmet by his side.
Trey Smith cried. But he didn’t cry the way he cries before the national anthem. This was sobbing, chest-heaving crying — very wet and loud.
It all came back to him.
Praying to be 6-5.
His promise.
Blood clots.
The phone call from Hicks.
The vision in his car.
Trips to medical centers across the country.
Jeremiah 29:11.
Playing without practicing.
Panic during the draft.
All his mother missed.
“To be so far down and to experience all of this,” he says, pausing, wiping his eye and taking a deep breath. “It just shows God’s grace.”
(Top photo: Nick Cammett / Diamond Images via Getty Images)
Sports
How the Australian Open became the tennis Silicon Valley, from roofs to party courts
MELBOURNE, Australia — There are plenty of reasons to travel to Melbourne for the Australian Open each January, especially from a winter climate.
It’s sunny, it’s warm and Aussies at Melbourne Park are good with beer at noon and banter all day. Roger Federer had it about right when he nicknamed this event the “happy slam”.
The Australian Open also doesn’t treat tennis like a fragile museum piece, never to be touched or tweaked because ‘that’s not the way it’s done’, or one of those other haughty phrases the guardians of the game use to rationalize their stodginess.
This is the signal Grand Slam: the event that starts each season and offers a window into where tennis is headed with remarkable and deliberate regularity, all on the north bank of the Yarra River. Retractable roofs; 10-point deciding tiebreaks; cameras in the player tunnels and glitching cartoon tennis stars: it all debuted here. What California is to America, Australia has often been for tennis — the lab where new stuff goes for a test drive before being pushed out in so many other places.
“We’ve always tried to keep pushing the business,” said Machar Reid, the head of innovation for Tennis Australia, in an interview in Melbourne.
This year’s innovations have been especially visible. Coaches are sitting in pods on the three main courts with tablet computers packed with live stats, rather than in a box above the court and in the stands, where they had to lean over to chat with players craning their necks and cupping their ears to hear a potential gem among the noise.
Even players who were against allowing any coaching, who really hated having a rule against coaching when it was happening match in, match out, have got on board.
“I always thought tennis is an individual sport where you kind of have to figure things out on your own in a way,” said Alexander Zverev, world No. 2.
“If tennis is going that way, then it should go that way to 100 percent.”
Novak Djokovic and his coach Andy Murray are having a face-to-face chat between sets. Iga Swiatek and her coach Wim Fissette are trading words between points. That kind of closeness is natural for a tournament that turned its underbelly — the tunnels under Melbourne Park that house the player areas and allow the best in the world to move freely and privately between the gym, the lounge, and their matches, bumping fists and talking shop as they go — into one large Big Brother live feed.
It’s probably a safe bet this is all coming soon to a tournament near you. Maybe not the Big Brother.
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The AO, as it calls itself (a little less grand than Wimbledon’s “The Championships”) was the first Grand Slam to have one retractable roof, then two, then three. It was the first to bring cameras into the bowels of the stadium, following players as they walked to the court through that fancy tunnel with all the photos and names of past champions.
The net camera first became a main staple here, according to organizers. It had the first heat scale, and the first air quality scale.
The U.S. Open fashions itself as a food and style and tennis technology hotbed. Tennis Australia has gotten some heat for that this year, as the tournament, along with some other Grand Slams have done away with the electronic let sensor. The chair umpire makes the call based on whether they hear the ball tick the net, a system tournament officials insist is reliable.
Players don’t agree. Zverev called it “quite ridiculous”.
“Every single corner of everything has a camera. We have video review and all the high-end technologies that we can possibly have. But a simple let machine that we’ve been using for the past 25 years is not available at a Grand Slam.”
Chances are, most spectators don’t pay it any mind. At the Australian Open, fans come for the tennis, but stay for the music festival.
All afternoon and into the evening, there are guitarists and singers performing in the main plaza between the courts, where fans take a break from the matches — if they ever make it to them in the first place. Those couches and pillows strewn across the shaded, artificial grass where the music plays make for an awfully pleasant spot to spend an evening sipping lager and whiskey.
Last year, the tournament introduced innovations — by tennis standards — that have been long overdue.
Ushers began letting people take their seats between every game, rather than having to wait for a changeover, the old rule penalizing fans for going to the toilet, making them potentially miss 20 minutes of action. Players were caught slightly off-guard on the first day, but quickly got used to it and the change has spread elsewhere, especially in the higher sections of stadiums.
“We have been a little bit behind the other sports with changes and trying to keep the pace with the evolution of society and the new generation that we all know doesn’t have that much of a great attention span, and they want the movement,” Djokovic said Thursday night, after his third-round win over Tomas Machac. “That’s one of the ways to really try to open up a bit more and not have strict rules.”
There was another change — a bar and cafe next to a court instead of a bank of stands, with music and no limitations on noise during play. Last year, there was one. This year there is another. And just like that, taking a child to a tennis match, or catching up with a friend a few feet away from the action, becomes doable. Watching tennis no longer feels like the punishment your parents hand down when you misbehave: sit still and be quiet for the next three hours!
On the afternoon of the first Saturday, Rachel and Miki Petrovic, who were on their annual trip to the Australian Open from their home in Serbia, took in an otherwise forgettable doubles match over a beer as their seven-week-old infant, Violetta, rested beside them in a stroller.
