Chiefs encounters: Looking for the best or most random stories you have

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NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - FEBRUARY 3: Kansas City Chiefs punter Matt Araiza takes a selfie with Chiefs fans inside the Caesars Superdome during the Super Bowl Opening Night on February 3, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. The Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs were made available for interviews during an energetic, New Orleans-themed event ahead of next Sunday's Super Bowl LIX. (Photo by Michael DeMocker/Getty Images) | Getty Images

You never know when or where you may run into a member of the Kansas City Chiefs as they soak up offseason time before preparing for next season.

Chiefs Kingdom doesn’t shy away from letting its favorite players know they are appreciated. My late father, one of the loudest and proudest Chiefs fans there was, was always looking for an opportunity to bellow “CHIEFS!” as loud as he could; the conclusion to the national anthem at Arrowhead Stadium only happened eight times a year, to be fair.

He was a well-respected salesman who had stories of working with former Chiefs players like quarterback Trent Green or linebacker Mike Maslowki, although he had to be on his best behavior in those professional scenarios.

That wasn’t the case on a 2007 summer trip our family took to Las Vegas to visit our grandmother. As my sisters and I spent time with her, our parents enjoyed the strip and decided to enter the Tao nightclub late one evening.

As they approach the bar, my dad recognizes a tall, mulleted man enjoying himself and doesn’t even think twice before unleashing a vintage “CHIEFS!” within earshot. Hall of Fame defensive end Jared Allen, then just a fourth-year player, was clearly surprised — then responded with cheers to acknowledge the randomly proud Chiefs fan in a Vegas nightclub. My parents recall former Chiefs linebacker Kawika Mitchell hanging out at the bar as well.

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I can’t top that, or any, of my father’s stories. I have coincidentally shared flights heading back to Kansas City with wide receiver Skyy Moore and defensive tackle Derrick Nnadi on separate occasions.

It sounds made up, but moments before I saw Moore while I sat in the terminal, I was drafting my 2022 fantasy football team on my phone and used a late pick on him. I did wish him good luck in his rookie season, but I failed to mention my incredibly-timed fantasy pick. He probably wouldn’t have believed me.

Do you have any random encounters with Chiefs players or coaches, current or historically? Share in the comments, and we’ll review for the best ones!

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...counters-looking-for-best-most-random-stories
 
Let’s Argue: Andy Reid will be gone in two years

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Jan 29, 2023; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid greets fans while leaving the field after winning the AFC Championship game against the Cincinnati Bengals at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images

In our “Let’s Argue” series, our Mark Gunnels considers the hot takes, wacky predictions and unpopular opinions of Kansas City Chiefs fans from all over the world.


The Chiefs should draft a QB with the probability Mahomes won’t be ready by the start of the season.​

The Chiefs should draft a QB with the probability Mahomes won't be ready by the start of the season.

— DiceGame (@DedagnDicegame) February 3, 2026

This isn’t a bad idea in theory.

However, the Chiefs only have six draft picks this year.

With that in mind, it’s hard for me to justify drafting a quarterback with so few picks. After missing the playoffs for the first time in the era of quarterback Patrick Mahomes, general manager Brett Veach can’t afford to waste a pick on a quarterback.

Also, all reports point to Mahomes being ready to start Week 1.

The team should just bring in a veteran quarterback as a backup.

Chiefs are 1 great RB and 1 great DE away from being back on top.​

Chiefs are 1 great RB and 1 great DE away from being back on top.

— Dillon Breeden (@Dilbobagns) February 3, 2026

This goes back to the previous point.

Depending on how free agency goes, Kansas City may need to spend picks on a running back and a defensive end. Even if everything goes right before the draft, it’s still likely that Veach spends two picks on these positions.

Let’s say the Chiefs sign Breece Hall: the first pick would most likely be spent on a defensive end or wide receiver, but you would assume the front office would draft a running back in the later rounds.

Remember that Isiah Pacheco, Kareem Hunt and Dameon Pierce are all free agents.

Andy will be gone in two years.​

Andy will be gone in two years.

— B. Skaigh (@BSkaigh) February 3, 2026

No one truly knows when Andy Reid will hang it up.

If I had to make an educated guess, I would say he finishes out his contract that runs through the 2028 season. At that point, I believe Big Red calls it quits.

This would give him three more seasons.

The Chiefs defense missed JReid last season.​

The Chiefs defense missed JReid last season.

🏈 ChiefsChickSEK RUN the ball🏈 (@chiefschicktx) February 3, 2026

When the Chiefs decided to move on without safety Justin Reid, most fans weren’t upset.

The thinking was that Jaden Hicks would take a major leap in his second season. Unfortunately, Hicks couldn’t quite get there.

Bryan Cook had an amazing year, but the other safety position wasn’t nearly as strong. I do think Chiefs Kingdom as a whole took for granted Reid’s veteran leadership and football IQ.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...254/chiefs-hot-takes-andy-reid-gone-two-years
 
Chiefs’ Andy Reid has update on Travis Kelce, ‘there is communication’

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GLENDALE, ARIZONA - AUGUST 19: Head coach Andy Reid of the Kansas City Chiefs reacts with Travis Kelce #87 of the Kansas City Chiefs prior to an NFL preseason football game between the Arizona Cardinals and the Kansas City Chiefs at State Farm Stadium on August 19, 2023 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When the 2025 season ended earlier than anyone expected for the Kansas City Chiefs, tight end Travis Kelce had a lot of time to weigh his big decision. A reasonable deadline felt like the start of the NFL Scouting Combine, which is the unofficial start to the race of offseason moves that will have any NFL fan’s head spinning once the legal tampering period opens on March 9.

For any of the 32 general managers causing the chaos, it would be important to know if a legendary player like Kelce was going to play in 2026. It would be reasonable for the Chiefs’ Brett Veach to ask for assurance in either direction by the time the football world starts gathering in Indianapolis on Monday.

That doesn’t mean the public will know by then, especially because Kelce is a free agent needing to negotiate a contract to officially come back, but the two sides have stayed in touch.

Head coach Andy Reid shared that information with local media during a Zoom press conference on Friday afternoon. He was asked if there was any indication he has felt from Kelce on returning for his 14th season.

“No, there is communication, though,” Reid pointed out. “As long as there’s communication, I’m good. That means people want to move forward, and I think that’s where Trav is.”

HC Andy Reid says he doesn’t want to put words into Travis Kelce’s mouth… but there’s a lot of positive communication happening. Sounds to me like there’s a great chance he’ll be back for the 2026 season! pic.twitter.com/3aMMpoadUw

— Lexi (@lexiosborne) February 20, 2026

“I’m not trying to put words in his mouth at all,” Reid clarified. “And I try to give him space here. He has been doing this a long time; he can sort all that out as he goes forward, but we’re proceeding with that, and there is communication going on.”

Whether it has been Kelce himself or now Reid, there have only been positive indicators that the all-time tight end wants to play next season. It shouldn’t be surprising if the news comes out next week.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...s-andy-reid-update-travis-kelce-communication
 
Kevin Knowles gives rookie perspective on Chiefs’ veteran leaders

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KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - DECEMBER 25: Nick Bolton #32 of the Kansas City Chiefs is congratulated by Kevin Knowles #38 after intercepting a pass against the Denver Broncos during the first quarter at Arrowhead Stadium on December 25, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Eric Thomas/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In an era of Kansas City Chiefs football that has multiple superstars dominating everyday headlines, it’s easy to appreciate them and overlook the impact made by the quieter or humbler cornerstones of the team.

To feel the gratitude for defensive leaders like linebacker Nick Bolton and cornerback Trent McDuffie, it takes listening to what coaches and teammates have to say. Defensive back Kevin Knowles was an undrafted signing by the Chiefs last spring before working his way onto the 53-man roster by midseason.

“Nick Bolton wows me every day… knows the playbook like the back of his hand.” 🤯

Chiefs CB Kevin Knowles II says @_nickbolton2 isn’t just calling plays, he’s calling EVERYBODY'S assignments 😤

FULL EPISODE🔗👇#ChiefsKingdom @flexxkp5 pic.twitter.com/Tntkk4Tyz8

— Chief Concerns (@ConcernsChief) February 19, 2026

He saw defensive snaps in six of the 13 games he played, and gained a new appreciation for the team’s top defensive players. Knowles joined co-hosts Marcus Dash and former Chiefs tight end Jason Dunn on the Chief Concerns YouTube channel to share that experience.

“Nick wows me every day,” Knowles said of Bolton. “Because regardless, he knows what that three-technique needs to be doing, he knows that the cornerback is supposed to be bailing, he knows the supposed the safety is supposed to be coming down and fitting the A-gap or whatever.”

“One thing about it: Nick [is] going to tell you ‘talk to me, communicate, lets go,’” Knowles continued. “If you make a play, he is going to come dap you up and say something to keep you up. Don’t get me wrong, don’t mess up now… Spags relies on that man a lot, and the defense does, the front end, the back end, even the guys next to him.”

Knowles admitted he believed Bolton was an older player before coming to Kansas City, speaking to the established presence of the Chiefs’ middle linebacker.

As impressed as Knowles was with Bolton, McDuffie — only 25 years old himself — is the player he and many young defensive backs truly look up to.

“Trent’s the blueprint, Trent does everything right,” Knowles declared. “Us doing everyday drills, he’s going to show you how to do it and let you know ‘lets pick it up a little bit.’”

