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suzzer99
10-26-2017, 11:28 AM
https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/marcus-peters-one-of-the-chiefs-top-players-is-certainly-not-their-most-beloved/2017/10/26/d2e03cac-b9b6-11e7-9e58-e6288544af98_story.html?utm_term=.c6ff251cafaf

Marcus Peters, one of the Chiefs’ top players, is certainly not their most beloved

NORTH KANSAS CITY, Mo. — They slide into a booth and order their beers, preparing to watch the Kansas City Chiefs at the sports bar inside a casino.

Then someone brings it up. Someone always brings it up.

As this Thursday evening begins, the Chiefs are 5-1 — one of the NFL’s best teams and perhaps the AFC’s most intriguing Super Bowl contender. But around here, there’s no meatier — or more divisive — topic than Marcus Peters, the team’s controversial and talented cornerback, and what should be done about him.

Peters doesn’t just protest during the national anthem before games; he has raised his fist or sat on a stationary bike. He doesn’t just sneer at coaches and disagreeable fans; he openly berates them. Peters uses profanity in interviews, has talked about going to get “loaded” after a bad game, told reporters last year he’s “black and I love being black.”

During an NFL season when some players’ off-field expressions have clashed with fans’ allegiances to their on-field efforts, Peters is, among other things, something of a cultural experiment here in Middle America: one that has occasionally pitted a player against his own team’s fans, individualism against traditional values.


“If it was me,” longtime Chiefs fan Dan Joy is saying, “I’d have a one-on-one; spend a day with him. He’s worth that. After that I’d sit him out a half a game.”

Sean Schuler, among the dozens at Winning Streaks wearing a red jersey but one of the few in Peters’s No. 22, snaps his head toward Joy.

“Sitting him out hurts the team!” Schuler says.

“That would be step two,” Joy says, reminding his friend a discussion would come first.

John Stoner, another fan at the table, nods.

“Progressive discipline,” he says, looking around the bar for someone. “Where’s Merf?”

Peters is one of the best defensive players on one of the NFL’s best teams. He tied for the league lead with eight interceptions in 2015, was named to the Pro Bowl following each of his first two seasons, is a young star at one of most demanding and isolated positions on the field. He also has a history of volatility: Three years before television cameras caught Peters screaming at fans and, a week later, his defensive coordinator, Peters was kicked off the University of Washington football team for a pattern of explosive behavior.


“We know that he’s emotional,” Chiefs Coach Andy Reid told reporters recently. “That’s not a secret here.”

Neither, at least recently, is Kansas City’s tense relationship with Peters. Earlier this season fans made shirts with a strike through a No. 22, and this month a business owner suggested on Facebook that other businesses should refuse service to Peters. Some want him fined, others want him traded, a few — maybe more than a few — just want him off the team and out of Kansas City.

“Merf!” Stoner says, waving over 62-year-old Doug Merfen, and he has barely taken a seat before someone brings up Peters.

“He’s a major pain in the” butt, Merfen says.

“I’d like to see him gone.”

Schuler shakes his head, unable to understand. Though many of the fans gathered here are friends and this season has mostly been a celebration, a debate has split them and it boils down to this: In 2017, which is more important to a fan base — reaching the Super Bowl or the preservation of some cultural ideal?

“He disrupts the way people think a football player should be,” Schuler says of Peters. “He’s young, he’s black, he’s talented — and he scares white America.”


Sean Schuler wears a Marcus Peters jersey while watching the Chiefs game among many fans who aren’t fans of the cornerback. (Christopher Smith/For the Washington Post)
Just let him go off
Peters’s high school coach called after the tirade toward a fan, some projects never complete.

“You can’t act like that,” the coach told him, and it wasn’t the first time he’d said it.

Even years ago, the young man had a temper. It was passion, the coach told himself; the kid was just emotional. Besides, it takes a certain personality to play cornerback, that lonely position whose isolation leads it to frequently be compared with living on an island.

Other times, the coach wondered if he was in fact to blame. Michael Peters isn’t just the coach at McClymonds High in Oakland; he’s also Marcus Peters’s father.

“Some of it, I can say, is my fault,” Coach Peters says, going on to list a few stops on a tour of his guilt-ridden mind.

Marcus was allowed on the sideline at 2, into the coaching offices a few years later; the elder Peters wonders sometimes if he allowed his son to wrap too much of his identity into the game. Is that why he was inconsolable when McClymonds lost? Was that why he would erupt at teammates when they blew a big play?

“Me and his mom, we got divorced when he was young,” Michael Peters says. “I don’t know if that had something to do with it.”


