The Denver Post

K.C. enters offseason with plenty of holes

- By Dave Skretta

K A NSA S CITY, MO.» The Chiefs were so confident in their Super Bowl-winning roster from the 2019 season that they did everything they could to bring it back intact, signing quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes and defensive tackle Chris Jones to huge deals and reworking other contracts to make the numbers fit in the salary cap.

It almost worked, too.

The Chiefs made it back to the big game before injuries along the offensive line, mental mistakes and a near-perfect performanc­e by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers ended their season one win short of a repeat.

Now, the Chiefs will have to take a much different tact if they want to make their third consecutiv­e Super Bowl.

While their core group is signed for the next several years, the Chiefs have a raft of important contributo­rs that are due to hit free agency. That includes wide receivers Sammy Watkins and Demarcus Robinson and four of the five offensive linemen who started the Super Bowl. As well as the defense, including eight players that were regulars or starters this past season.

“Like all teams, we’ll get busy here going down the road,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said Monday. “We’ll still have a good core of players coming back. We’ll have some additions. No team stays in the same in today’s NFL.”

It was clear in a 31-9 romp by the Buccaneers that the status quo probably wouldn’t work anyway.

The Chiefs managed to hide their many shortcomin­gs while winning a franchise-record 14 regular-season games and then beating Cleveland and Buffalo in the playoffs.

But those issues were on stark display Sunday night: a makeshift offensive line pounded by the Tampa Bay pass rush, their own pass rush never getting pressure on Tom Brady, their secondary struggling against the Bucs wide receivers and their linebacker­s constantly out of position or slow to make plays.

“Every year is different because of your cap situation and what you have and what you need,” Chiefs general manager Brett Veach said. “... We’ll have some tough decisions to make trying to keep as many players on this team intact.”

Mahomes will have wide receiver Tyreek Hill, tight end Travis Kelce and running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire at his disposal next season. But the big names are surrounded by some big holes.

Watkins only had 28 catches for 421 yards and two touchdowns during another injuryfill­ed season, and Robinson slowly lost playing time to Byron Pringle, who is a restricted free agent. That leaves Mecole Hardman as the only viable No. 3 pass-catcher heading into next season.

Offensive linemen Mike Remmers, Stefan Wisniewski and Andrew Wylie were supposed to be backups, but each played in the Super Bowl. Now, all three are free agents along with center Austin Reiter.

The reason Brady dominated the Chiefs defense in the Super Bowl was twofold: their inability to generate pass rush — he was pressured four times on 30 drops — and shortcomin­gs among the cornerback­s.

That leaves the Chiefs searching for upgrades to edge rushers Alex Okafor, Tanoh Kpassagnon and Taco Charlton while also having to replace fellow free-agent DBs Bashaud Breeland, Charvarius Ward and Daniel Sorensen.

 ?? David J. Phillip, The Associated Press ?? Kansas City Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes (15) sits on the turf during the second half of their Super Bowl 55 loss Sunday in Tampa, Fla.
David J. Phillip, The Associated Press Kansas City Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes (15) sits on the turf during the second half of their Super Bowl 55 loss Sunday in Tampa, Fla.

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