“Trent paved the way for a lot of people in that room,” Knowles emphasized. “Whether it’s answering questions that has nothing to do with him, answering questions about the defensive line, answering questions about a screen that we’d never see.”

“I don’t think he knows, but there are a lot of people that got eyes on him, a lot of younger guys got eyes on him, especially me… me and Nohl Williams [say] ‘Trent doing this, we got to do this.’ It’s little things like that.”

Two of the defense’s top players feel like coaches on the field to teammates, and that points to the impact the actual coaching staff has. Defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo has always valued “teaching” the game, and Knowles credited he, defensive backs coach Dave Merrit and senior defensive assistant Matt House for that.

“They teach it, they truly sit you down,” Knowles explained. “We’ll go over one thing for a whole week until you get it. Merrit [will] throw you on the board; he’s going to ask you questions out of the blue. It’s like ‘if you don’t got it, you’re [going to] sit here and do it until you get it.‘”

The persistence was needed for Knowles, who acknowledged the difficulty of learning the scheme.

“I started off a little shaky,” Knowles admitted, referring to understanding the defense. “It took hours and hours of me truly diving into that playbook until I truly got it, until things started to stick. I’m not going to lie, it probably didn’t start sticking until middle of the season. Then, you know how the game comes… game adjustments are totally different.”

After being elevated from the practice squad multiple times, Knowles was signed to the 53-man roster before Week 8. He didn’t start impacting the defense until the final five-game stretch of the schedule, but he was ready at anytime.

“That’s where mental reps come in,” Knowles reflected. “I was on the sidelines, I was playing special teams, I wasn’t playing any defense. Mentally, I had to lock in and see what I was doing because when my name is called, it wasn’t ‘oh I got to get ready.’ If you aren’t ready, it’s next up.”

Knowles became an intriguing player to think about moving forward after flashing as a slot defender for the Chiefs’ defense. According to PFF Premium Stats, Knowles allowed only four catches over the 12 passes thrown his direction in coverage.

Knowles’ flashes of playmaking are paired with a leadership group around him that could bring the best out of the young defensive back in his NFL career.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ves-rookie-perspective-chiefs-veteran-leaders
 
Chiefs News 2/21: Patrick Mahomes spends 7 hours a day rehabbing

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Kansas City Chiefs Patrick Mahomes warms up and stretches pre-game.

The latest​


Here’s how Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes’ knee rehab is going, per coach Andy Reid | The Kansas City Star

“He’s around here all the time, spends a ton of time here,” Kansas City head coach Andy Reid said Friday. “Seven hours a day. He’s in there cranking away, making progress every day. It’s great to see.”

Mahomes suffered a season-ended torn ACL and LCL in a Week 15 home loss to the Los Angeles Chargers. The injury required immediate surgery and the rehab process could take up to nine months. If so, Mahomes could miss the start of the 2026 season.

Reid said Mahomes is working with Julie Frymyer, the team’s assistant trainer and physical therapist. She was key figure in Mahomes’ management of a high-ankle sprain through the 2023 playoffs — a run that ended in a Chiefs Super Bowl victory.

“She makes sure he stays on task, and challenges him,” Reid said. “And he keeps showing up. That’s about half the battle on these things.

“It’s not going to be a pleasant thing. Every day you’ve got to fight through it and attack the challenge of the workout. He’s doing a great job with that.”

Chiefs’ Andy Reid: ‘Nothing happening’ with Tyreek Hill | Reuters

“I don’t even know if Tyreek is healthy right now to do anything,” Reid said. “So, I’m sure he’s working hard on that part of it, trying to get that all straightened out.

“But yeah, listen, we talk about everything. So there’s nothing happening there, but we know what you know – that he’s out there and cranking away, trying to get himself back to where he can play, period.”

Hill said in a recent stream on Twitch that his recovery is “going good,” while adding that he faces one more surgery.

Andy Reid says Rashee Rice’s legal issue won’t affect Chiefs’ approach at receiver | The Kansas City Star

But it’s not just that. A civil suit filed against Rice by the mother of his two children for abuse this week could add to the uncertainty of the position group.

Kansas City head coach Andy Reid said Rice’s situation doesn’t change the team’s approach to shaping the position for the 2026 NFL season.

“I would tell you, no, not right now on this,” Reid said.

Rice led the Chiefs wide receivers in 2025 with 53 receptions despite playing in just eight games. He was suspended for the first six under the NFL’s conduct policy for his role in a 2023 car crash.

Brown was second with 49 catches in 2025, followed by Worthy with 42.

Will the Chiefs re-sign any of their free agents, and does a wide receiver become a possibility with the team’s first draft pick? General manager Brett Veach will continue to sort through the options next week at the NFL Combine in Indianapolis.

“Brett’s already got his guys digging in on things,” Reid said. “There’s a million different options of things you have to look at. A lot of moving parts going on.”

Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce sued for trademark infringement | ESPN

Mahomes and Kelce, along with business partner Noble 33, opened their steakhouse last year, combining Mahomes’ and Kelce’s jersey numbers to give it the name. The sneaker company 1587 Sneakers alleges in the suit that the restaurant name infringes its usage of the identical number combination.

The legal question revolves around the unregistered rights that the sneaker company claimed before it filed its trademark applications last year, said trademark attorney Josh Gerben of Gerben IP, who doesn’t represent either party.

The suit alleges that the 1587 Sneakers brand started selling its shoes April 13, 2023, and thus has first use of the number and markings. The shoe company did not apply for the “1587” trademark until last October, and the application is still under review by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

Around the NFL


Cowboys waive LB Logan Wilson, save $6.5M in salary cap space | ESPN

In seven games, Williams was credited with 28 tackles and a forced fumble, but he started just once. Despite the struggles at the position and the defense in general, the Cowboys kept Kenneth Murray Jr. as the starter over Wilson. In the Christmas Day win against the Washington Commanders, he did not play a snap, which was called a coaches’ error in the days after the game.

The Cowboys gave up a 2026 seventh-round pick to the Cincinnati Bengals for Wilson. In Cincinnati, where he was voted a captain in 2025, Wilson was benched in favor of rookie Barrett Carter and led to the trade.

In parts of five seasons with the Bengals, Wilson started 65 games, intercepted 11 passes and was a key figure in their run to Super Bowl LVI where they lost to the Los Angeles Rams.

Rams promoting Nate Scheelhaase to offensive coordinator | NFL.com

A rising star in league circles, the 35-year-old Scheelhaase is being promoted from L.A.’s pass game coordinator to its new OC, NFL Network Insider Tom Pelissero reported Friday.

Scheelhaase succeeds Mike LaFleur, who was hired as the Arizona Cardinals head coach after three years as L.A.’s offensive coordinator under head coach Sean McVay. LaFleur and Scheelhaase aided in the Rams’ run to the NFC Championship Game, and the latter will be looked upon to maintain an offense that was No. 1 overall in the NFL.

Should Scheelhaase find success in the role, just how long he sticks around could come into question. He garnered interviews for the Baltimore Ravens, Cleveland Browns, Pittsburgh Steelers and Las Vegas Raiders HC vacancies this hiring cycle.

Florida Senate passes ‘Teddy Bridgewater Act,’ allowing coaches to use personal funds to assist players | NFL.com

The Florida Senate on Thursday unanimously passed CS/CS/SB 178, known as the “Teddy Bridgewater Act,” which authorizes K-12 head coaches to use $15,000 in personal funds per year to support student-athlete welfare.

The bill was immediately certified by a 38-0 vote.

Officially, the act requires, “the Florida High School Athletic Association to adopt bylaws authorizing a head coach to support the welfare of a student by using personal funds to provide certain effects to the student; requiring the head coach to report such use of personal funds to the association; providing that such use of personal funds is presumed not to be an impermissible benefit, etc.”

Bridgewater, once a star quarterback at Northwestern, returned to his alma mater and promptly coached the Bulls to a Class 3A state title in 2024. However, after admitting to covering food and transportation costs for his players while seeking financial aid from supporters, he was suspended from coaching the team in 2025 for providing prohibited benefits.

In case you missed it on Arrowhead Pride


NFL free agency: 3 running backs the Chiefs should target

2. Kenneth Gainwell

If the Chiefs decided to go a more affordable route, or one with a significant draft selection, Kenneth Gainwell could be a player Kansas City’s coaching staff can utilize in a variety of ways, no matter how the rest of the backfield shakes out.

A career backup, Gainwell found his footing with the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2025, where he became a solid receiving option out of the backfield as well as in the slot.

Gainwell brings shiftiness and good speed to the table, but he would also provide a veteran presence in the running back room. He would be a Swiss Army knife the Chiefs’ backfield has lacked since another veteran back, Jerick McKinnon.

The perfect complement to a “power” back, Gainwell is estimated to make only around $3 million per season, per Spotrac. He’s a good bargain for any team looking to add explosive capability to the backfield.

Social media to make you think

Ahead of Combine week, I’m hearing there’s legitimate interest from Travis Etienne to come to KC. Etienne’s due to become a UFA on 3/11, and the Chiefs need a running back. We’ll see.

— Pete Sweeney (@pgsween) February 21, 2026

Follow Arrowhead Pride on Social Media


Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...-patrick-mahomes-spends-7-hours-day-rehabbing
 
How did you become a Chiefs fan?