Point is, Marcus Peters is the way he is, and for a long time even his dad had no idea what to do about it. So the coach dug deeper into football, any downsides be damned, because the kid loved it and was so good at it.

He seemed to relish that isolation, that pressure; he could absorb the playbook in a few days, memorize route combinations, predict a receiver’s intentions based on body language. Marcus was patient enough to tackle in the open field, dogged enough to throw down against an opponent in press coverage.

His father came to believe the trade-offs were worth the outbursts, and when Marcus Peters overreacted, his dad ignored him and pleaded with him and placated him and — eureka! — let him explode, assigned someone his son trusted to pull him aside to cool off, and a moment later it was finished.

And that became a kind of cheat code to managing Mount St. Peters: Just let him blow and then minimize the damage. Michael Peters doesn’t know if it’s right; he just knows it works.

“I’m always a coach,” he says, and now he spends his weekends in Kansas City or in front of the television, watching the only NFL player he ever coached.

A week after calling Marcus when he screamed at a fan at Arrowhead Stadium — Michael Peters says someone called his son a racial slur — the coach again watched his son explode on national television. This time Marcus was yelling at Bob Sutton, the Chiefs’ defensive coordinator, and veteran linebacker Justin Houston calmly walked toward Peters, pulled him aside, and took him somewhere to cool off.

The old coach decided he wouldn’t have to call his son this time. It took almost three years, but finally the Chiefs had figured out the Marcus Peters cheat code.


They spoke with more than a dozen former teammates at Washington, with family and friends, with coaches who loved him and coaches who didn’t. There was no doubting his upside as a player; there was no predicting the downsides to his emotions.

“A pain in the butt,” is how one former Washington employee now describes Peters. “As talented as he was, I’d see [former defensive coordinator] Justin Wilcox shaking his head, going: ‘Oh, God, he just doesn’t listen.’ ”

With the 18th pick, the Chiefs went for it anyway.

“He’s not a problem off the field,” Reid told reporters about a player who failed a drug test in college, had an academic problem that got him barred from the Huskies’ workout facility, was suspended three times, showed up late or not at all for occasional team meetings, clashed with coaches and was eventually dismissed.

But the Chiefs were in love with what Peters could do on the field, and all marriages need at least a little denial.

Fans in Kansas City, anyway, were more skeptical: “ok, not my first choice,” someone wrote on Arrowhead Pride, a popular Chiefs blog and online gathering place, after the selection.

“Beast with an attitude problem,” wrote another.

“Reid is a character whisperer.”

And that much seemed true throughout Peters’s rookie season; he picked off passes in three of his first six games, wound up leading the league in deflections, was the runaway winner for defensive rookie of the year.


Then a few weeks after Colin Kaepernick refused to stand for the national anthem for the first time, the beginning of a movement and a firestorm, Peters stood on the Arrowhead Stadium sideline and, wearing a black glove, raised his fist. “The struggle, I seen it,” Peters, who declined an interview request for this story, told reporters after that game.

Some Kansas City fans didn’t see it that way.

“Peters proved he’s not on our team,” someone posted on Arrowhead Pride.

“Cut him.”

“First time I’ve felt this way about a Chiefs player. But I hope he has a career ending injury.”

Some fans became critical not just of Peters’s stance but of his play, the one thing about him never in question. A common point here is that, recently anyway, he hasn’t been worth the trouble; that Peters is, in fact, a liability on the field.

“If you’re going to be that big of a man, you’d better do it on the field, too,” Tim Vander Pol, 55, says about a player whom Pro Football Focus ranked as its No. 11 cornerback in 2016 and lists as its No. 40 corner through seven games this season. No other Chiefs cornerback is listed in the top 80.

When Michael Peters has visited Kansas City the last two seasons, he has felt tension. This marriage, between defiant young man and conservative region, seems increasingly strained. Peters, especially here, seems out of place.

“People from Kansas City just don’t understand it,” he says. “They’ve never had to live in a city like Oakland. You’re already a target here just by being an African American male.”

He sighs.

“Fans are going to be fans,” he says.


Take him or leave him?

And here are a lot of those fans, maybe 100 of them at the casino bar, and y might be the only one old enough to know the experience of celebrating a Super Bowl.

He was a teenager in 1970, watching Kansas City face Minnesota in the championship game as his young relatives played outside. One of them fell and hit his head, and suddenly the whole family was hurrying toward the hospital. The Chiefs won, and when Merfen learned the score he went running through the hallways, past the treatment rooms, hollering about it.

“You’ve got a certain pride anyway. But when they go all the way, it’s a feeling . . .” he says, trailing off as he tries to recapture a memory that’ll turn 48 years old in January. “It’s a rock-and-roll party, man.”

