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Was just looking at Super Bowl odds for next season.
The Chiefs have the best or second best odds in most places. |
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Sorry my emotional girly side is coming out (territorial wise) due to the loss. |
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It’s a good feeling |
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As a result, the Chiefs should be the favorite to make the Super Bowl every year until one of these other teams finds the same consistency. |
This sucks. I hope they can get some of these guys back notably Bolton, J Reid, Omenihu and Wharton.
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Notable <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Chiefs?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Chiefs</a> Free Agents<br>G Trey Smith<br>LB Nick Bolton<br>S Justin Reid<br>DE Charles Omenihu<br>DE Tershawn Wharton<br>WR Marquise Brown<br>WR DeAndre Hopkins<br>WR Justin Watson<br><br>Extension Candidates<br>CB Trent McDuffie<br>OL Joe Thuney<br>DE George Karlaftis</p>— Spotrac (@spotrac) <a href="https://twitter.com/spotrac/status/1888792146360087033?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">February 10, 2025</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> |
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That is not an insult to Mahomes at all. He’s the best QB in the league and could retire tomorrow as a top 3 all time QB. I think some people get a little too obsessed with Mahomes passing Brady and don’t consider where the Chiefs rank amongst the other franchises. Only the Steelers, Patriots, 49ers, and Cowboys have more Lombardis. I fully expect the Chiefs to win at least a couple more with Mahomes. With the state of those other teams in that top tier, it isn’t unreasonable to think the Chiefs may well be the first franchise with 7. |
Forget investing in an expensive Left Tackle. Let's just return to 1978's Wing-T Offense:
In 1978, Marv Levy, who at that time was the head coach of the Kansas City Chiefs, decided to employ an offense called the Wing-T offense. Many historians claim that Glenn “Pop” Warner first introduced the offense back in 1912, but there are several other former coaches who laid claim to its invention. Marv Levy did not invent it, but he utilized it in 1978, to offset the fact that he needed to use up the game clock. Huh? Use up the game clock? Yes. Kansas City’s defense had surrendered over 300 points each year from 1975 to 1978. Levy wanted to keep possession of the ball and keep his defense on the sidelines, and the Wing-T Offense permitted his offense to do that. The formation utilized three running backs in odd locations in the Chiefs’ offensive backfield. It usually included a myriad of fakes and misdirection runs, and it almost always included a man-in-motion prior to the snap of the ball. Levy described the Wing-T as “grueling” and “consistent.” The key to its success was its deceptive nature. Retired Chiefs historian Bob Moore explained that “Ball handling was crucial with the Wing-T, especially with the dimension of a third back. What caused confusion for the (opposing) defenses was the number of flows and split flows that the offense ran.” In 1978, Levy’s Wing-T offense racked up 2,986 rushing yards, which was the second most in the league. The key to stopping the Wing-T was a defense with outstanding speed, in particular on the outside. A quality 3-4 defense such as that of the Denver Broncos...one with quick and active linebackers...was one defense which showed the rest of the NFL how to stop (or at least slow down) the Wing-T. Most teams did not have enough quality running backs to effectively run the Wing-T, and by the end of the decade, the Wing-T disappeared from the NFL. |
Man this free agent class ****ing sucks man. They need to keep Hollywood Brown bc the rest of these WR’s are awful.
Diggs, Hopkins, Cooper, Cooks. Guys who were good 3 years ago LMAO |
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