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17 Sep 1995: Kansas City Chiefs fan waves a flag before a game against the Oakland Raiders held at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. The Chiefs won the game, 23-17. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Dunn /Allsport | Getty Images

Some fans choose their team, and some fans are chosen by their team. Which was it for you? Today, we want to hear your story from you: How you became a fan of the Kansas City Chiefs.

When did you first become a fan? Were you born into it? Was there a specific game or season that pulled you in? What’s the earliest moment you remember as a fan?

Let’s hear your story.

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
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  • Comment on articles, community posts
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  • New, improved notifications system!

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kansas-city-chiefs-discussions/194724/how-did-you-become-a-chiefs-fan
 
How can the Chiefs fix the wide receiver woes this offseason?

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The Kansas City Chiefs can no longer ignore the problem staring them right in the face, growing larger by the day. It’s time to make another significant investment in the wide receiver position to find a long-term answer at the position.

The problem is obvious. The solution, less so.

The Chiefs enter the offseason with just six wide receivers signed to the 90-man roster: Xavier Worthy, Rashee Rice, Jalen Royals, Jason Brownlee, Andrew Armstrong and Jimmy Holiday. Only Worthy and Rice have seen meaningful playing time among that group.

That makes depth important to address this offseason, but it isn’t a more significant need than to find a true alpha, no.1 receiver capable of carrying the load in 2026 and beyond.

If that wasn’t already the case, Rashee Rice’s latest offense — a civil suit filed by his ex-girlfriend alleging physical abuse over the course of a year and a half — emphasizes it. These are serious allegations that the NFL will take notice of because Rice will be viewed as a repeat offender under the league’s personal conduct policy if any discipline is deemed necessary.

A lengthy suspension based on these allegations would not be surprising.

That means Rice could miss a sizable portion of his final year under contract with Kansas City. It’s a massive loss on the field, but a stark reminder that the Chiefs simply can’t trust Rice; a long-term contract offer would be a mistake.

That leaves Worthy as Kansas City’s lone wide receiver under contract with any track record. Worthy has 1,170 receiving yards in his first 31 career regular-season games. There are explanations for why the production hasn’t been greater, but the reality is he can’t and shouldn’t be counted upon as the team’s number one wide receiver at this point in his career.

So, who could be? There are three ways to acquire players in the coming months:

Free Agency​

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Free agency is generally preferable because it simply requires monetary investment. It isn’t as straightforward for the Chiefs, who entered the offseason nearly $60 million over the cap. The team has already carved a large chunk out of that deficit with this year’s restructure of quarterback Patrick Mahomes’ contract, with the potential for more similar moves to come.

It’s hard to open up the kind of space necessary to add an alpha wide receiver, however.

Regardless, such a wide receiver will be hard to find in this particular free agent market. Among the best names of the bunch, one will just be an honorable mention: Deebo Samuel. He just doesn’t fit what the Chiefs need at this point in his career.

Rashid Shaheed is a fun player, but he’s probably not enough of a volume receiver to fill the role the Chiefs are looking for.

Alec Pierce is a good player, but he’s more of a deep threat than a target monster, and should command something in the neighborhood of $25 million per year.

Mike Evans doesn’t fit the typical model Kansas City follows being a 33-year old receiver with a recent injury history, but his production is hard to ignore. 2025 was the first season he failed to eclipse the 1,000-yard plateau in his 11-season career. He is a matchup nightmare in the red zone and should command more than 100 targets per year if healthy.

The Athletic is projecting Evans to earn a two-year contract worth more than $50 million, while Pro Football Focus is projecting a one-year, $18 million deal. Both are probably out of the Chiefs’ price range, barring significant changes to their cap situation.

Jauan Jennings and Romeo Doubs are projected to land deals three or four years in length worth roughly $15 million per season. That’s more palatable for the Chiefs’ cap situation.

Doubs fits more of what general manager Brett Veach typically looks for as a 26-year old receiver on the upswing of his career, but Jennings could provide Kansas City a plug-and-play for the offense. Both players could be strong additions, but may not be easily sold to the fans as the solution.

There is an enormous, yet familiar elephant in the room: Tyreek Hill. The risk is obvious: he’s prone to his own off-field issues, he is recovering from a catastrophic knee injury, he is 32 years old and his GPS tracking numbers have shown a decline in his speed even before his injuries.

The on-field rewards have always been easy to recognize: he knows the offense. He has prior relationships in the locker room. Before his injury last season, he was on pace for more than 1,000 receiving yards.

I personally wouldn’t advocate for the Chiefs to go this path, but purely from a football perspective, I understand the appeal.

Trade Options​

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The free agent options leave something to be desired.

You can’t say that about A.J. Brown. He’s a stud when he’s at his best for the Philadelphia Eagles, but the cost to acquire him is likely astronomical. Kansas City would have to depart with the 40th overall pick and then some, while Brown will be 29 years old next season with a significant salary for multiple years. It just doesn’t seem realistic.

DJ Moore and Michael Pittman Jr. are far more realistic. Both would cost slightly more than $20 million this year.

Pittman is entering the final year of his deal with the Indianapolis Colts, while Moore still has four years remaining with the Chicago Bears — but Moore could be cut if Chicago decides he is no longer worth that money. The cost to acquire either player shouldn’t be nearly as high as it would be to land Brown.

To compare, it feels preferable to sign from the group of Evans, Jennings and Doubs rather than committing money and a draft asset for Moore or Pittman.

The team the Chiefs should be calling to discuss trades is the Jacksonville Jaguars. Jacksonville made the decision in-season to extend Jakobi Meyers, even with two recent first-round picks at the position, including last year’s second-overall pick, Travis Hunter.

Parker Washington and Brian Thomas Jr. would be extremely interesting trade options for Kansas City. It would be interesting to know if the Chiefs’ second-round pick would be enticing enough to strike a deal.

The Draft​


This feels like the most realistic path for Kansas City to solve the wide receiver quandary. There appear to be three wide receivers worthy of a top-10 selection this year:

  • Makai Lemon, USC
  • Carnell Tate, Ohio State
  • Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State

Each would immediately serve as a go-to weapon in the Chiefs’ offense — but the depth of this receiver class goes beyond the top 10 picks. Daniel Jeremiah of NFL.com has 11 wide receivers ranked among his initial top 50 prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft, including:

  • Denzel Boston, Washington
  • KC Concepcion, Texas A&M
  • Antonio Williams, Clemson
  • Chris Brazzell II, Tennessee
  • Malachi Fields, Notre Dame
  • Deion Burks, Oklahoma
  • Zachariah Branch, Georgia
  • Chris Bell, Louisville

That’s a long list of playmakers who could be available to the Chiefs — but the proper value in selecting them could come from trading cornerback Trent McDuffie for a late first-round selection, or just at 40th overall.

The bottom line


Fixing this wide receiver problem won’t be easy. It’s going to require significant investment. There are multiple paths Veach could go, and his ultimate choice will have a trickle-down effect on what he can do to fix other positions.

This wasn’t supposed to be necessary. Rice and Worthy were expected to be the future, but Rice has solidified mistrust from the Chiefs, who know a move needs to be made.

For now, we wait.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans.../194624/how-can-chiefs-fix-wide-receiver-woes
 
Andy Reid details DeMarco Murray’s choice to join Chiefs’ staff

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NORMAN, OKLAHOMA - AUGUST 30: Running backs coach DeMarco Murray of the Oklahoma Sooners directs his players before a game against the Illinois State Redbirds at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium on August 30, 2025 in Norman, Oklahoma. Oklahoma won 35-3. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Earlier this month, the Kansas City Chiefs hired DeMarco Murray as running backs coach. The former first-team All-Pro and 2014’s NFL rushing yards leader previously held the same position at Oklahoma, his alma mater.

Head coach Andy Reid discussed the new coaching staff addition when he spoke to reporters on Friday. He sees Murray’s six-year tenure as Oklahoma’s running backs coach speaking for itself.

“We know DeMarco as the football player,” remarked Reid, “the great football player that he was. DeMarco has been at the University of Oklahoma. He did a nice job there for six years and had some good running backs. I just thought him coming in, in that position, there would be a strength to that. Not only from an experience standpoint, but also the way he goes about teaching things.”

Reid revealed that Murray wanted to jump from the college to the pro sidelines. The opportunity to work under offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy, who cut his coaching teeth as a running backs coach at Colorado and UCLA, should prove a great fit for Murray’s introduction to the NFL.

“[Murray] was doing well there [at Oklahoma],” observed Reid. “He could’ve stayed there, he was a legend there, so he could’ve stayed there forever probably. He wanted to get in the National Football League, he wanted to be here and learn. Hiring Eric Bieniemy, I think is a big thing because if Eric’s coaching the running backs, he is the best running backs coach in the NFL. He had an opportunity to go back and do that again last year, and so we hire him here as the offensive coordinator. Well, if I’m a running backs coach, what a great opportunity to learn, there’s nobody better to learn from than Eric for that particular spot.”

With no previous history with Reid, Murray could be considered a surprise hire. While there were no obvious connections with Kansas City’s staff, Reid revealed the history with Bieniemy dates to the early 2000s — when Murray was a senior at Bishop Gorman High School in Las Vegas. Bieniemy was then UCLA’s recruiting coordinator (on top of his running backs coach duties) and hoped to make the star running back a Bruin. Ultimately, Murray committed to Oklahoma.