Since the team’s last Super Bowl appearance, he has served in the Navy, played professional baseball, worked as a bouncer at a biker bar, he says. If those experiences shaped his worldview, he cannot say; he just knows he’s uncomfortable with Marcus Peters within it.

“He needs an ass-whooping,” Merfen says.

“I bet people felt the same way about Deion Sanders when they were winning those . . . Super Bowls, too,” Schuler tells him.

“I bet they did,” Merfen says, going on to say he cannot respect NFL players who protest by taking a knee during the national anthem or shout at fans. He estimates half of all Chiefs fans would like Peters off the team.

“He’s young, Merfen,” Schuler says.

“We’ve got enough backup.”

Before the game starts, Peters remains seated for the national anthem. For most of the game against Oakland, he is unpredictable, disruptive, a defender opposing quarterbacks tend to avoid and a player his own fans cannot agree on.

When he surrenders a third-down conversion to Oakland’s Michael Crabtree, the anti-Peters contingent boos. When he rushes in for a helmet-to-helmet hit on Raiders quarterback Derek Carr, instigating a brawl and the ejection of his longtime friend Marshawn Lynch, even a few doubters come around.

“It’s fun when he gives it somebody else,” Stoner says during the fracas.

“Hell yeah!” Merfen says.

The adrenaline subsides, and Merfen remembers why he dislikes Peters. He calls him dirty. He says he’s unprofessional. He insists, regardless of statistics or context, Peters is a bad player.

At one point he’s asked which he’d prefer: the Chiefs winning a championship or the ouster of their best defensive back?

“It takes more than one player to win a Super Bowl,” he says.

He’s asked again.

“A really good team has backups.”

So, would he prefer Peters be cut, weakening Kansas City’s secondary and potentially extending Merfen’s 48-year wait for another Super Bowl? He thinks about it before answering.

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“Yeah,” he says, adding he’ll actually say what many others think, and a few minutes later Carr throws toward the end zone and two Chiefs defenders surround Amari Cooper. The side judge throws a penalty flag.

Merfen stands and looks toward a television.

“On Peters,” he says before the referee announces a 47-yard pass interference foul that sets up a go-ahead Raiders touchdown. “Thanks, Peters.”

He keeps watching, shaking his head.

“Should’ve taken a knee on that one,” he says.

Easy 6
10-26-2017, 11:31 AM
I figured it had to be Babb, sure wish we still had him around here

cabletech94
10-26-2017, 11:33 AM
my god that's a lot of tld;r



;)

The Franchise
10-26-2017, 11:40 AM
Doug Merfen says he and many Chiefs fans would rather see the team release Marcus Peters than win a Super Bowl with him on the roster.

What a fucking idiot.

loochy
10-26-2017, 11:42 AM
bald heads, goatees, and beer bellies

WhawhaWhat
10-26-2017, 11:42 AM
Doug Merfen should go eat some AIDS brownies.

Graystoke
10-26-2017, 11:43 AM
What a ****ing idiot.

Derf de Merf

carcosa
10-26-2017, 11:44 AM
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DLnzh65W0AEey1P.jpg

stevieray
10-26-2017, 11:44 AM
bald heads, goatees, and beer bellies

as opposed to man bun, neck beard and tofu tummy.

The Franchise
10-26-2017, 11:44 AM
This dipshit thinks we have backups to cover for Peters. ROFL Way to pay attention to the team there, mustache.

TimBone
10-26-2017, 11:59 AM
This article says so much more about Doug Merfen and his kind than it does about Marcus Peters.

KCUnited
10-26-2017, 12:02 PM
GloryMerf

DaneMcCloud
10-26-2017, 12:19 PM
Doug Merfen should go eat some AIDS brownies.

That dude is 48? He looks like he's 68.

RockChalk
10-26-2017, 12:22 PM
That dude is 48? He looks like he's 68.

If he's 48, he's had a 3-pack per day habit since he was 16

Fansy the Famous Bard
10-26-2017, 12:28 PM
That dude is 48? He looks like he's 68.

48? it says he's 62. He just has a memory that's 48 years old (from when he was a teenager)

Lex Luthor
10-26-2017, 12:33 PM
Marcus Peters is a shutdown corner. I like having a shutdown corner on this team.

I like having Marcus Peters on this team, and I don't want him to go anywhere. However, I do wish he would shut the **** up sometimes, I wish he wouldn't get stupid penalties, and I really wish he didn't have such a boner for the city of Oakland.

Of those three things, the third one bothers me the most.

