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BR: Kansas City Chiefs Make a Huge Mistake
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It wasn't long ago that Todd Haley stated that he wanted to improve the quality of the players on the team.
Nice statement.
Has a nice ring to it.
Too bad its complete BS.
We all know the story of Chris Chambers. He was Kansas City's
biggest free-agent steal during the season last year. He also made more
big plays in one season than any receiver in Chiefs history.
He's big, he's strong, and he's fast. Chief fans have not seen a big play receiver like this since Otis Taylor. continue reading...
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LA Times: Lessons learned from Matt Cassel
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Quarterback Matt Cassel of the Kansas City Chiefs and USC Trojans showed up at a wet Rose Bowl Saturday morning to help with Steve Clarkson's Dreammaker competition, but it was good to see that Cassel was wearing a Chatsworth Chancellors hat.
Nothing has changed with Cassel. I've known him since he was 12 and
playing for Northridge Little League, and he's the same energetic,
friendly, sometimes goofy person who loves sports, thrives on
competition and respects friends and foes alike. continue reading...
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Fix the franchise: Kansas City Chiefs edition
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The Kansas City Chiefs got it pretty easy, they don’t need to redo
their front office, or find a new coaching staff. They just need to
find some better players. That sounds a little crass but this is a team
that has won just six games over the last two years, and ten over the
last three. By ways of comparison that is just one more win in the last
three years than the Detroit Lions who went winless in 2008. The
challenge for the Chiefs is finding players that they can build around,
and it sounds easy but is actually quite hard.
Chief’s fans and their front office staff want to believe that they
have a QB Matt Cassel from which the offense can be built around. I am
not as optimistic. I think at some point the Chiefs are going to have
to draft a franchise QB. I am not saying that he is a total bust, but
that he needs a lot of help and may not have the skill set to be a NFL
starter. continue reading...
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Chiefs Name Mike Clark As Strength Coach
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CHIEFS NAME MIKE CLARK AS STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING COACH,
TRIP MacCRACKEN HIRED AS DIRECTOR OF FOOTBALL ADMINISTRATION
The
Kansas City Chiefs named Mike Clark as the club’s strength and
conditioning coach on Thursday. The club also hired Trip MacCracken as
the team’s Director of Football Administration.
Clark
joins the Chiefs after serving in that same capacity for six seasons
with Seattle (2004-09). He was part of Mike Holmgren’s staff that
helped guide the Seahawks to a berth in Super Bowl XL. Clark served 14
seasons as the head strength and conditioning coach at Texas A&M
(’90-03) before entering the NFL ranks. A 2003 inductee into the USA
Strength and Conditioning Coaches Hall of Fame, he served as president
of the Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Coaches Association in
2000.
continue reading...
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Mike Vrabel Probably Won't Be Back With The Chiefs
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Mike Vrabel
will most likely try to move onto greener pastures this off-season as
he is set to become an unrestriced free Agent in March.
What
does that mean for the Kansas City Chiefs? As far as productivity on
the field, not much. Vrabel had a productive season starting 14 games
in his one year with the Chiefs. He racked up 53 tackles and two
sacks, which was solid for a veteran on a poor defense. continue reading...
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Teicher: Why not L.T. in KC?
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The Chiefs need a proven running back to take some of the load off
Jamaal Charles. LaDainian Tomlinson will soon need a new job. If
Tomlinson can accept a secondary role, at least initially, this union
makes too much sense for it not to happen.
First, look at this from the Chiefs perspective. Charles' emergence
the second half of last season was the best thing to happen to the
Chiefs offense since Dick Vermeil and Al Saunders walked out the door.
Charles looks like a legitimate threat, someone the Chiefs can build
around.
But let's not put him in the Hall of Fame just yet. Let's not forget
that until halfway through last season, Charles was a fumble-prone
third-down back. continue reading...
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FH: Buck Buchanan: Chief Concern for Kansas City's Opponents
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Imagine a defensive lineman who is 6-foot-7, 287 pounds. Imagine that he can run a 40-yard dash in 4.9 seconds.
High draft pick? Depends on what league you were in in 1963, when Junious (Buck) Buchanan was coming out of Grambling. In the NFL, he was a 19th rounder, taken by the New York Giants.
In the American Football League, which was entering its fourth season? No. 1 overall by the Kansas City Chiefs, where he turned into a Hall of Famer, one of the major players on a Kansas City team that lost the first Super Bowl to Green Bay, then beat Minnesota, 23-7, in Super Bowl IV, establishing once and for all that the win by Joe Namath and the Jets over Baltimore the previous year was no fluke.
Growing up in the 1950s in segregated Birmingham, Ala., Buchanan excelled in football and basketball at A.H. Parker High School, then went on to Grambling to play for Eddie Robinson. For an African-American in the South, it was the equivalent, on a much poorer scale, of a white youngster going to Alabama to play for Bear Bryant -- Robinson ended up producing dozens of professional football players, including four who made it to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. continue reading...
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Brian Waters wins NFL Man of the Year
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Kansas City Chiefs guard Brian Waters was announced as the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award in a ceremony before Sunday's Super Bowl.
He beat out finalists Mike Furrey of the Browns and London Fletcher of the Redskins.
Fletcher
may not have won, but he did have the honor of hitting the
complimentary breakfast at my hotel at the exact same time as me (five
minutes before it closed) for seven straight days, which is an NFL
record. continue reading...
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