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With the Chiefs choosing Murray over other candidates, the two have a new chance for success together.

“Eric recruited him out of high school,” Reid noted, “so they’ve known each other for a number of years. That was another piece of it. I always look to see who works well together and anticipate who I think will work well together. I wanted to bring a young guy in that was ambitious to learn, and I thought DeMarco did a heck of a job. We talked to a lot of running backs coaches, and I just thought this was a pretty good fit.”

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ails-demarco-murrays-choice-join-chiefs-staff
 
Chiefs release defensive end Mike Danna after six seasons

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KANSAS CITY, MO - DECEMBER 26: Kansas City Chiefs defensive end Michael Danna (51) signs autographs for fans after an NFL game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Kansas City Chiefs on Dec 26, 2021 at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, MO. (Photo by Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

On Monday afternoon, the Kansas City Chiefs announced the release of defensive end Mike Danna with a simple message to say farewell.

Two-time Super Bowl champ 🫡 Thanks for everything, @M_Danna4! pic.twitter.com/GITplQiPdD

— Kansas City Chiefs (@Chiefs) February 23, 2026

Danna will become a free agent after six seasons with the Chiefs, which featured four AFC Titles and two Super Bowl victories. He will not finish out the three-year contract he signed after his rookie deal expired, and will be looking for an opportunity elsewhere at 29 years old.

This move has a significant financial note: it will save the team nearly $9 million against the cap. Unfortunately, Danna’s role has evolved into one that does not justify that cost, according to this move by Chiefs’ general manager Brett Veach.

Kansas City drafted Danna in the fifth round of the 2020 NFL Draft, and he was an immediate contributor despite not meeting the physical standards most defensive ends do under defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. He only started seven games over his first three seasons, but tallied 10.5 sacks, 10 tackles for loss, and four forced fumbles in that stretch as a rotational player.

In 2023, Danna started every game, including all four postseason matches that culminated in the dynasty’s third championship. In that regular season, he set current career-high marks in tackles (50), sacks (6.5), tackles for loss (7), quarterback hits (13) and passes defended (3).

That spring, he re-signed with the Chiefs, but was unable to build off that breakout year. He has dealt with injuries that have forced him to miss six games over the last two years, but it became clear that a younger, less expensive player should be occupying the role Danna had in the defensive rotation.

He was an easy player to root for, and there’s little doubt Chiefs Kingdom will remember him fondly as he looks for a new home before his seventh NFL season.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...se-defensive-end-mike-danna-after-six-seasons
 
Chiefs’ Brett Veach prepared for Travis Kelce’s decision either way

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GLENDALE, ARIZONA - AUGUST 9: Tightend Travis Kelce #87 of the Kansas City Chiefs watches his teammates in action on the field from the sidelines during the first half of the NFL Preseason 2025 game between Kansas City Chiefs and Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium on August 9, 2025 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Bruce Yeung/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With the NFL Scouting Combine underway, the Kansas City Chiefs’ front office is busy working on ways to free up cap space and be aggressive in improving the roster.

General manager Brett Veach already made one transaction towards that goal by releasing defensive end Mike Danna on Monday. It was one of a few obvious steps in the direction of clarity, but that endpoint may be impossible without knowledge of tight end and free agent Travis Kelce’s status for the 2026 season.

Last Friday, head coach Andy Reid told local media that there has been communication between the two sides. On Tuesday morning, Veach met with reporters at the Combine in Indianapolis and shared how the organization. has progressed with respect to Kelce’s decision.

“I think we’ve kind of taken a different approach with Travis in the sense that I think we’ve kind of prepared for either scenario,” Veach said. “Coach had mentioned on Friday [that] he’s had great dialogue with Travis on our end, myself, (assistant general manager) Chris Shea, Travis’ crew, we’ve had some good dialogue there, and I’m sure we’re going to see him here just like we will all the other players’ agents and we’ll continue that dialogue. Travis is the best, he’s an icon, hopefully he comes back and we’ll just kind of let that process play out.”

Brett Veach on Travis Kelce’s future: “We’re prepared for either scenario.”

Veach said the Chiefs are hoping Kelce returns for Year 14. pic.twitter.com/diqUAhCyyI

— Nate Taylor (@ByNateTaylor) February 24, 2026

Two days into the NFL’s annual gathering of team decision makers, and Veach is unsure if one of the offense’s cornerstone players is coming back. There are fewer than two weeks until the legal tampering period opens for free agency, and the team can only straddle the fence without a definitive answer for so long.

“It’s not your typical 27-year-old first time in free agency,” Veach continued. “Travis has done everything, he has accomplished everything, he’s about to get married, he has a lot going on… You need some sort of deadline, timeline, but at the same time, it’s Travis Kelce, so we’re going to just continue to have positive dialogue and see where this thing ends.”

“We’re trying to position ourselves that either way, we have a plan moving forward.”

With nearly two months since he played in the season finale, Kelce has yet to commit to one or the other: football or retirement. The longer he mulls it over, the more stress it puts on Veach and the franchise as it works on revamping the offense, from the coaching staff to the necessary positions.

Veach subtly expressed the need for an idea of when Kelce will commit to one future or the other; that could motivate the legendary tight end to make up his mind soon.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ch-prepared-travis-kelces-decision-either-way
 
Chad O’Shea wants Chiefs receivers to be ‘dependable’ and ‘detailed’

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Cleveland Browns wide receivers coach Chad O’Shea, left, works with wide receiver Jerry Jeudy (3) and wide receiver Diontae Johnson (16) during NFL training camp at CrossCountry Mortgage Campus, Friday, July 25, 2025, in Berea, Ohio. | Jeff Lange / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The wide receivers of the Kansas City Chiefs will be led by a new position coach in 2026: Chad O’Shea, who has 18 years of experience coaching NFL receivers. He joined the Chiefs’ staff after six years with the Cleveland Browns and 10 years with the New England Patriots, bringing the offense experience outside of head coach Andy Reid’s philosophy.

It’s exactly what many in Chiefs Kingdom have clamored for, but now the focus is on making sure O’Shea’s input assimilates with Kansas City’s culture and scheme. That’s what he told Voice of the Chiefs Mitch Holthus and senior team reporter Matt McMullen on the Chiefs’ YouTube channel last week.

“The first thing, we have to be aligned with what coach Reid wants and his vision for the football team,” O’Shea said. “We do that in doing our job, being dependable and being detailed. I’ll use those words over and over. Those are going to be words that you’re going to hear me speak a lot here in Kansas City.”

O’Shea will coach a group of receivers that has talent on paper: Xavier Worthy is a first-round pick entering his third season, and Rashee Rice proved something with 938 yards and seven touchdowns as a rookie second-round pick, but injuries and a suspension have limited his production since.

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It could be argued that someone like Worthy — especially on deep passes — has yet to develop a feel for the little things, such as sideline awareness or on-the-fly route adjustments. Those factors are very important to O’Shea.

“I value, at the receiver position, is being detailed in everything we do,” O’Shea declared. “I think sometimes that can become more important than a 40 time or some of the things that are measurable physical, the intangibles of the receiver position… being able to have a dropped pass, and then get back in the huddle and be persistent enough to be able to be there for your team on the next play.”

He will play a part in helping those players, and others, reach their individual potentials — but that will start with a mentality to do whatever it takes to get the organization back to its contending ways.

“The identity we want in our receivers is we’re going to put the team first in everything that we do, it starts with that,” O’Shea said. “If we can do that, we can do everything on an individual-goal basis that we need to, but it’s going to start with putting the team first.”

What does that look like? O’Shea laid out his straightforward mindset.

“You’re going to have a group that’s going to be able to play fast from the line of scrimmage and be able to block and compete in the run game,” O’Shea told Holthus and McMullen.

“I keep it real simple in my teaching: get open, catch the ball and compete in the run game. If you do those three things, we stand a chance to win at the receiver position.”

Of course, getting open is easier said than done. When opponents have deployed man coverage against the Chiefs, the receiving corps has struggled to create separation and make themselves available for a pass.

That’s life in the NFL, and O’Shea believes he can help Kansas City and quarterback Patrick Mahomes have more success when the targeted receiver is tightly covered.

“It’s so important that we are able to function in those high-traffic areas; I call them contested catches and traffic catches,” O’Shea explained. “Traffic-type throws where there is going to be some sort of distraction because the defender is going to be close to you, or our ability to make a play in a contested area. I do think you can improve in those areas. It’s something we can improve on daily.”

“I have a plan in place for our players when we get started in the spring,” O’Shea continued. “Whether it’s drill work, film work [or] teaching from my experience with these past players I’ve been fortunate enough to be around. We’re going to get started on that, and I do think it’s an area you can improve and we’ll have to be good in those areas, because in our division, there are very competitive coverage players.”

With the Denver Broncos employing one of the league’s best cornerbacks in Pat Surtain II and the Los Angeles Chargers proving to be an elite coverage unit last year, O’Shea’s point lands. The receiving unit needs to be tougher at the catch point; that was clear since last season, but it will be a focal point of O’Shea’s teachings.

