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Chiefs Offseason Timeline After Disappointing 2025 Season
Denny Medley-Imagn Images

The Kansas City Chiefs for the first time in seven years, will not be a part of Championship Sunday. Following a 6-11 finish in 2025, the franchise has been forced into an early offseason, turning its attention toward a massive retooling effort intended to restore the organization to its standard of dominance.

The disappointment of the 2025 season has created a sense of urgency at One Arrowhead Drive. While the external noise focuses on the abrupt end of a dynasty, the internal reality is a strict calendar of deadlines and financial maneuvering. General Manager Brett Veach faces a constrained timeline to fix a roster that fell well below expectations, and the work has already begun with significant coaching changes.

Crucial Dates on the Horizon

The roadmap for the Chiefs’ return to contention is dictated by the league calendar. The immediate focus turns to February 17, which marks the opening of the window for teams to designate Franchise or Transition players. This window closes on March 3, just as the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis wraps up. While the Combine offers a glimpse at the future, the roster surgery required in Kansas City will largely take place in mid-March.

The legal tampering period opens on March 9. During this two-day window, teams are permitted to contact certified agents of players with expiring contracts. This leads directly into the new league year on March 11 at 3 p.m. CT. This specific time is critical for the Chiefs. By that afternoon deadline, Kansas City must be compliant with the salary cap, officially marking the start of free agency and the trading period.

Navigating Salary Cap Challenges

That March 11 deadline presents a massive logistical hurdle. Kansas City currently sits approximately $55 million over the projected $304 million salary cap. Compliance will not be achieved through minor adjustments; it will require difficult decisions regarding veteran contributors who were once viewed as foundational pieces.

Right tackle Jawaan Taylor, defensive end Mike Danna, and linebacker Drue Tranquill appear to be the most likely cap casualties. All three are entering the final years of their respective deals, and their recent production has not matched their price tags. Releasing that trio would clear significant space, signaling a shift toward younger, more cost-effective talent.

Furthermore, the front office likely will look to restructure the contracts of core interior linemen Trey Smith and Creed Humphrey. Both are entering the second year of four-year extensions, and converting base salary to signing bonuses could save roughly $10 million against the cap. The largest financial lever available remains Patrick Mahomes’ contract. The structure of his 10-year deal allows for maximum flexibility, and a restructure could clear between $15 million and $45 million depending on how aggressively the front office wishes to push money into future years.

Personnel Decisions and Coaching Shifts

The team has already begun reshaping its identity on the sidelines. The return of Eric Bieniemy as offensive coordinator replaces Matt Nagy, a move the organization hopes will revitalize a stagnant unit. Additionally, Chad O’Shea takes over a wide receiver room that struggled mightily to produce consistent offense.

regarding personnel, the Chiefs face a list of 29 unrestricted free agents. The running back room requires a total reset. Veterans Kareem Hunt and Isiah Pacheco likely have played their final snaps in Kansas City, as the team looks to inject fresh speed into the backfield. At receiver, Tyquan Thornton showed enough promise as a downfield threat to warrant a return, but the experiments with JuJu Smith-Schuster and Hollywood Brown appear to have run their course.

The most significant variable remains Travis Kelce. While retirement rumors naturally swirl around the aging tight end, the return of Bieniemy could provide the familiarity and spark needed to entice the Hall of Famer back for another run. Retaining key defensive backs like Bryan Cook and Jaylen Watson also remains a priority, though the team likely cannot afford to keep everyone.

The Trent McDuffie Trade Scenario

Perhaps the most significant pivot point of the entire offseason involves All-Pro cornerback Trent McDuffie. Entering the final year of his deal after the Chiefs exercised his fifth-year option, McDuffie presents a fascinating financial dilemma. Extending him would likely cost north of $25 million annually. With the team already facing a cap deficit and possessing only six draft picks, trading the star defender has emerged as a pragmatic option.

McDuffie is an elite slot corner, but his lack of size against perimeter receivers makes a massive extension risky for a cash-strapped team. Moving him could yield a late first-round pick, providing the ammunition needed to rebuild a defensive line that lacks depth outside of Chris Jones and George Karlaftis.

Looking Toward the Draft

The NFL Draft in Pittsburgh from April 23 to 25 represents the final phase of this retooling effort. If a McDuffie trade occurs, Veach could enter the draft with eight picks, including two in the first round. This influx of youth is necessary to inject talent back into a roster that looked slow and aging throughout 2025.

The upcoming months will define the trajectory of the franchise. The 6-11 finish served as a wake-up call that the status quo is no longer sufficient. The path back to the postseason is clear, but it requires navigating a tight financial timeline and making unsentimental decisions about the roster that brought the Kansas City Chiefs its previous glory.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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