The Franchise
10-26-2017, 12:34 PM
Marcus Peters is a shutdown corner. I like having a shutdown corner on this team.

I like having Marcus Peters on this team, and I don't want him to go anywhere.
However, I do wish he would shut the **** up sometimes, I wish he wouldn't get stupid penalties, and I really wish he didn't have such a boner for the city of Oakland.

Of those three things, the third one bothers me the most.

God forbid he be all about the city in which he grew up in.

Rudy tossed tigger's salad
10-26-2017, 12:38 PM
what a pathetic fan base.

Pitt Gorilla
10-26-2017, 12:48 PM
What a fucking idiot.
Article could have been titled: Some Chiefs Fans are butt****ing morons.

Pitt Gorilla
10-26-2017, 12:49 PM
Bring back Scallon, grigsby, lachapelle, shay. Those guys played with grit.

jimidollar
10-26-2017, 12:50 PM
According to the article, Peters used to make tackles. Cool.

DaneMcCloud
10-26-2017, 12:51 PM
48? it says he's 62. He just has a memory that's 48 years old (from when he was a teenager)

Ah, that makes sense.

DaneMcCloud
10-26-2017, 12:52 PM
God forbid he be all about the city in which he grew up in.

He'd be gone in 2020 if the Raiders were staying in Oakland

TinyEvel
10-26-2017, 12:54 PM
That dude is 48? He looks like he's 68.

He' what Abraham from The Walking Dead will look liker when he's 70.

stevieray
10-26-2017, 12:58 PM
He'd be gone in 2020 if the Raiders were staying in Oakland

....all day long.

Fish
10-26-2017, 01:03 PM
“Merf!” Stoner says, waving over 62-year-old Doug Merfen, and he has barely taken a seat before someone brings up Peters.

“He’s a major pain in the” butt, Merfen says.


LMAO...

Fish
10-26-2017, 01:05 PM
Author Kent Babb? The old Chiefs beat writer?

The Franchise
10-26-2017, 01:06 PM
He'd be gone in 2020 if the Raiders were staying in Oakland

He may be gone in 2020 to the Raiders.....who knows. If it happens....so be it. But I'm not going to sit here and shit on someone for talking about the city they grew up in.

Think Broncos fans want to cut Ray because he has a Chiefs tattoo?

DJJasonp
10-26-2017, 01:08 PM
Marcus Peters is a shutdown corner. I like having a shutdown corner on this team.

I like having Marcus Peters on this team, and I don't want him to go anywhere. However, I do wish he would shut the **** up sometimes, I wish he wouldn't get stupid penalties, and I really wish he didn't have such a boner for the city of Oakland.

Of those three things, the third one bothers me the most.

Need evidence from 2017 please.

(and that has zero to do with what I think or not think about Peters the person)

carcosa
10-26-2017, 01:26 PM
Think Broncos fans want to cut Ray because he has a Chiefs tattoo?

I bet you could find a few.

The Franchise
10-26-2017, 01:27 PM
I bet you could find a few.

Has there been articles written about it?

The Franchise
10-26-2017, 01:28 PM
Has there been articles written about it?

Spoiler. There has. But I don't see it to this magnitude.

Titty Meat
10-26-2017, 01:33 PM
Bet this dudes wife weighs more than any of the Chiefs linemen

stevieray
10-26-2017, 01:39 PM
I know a couple of people in that article.

Iowanian
10-26-2017, 01:39 PM
I've seen one of those names associated with a member here before.

The Franchise
10-26-2017, 01:42 PM
I know a couple of people in that article.

Tim Vander Pol sounds familiar. Where have I heard that name before?

ThaVirus
10-26-2017, 01:50 PM
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DLnzh65W0AEey1P.jpg

Lol

loochy
10-26-2017, 02:05 PM
as opposed to man bun, neck beard and tofu tummy.

as opposed to high zero fade, hard part, 8 pack, and striated glutes.

Rudy tossed tigger's salad
10-26-2017, 02:06 PM
I know a couple of people in that article.

Shocker

lcarus
10-26-2017, 02:15 PM
Clearly some people understand how hard it is to find a corner with Peters abilities. No CBs are perfect. He's made some dumbass plays but they're few and far between. As far as his personality, as long as he doesn't draw flags I don't really care. The one thing that I will call him out for is his willingness to tackle at times.

You know what I love about Peters? He tries to strip the ball every time he tackles. You know what I hate about Peters? He tries to strip the ball every time he tackles.