Could it also influence the style of receivers the Chiefs invest in through free agency or the draft? It won’t be too long until we find out.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...hiefs-receivers-to-be-dependable-and-detailed
 
Chiefs’ Brett Veach breaks down draft philosophy at NFL Combine

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INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - FEBRUARY 25: General manager Brett Veach of the Kansas City Chiefs speaks at the podium during the 2025 NFL Combine at the Indiana Convention Center on February 25, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

As the Kansas City Chiefs shift fully into offseason mode, general manager Brett Veach is in unfamiliar territory with a top-10 pick. After years of selecting near the bottom of the first round, often at No. 31 or No. 32 following deep playoff runs, Kansas City now finds itself at No. 9.

Veach admitted the perspective feels different when he met with reporters at the NFL Scouting Combine on Tuesday.

“It’s funny, you know, every year when we were picking 31, 32, I’d always say, man, if we were just at 24 or 25, we’d be exactly where we wanna be,” Veach said. “And now we’re at nine, I’m like, man, if we were just at four or five, we’d be exactly where we wanna be.”

For the head of the Chiefs’ front office, the draft remains an exercise in patience. Unless a team holds the first overall selection, nothing about the process can be counted on.

“I think every GM kind of has that mindset where, you know, unless you have the first pick, there’s a certain element that you can’t control, and you have to let the dominoes fall,” he added.

Draft board​


Still, Veach is “excited” about the opportunity — not just at No. 9, but throughout the first two days. He pointed specifically to improved flexibility in the second and third rounds — something Kansas City hasn’t often enjoyed while drafting at the end of each round.

“It’s not just the first round,” Veach explained. “I think we have an opportunity to really capitalize here and add a lot of talent throughout the course of the draft weekend.”

Chiefs GM Brett Veach on what it means to draft in the Top 10 for a change.#ChiefsKingdom pic.twitter.com/4s202iwwNy

— The Draft Network (@TheDraftNetwork) February 24, 2026

Beyond positioning, Veach addressed another factor reshaping roster construction: the impact of NIL in college football and how it is altering the age and profile of draft prospects. When underclassmen’s decision deadlines passed, Kansas City adjusted its draft strategy significantly.

“I believe we moved over 25 guys off our board that we had top 75, top 100,” he stated. “So it’s really impacted, I think, the draft, and then you’re getting older, older prospects as you go on.”

According to Veach, that shift has changed the type of player traditionally available in the middle rounds.

“Typically, the second and third round would be those guys that maybe they didn’t play a lot, but they were young,” he said. “Well, now these guys are just bouncing and getting paid by another school and getting paid and playing.”

The result, he acknowledged, is a smaller pool of younger developmental prospects.

“You’re getting a little bit more already finished product,” Veach continued. “And so that’s challenging, but I think it’s, again, what we have to adapt to.”

Positional value​


That adaptation also extends to how Kansas City balances draft strategy with free agency — particularly when evaluating positional value.

“There’s the old school… you’re always gonna O-line, D-line,” Veach said. “Those positional values are there; you see them in free agency.”

At the same time, he pointed out that some of the top prospects in this class play positions traditionally viewed as less premium.

“Arguably, some of the best players in this draft are maybe at non-premium positions,” Veach observed. “Those are really, really good players. It’s hard to find faults with their tape.”

The challenge lies in long-term roster construction and positional scarcity.

“Some of those more premium positions, interior D-line, edge rushers, you know, they’re hard to find,” he explained. “And with those guys, the problem with those guys is they’re hard to find, and then they don’t really become available in free agency.”

Conversely, certain positions may be easier to address on the open market.

“Some of those other positions, they’re good players, you’ll probably eventually get a chance to get some of those positions in free agency,” Veach added.

The bottom line​


Ultimately, he made clear that the guiding principle remains unchanged despite a shifting draft landscape.

“At the end of the day, I think, is when a guy is going to come in here and be a great contributor on the field, off the field,” Veach said, “stick to that old mantra, take the best player available.”

For a franchise navigating an uncommon draft position while adapting to a rapidly evolving college system, the objective remains steady: maximize value, account for positional scarcity and continue building a roster capable of returning to contention.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...tt-veach-breaks-down-draft-philosophy-combine
 
Chiefs met with Rueben Bain Jr. and more defensive linemen at Combine

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Dec 31, 2025; Arlington, TX, USA; Miami Hurricanes defensive lineman Rueben Bain Jr. (4) rushes the line during the 2025 Cotton Bowl and quarterfinal game of the College Football Playoff at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The NFL Scouting Combine is underway, and the Kansas City Chiefs have kept busy. General manager Brett Veach spoke to reporters yesterday about free agency, the draft and how he will build the Chiefs’ 2026 roster.

The process starts with researching the 2026 NFL Draft class and meeting with prospects as the football world is gathered in Indianapolis this week. On Wednesday, it was revealed that the Chiefs are doing homework on the defensive line class, including a meeting with one of the top players.

Rueben Bain Jr on his meeting with the Chiefs: “I felt like I had a real strong interview.” pic.twitter.com/MyR0PFR3Tu

— Sam McDowell (@SamMcDowell11) February 25, 2026

Miami defensive end Rueben Bain Jr. revealed to the pool of reporters that he has met with the Chiefs. According to Sam McDowell of the Kansas City Star, Bain felt like “he had a real strong interview.”

He was one of six defensive line prospects to reveal their meeting with Kansas City on Wednesday, along with David Bailey of Texas Tech, Dominique Orange of Iowa State, Anthony Lucas of USC, Keldric Faulk of Auburn and Dani Denis-Sutton from Penn State.

The Arrowhead Pride staff’s analysis of all will be coming soon, but Bain is one of the most well-known prospects to Chiefs Kingdom in this draft cycle. Through one month of tracking data from offseason mock drafts, Bain was the second-most often picked player for Kansas City, behind running back Jeremiyah Love of Notre Dame.

Bain is one of the biggest focus points among the top players at this year’s Combine. He is ranked sixth by The Athletic’s consensus big board, but questions about his measurements — specifically his arm length — are being asked by many in the draft community. The results that come out on Thursday will be intriguing in terms of how they will affect his draft stock.

Rueben Bain said the biggest misconception about his game is his arm length. He’s not sure why that’s been the focus, but he said teams haven’t expressed that concern to him. pic.twitter.com/WlbW5irlHy

— Matthew Paras (@Matthew_Paras) February 25, 2026

However, Bain doesn’t sound concerned, nor do the teams he has spoken to, about the narrative that has surrounded him since draft season kicked off. He was also quoted as saying the team that selects him “will get the best player in the draft.”

My analysis


Bain is a clear match with the Chiefs’ scheme under defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. He is a powerful player, whether it’s violently shedding blocks or overwhelming pass blockers. He is certainly the edge-setting, pocket-crushing edge defender that Spagnuolo has valued in a three-down starter at defensive end.

After it felt like he wouldn't make it to 9 after an awesome CFP run, Rueben Bain Jr. is becoming a more realistic option for the #Chiefs at 9

Powerful hands. Fits edge-setting, pocket-crushing mold Spags desires even without overwhelming length pic.twitter.com/A1uWlGlBAf

— Ron Kopp Jr (@RonOnChiefs) February 4, 2026

In these clips, the power in his hands is showcased. He controls blocks off the line and has the strength to suddenly swim or redirect his hands as he maintains pressure towards the pocket. His stature gives him natural leverage on the bull rush, and he will get an offensive tackle rolling back on skates if they don’t bring legitimate momentum to the block engagement.

After it felt like he wouldn't make it to 9 after an awesome CFP run, Rueben Bain Jr. is becoming a more realistic option for the #Chiefs at 9

Powerful hands. Fits edge-setting, pocket-crushing mold Spags desires even without overwhelming length pic.twitter.com/A1uWlGlBAf

— Ron Kopp Jr (@RonOnChiefs) February 4, 2026

With his well-known advantage of power, Bain can set up his outside rushes for success, but he executes with impressively efficient technique to turn the corner quickly. He easily swats away blockers’ hands as he approaches the edge, but he also uses the underwhelming height to seamlessly dip into the back of the pocket, even if the tackle is still engaged with half of him.

Bain did have the benefit of playing with another projected 1st-round pick: Akheem Mesidor

Their impact together really pops at the finish of the season-opening W over Notre Dame pic.twitter.com/aiN07BcJyg

— Ron Kopp Jr (@RonOnChiefs) February 4, 2026

Bain is on the attack throughout a game, but these plays were the final two snaps of Miami’s win over Notre Dame to start the 2025 season. On the first play, he paces outside before using a “hump” move that the late, Hall of Fame NFL defensive lineman Reggie White made famous in his heyday.

He is more of the clean-up crew on the second sack, but it’s clear he has a strong feel for how to work an offensive tackle one-on-one in an obvious passing situation like the two-minute drill or a third and long.

It could be wishful thinking of the mock drafts to continuously have him available at the ninth-overall pick, but there’s a reason he rarely slips past that for many in draft media. Bain would be a great fit with the Chiefs, so it makes sense the team took the time to meet with him.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...eben-bain-jr-2-more-defensive-linemen-combine
 
Chiefs Draft: KC native Domonique Orange of Iowa State met with Chiefs

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FORT WORTH, TEXAS - NOVEMBER 8: Jordyn Bailey #4 of the TCU Horned Frogs is wrapped up by Domonique Orange #95 of the Iowa State Cyclones during the first half at Amon G. Carter Stadium on November 8, 2025 in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo by Ron Jenkins/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The NFL Scouting Combine is in full swing in Indianapolis, Indiana, which means every team in the NFL is setting up both formal and informal meetings with players and agents.

