Jump to content

xen

Administrators
  • Posts

    16,426
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    384
Everything posted by xen
 
 
  1. For those worried about Niangs weight (and btw i assume you didn't watch his college tape cause he looks the same):
  2. Niang has been constantly training during the opt out. He looks pretty much like he did in college, he's just a big dude. There's a whole series of Niang training on YouTube.
  3. Its B/R so you know, buyer beware https://www.google.com/amp/s/syndication.bleacherreport.com/amp/2441018-which-positions-are-the-safest-riskiest-at-the-top-of-the-nfl-draft.amp.html
  4. Thats now 2 recent first round corners (1 from 2018 draft and 1 from 2019 draft) that fit our system, both added since last Nov 2020. Total cost = 1 6th round pick and got back a 7th. Further evidence that Veach is a goddamn Sorcerer.
  5. Really liked him coming out of college. Low risk. I like it.
  6. Wilkie went to KU. So he'll predict 8-8-8
  7. A lot of our runs are RPO's and they're schemed whether we pass or not. Up to the defense and what Pat sees whether they are runs or passes.
  8. Note that Andy has been toying with this for several years now so this makes sense to me. Also the pickups of these bigger interior linemen over the last few years who don't move as well makes more sense, as they didn't fit the zone concepts we usually run. Looks like Andy is done screwing around. The great thing is, we still have the athletes inside to keep running zone.
  9. https://thedraftnetwork.com/articles/creed-humphrey-trey-smith-kansas-city-chiefs-offensive-line-depth KANSAS CITY REVAMPS OFFENSIVE LINE WITH HELP OF 2021 NFL DRAFT BY: BENJAMIN SOLAK MAY 11TH, 2021 THE DRAFT NETWORK Photo: Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports Acommon one-sentence summary of Super Bowl 50 included the same idea: “The Kansas City Chiefs couldn’t pass protect.” It could have been the first football game someone ever watched, and they would still have been able to figure out that the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ defensive front was free to act as they wished against a depleted Chiefs offensive line. Injuries hassled Kansas City up front all season. The Chiefs lost starting right guard Kelechi Osemele and right tackle Mitchell Schwartz—both All-Pro caliber players—in back-to-back weeks in October and left tackle Eric Fisher in the playoffs after the win over the Buffalo Bills. Center Austin Reiter missed some time, which forced Daniel Kilgore onto the field, and tackle Mike Remmers was out for a stretch, putting Yasir Durant and Martinas Rankin in positions to start; rookie third-round pick Lucas Niang never got over a preseason injury. That’s about as ugly as it gets—and it never got worse than in the Super Bowl when only Reiter remained a projected starter. The rest is history: a seventh ring on Tom Brady’s finger. The offensive line became an expected priority in Kansas City this offseason, but only to a certain degree. Depth needed improvement and recoveries required careful oversight, but the Chiefs’ offensive line was good before the rash of injuries. It could be good again. Or it could be totally done over. Kansas City’s career tackle Eric Fisher and back-to-back-to-back-to-back All-Pro lineman Mitchell Schwartz were both cut. After getting a long hard look at the reality of football without both players available, the Chiefs decided they wanted to keep looking. It would be one thing if the Chiefs had several contracts expire and were forced to rebuild the offensive line, but that didn’t happen here. The Chiefs needed to become salary-cap compliant after the COVID-19 pandemic dropped the cap ceiling for NFL teams, but extensions and restructurings can create immediate cap relief just as well as full-on cuts do. While Reiter’s contract had expired and he was entering free agency, Schwartz and Fisher both still had deals with the team. The Chiefs created $18 million in cap space, yes; but they also released their starting left tackle from the last seven seasons and a four-time All-Pro right tackle, neither of whom were on egregious deals above their worth. Neither Schwartz nor Fisher were immediately scooped up; with Schwartz on the wrong side of 30 and apparently mulling retirement and Fisher coming off of the Achilles injury, both were available to return at a lower price tag if Kansas City had the inclination. The Chiefs may have tried and failed, but it seems like they weren’t interested. Instead, they got aggressive with draft capital. They traded their first-round pick to the Baltimore Ravens in a package for Orlando Brown, a clear plus starter determined to play left tackle; they followed that up with former Oklahoma center Creed Humphrey as one of their second-round picks. Small free-agent deals for Kyle Long and Mike Remmers buttressed the depth. In Humphrey and Brown, the Chiefs did more than just get younger along the offensive line: They got bigger. Brown, at 6-foot-7 and 345 pounds, is one of the largest left tackles in the league. Creed cut down to 302 pounds for his Pro Day, but is currently listed at 312 pounds via the team’s official website and brings plus height and wingspan to the center position. Brown carries a whopping 30 pounds more than Fisher, who he replaced; Creed has about 10 pounds on Reiter. These aren’t aberrations, either. When starting right guard Laurent Duvernay-Tardif opted out of the 2020 season, the Chiefs signed all 330 pounds of noted trench bully Osemele to replace him. In the sixth round of this year’s draft, Kansas City took former 5-star Trey Smith, who, at 6-foot-6 and 335 pounds, has a tackle body but experience playing guard during his time at Tennessee. And the gem of this year’s free agency: New England’s Joe Thuney. Thuney, one of the best guards in the league, doesn’t have particularly stunning size—he’s tall for a guard, but only carries about 308 pounds. However, top offensive line expert Brandon Thorn noted this about Thuney after his Kansas City signing: Thuney comes from a New England running game that loved power blocking concepts and working behind pullers; the same is true of Brown from Baltimore and Humphrey from Oklahoma, as those running games are actually fairly similar across the college-NFL divide. Again: I don’t think the investments of a mega-contract, a first-round trade, and a second-round pick allow for coincidence. The Chiefs are telling us, with their spending, that the offensive line was a problem last year; but not just in terms of depth and pass protection woes down the stretch. They also want to change how they run the football. The Chiefs were an inside/outside zone team last year. Outside zone is all the rage on the Kyle Shanahan coaching tree, but those teams run zone from under center and have tight end depth and blocking wide receivers to create extended surfaces. The Chiefs like to operate their passing game from the gun and prefer to spread out their athletes, which makes the numbers game on zone runs harder to win. While they delivered a respectable performance in the running game, in terms of efficiency, no team is offered lighter boxes and better rushing looks than Kansas City is because no passer is as feared in the league as Patrick Mahomes is. There’s meat left on the bone. The Athletic's Nate Tice is also barking up this tree. Gap schemes can help the Chiefs deal with the three-down fronts they get when defenses align to steal gaps in the running game and drop eight men into pass coverage, all while staying in their spread alignments Teams tell us the plan with their investments, and the Chiefs are telling us to expect a more physically dominant offensive trench next season, with a priority on gap blocking to better exploit the soft boxes created by Mahomes’ presence. Whether or not it works, it’s awesome to see how quickly the Chiefs have made this shift. WRITTEN BY: Benjamin Solak Senior CFB Writer Director of Special Projects and Senior NFL Draft Analyst for The Draft Network. Co-host of the Locked On NFL Draft Podcast. The 3-Wide Raven.
  10. An all time great chief and one of the rare guys to play entirely for one team. Wasn't an elite athlete but had elite technique and a beyond elite motor. Love that guy. If I had to describe him in one word it would be "relentless".
  11. Well we could shoot him but I think a good stabbing is probably the right thing to do.
  12. Dudes like 50 years old. You think anyone would trade for a washed up qb?
 
×
  • Create New...