KCUnited
10-26-2017, 02:20 PM
You know what I love about Peters? He tries to strip the ball every time he tackles. You know what I hate about Peters? He tries to strip the ball every time he tackles.
Going for the strip is great when you're the 2nd guy there and the 1st guy is holding him up. When you're the first guy there and going for the strip, Donnie Edwards is worried about your turf burn from getting trucked 10 yards down the field. I wonder how many fumbles Peters has forced, I honestly don't know?

tatorhog
10-26-2017, 02:23 PM
I know a couple of people in that article.

Same. Stoner is a good dude, funny as hell.

BigCatDaddy
10-26-2017, 02:28 PM
Race baiting article.. lovely

Chiefnj2
10-26-2017, 02:30 PM
Need evidence from 2017 please.

(and that has zero to do with what I think or not think about Peters the person)

A quick google search:

New England week one - 1 target all game.
San Diego - 7 targets, allowed 3 catches for 20 yards total.
Pitt - 6 targets, 1 INT, 1 PBU and allowed 4 receptions for 29 yards.

Yep, he sucks. People's opinion of him have nothing to do with his attitude and demeanor.

stevieray
10-26-2017, 02:34 PM
Same. Stoner is a good dude, funny as hell.

^

Dan throws a HUUUUGE tailgate.

stevieray
10-26-2017, 02:37 PM
as opposed to high zero fade, hard part, 8 pack, and striated glutes.

you took that personal? :eek:

btw, you forgot skinny jeans and popped collar


:D

Marcellus
10-26-2017, 02:44 PM
Marcus was patient enough to tackle in the open field,

Wonder when that part of his game went away.

ptlyon
10-26-2017, 02:48 PM
Tim Vander Pol sounds familiar. Where have I heard that name before?

Go to any male strippers lately?

Marcellus
10-26-2017, 02:48 PM
When Michael Peters has visited Kansas City the last two seasons, he has felt tension. This marriage, between defiant young man and conservative region, seems increasingly strained. Peters, especially here, seems out of place.

“People from Kansas City just don’t understand it,” he says. “They’ve never had to live in a city like Oakland. You’re already a target here just by being an African American male.”

Are you ****ing shitting me? :rolleyes:

Rudy tossed tigger's salad
10-26-2017, 02:55 PM
Are you ****ing shitting me? :rolleyes:

Would you feel better if he would have said outspoken African-American male?

Pitt Gorilla
10-26-2017, 03:00 PM
A quick google search:

New England week one - 1 target all game.
San Diego - 7 targets, allowed 3 catches for 20 yards total.
Pitt - 6 targets, 1 INT, 1 PBU and allowed 4 receptions for 29 yards.

Yep, he sucks. People's opinion of him have nothing to do with his attitude and demeanor.Right, but aside from the stats, he sucks because we want to believe he does.

Rudy tossed tigger's salad
10-26-2017, 03:02 PM
A quick google search:

New England week one - 1 target all game.
San Diego - 7 targets, allowed 3 catches for 20 yards total.
Pitt - 6 targets, 1 INT, 1 PBU and allowed 4 receptions for 29 yards.

Yep, he sucks. People's opinion of him have nothing to do with his attitude and demeanor.


God bless you.

Tribal Warfare
10-26-2017, 03:04 PM
Are you ****ing shitting me? :rolleyes:

This is reason I want to trade Marcus Peters for a 1st rounder and more.If he's unhappy playing for the Chiefs ship him somewhere he'll be more comfortable while on our end we gouge the recipient for multiple picks.

This shit will start to fuck with team because of the inherent distraction

stevieray
10-26-2017, 03:33 PM
Shocker

I know quite a few local Chiefs fans, Rude E.

Marcellus
10-26-2017, 03:35 PM
This is reason I want to trade Marcus Peters for a 1st rounder and more.If he's unhappy playing for the Chiefs ship him somewhere he'll be more comfortable while on our end we gouge the recipient for multiple picks.

This shit will start to **** with team because of the inherent distraction

I'm not saying KC doesn't have some redneck douchenozzles like most every city but I have never heard of a Chiefs player complaining about being black and being in KC before.

I've heard that shit about Green Bay for example but never KC. I dont get it.

KranzDictum
10-26-2017, 03:41 PM
https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/marcus-peters-one-of-the-chiefs-top-players-is-certainly-not-their-most-beloved/2017/10/26/d2e03cac-b9b6-11e7-9e58-e6288544af98_story.html?utm_term=.c6ff251cafaf

Marcus Peters, one of the Chiefs’ top players, is certainly not their most beloved

If this article had a bunch of long pauses in it, it could be a Harold Pinter play.

