Chiefs RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire to miss 4 games, placed on non-football illness list

JACKSONVILLE, FL - AUGUST 10: Kansas City Chiefs running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire (25) warms up before the game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Jacksonville Jaguars on August 10, 2024 at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fl. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The Kansas City Chiefs have placed running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire on the non-football injury (NFI) list. The move, reported by ESPN’s Field Yates, means the fifth-year veteran will be ineligible to play during the team’s first four regular season games.

The Chiefs said that Edwards-Helaire had missed several training camp practices due to an illness. He also did not participate in practice sessions leading up to the defending Super Bowl champions’ Week 1 matchup with the Baltimore Ravens.

Edwards-Helaire, 25, revealed on social media in late July that he was dealing with PTSD and soon thereafter explained to reporters that he’s experienced nausea and vomiting because of it, sometimes requiring hospitalization.

“I have PTSD and cyclic vomiting syndrome,” he said, crediting team trainer Julie Frymyer for providing help. “So it’s something kind of neurologically that they just kind of help me with and walk through it.”

“Sometimes I’m admitted into the hospital, something like I can’t stop throwing up,” he added. “Nothing pretty much can stop it. The only person who kind of put me in the right direction was Julie Frymyer early on to give me some of meds at the time when I’m going through an episode, to get me over the hump. But it’s real, real bad dehydration, dropping weight real fast. It’s really just, mentally, not being there.”

According to Edwards-Helaire, he has been struggling with PTSD since a 2018 incident while he was in college at LSU. In what he called “a self-defense situation,” Edwards-Helaire was one of two players attempting to sell an electronic item and shot someone attempting to rob them, according to Baton Rouge police.

Sources confirmed to the Associated Press and WAFB-TV at the time that Edwards-Helaire was indeed one of the players involved. He described the incident as

In what he called “a self-defense situation,”

Reference

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