In all honesty, this is probably one of my favorite parts of the offseason. It’s the first time that we get a glimpse at what players your team might have their eyes on, and who the front office is vetting. While the team may have met with some of these guys at all-star games like the Senior Bowl, for many of this draft class’s top prospects, this might be the first opportunity to meet representatives of the team in person.

Kansas City Chiefs general manager Brett Veach spoke to reporters earlier this week about the team’s offseason plans, including the draft and free agency. As always, Veach spoke about the value of finding guys in the trenches, and to that point, the Chiefs have met with a lot of this year’s top defensive linemen — including Iowa State nose tackle Dominique Orange.

A big crowd today for Dom Orange, North KC grad

Orange said he’s talked with the Chiefs. (Q from @mickshaffer). pic.twitter.com/CbkcoktL2Y

— Sam McDowell (@SamMcDowell11) February 25, 2026

Background​


On Thursday morning at the Combine, Orange measured 6 feet 2 inches tall and 322 pounds. His arm length was measured to be 33 3/8 inches and he showed off 10 1/4-inch hands.

The 21-year-old Orange, who is known to fans by the nickname ‘Big Citrus,’ is a Kansas City native who attended North Kansas City High School in Kansas City, Missouri. Coming out of high school in the class of 2022, the Hornet alumnus was a three-star recruit, the 99th-ranked defensive lineman nationally and the 16th-ranked player in the state of Missouri. Despite receiving offers from Power-5 schools like Ohio State, Missouri, Michigan, Oregon, Texas, and Georgia, Orange opted to play at Iowa State University.

An interesting note to point out about Orange, and something to keep an eye on when making draft predictions, is that he was recruited to Iowa State by the current Los Angeles Rams wunderkind offensive coordinator Nate Scheelhaase — another native of Kansas City who graduated from Rockhurst High School.

In 2025, Orange earned third-team All-Big 12 honors and was on the Academic All-Big 12 team in 2024.

My analysis​


Orange is a traditional nose tackle, a body eater that can take on a double team and stand his ground. He shows a good ability to shed blocks while carrying his enormous frame well. He has pretty good agility and speed for being so massive as well.

He shows consistent effort on the line and does not take plays off. He is also a dog in pursuit and takes good angles to track guys down from behind or cut them off on the boundary, and is an overall menace to deal with in the run game.

Iowa State DT Domonique Orange. Big Citrus. Big ol' Citrus. I love him. pic.twitter.com/Git9fykQwu

— Benjamin Solak (@BenjaminSolak) February 25, 2026

As you can see in the clip above, Orange earns his nickname of “Big Citrus.” He is one of the physically strongest players in this draft and maintains good pad level at the point of contact to maintain forward momentum and leverage against the center.

Iowa St NT Domonique Orange (6-4, 325) need not get lost as the most true NT in a stacked class

Career snap % at NT:
🍊73%
Kayden McDonald 60%
Tim Keenan III 42%

🍊650 squat, 450 bench, 34” vert

‘23-‘25 snaps: 945 A-Gap, 233 B-Gap, 123 over OT, 50 outside OT, 5 off ball… https://t.co/aDMBbwNe4G pic.twitter.com/swXO0cqagV

— Clint Goss (@NFLDraftDome) February 25, 2026

Iowa State plays a lot of odd fronts (three down linemen), and Orange lined up at nose tackle for 74% of his snaps during his college career.

By default, there won’t be a ton of pass-rushing production out of that player profile. In an odd front, the primary job of the nose tackle is to collapse the pocket and take up the attention of as many linemen as possible. This prevents the quarterback from stepping up to make a throw, instead forcing a roll out to create favorable matchups for defensive ends and linebackers rushing the passer. Orange excels here and uses his swim move and bull rush to great effect.

His numbers may not reflect it, he had only one sack in college, but Orange is definitely a factor offensive coordinators have to account for regardless of their play call.

There is one part of Orange’s game that often goes unnoticed: he excels at getting across the face of the center and guards, setting up stunts so defensive ends and linebackers can loop around and attack through the vacated space inside.

Fit with the Chiefs​


Fit: Very high

Round grade: Second or Third

Orange would be an immediate upgrade over the two veterans that have manned the nose tackle spot for years: Mike Pennel and Derrick Nnadi; he would also be the best run-stuffing defensive lineman the Chiefs have had in recent history.

That being said, Kansas City’s lack of pass rushers must be considered here too. If you want to earn the right to rush the quarterback on third and long, you have to stop the offense on early downs first; Orange helps you do that. Spending pick 74 on a guy like this would be a likable outcome.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...fs-meet-iowa-state-domonique-orange-kc-native
 
Chiefs Draft: Arm length becoming hot topic for defensive line class

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COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS - NOVEMBER 15: Cashius Howell #9 of the Texas A&M Aggies rushes the quarterback in the second half of a game against the South Carolina Gamecocks at Kyle Field on November 15, 2025 in College Station, Texas. (Photo by Joe Buvid/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images) | ISI Photos via Getty Images

When football fans imagine an NFL defensive lineman, it’s a massive, hulking player that is somehow cut like a Greek God and moves faster than 95% of human beings with their combination of height and weight.

Offensive linemen are rare athletes in their own respect, but there’s another level of special, all-encompassing athleticism needed to be a top defensive lineman. Quick-twitch muscles are needed to fire off the ball, upper-body and core strength help get off blocks, lower-body power is necessary to maintain positioning on the line of scrimmage and flexibility is almost a prerequisite for all pass rushers.

Reminder when looking at Edges in this year's class; if you look at the top 10 Edges in pressures every year for the last decade, these were the average measurables.

6'3"
262lbs
33 and 3/8" arms
1.63 10-yd
7.02 3-cone
35" vert
120" broad
8.77 RAS

It's power rushers all day.

— Brett Kollmann (@BrettKollmann) February 24, 2026

Again, all this is packaged in a player big enough to collide with 320-pound blockers on each snap. It feels like the NFL, and the Kansas City Chiefs, will prioritize long-limbed defensive linemen when building the trenches. The longer and more athletic a defensive lineman is — regardless of on-field production — the more likely an NFL team will invest significant capital.

That’s what makes the 2026 NFL Draft’s defensive line class so interesting.

At 30 7/8" and 30 1/4" arm length, Rueben Bain and Cashius Howell would have the shortest arms for an EDGE rusher drafted in the first round since at least 1999.

— Matt Miller (@nfldraftscout) February 26, 2026

On Thursday, the defensive linemen attending the NFL Scouting Combine were measured to piece together a physical profile. Two edge-rushing prospects — both ranked within the top 21 players on The Athletic’s consensus big board — made headlines with historic results. Rueben Bain Jr. from Miami and Cashius Howell from Texas A&M each registered arm length shorter than 31 inches.

Each would be the shortest-armed defensive lineman picked on Day 1 since 1999, which speaks to the lack of precedent. In the Mockdraftable database, there are only three “edge rushers” who had arms shorter than the 31-inch benchmark:

  • Nate Williams, Ohio State, Class of 2013
  • Sutton Smith, Northern Illinois, Class of 2019
  • Tyree Johnson, Texas A&M, Class of 2022

There are zero career sacks in the NFL between these three players. Smith, a sixth-round pick, was the only one to see regular-season action — and registered just one tackle over eight games.

Among edge defenders with up to 31-1/2 inch arms, the success stories are former Cincinnati Bengals edge rusher Carl Lawson (32 career sacks) and Missouri alum, former Arizona Cardinals defensive lineman Markus Golden (51 career sacks). Current Pittsburgh Steelers defensive lineman Dean Lowry (16.5 sacks) has sustained an NFL role over nine seasons after recording 31-inch arms at the 2016 Combine.

The list is taken all the way up to 32 inches, and the list remains thin on names of note — although Chiefs’ defensive end Ashton Gillotte did record 31 7/8-inch arms last year — but the impact players begin popping up after that. Bengals edge rusher Trey Hendrickson, Denver Broncos outside linebacker Jonathan Cooper and Detroit Lions defensive end Aidan Hutchinson all come up before looking past 32 1/8 inches.

That’s exactly why the arm length of Bain and Howell — a graduate of Rockhurst High School in Kansas City — has become a hot topic. With so many years of data to understand what to look for in draft prospects, the outliers tend to feel like riskier picks, regardless of college production.

Some context on measurements taken throughout the week of the combine: measurements sometimes can vary for players depending on who they are taken by. To that end, at least two NFL teams that measured Rueben Bain, Jr. today had his arms at north of 32”. https://t.co/4HhpIM2luR

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) February 26, 2026

After 7.5 sacks and 12.5 tackles for loss as a true freshman at Miami, Bain’s career statistics over three seasons totaled 20.5 sacks and 33.5 tackles for loss. He stood out during the College Football Playoff as one of the most impactful, disruptive defenders on the field in any game.

In 2025, Howell earned All-American honors and the award for SEC Defensive Player of the Year by earning 11.5 sacks and 14 tackles for loss, along with six defended passes. Over his final three collegiate seasons — one being at Bowling Green — Howell accumulated 24 sacks and 33 tackles for loss with 14 passes defended.

Production is a vital factor in a successful transition from college pass rush to the NFL. The recent exceptions have been Los Angeles Chargers’ outside linebacker Odafe Oweh — who infamously registered zero sacks during his final season at Penn State — and Danielle Hunter, an All-Pro edge rusher for the Houston Texans who had just 4.5 career sacks at LSU.