EPodolak
10-26-2017, 03:42 PM
Keep Peters. Lose Merfen.

thegame214
10-26-2017, 03:50 PM
Andy is one of the only coaches who lets him be himself. Imagine his ass in New England hahaha

Tribal Warfare
10-26-2017, 05:19 PM
I'm not saying KC doesn't have some redneck douchenozzles like most every city but I have never heard of a Chiefs player complaining about being black and being in KC before.

I've heard that shit about Green Bay for example but never KC. I dont get it.

If the family is citing this as a reason why there's is tension then fuck it let's trade him and get something out of it. If he is truly exasperated to the point he can't be emotionally controlled because of said issue. Then trade Peters and get a metric fuckton of picks out of the deal

GloryDayz
10-26-2017, 05:33 PM
This part was interesting:

NORTH KANSAS CITY, Mo. — They slide into a booth and order their beers, preparing to watch the Kansas City Chiefs at the sports bar inside a casino.

Then someone brings it up. Someone always brings it up.

As this Thursday evening begins, the Chiefs are 5-1 — one of the NFL’s best teams and perhaps the AFC’s most intriguing Super Bowl contender. But around here, there’s no meatier — or more divisive — topic than Marcus Peters, the team’s controversial and talented cornerback, and what should be done about him.

Peters doesn’t just protest during the national anthem before games; he has raised his fist or sat on a stationary bike. He doesn’t just sneer at coaches and disagreeable fans; he openly berates them. Peters uses profanity in interviews, has talked about going to get “loaded” after a bad game, told reporters last year he’s “black and I love being black.”

During an NFL season when some players’ off-field expressions have clashed with fans’ allegiances to their on-field efforts, Peters is, among other things, something of a cultural experiment here in Middle America: one that has occasionally pitted a player against his own team’s fans, individualism against traditional values.


“If it was me,” longtime Chiefs fan Dan Joy is saying, “I’d have a one-on-one; spend a day with him. He’s worth that. After that I’d sit him out a half a game.”

Sean Schuler, among the dozens at Winning Streaks wearing a red jersey but one of the few in Peters’s No. 22, snaps his head toward Joy.

“Sitting him out hurts the team!” Schuler says.

“That would be step two,” Joy says, reminding his friend a discussion would come first.

John Stoner, another fan at the table, nods.

“Progressive discipline,” he says, looking around the bar for someone. “Where’s Merf?”

Peters is one of the best defensive players on one of the NFL’s best teams. He tied for the league lead with eight interceptions in 2015, was named to the Pro Bowl following each of his first two seasons, is a young star at one of most demanding and isolated positions on the field. He also has a history of volatility: Three years before television cameras caught Peters screaming at fans and, a week later, his defensive coordinator, Peters was kicked off the University of Washington football team for a pattern of explosive behavior.


“We know that he’s emotional,” Chiefs Coach Andy Reid told reporters recently. “That’s not a secret here.”

Neither, at least recently, is Kansas City’s tense relationship with Peters. Earlier this season fans made shirts with a strike through a No. 22, and this month a business owner suggested on Facebook that other businesses should refuse service to Peters. Some want him fined, others want him traded, a few — maybe more than a few — just want him off the team and out of Kansas City.

“Merf!” Stoner says, waving over 62-year-old Doug Merfen, and he has barely taken a seat before someone brings up Peters.

“He’s a major pain in the” butt, Merfen says.

“I’d like to see him gone.”

Schuler shakes his head, unable to understand. Though many of the fans gathered here are friends and this season has mostly been a celebration, a debate has split them and it boils down to this: In 2017, which is more important to a fan base — reaching the Super Bowl or the preservation of some cultural ideal?

“He disrupts the way people think a football player should be,” Schuler says of Peters. “He’s young, he’s black, he’s talented — and he scares white America.”


Sean Schuler wears a Marcus Peters jersey while watching the Chiefs game among many fans who aren’t fans of the cornerback. (Christopher Smith/For the Washington Post)
Just let him go off
Peters’s high school coach called after the tirade toward a fan, some projects never complete.

“You can’t act like that,” the coach told him, and it wasn’t the first time he’d said it.

Even years ago, the young man had a temper. It was passion, the coach told himself; the kid was just emotional. Besides, it takes a certain personality to play cornerback, that lonely position whose isolation leads it to frequently be compared with living on an island.

Other times, the coach wondered if he was in fact to blame. Michael Peters isn’t just the coach at McClymonds High in Oakland; he’s also Marcus Peters’s father.

“Some of it, I can say, is my fault,” Coach Peters says, going on to list a few stops on a tour of his guilt-ridden mind.

