The Denver Post

Kansas City signs OT Taylor, DE Omenihu to fill enormous holes

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, MO. >> The Kansas City Chiefs wasted little time filling two enormous holes on their Super Bowl-winning roster.

After reaching agreements earlier in the week, the Chiefs announced the signings Thursday of offensive tackle Jawaan Taylor and defensive end Charles Omenihu. Taylor is expected to replace Orlando Brown Jr., who agreed to a deal elsewhere in free agency, and Omenihu is expected to help replace Frank Clark, who was released in a move to create salary cap space.

“There was a good amount of teams involved,” Taylor said, “but once free agency opened up, my agent told me about the possibilit­y of the Chiefs wanting me. It’s a great opportunit­y and I couldn’t pass it up.”

The 25-year- old Taylor, who played almost exclusivel­y right tackle in Jacksonvil­le but will likely move to the left side in Kansas

City, agreed to a four-year, $80 million deal with $60 million guaranteed, a person familiar with the terms told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the terms were not disclosed.

Omenihu, who is also 25, signed a two-year, $16 million deal, a person with knowledge of the deal also told the AP.

The Chiefs were tight on salary cap space after the season — a big reason they released Clark and were unable to sign wide receiver Juju Smith- Schuster, who instead agreed to a deal with New England. But they were able to free up some extra space on Wednesday night when they converted part of quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes’ $ 34.4 million roster bonus into a signing bonus spread over the next four years, which freed up nearly $10 million in space for the current offseason.

Mahomes will hope that Taylor can continue the breakthrou­gh he began to experience last season.

The second-round pick of the Jaguars in the 2019 draft gave up a league-leading 40 sacks his first three seasons. But Taylor only allowed six sacks while protecting Trevor Lawrence last season, which ended with a divisional- round loss to Kansas City, and produced one of the lowest pressure rates among offensive tackles in the league.

It’s not guaranteed that Taylor will end up at right tackle, though that’s the expectatio­n. The Chiefs also have a hole on the right side after Andrew Wylie joined Washington, but that position is typically easier — and cheaper — to fill. The Chiefs have an in- house candidate with Lucas Niang and could also address that need through next month’s draft.

“Left tackle, right tackle, it’s just a flip of the hips, honestly,” Taylor said. “If you’re athletic enough, trust your feet, have good coaching and I think they have that here, I think the transition will be pretty good.”

Omenihu was a fifthround pick of the Texans in 2019 but was traded after two-plus seasons of mediocre production to San Francisco in November 2021. He proceed to have a careerbest 4 1/2 sacks for the 49ers last season.

“I think I’m a guy that can play the run on first and second down, play over tight ends, and I can rush on the edge if you need me to,” Omenihu said. “I think versatilti­y is what I bring to the table, a guy that’s going to play hard.”

Omenihu arrives in Kansas City amid some off-thefield trouble. He was arrested on suspicion of domestic violence in January, though no charges have been filed, after his girlfriend accused him of pushing her to the ground.

Chiefs general manager Brett Veach has been a whiz when it comes to plugging holes through the draft, and while their first pick isn’t until No. 31 overall, they have 11 total to further address defensive end, offensive tackle and wide receiver.

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