So Bain and Howell will be fascinating data points in the history of the draft process. Each has the production profile to back up Day 1 hype, but the arm-length concerns could be loud enough to relatively hurt the draft stock of both players.

If arm-length concerns about a DE are about not being able to get into an OL’s chest as easy and control a block…

Bain overcomes it with Mike Tyson-power hands plus a unique stature that naturally gives him great leverage & low pad level. Also turns the corner effortlessly https://t.co/V5YsvW7E0Q

— Ron Kopp Jr (@RonOnChiefs) February 26, 2026

In Bain’s case, it could diminish the feeling he is a lock for the top 10 — but the level of dominance Bain has had over opposing offensive linemen is hard to overlook. He has incredibly powerful hands that overwhelm blockers regardless of who engages first. At 6 feet 2 inches tall and 263 pounds measured, he has a unique stature that naturally gives him advantageous pad level and leverage against the typical offensive tackle.

The powerful profile of Bain may allow him to overcome the lack of length, but Howell has succeeded with speed moreso than power. At the Combine, he measured at 6 feet 2.5 inches tall and 253 pounds. Howell will need to show off in the athletic testing to maintain the high-profile status he had entering the week.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...ength-becoming-hot-topic-defensive-line-class
 
Chiefs Draft: Arizona safety Genesis Smith met with KC at Combine

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TUCSON, ARIZONA - SEPTEMBER 12: Defensive back Genesis Smith #12 of the Arizona Wildcats defends a pass during the first quarter against the Kansas State Wildcats at Arizona Stadium on September 12, 2025 in Tucson, Arizona. (Photo by Patrick Mulligan/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Day 2 of interviews at the NFL Scouting Combine occurred on Thursday in Indianapolis. Teams and reporters got a chance to meet with defensive backs and tight ends in the 2026 draft class. Among some of the bigger names were projected first-round safety talents like Ohio State’s Caleb Down and Oregon’s Dillon Thieneman.

However, one name that did stick out from the list that revealed meetings with the Kansas City Chiefs this week: Arizona Wildcats safety Genisis Smith, who confirmed to reporters that he had a formal meeting with Kansas City.

Arizona S Genesis Smith says he fractured his foot against Oklahoma State but played through it all year. He’ll be participating in everything this week except the 40.

Mentioned he had a formal meeting with the Chiefs pic.twitter.com/TVQvlWtgCH

— Daniel Harms (@InHarmsWay19) February 26, 2026

Background​


Smith was a three-star recruit coming out of Chandler, Arizona, where he attended Hamilton High School. He was the 53rd-ranked safety in the 2023 recruiting class and the eleventh overall athlete in the state of Arizona. During his recruiting process, Smith received offers from Arizona State, Washington and Iowa State, among others, but ultimately chose to be a Wildcat.

Smith was recruited by current Arizona safeties coach Chuck Cecil, who you may remember was once the Tennessee Titans‘ defensive coordinator from 2009-2011.

Smith ran track in high school, where he competed in the 4×400 relay, the high jump (personal best of 6 feet 2 inches) and the long jump, (personal best of 21 feet 1 inch).

He is also very active in his community: he founded the Genesis Smith Foundation while he was at Arizona, whose mission is:

The Genesis Smith Foundation intertwines the unifying and transformative power of sports with community-driven initiatives that prioritize mentorship, accessibility, and holistic support. By bridging critical resources with safe spaces for growth, we offer a hand up, not a hand out—empowering youth and families to overcome challenges, cultivate resilience, and embrace their fullest potential. In doing so, we inspire a ripple effect of change, fostering interconnected communities rooted in confidence, compassion, and equity—communities resolutely committed to the boundless pursuit of opportunity, inclusion, and shared growth.

My analysis​


Smith is a 6-foot-2, 202-pound, long-limbed safety with range and ball-hawking skills; he mentally processes the game well and uses it to his advantage more than his athleticism. He is not slow by any means, but he can struggle to change direction and his footwork can be sloppy at times.

That being said, he has fluid hips and can flip them without losing momentum. Plus, he tracks deep balls well and does not panic at the catch point. He is a smart player, and he is rarely out of place early in the down, but he can struggle to hang with smaller receivers when the play is extended.

Range and football IQ like this are why I have Arizona S Genesis Smith as a top 30 player in this class pic.twitter.com/XH8pH30del

— Jack Brentnall (@Jack_Brentnall) February 2, 2026

Smith shows a good motor and rallies to the football. He is a willing tackler in the run game, but he does need to work on his tackling form; he can fail to wrap guys up from time to time, which led to him having 18 missed tackles last season, according to Pro Football Focus.

He profiles as the movable chess piece that Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo likes to have on his defense. In 2025, Smith played 319 snaps on or near the line of scrimmage, compared to 451 snaps aligned deep.

Genesis Smith (6’2 202) Arizona

+ Good size and length
+ 88.5 coverage grade in 2025
+ Capable in man coverage
+ Gets to top speed quickly
+ Over 1,700 career snaps played
+ Team leader and captain
+ Ball tracking
+ Quick to trigger downhill

– Inconsistent tackling technique… pic.twitter.com/0wGwEnxTKF

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) January 26, 2026

Smith is a glue guy in the locker room and a team captain. While his stats don’t jump off the page — like five interceptions over his entire college career — part of that is because, since he has such a mastery of the playbook, and rarely blows his assignment, quarterbacks rarely throw his way. Out of 382 coverage snaps last season, Smith was targeted just 23 times.

Unlike Kansas City, Arizona does not send safeties on blitzes a lot — but based on his tape, it’s not hard to envision that Smith has the smarts, savvy and size to be effective in that role for Spags.

Fit with the Chiefs​


Fit: Very High

Round grade: Late-third or fourth round

With Bryan Cook and Mike Edwards both hitting free agency, the safety position is a need for the Chiefs. However, given the other needs on this roster, it’s easy to see general manager Brett Veach being hesitant to spend a top-100 pick on a safety. Smith could be a good value in the middle rounds and would be an instant upgrade near the line of scrimmage over the current players fitting into that role for Kansas City.

When you watch Smith’s tape, you notice that he and Jaden Hicks have a lot in common in the way they play football. That being said, I believe Smith’s upside might be a little higher than Hicks.

Sagnuolo’s defense is at its best when he has a smart and hard-nosed safety roaming the secondary, and Smith fits that bill to a T. More than being a pretty good football player, he is a great fit for what the Chiefs want to do on defense.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...t-arizona-safety-genesis-smith-met-kc-combine
 
Combine Week ‘Reacts’ poll: Chiefs’ fans want to sign a running back

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JACKSONVILLE, FL - JANUARY 11: Travis Etienne Jr. #1 of the Jacksonville Jaguars runs with the ball during the AFC Wildcard Playoff game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Buffalo Bills on January 11, 2026 at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fl. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Each week, we send out questions to the most plugged-in Kansas City Chiefs fans. You can see all of the recent survey results here.

And be sure to check out
FanDuel Sportsbook, the official sportsbook partner of SB Nation.


Chiefs fans want an established back


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The votes tallied among Chiefs fans show that running back is on everyone’s mind — and not just Notre Dame star Jeremiyah Love. If Kansas City makes a significant addition to the backfield before the draft, don’t expect Love to be the pick at No. 9.


Offense or Defense in the Draft


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When it comes to the six draft selections Kansas City currently has, the polled Chiefs fans are calling for defense to have young, fresh talent injected into it. Two-thirds of the votes went that direction, while offense may be easier to take care of through free agency.



Click here to see other recent survey results.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/nfl-...results-chiefs-fans-want-running-back-signing
 
NFL sets the 2026 salary cap. Here’s where the Chiefs stand

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INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - FEBRUARY 24: Brett Veach of the Kansas City Chiefs speaks to the media during the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine at Lucas Oil Stadium on February 24, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Lauren Leigh Bacho/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Throughout the offseason, we have known that the Kansas City Chiefs had work to do for compliance with the NFL’s salary cap. However, we did not have a definitive estimate of how much.

On Friday, the league officially set the 2026 limit at $302.1 million per club. This marked a $22 million increase from 2025’s number.

NFL clubs were informed today that the salary cap for the ’26 season will jump $22 million per club to $301.2 million. Add in another $77.6m in benefits & that’s $378.8m per club in player spending. Tremendous growth pic.twitter.com/cQ5Zf3aGVW

— Brian McCarthy (@NFLprguy) February 27, 2026

The official figure is the minimum that the range teams were told in January to expect. The Chiefs — who were estimated to be almost $60 million over the limit at the start of the offseason — likely hoped for the upper limit of $305.7 million.

With slightly less breathing room than hoped, Spotrac currently estimates Kansas City to be about $8.6 million over the cap. All teams must be under the salary cap when the new league year begins on March 11 at 3 p.m. Arrowhead time.

The obvious move for the Chiefs remains a release of right tackle Jawaan Taylor, which would create a net savings of $19.1 million in cap room. When general manager Brett Veach spoke at the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis this week, he suggested the team may also be open to maximum savings via restructuring existing contracts. $22.5 million in breathing room could be singlehandedly created by adjusting defensive tackle Chris Jones’ large 2026 base salary and roster bonus.

