
McDaniels jab: Nuggets are 'all bad defenders'
Jaden McDaniels criticizes Nuggets' defense after playoff win.
The Kansas City Chiefs are considering tight end Kenyon Sadiq in the upcoming NFL Draft. Albert Breer highlights Sadiq as a potential successor to Travis Kelce.
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EUGENE, OREGON - MARCH 17: Kenyon Sadiq #18 of the Oregon Ducks runs during tight end drills at Oregon Ducks Pro Day at Moshofsky Center on March 17, 2026 in Eugene, Oregon. (Photo by Soobum Im/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Albert Breerâs 2026 NFL Draft Needs for Every Team Reveal a Compelling Theme | Sports Illustrated
**First round:**Nos. 9, 29
**Total picks:**9
**Needs:**CB, WR Edge, OT, S
**What you need to know:**Like the Giants and Jets, itâs fair to look at the top of the Chiefs draft, with three of the first 40 picks as part of the equation, as a mosaic. Theyâd like to infuse some youth into the defense and add a playmaker, and I wouldnât overlook tackle as a needâboth because maybe they arenât quite sure they can trust Josh Simmons yet, and because Jaylon Moore is in a contract year. So with that in mind, thereâll be a pool of players theyâll consider at 9 that I believe will include Tate, Tyson, Utah OT Spencer Fano, Bain, Delane and Downs. But the name thatâs most intriguing to me is Oregon TE Kenyon Sadiq, whom the Chiefs have discussed. Iâm not sure if theyâd take him at 9, or want him in a trade-down scenario, but heâd fit as a successor, and might have as good a shot as anyone in the draft to be the focal point of some teamâs passing game.
Albert Breer noted that the Chiefs have discussed Kenyon Sadiq as a potential pick in the NFL Draft, possibly as a successor to Travis Kelce.
The Chiefs' draft needs include cornerback, wide receiver, edge rusher, offensive tackle, and safety.
Kenyon Sadiq played college football at the University of Oregon.
The Kansas City Chiefs have first-round picks at Nos. 9 and 29 in the 2026 NFL Draft.

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Chiefs cornering the market
The Chiefs have three top-40 picks (Nos. 9, 29 and 40), and many expect at least one of those to be used on a cornerback. Kansas City traded Trent McDuffie to the Rams, lost Jaylen Watson to the same team in free agency and is now left with its projected starting cornerbacks as Kristian Fulton and second-year player Nohl Williams.
At last monthâs owners meetings, Chiefs head coach Andy Reid praised the play of Williams, who played 44% of the snaps last season; the team believes in him. But the Chiefs also have holes at the position that are expected to be addressed this week.
Round 1, No. 9: Caleb Downs, S, Ohio State
Also considered: Arizona State WR Jordyn Tyson, USC WR Makai Lemon, LSU CB Mansoor Delane
This is not who I would pick, but it is a direction I could see the Chiefs going after the top three edge rushers and receiver Carnell Tate already off the board.
My issue isnât with Downs, the player. By all accounts, he has some of the cleanest tape in the draft and could help the Chiefs fill the leadership void created when they traded cornerback Trent McDuffie to the Rams.
My argument would be all about positional value. There are only three NFL safeties who earn $20 million or more per year, per Over the Capâs data. Compare that to receiver (22 players) and edge rusher (19 players), and you can see that the NFL has made clear which positions move the needle most when it comes to dollars spent for on-field impact.
This sort of evaluation is why Downs ranks 46th on Kevin Coleâs analytical big board. Even in a perfect world, youâre getting impact that is slightly better than the No. 9 pickâs four-year, $31 million salary, with potentially no ability to hit the jackpot if the player exceeds expectations.
Recently, the Chiefs hosted Louisville defensive tackle Rene Konga, who is currently projected to come off the board on Day 3 (Rounds 4 through 7).
About Rene Konga
Konga is a 6-foot-3, 298-pound defensive tackle who played four years at Rutgers before transferring to Louisville in 2024. He spent the first of his two seasons at Louisville as a teammate of current Chiefs defensive end Ashton Gillotte.
