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cavtrp1
09-08-2004, 02:02 PM
Sep 8, 3:08 PM (ET) Email this Story

By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The punter does not have one minute of NFL experience. The placekicker does not have one minute of NFL experience.

The general manager, at least for the time being, does not have one minute's peace of mind.

"I'm scared to death," said Carl Peterson, president and GM of the Kansas City Chiefs. "I'm not going to be able to sleep at night until these guys prove themselves."

The Chiefs' focus throughout the preseason was trained on achieving a defensive renaissance under Gunther Cunningham and fine-tuning a powerful offense - making sure a 13-3 playoff team remained a viable Super Bowl contender.

But less than a week before the season opener, the Chiefs did something only rebuilding teams are supposed to do. They fired their veteran placekicker, No. 2 career scorer Morten Andersen, and dumped their in-the-doghouse punter, rolling the dice with a couple of scarily untested newcomers.


"A tough decision. A risky decision," agreed coach Dick Vermeil.

Punting will be handled by Steve Cheek. He's been with five teams in four years, but never found his way onto an NFL roster until making good in his only preseason game with Kansas City.

Succeeding Andersen, who still possesses great accuracy from 40 yards and in, is Lawrence Tynes.

Tynes kicked well the past two years in the CFL and obviously has more distance and power than the 44-year-old he displaced.

But like Cheek, he's never kicked with NFL-caliber athletes bearing down on him and 70,000 crazed fans screaming in his ear.

Peterson, among others on the staff, favored keeping at least one of the veterans. But Vermeil prevailed.

"You don't always have a 100 percent consensus on the decisions you make on moving and changing the roster, but you try to come up with a majority that believes you're doing the right thing," Vermeil said.

Tynes should have plenty of opportunity to kick field goals and extra points because the offense that's led the NFL in scoring the past two years has never looked sharper.

Pro Bowl players in quarterback Trent Green, running back Priest Holmes, fullback Tony Richardson and tight end Tony Gonzalez assure the Chiefs of plenty of firepower.

Green trails only Peyton Manning for the most yards passing in the past two seasons combined (7,729 to 8,467). Holmes, who rebounded from hip surgery in 2003 to score an NFL-record 27 touchdowns, has been running with greater energy than he ever showed a year ago.

Nine-time Pro Bowlers Will Shields at guard and Willie Roaf at tackle anchor an offensive line which ranks among the very best.

Wide receiver is the only worry on offense.

Never a strength, the situation grew bleaker with injuries that put Marc Boerigter on injured reserve and sidelined Johnnie Morton until this week.

In addition, rookie tight end Kris Wilson, who had the most impressive camp of any newcomer, broke his leg and will be gone at least half the season.

The unsettled look among the pass catchers might even take the ball out of Dante Hall's hands on some punts and kickoffs. If Hall winds up shouldering a greater load at receiver, Vermeil will not risk overworking the little guy who had five touchdown returns in '03.

But what of the defense?

Cunningham, fired four years ago as head coach, is back doing what he does best - coordinating and energizing a defense. He has almost the exact same personnel as the unit that finished 29th a year ago. But he's installed a new scheme and, perhaps equally important, a new mind-set.

"You don't have to watch our 9-on-7 drills to see the difference," said linebacker Scott Fujita. "You can actually hear the drill, too. It's a completely different attitude."

Gravelly voiced and salty-tongued, Cunningham's influence is being felt everywhere.

"There's been a trickle-down effect ... to the whole football team," Vermeil said. "He's a tough guy and you can't have enough tough guys on a football team. He brings that little extra dimension that rubs off into everything."

At least one front row observer swears it'll be a new defense.

"They're attacking now," said Gonzalez. "They're rallying to the football. I think this is the year to do it, and I'm talking Super Bowl. This playoff stuff, we expect that. But we really do think our chances are good to go to the Super Bowl and win the thing this year."


http://sports.iwon.com/news/09082004/v0997.html

BigVE
09-08-2004, 02:48 PM
Sep 8, 3:08 PM (ET) Email this Story

By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The punter does not have one minute of NFL experience. The placekicker does not have one minute of NFL experience.

The general manager, at least for the time being, does not have one minute's peace of mind.

"I'm scared to death," said Carl Peterson, president and GM of the Kansas City Chiefs. "I'm not going to be able to sleep at night until these guys prove themselves."