Marcus was allowed on the sideline at 2, into the coaching offices a few years later; the elder Peters wonders sometimes if he allowed his son to wrap too much of his identity into the game. Is that why he was inconsolable when McClymonds lost? Was that why he would erupt at teammates when they blew a big play?

“Me and his mom, we got divorced when he was young,” Michael Peters says. “I don’t know if that had something to do with it.”


Point is, Marcus Peters is the way he is, and for a long time even his dad had no idea what to do about it. So the coach dug deeper into football, any downsides be damned, because the kid loved it and was so good at it.

He seemed to relish that isolation, that pressure; he could absorb the playbook in a few days, memorize route combinations, predict a receiver’s intentions based on body language. Marcus was patient enough to tackle in the open field, dogged enough to throw down against an opponent in press coverage.

His father came to believe the trade-offs were worth the outbursts, and when Marcus Peters overreacted, his dad ignored him and pleaded with him and placated him and — eureka! — let him explode, assigned someone his son trusted to pull him aside to cool off, and a moment later it was finished.

And that became a kind of cheat code to managing Mount St. Peters: Just let him blow and then minimize the damage. Michael Peters doesn’t know if it’s right; he just knows it works.

“I’m always a coach,” he says, and now he spends his weekends in Kansas City or in front of the television, watching the only NFL player he ever coached.

A week after calling Marcus when he screamed at a fan at Arrowhead Stadium — Michael Peters says someone called his son a racial slur — the coach again watched his son explode on national television. This time Marcus was yelling at Bob Sutton, the Chiefs’ defensive coordinator, and veteran linebacker Justin Houston calmly walked toward Peters, pulled him aside, and took him somewhere to cool off.

The old coach decided he wouldn’t have to call his son this time. It took almost three years, but finally the Chiefs had figured out the Marcus Peters cheat code.


They spoke with more than a dozen former teammates at Washington, with family and friends, with coaches who loved him and coaches who didn’t. There was no doubting his upside as a player; there was no predicting the downsides to his emotions.

“A pain in the butt,” is how one former Washington employee now describes Peters. “As talented as he was, I’d see [former defensive coordinator] Justin Wilcox shaking his head, going: ‘Oh, God, he just doesn’t listen.’ ”

With the 18th pick, the Chiefs went for it anyway.

“He’s not a problem off the field,” Reid told reporters about a player who failed a drug test in college, had an academic problem that got him barred from the Huskies’ workout facility, was suspended three times, showed up late or not at all for occasional team meetings, clashed with coaches and was eventually dismissed.

But the Chiefs were in love with what Peters could do on the field, and all marriages need at least a little denial.

Fans in Kansas City, anyway, were more skeptical: “ok, not my first choice,” someone wrote on Arrowhead Pride, a popular Chiefs blog and online gathering place, after the selection.

“Beast with an attitude problem,” wrote another.

“Reid is a character whisperer.”

And that much seemed true throughout Peters’s rookie season; he picked off passes in three of his first six games, wound up leading the league in deflections, was the runaway winner for defensive rookie of the year.


Then a few weeks after Colin Kaepernick refused to stand for the national anthem for the first time, the beginning of a movement and a firestorm, Peters stood on the Arrowhead Stadium sideline and, wearing a black glove, raised his fist. “The struggle, I seen it,” Peters, who declined an interview request for this story, told reporters after that game.

Some Kansas City fans didn’t see it that way.

“Peters proved he’s not on our team,” someone posted on Arrowhead Pride.

“Cut him.”

“First time I’ve felt this way about a Chiefs player. But I hope he has a career ending injury.”

Some fans became critical not just of Peters’s stance but of his play, the one thing about him never in question. A common point here is that, recently anyway, he hasn’t been worth the trouble; that Peters is, in fact, a liability on the field.

“If you’re going to be that big of a man, you’d better do it on the field, too,” Tim Vander Pol, 55, says about a player whom Pro Football Focus ranked as its No. 11 cornerback in 2016 and lists as its No. 40 corner through seven games this season. No other Chiefs cornerback is listed in the top 80.

When Michael Peters has visited Kansas City the last two seasons, he has felt tension. This marriage, between defiant young man and conservative region, seems increasingly strained. Peters, especially here, seems out of place.

“People from Kansas City just don’t understand it,” he says. “They’ve never had to live in a city like Oakland. You’re already a target here just by being an African American male.”

He sighs.

“Fans are going to be fans,” he says.


Take him or leave him?

And here are a lot of those fans, maybe 100 of them at the casino bar, and y might be the only one old enough to know the experience of celebrating a Super Bowl.