Of less interest to Kansas City, the official salary cap number finalizes amounts to franchise and transition tags extended to pending free agents. The Chiefs are unlikely to make the financial commitment to any of their players set for free agency. Fifth-year option numbers for the first round of the 2023 NFL Draft are also now official. Kansas City will undoubtedly decline the $14.5 million cost to lock up defensive end Felix Anudike-Uzomah, who missed the 2025 season with a hamstring injury.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...sets-2026-salary-cap-heres-where-chiefs-stand
 
Chiefs News 2/28: Bryan Cook could ‘break the bank’ in free agency

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JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA - OCTOBER 06: Bryan Cook #6 of the Kansas City Chiefs plays against the Jacksonville Jaguars during the first half of the game at EverBank Stadium on October 06, 2025 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The latest​


8 NFL Free Agents Who Could Break the Bank in 2026 | Bleacher Report

S Bryan Cook

To his credit, while speaking to reporters at the end of last season Chiefs linebacker Nick Bolton said he has seen the growth from Cook over his first four years in the NFL.

“He’s definitely been evolving year to year,” Bolton said. “And this year, he’s obviously taken big steps, just making sure everybody’s on the same page, including me.”

However, like so many players on this list Cook’s next contract may have more to do with the talent (or lack thereof) available at safety than Cook himself. Cook has never had even 90 tackles in a season. His coverage numbers aren’t blowing anyone’s doors off either—his passer rating against of 128.5 in 2025 was actually the second-best of his career.

The logic of giving a player with Cook’s resume over $14 million a season and making him a top-10 safety in terms of average annual salary is…questionable.

Louis Riddick suggests a quarterback trade for the Kansas City Chiefs | Chiefs Wire

The backup quarterback position for the Kansas City Chiefs is a crucial spot, as shown by the impact of not having Patrick Mahomes in past seasons. ESPN’s Louis Riddick suggests the team trade for Indianapolis Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson during a recent ‘Get Up’ appearance.

“No one is going to question Andy Reid. No one is going to question the wisdom of going ahead and sitting behind Patrick Mahomes,” said Riddick. “No one is going to question that at this point, considering they just brought back Eric Bieniemy for the single most important reason, which is: they really needed to instill some accountability on that side of the football. I think that’s exactly what Richardson needs.”

Travis Kelce could reportedly command $15 million per year as ‘studio presence’ | Awful Announcing

That tracks with what we’ve covered here before. Back in January, Marchand assessed Kelce as someone who would only accept a No. 1 job and pegged his range anywhere from $10 to $20 million. The $15 million studio floor is essentially the low end of that range, and it’s for the role Kelce might not even want.

Kelce wants the booth. He said so last July on Bussin’ With the Boys — unprompted and unambiguously — that he grew up mimicking the guys who called games, that he always imagined what it would feel like actually to be one of them. He saw Tom Brady’s $375 million Fox deal and, by his own admission, “everyone saw it.” If he’s going to do this, he wants to call games, not react to them from a set somewhere.

The one thing giving him pause isn’t the workload or the possibility of ending up on sites like Awful Announcing. It’s reading. His SNL hosting stint — which required table reads — was, in his words, “a f*cked situation” for a guy who, by his own description, “can’t really read that well.” Player names, he admitted, would be where he’d “get f*cking ruined” in a live broadcast setting. Butchering a name or two has never stopped anyone from having a long career in this industry, just ask Christopher “Mad Dog” Russo.

Chiefs DT Chris Jones sends message to 2026 NFL Draft prospect who says he models his game after No. 95 and aims to surpass him | A to Z Sports

Speaking to CBS Sports’ Ryan Wilson and former Tennessee Titans GM Ran Carthon at the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine, Banks was asked which NFL players he models his game after. It didn’t take him long to come up with his response.

“Definitely, after Chris Jones, for sure,” Banks said. “The athleticism that he has. How he carries himself. He’s a dog. I feel like we have similar traits. I’m not there all the way yet, but once I reach the higher end of my ceiling, I’ll be able to go out there and do what I do. I definitely feel like I’ll pass him up a little bit.”

“Ya heard that, Chris?” Carthon said. “Chris, you watching? He’s coming for you.”

Well, Chris actually heard it, or rather saw it, and responded with some words of encouragement on X (formerly Twitter).

“Keep at it!” Jones wrote, preceded by two flexing emojis.

Looking at the Chiefs “Reserve/Future” Signees Heading into the 2026 Offseason | The Mothership

WR Andrew Armstrong

The 6-foot-4, 204-pound Armstrong went undrafted in 2025 after leading the SEC in receiving yards (1,140) at Arkansas in 2024, marking the second-best single season in terms of yards and catches (78) in school history. It was a strong follow-up to Armstrong’s initial campaign with the Razorbacks a season prior, which included 56 grabs for 764 yards and five touchdowns.

That overall performance put a bow on an impressive career that began at Texas A&M-Commerce, a Division II school, where Armstrong tallied 77 catches for 1,317 yards and 16 touchdowns between the 2021 and 2022 campaigns.

Around the NFL


NFL salary cap hits milestone at $301.2 million for 2026 | ESPN

The cap has increased 40% in just five years, since it dropped coming off the pandemic-altered 2020 season when few or no fans were allowed to attend games.

The numbers were sent to clubs Friday, and teams must be under the salary cap by March 11, the first day of the new league year.

Rapid growth has been expected since the COVID-19 season, and the biggest year-to-year increase of $31 million came from 2023 to 2024.

The cap dropped to $182 million in 2021 from $198 million going into the pandemic season. The increase has been at least $16 million each year since then, with an average increase of $24 million.

2026 NFL combine: Oregon’s Kenyon Sadiq runs fastest 40 by tight end since at least 2003 | NFL.com

Sadiq’s official time bested the previous mark of 4.40 seconds, set by Vernon Davis in 2006 and tied by Dorin Dickerson in 2010.

The 6-foot-3 1/8, 241-pound Sadiq was expected to be a standout during the workout portion of the event, and he started the night with a broad jump of 11-1. It was the highest mark of the 2026 combine among tight ends before Vanderbilt’s Eli Stowers topped it a few minutes later with a jump of 11-3.

Sadiq shined in the vertical leap, too, jumping 43 1/2 inches, only to be outdone by Stowers shortly thereafter after he posted a jump of 45 1/2 inches, the best mark by a TE since at least 2003.

Falcons fire LaTroy Lewis amid investigation into sexual assault allegations while at Michigan | The Athletic

The Atlanta Falcons fired assistant coach LaTroy Lewis on Friday after the Ann Arbor Police Department confirmed an investigation into an alleged sexual assault involving Lewis that occurred in 2024 when he was a staffer at Michigan.

The assault accusations were first made public on social media on Thursday night by reporter Justin Spiro.

“The Ann Arbor Police Department was just recently made aware of allegations regarding a sexual assault reported to have occurred on December 5, 2024,” strategic communications manager Chris Page wrote in an email to The Athletic. “The AAPD Detective Bureau launched an immediate investigation into the incident. This investigation remains active and ongoing.”

The initial statement did not identify a suspect, but Page later confirmed that Lewis is the suspect in the investigation.

The Falcons fired Lewis as assistant defensive line coach hours after they issued a statement saying they were aware of allegations involving Lewis and were “in the process of gathering information.”

In case you missed it on Arrowhead Pride


Is Rueben Bain Jr. too risky for the Chiefs to select in the top 10?

Would Melvin Ingram’s career be considered a success for Bain if he’s drafted ninth overall? What about Markus Golden’s? Brandon Graham was a good player for a long time, but he had exactly one season with double-digit sacks. Was Carl Lawson good enough to justify a top 10 pick?

If you’re betting on a player to be a historical outlier, you better be right. Especially when you’re drafting that player in the top 10 for a franchise with very few opportunities to do so. This is too important a draft and too important a pick for the Chiefs to whiff. The opportunity cost is simply too great.

There’s a point at which Bain would be an obvious pick for the Chiefs. The arm length limitations make that case much more difficult to make with the ninth overall pick.

Social media to make you think

"I'd be close to home. … I feel like [Patrick Mahomes] is the best quarterback as of right now. … It would be an honor to play with him."

Jeremiyah Love on the possibility of being drafted by the Chiefs 👀

(via @richeisenshow) pic.twitter.com/e4unNlwn6N

— NFL on ESPN (@ESPNNFL) February 27, 2026

Follow Arrowhead Pride on Social Media


Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans.../2-28-bryan-cook-could-break-bank-free-agency
 
Chiefs fan discussion: Where in the world are Arrowhead Pride readers?

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A Kansas City Chiefs employee takes a Polaroid photo of fans at the Chiefs Kingdom Experience exhibit during the NFL Draft on Thursday, April 27, 2023, in Kansas City. Chiefs fans were given the opportunity to place the photos on a map depicting where they traveled from around the world. (Emily Curiel/Kansas City Star/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

We’re in that slow period between the Super Bowl and the new league year where it sometimes feels like the NFL world has ground to a halt. And that makes it a perfect time to ask: Where in the world are our Arrowhead Pride readers?

We don’t want or need your address or any personal details — sharing just the state is fine, or city and state if you’d like to be more specific. Same thing if you live abroad – if you’d like to just share the country, that’s cool, and if you want to share more details like the city or region, that’s totally up to you.

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Scroll down to the comments and let us know where you are! We’ll update this list as locations are shared.

Source: https://www.arrowheadpride.com/kans...94690/survey-census-where-do-chiefs-fans-live
 
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