In Kansas City, this offseason isnāt about tweaking the edges.
Itās about survival.
After a brutal 6ā11 collapse, the Kansas City Chiefs find themselves facing a reality they havenāt known in years:
the bill for chasing greatness has finally arrived.
And at the center of it all stands one uncomfortable, almost unthinkable name:
Trent McDuffie
š§© The First Domino That Changes Everything
Every NFL offseason is a puzzle.
But this one? Itās a choose-your-own-disaster adventure.
Before the Chiefs can sign anyone.
Before they can dream of a rebound.
Before they can even breathe under the salary capā¦
They must answer one question:
š What do you do with Trent McDuffie?
On paper, the answer seems obvious.
You donāt trade players like him.
McDuffie is everything the Chiefs hoped for when they traded up in the 2022 Draft:
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Elite versatility
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Physical against the run
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Reliable inside and outside
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Professional, durable, dependable
The kind of player contenders build around.
And yet ā this is not a normal offseason.
š° The Cap Crisis No One Can Ignore
The Chiefs are more than $54 million over the salary cap.
Thatās not tight.
Thatās suffocating.
Yes, there are escape hatches:
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Cutting veterans
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Restructuring contracts
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Pushing money into the future
Even after painful cuts and a potential restructure of Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City would still be operating with razor-thin flexibility.
And thatās before:
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Draft picks are signed
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A running back is added
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Pass rush help is found
Suddenly, the math doesnāt work.
Unless one move changes everything.
š Why McDuffie Is the āMr. Fix-Itā of the Offseason
McDuffie is scheduled to earn $13.6 million fully guaranteed in 2026.
Hereās the key part:
ā”ļø Trading him creates instant cap relief.
ā”ļø No dead money. No lingering damage.
Just clean, usable space.
That money could immediately be redirected to areas the Chiefs desperately lack:
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Pass rush juice
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Defensive line pressure
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Physicality up front
Names like Boye Mafe or DreāMont Jones suddenly become realistic ā players who fill holes Kansas City couldnāt fix last season.
š¦ Draft Capital: The Hidden Prize
This isnāt just about money.
Itās about resetting the pipeline.
The Chiefsā last true youth injection came in 2022 ā a draft class that defined the dynasty:
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McDuffie
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George Karlaftis
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Leo Chenal
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Isiah Pacheco
That class only happened because of a controversial trade.
Sound familiar?
Trading McDuffie could net at least an early second-round pick, maybe more.
That pick restores flexibility ā the ability to move, maneuver, and re-build the spine of the roster.
Right now, the Chiefs are aging out and pricing themselves out at the same time.
Thatās a dangerous place to live.
ā ļø The Emotional Cost
Letās be honest.
This move would hurt.
McDuffie is one of the most watchable, dependable defensive players on the roster.
An All-Pro caliber talent.
A player fans trust.
But the Chiefs havenāt truly maximized his best skill set in two straight seasons ā often using him out of position to plug other leaks.
And that tells its own story.
š§ The Alternative (And Why Itās Worse)
The Chiefs could:
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Play out his fifth-year option
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Or extend him long-term (think $90M+ deals)
But doing so would require pushing even more money into future seasons ā ballooning cap hits for aging stars and limiting roster flexibility when Brett Veach needs it most.
Itās doable.
Itās just not smart.
š The Bottom Line
Trading Trent McDuffie isnāt about talent.
Itās about timing.
The Chiefs chased a three-peat.
They paid the price.
Now, concessions must be made.
As painful as it sounds, this may be the cleanest, clearest path back to contention ā not just in 2026, but beyond.
No one enjoys saying it.
No fan wants to hear it.
But dynasties donāt die from one bad season.
They die from refusing to make the hard choice after it.
š¬ Is trading McDuffie a necessary evil ā or a fatal mistake?
š Chiefs Kingdom is split. Where do you stand?