âWe have a good relationship,â Konga said in a phone interview with The Star. âAsh and I talk probably like once a week, if anything. We talked around the time of my visit, before my visit or whatnot, and then we play video games together. We used to watch film together back in Louisville. We lived in the same apartment building back in Louisville, so we (were) at each otherâs house all the time.â
During Chiefs general manager Brett Veachâs pre-draft press conference, he spoke about signing defensive tackle Khyiris Tonga in free agency. But the GM was candid that heâd like to add two more defensive linemen before Kansas City gets into the thick of its offseason program.
Konga grew up playing basketball, and his football journey has included stops at defensive back, linebacker, defensive end and now defensive tackle. The prospect says he likely derives his explosiveness from playing hoops.
The Kansas City Chiefs took one step closer to football on Monday as the team kicked off the voluntary offseason training program at the team facility.
âPhase 1â of the program, which spans two weeks, is limited to meetings, strength training, conditioning, and physical rehabilitation before the on-field work begins in mid-May. Additionally, in contrast to recent years, this portion of the program will take place at the team facility rather than virtually.
âWeâre fired up to get the guys back in the building. We had a nice turnout today, which I appreciate,â said Head Coach Andy Reid. âThis is a time when the players can meet with their coaches and lift weights. Thereâre no coaches on the field, but the [players] can go out and throw â the receivers and quarterbacks.â
Nick Lowery built a résumé that stretches far beyond football.
A two-time All-Pro kicker, member of the Kansas City Chiefs Hall of Fame, Harvard MBA graduate and advisor who has worked with multiple U.S. presidents, Loweryâs career is marked by success, but also by setbacks.
âEleven rejections by eight NFL teams. The Jets cut me twice,â Lowery said.
Those early struggles helped inspire his new book, Naked and Alone with 80,000 People, a project he said took more than two decades to complete.
âIt took me 24 years to write it,â he said.
The title reflects the pressure-filled moments athletes, and people in all walks of life, experience when everything is on the line.
Earlier this month, free-agent quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo was reportedly âweighing a few options.â
One of those options includes not playing for anyone.
Ian Rapoport of NFL Network reports that Garoppolo is considering retirement.
Garoppolo, 34, was a second-round pick of the Patriots in 2014. Traded to the 49ers, Garoppolo became the starter immediately. He signed after his first season a contract that made him, at the time, the highest-paid player in the NFL.
After the 2022 season, Garoppolo signed with the Raiders as a free agent. He then went to the Rams for 2024 and 2025.
The New York Giants had free agent wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. in for a workout and physical with the team Monday, sources told ESPN.
While a return to New York remains a possibility, no signing appears imminent, according to a source. It seems likely the Giants will wait to see how the draft pans out later this week.
Beckham, 33, has expressed a desire to play this season, and wants a return to the team that drafted him in 2014 out of LSU. He even met with Giants ownership and new coach John Harbaugh several weeks back at the NFLâs annual meetings to state his case.
The Giants have been open to a potential reunion and wanted to see how Beckham looked in person before proceeding. The 2014-16 Pro Bowl receiver has been training this offseason in Arizona.
âLearning over the years that we do have a great environment here,â Veach admitted. âIf anyone is going to get the best out of any player, itâs going to be here, but even some of those players, itâs hard. I think just making sure weâre tweaking that process, and making sure weâve identified the right players.â
âNobodyâs going to be perfect, youâre not going to always get Pat Mahomes and Creed Humphrey and Trey Smith in regards to just mental makeup,â Veach pointed out. âBut the guys that you do âroll the diceâ for, the plan the approach, just working on that over the years.â
As Kansas City sets its sights on the 2026 NFL Draft, Veach hammered a point home that will be crucial to making the most of the nine picks available to the team this upcoming weekend.
âThe mistakes you make are [on] guys that, at the end of the day, they just donât love football,â Veach emphasized. âEven though you thought you were going to change them, you didnât. I think thatâs one of those things that we try to do better with that process⊠making sure weâre looking for the right traits and characteristics that do lend [themselves] to future change.â