KANSAS CITY, MO — The NFL landscape shifted on its axis this week when Brett Veach pulled the trigger on a deal nobody saw coming. Trading All-Pro cornerback Trent McDuffie to the Los Angeles Rams for the No. 29 overall pick and a package of mid-round capital was a move of pure aggression. With the 2026 legal tampering period just hours away, the message from Arrowhead is clear: the Chiefs aren’t just reloading; they’re hunting. Kansas City now sits at No. 9 and No. 29 in the first round, armed with the firepower to fix a roster that missed the postseason for the first time in over a decade.
The New Island: Mansoor Delane at No. 9
Replacing a player of McDuffie’s caliber is a tall order, but LSU’s Mansoor Delane is the closest thing to a plug-and-play lockdown corner in this class. In the 2025 season, Delane allowed a microscopic 31.3 passer rating when targeted. That is statistically better than a quarterback simply throwing the ball into the turf every play. Standing 6-foot-1 with a verified 4.41-second 40-yard dash, Delane possesses the length and recovery speed Steve Spagnuolo craves. By snagging the LSU standout at ninth overall, Veach secures a premium starter on a rookie contract, easing the financial sting of the upcoming cap crunch.
Beefing Up the Interior and Finding Mahomes’ New Weapon
At No. 29, the Chiefs pivot to the trenches with Ohio State’s Kayden McDonald. The 326-pounder is a wrecking ball in the run game, a necessary addition for a defense that struggled to get off the field in short-yardage situations last year. But the real intrigue happens on Day 2. Louisville’s Chris Bell would have been a first-round lock if not for a torn ACL on November 22. Getting him at No. 40 is the kind of value play Veach lives for. Bell hauled in 72 passes for 917 yards before his injury, providing the physical, “X” receiver profile the Chiefs have lacked since the 2024 season.
Mid-Round Value and the Mizzou Pipeline
- Round 3, Pick 74: Josiah Trotter, LB, Missouri – The son of an NFL legend stays in the neighborhood. Trotter racked up 176 tackles over two seasons at Mizzou and brings a downhill violence that perfectly complements Nick Bolton.
- Round 4, Pick 109: Jonah Coleman, RB, Washington – A compact, 220-pound bruiser who finished his college career with 34 rushing touchdowns. He is the ideal “thunder” to Isiah Pacheco’s “lightning.”
- Round 5, Pick 147: Nadame Tucker, EDGE, Western Michigan – A high-motor specialist who led the nation with 14.5 sacks in 2025. He’s older at 26, but his 93.3 PFF pass-rush grade is too good to ignore.
- Round 5, Pick 168: V.J. Payne, DB, Kansas State – A local favorite who blazed a 4.40 40-yard dash at the Combine. His versatility as a safety/nickel hybrid fits the Spagnuolo mold perfectly.
“We knew we had to be bold. Trading a player like Trent is never easy, but this draft class provides a unique opportunity to reset our defensive floor while giving Patrick the weapons he needs to keep this window open.”
— Brett Veach, Chiefs General Manager
What’s Next: The Free Agency Frenzy
With the draft board set, the Chiefs now turn to free agency to address the offensive tackle spot. The release of Jawaan Taylor has left a massive hole on the right side. While Aamil Wagner (Notre Dame) was taken in the fifth round of this mock, he’s a developmental project. Expect Veach to be aggressive in the coming days, potentially targeting a veteran tackle to protect Mahomes’ blindside. The McDuffie trade wasn’t just about picks; it was about the cap flexibility to make a splash in the veteran market. The next 72 hours will define whether the Chiefs return to their throne in 2026.

