KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Running back Priest Holmes will practice on Wednesday for the first time since a severe 2005 head and neck injury.
Chiefs coach Herm Edwards repeated Tuesday there's a chance Holmes could play at Oakland.
The Chiefs traded backup running back Michael Bennett to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for draft picks on Tuesday, creating a roster spot behind starter Larry Johnson and adding to speculation they might activate Holmes in time for Sunday's game against the Raiders.
Holmes "will put the pads on. He will put the helmet on. Whether he participates in the (Oakland) game or not, we'll see how practice goes," Edwards said.
Holmes sustained neck and spinal injuries in a game at San Diego on Oct. 30, 2005, when he was hit by Shawne Merriman. He was placed on the physically unable to perform list and stayed there until he showed up at training camp in River Falls, Wis., in July claiming he'd seen himself playing football in a dream.
Holmes, a three-time Pro Bowler who turned 34 this month, appears to have lost about 10 pounds since July and looks fit.
Holmes is eligible to come off the Reserve/Non-Football Injury List once he begins practicing, and the Chiefs will then have 21 days to either move him to the active roster, terminate his contract or place him back on injured reserve.
Chiefs president Carl Peterson said he expects Holmes to be activated sooner rather than later.
"My sense right now is that he will be ready to go," Peterson said. "I've said a thousand times, those people who question Priest Holmes are very foolish. Throughout his entire career, he's always come back. When he called me last spring shortly before training camp and told me he would like to do this one more time, I felt that I owed him that opportunity."
When Holmes was healthy he was one of the most productive running backs in the NFL. He owns 18 Chiefs single-game and career records, including career marks for yards rushing (5,933), total touchdowns (83) and rushing touchdowns (76).
Edwards said it won't be long before he knows whether Holmes is ready.
"If he can go out there and practice pretty well, and feels OK after practice, that's good for us and for him. We'll know this week," Edwards said. "It's been three months. Either he's ready to go or he's not. Another week won't make much of a difference. He's prepared. He's been mentally into it. He's working his tail off.
"For a guy his age to go through what he's gone through over the last three months, you have to take your hat off to the guy."
Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press