The Chiefs' focus throughout the preseason was trained on achieving a defensive renaissance under Gunther Cunningham and fine-tuning a powerful offense - making sure a 13-3 playoff team remained a viable Super Bowl contender.

But less than a week before the season opener, the Chiefs did something only rebuilding teams are supposed to do. They fired their veteran placekicker, No. 2 career scorer Morten Andersen, and dumped their in-the-doghouse punter, rolling the dice with a couple of scarily untested newcomers.


"A tough decision. A risky decision," agreed coach Dick Vermeil.

Punting will be handled by Steve Cheek. He's been with five teams in four years, but never found his way onto an NFL roster until making good in his only preseason game with Kansas City.

Succeeding Andersen, who still possesses great accuracy from 40 yards and in, is Lawrence Tynes.

Tynes kicked well the past two years in the CFL and obviously has more distance and power than the 44-year-old he displaced.

But like Cheek, he's never kicked with NFL-caliber athletes bearing down on him and 70,000 crazed fans screaming in his ear.

Peterson, among others on the staff, favored keeping at least one of the veterans. But Vermeil prevailed.

"You don't always have a 100 percent consensus on the decisions you make on moving and changing the roster, but you try to come up with a majority that believes you're doing the right thing," Vermeil said.

Tynes should have plenty of opportunity to kick field goals and extra points because the offense that's led the NFL in scoring the past two years has never looked sharper.

Pro Bowl players in quarterback Trent Green, running back Priest Holmes, fullback Tony Richardson and tight end Tony Gonzalez assure the Chiefs of plenty of firepower.

Green trails only Peyton Manning for the most yards passing in the past two seasons combined (7,729 to 8,467). Holmes, who rebounded from hip surgery in 2003 to score an NFL-record 27 touchdowns, has been running with greater energy than he ever showed a year ago.

Nine-time Pro Bowlers Will Shields at guard and Willie Roaf at tackle anchor an offensive line which ranks among the very best.

Wide receiver is the only worry on offense.

Never a strength, the situation grew bleaker with injuries that put Marc Boerigter on injured reserve and sidelined Johnnie Morton until this week.

In addition, rookie tight end Kris Wilson, who had the most impressive camp of any newcomer, broke his leg and will be gone at least half the season.

The unsettled look among the pass catchers might even take the ball out of Dante Hall's hands on some punts and kickoffs. If Hall winds up shouldering a greater load at receiver, Vermeil will not risk overworking the little guy who had five touchdown returns in '03.

But what of the defense?

Cunningham, fired four years ago as head coach, is back doing what he does best - coordinating and energizing a defense. He has almost the exact same personnel as the unit that finished 29th a year ago. But he's installed a new scheme and, perhaps equally important, a new mind-set.

"You don't have to watch our 9-on-7 drills to see the difference," said linebacker Scott Fujita. "You can actually hear the drill, too. It's a completely different attitude."

Gravelly voiced and salty-tongued, Cunningham's influence is being felt everywhere.

"There's been a trickle-down effect ... to the whole football team," Vermeil said. "He's a tough guy and you can't have enough tough guys on a football team. He brings that little extra dimension that rubs off into everything."

At least one front row observer swears it'll be a new defense.

"They're attacking now," said Gonzalez. "They're rallying to the football. I think this is the year to do it, and I'm talking Super Bowl. This playoff stuff, we expect that. But we really do think our chances are good to go to the Super Bowl and win the thing this year."


http://sports.iwon.com/news/09082004/v0997.html

I guess getting to playoffs EVERY YEAR and getting SO CLOSE to the superbowl isnt satisfying Tony G...oh wait, we havent even WON a playoff game since...when??? Yes, I want the Chiefs to make it to the SB but C,MON, lets WIN a playoff game FIRST!!?? Talk is cheap.

bogie
09-08-2004, 04:19 PM
I guess getting to playoffs EVERY YEAR and getting SO CLOSE to the superbowl isnt satisfying Tony G...oh wait, we havent even WON a playoff game since...when??? Yes, I want the Chiefs to make it to the SB but C,MON, lets WIN a playoff game FIRST!!?? Talk is cheap.


Talk is cheap, but I love the positive attitude!

BigChiefFan
09-08-2004, 05:59 PM
I'm a little concerned about the punter and kicker, but they earned the job, so I think they will be fine.