“I have a baby,” Rachel told The Athletic. “Here I don’t have to worry about being annoying.”
A few feet away, Andrew Matthews and Danny Sincic, longtime Melbournians and attendees but first-time party-court visitors were enjoying a ginger beer and an IPA.
“Never been to anything like this,” Sincic said. “Makes it feel a bit more social than having to sit in the stadium without talking.”
“I don’t know how the players feel, but it’s good for us,” Matthews said.
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The players are basically fine with it. At this point, they know that when they play tennis in Melbourne Park, it might feel like a rugby match — especially if they play an Aussie. Chair umpires and stadium officials will attempt to keep the hometown faithful in line, but they don’t try that hard.
After all, that would rob the tournament of its more moments, such as Danielle Collins’ second-round win over home favorite Destanee Aiava. After enduring more than two hours of harassment from the Australian fans, Collins blew kisses to the crowd and thanked them in her on-court interview for helping her land a “big fat pay check”.
Djokovic, who ends up trolling crowds more often than anyone, gave Collins his full backing.
“Big fan of Danielle Collins,” he said the Thursday night after Collins’ interview. “We should try to look to connect more with the younger people and bring them. I want to see a little bit more entertainment.”
He has thoughts, including on-court dancers during changeovers or some version of a Super Bowl half-time show mid-match. Coco Gauff points out that in a sport with one-minute changeovers, it doesn’t really work. Maybe, somewhere in Melbourne, it’s already been noted on a whiteboard.
(Top photo: Brett Price / VWPics via Associated Press)
Sports
WNBA star Caitlin Clark details 'incredible' experience alongside Taylor Swift at Chiefs' playoff game
Caitlin Clark, the reigning WNBA Rookie of the Year, shared some details about her experience attending an NFL postseason game with Taylor Swift.
Clark sat beside Swift in a luxury suite at Arrowhead Stadium, the home of the Kansas City Chiefs, Jan. 18. The star duo chatted and hugged at times as the Chiefs took on the Houston Texans.
During a recent appearance on a podcast, Clark confirmed she supports the Chiefs and praised Swift’s kindness.
“I’m a huge Chiefs fan, and Taylor is a huge Chiefs fan,” Caitlin told the “Swarmcast” podcast. “Taylor is very sweet and very kind, and it’s a good reminder that people in our position are very normal. We enjoy watching sports and hanging out with our friends. It puts a great perspective on life.”
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Since last season, Swift has made frequent appearances at Chiefs games in support of the team and star tight end Travis Kelce.
Clark further raved about her and Swift’s shared fondness for the Chiefs.
“It’s just cute to see how excited she is for the Chiefs and getting to share that. I was like, ‘Oh my God, she loves this. She loves the Chiefs as much as me, This is incredible,’” Clark said.
Clark said the meeting between the Chiefs and Texans ended up being “a perfect game.”
“We had so much fun, and, honestly, it was the perfect game. The Chiefs won. It was close at halftime. Travis scores a huge touchdown for the Chiefs. We ended up winning,” the Indiana Fever star added. “There was nothing crazy that happened, and we felt confident as it got to the end. It ended up being a perfect game.”
Clark’s surprise appearance at the game captured the attention of the sports world. After noticing Clark was attending the game alongside Swift, longtime sports commentator Skip Bayless shared his thoughts on the duo.
Bayless argued Clark did not “need to be seen with her.”
Bayless, who hosts a weekly podcast, posted a video to his social media platform as he addressed Clark’s decision to attend the game with the music star.
“Can somebody tell me what possessed Caitlin Clark to associate with Taylor Swift?” he asked.
Swift was on hand Sunday to watch the Chiefs defeat the Buffalo Bills in the AFC championship. The Chiefs will take on the NFC champion Philadelphia Eagles in the Super Bowl Feb. 9 in New Orleans.
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Sports
Son of Bishop Alemany baseball coach Randy Thompson denied immediate eligibility
Despite support from his fellow Mission League baseball coaches, Bishop Alemany coach Randy Thompson said Tuesday his son, Brody, a junior catcher, has been denied immediate eligibility by the Southern Section after transferring from Sherman Oaks Notre Dame. He will have to sit out the first portion of the season until March 28.
Thompson had been head coach at Alemany for 18 years until losing his job in a cost cutting measure in 2019. He became an assistant coach at Notre Dame. When the school decided it wanted him back to be athletic director and baseball coach, he agreed. His son, a starter at Notre Dame last season as a sophomore, wanted to join him at Alemany.
Notre Dame coach Tom Dill wrote a letter to the Southern Section supporting the move. But Southern Section rules require students to move physically to be eligible immediately. Thompson said he could not afford to move.
“It’s unfortunate,” Thompson said. “The rules are set up to prevent athletically-motivated transfers. My son wants to play for his dad.”
Said Dill: “My request was that we as coaches put in a lot of time developing young men, trying to make a difference in their lives, not just in game of baseball. We spend our careers doing that. I think a son should be able to play for him. How could he not go back to Alemany for his dad? The whole league agreed and I don’t know why there could not be an exception.”
A Southern Section spokesman said no valid residential change occurred and the organization cannot waive bylaw 206. Other coaches who brought along their sons without moving have faced a similar situation.
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