He was a teenager in 1970, watching Kansas City face Minnesota in the championship game as his young relatives played outside. One of them fell and hit his head, and suddenly the whole family was hurrying toward the hospital. The Chiefs won, and when Merfen learned the score he went running through the hallways, past the treatment rooms, hollering about it.

“You’ve got a certain pride anyway. But when they go all the way, it’s a feeling . . .” he says, trailing off as he tries to recapture a memory that’ll turn 48 years old in January. “It’s a rock-and-roll party, man.”

Since the team’s last Super Bowl appearance, he has served in the Navy, played professional baseball, worked as a bouncer at a biker bar, he says. If those experiences shaped his worldview, he cannot say; he just knows he’s uncomfortable with Marcus Peters within it.

“He needs an ass-whooping,” Merfen says.

“I bet people felt the same way about Deion Sanders when they were winning those . . . Super Bowls, too,” Schuler tells him.

“I bet they did,” Merfen says, going on to say he cannot respect NFL players who protest by taking a knee during the national anthem or shout at fans. He estimates half of all Chiefs fans would like Peters off the team.

“He’s young, Merfen,” Schuler says.

“We’ve got enough backup.”

Before the game starts, Peters remains seated for the national anthem. For most of the game against Oakland, he is unpredictable, disruptive, a defender opposing quarterbacks tend to avoid and a player his own fans cannot agree on.

When he surrenders a third-down conversion to Oakland’s Michael Crabtree, the anti-Peters contingent boos. When he rushes in for a helmet-to-helmet hit on Raiders quarterback Derek Carr, instigating a brawl and the ejection of his longtime friend Marshawn Lynch, even a few doubters come around.

“It’s fun when he gives it somebody else,” Stoner says during the fracas.

“Hell yeah!” Merfen says.

The adrenaline subsides, and Merfen remembers why he dislikes Peters. He calls him dirty. He says he’s unprofessional. He insists, regardless of statistics or context, Peters is a bad player.

At one point he’s asked which he’d prefer: the Chiefs winning a championship or the ouster of their best defensive back?

“It takes more than one player to win a Super Bowl,” he says.

He’s asked again.

“A really good team has backups.”

So, would he prefer Peters be cut, weakening Kansas City’s secondary and potentially extending Merfen’s 48-year wait for another Super Bowl? He thinks about it before answering.

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“Yeah,” he says, adding he’ll actually say what many others think, and a few minutes later Carr throws toward the end zone and two Chiefs defenders surround Amari Cooper. The side judge throws a penalty flag.

Merfen stands and looks toward a television.

“On Peters,” he says before the referee announces a 47-yard pass interference foul that sets up a go-ahead Raiders touchdown. “Thanks, Peters.”

He keeps watching, shaking his head.

“Should’ve taken a knee on that one,” he says.

Chiefshrink
10-26-2017, 06:25 PM
Andy is one of the only coaches who lets him be himself. Imagine his ass in New England hahaha

Hey, Andy and the owners and the NFL brass know who the product is and the fact that 80% of the product are black and the majority of that 80% black product agree with "dissing on the national anthem" and "could strike at any moment" and that is the key phrase there, and why you see the NFL brass walking a fine line, Andy allowing individual expression and Jerry Jones "kneeling in the beginning with his team" before he came out later with his opposite statement to save face.:rolleyes:

We all know who has the leverage here and it ain't the NFL slaveowners that is for sure.;)

listopencil
10-26-2017, 06:34 PM
He may be gone in 2020 to the Raiders.....who knows. If it happens....so be it. But I'm not going to sit here and shit on someone for talking about the city they grew up in.

Think Broncos fans want to cut Ray because he has a Chiefs tattoo?

Ray is an inspiring success story and I hope we keep him. Somebody from a Broncos site posted a link to an article about how he grew up. You guys might want to read it:

https://www.theplayerstribune.com/shane-ray-broncos-super-hardcore/

loochy
10-27-2017, 08:08 AM
you took that personal? :eek:



No. It's just fun to play juxtaposing douchebags.
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Rausch
10-27-2017, 08:13 AM
Keep Peters. Lose Merfen.

Peters isn't here because of his political, social, or financial beliefs.

As long as he wants to be here, the team wants to have him, and he plays at a high level I want him here.

GloryDayz
10-27-2017, 08:57 AM
Peters isn't here because of his political, social, or financial beliefs.

As long as he wants to be here, the team wants to have him, and he plays at a high level I want him here.That's not how they treated LJ. They went out of their way to make sure he didn't get those last few yards to surpass Nacho.

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TimBone
10-27-2017, 10:20 PM
I know a couple of people in that article.

There's a surprise...