![]() |
John Dorsey handled the difficult 2014 offseason unbelievably well.
The Chiefs faced a difficult offseason following the 2013 playoff meltdown. After GM John Dorsey's spending spree in the 2013 offseason, the Chiefs had a half dozen premier free agents getting ready to hit the market, no cap room to sign any of them (or any incoming free agents of any renown), and no second round pick due to the Alex Smith deal. How do you make a team betterwhen you're set to lose so much talent and have so little resources to replace them?
Now, I'm not an NFL General Manager, and y'all better be glad I don't run the Chiefs, because I must have ran three dozen simulations of that offseason for the Chiefs before it arrived, and every one of them had the Chiefs doing their damnedest to stay afloat replacing our departing players with free agents from the Salvation Army and midround draft picks. The intense spending spree of 2013 now looked like it had hopelessly hamstrung the Chiefs, who at this point would just have to hope to stay afloat until cap space opened up in future years. John Dorsey, however, is an NFL General Manager. And armed with few draft picks and a shoestring budget, he totally dismantled my expectations of what can be accomplished by a Chiefs team that knows exactly what it's doing. Let's start with the free agent departures, because this part is astonishing. The Chiefs limited budget meant that they would ultimately have to wave bye-bye to left tackle Brandon Albert, starting guards Jon Asamoah and Geoff Schwartz, playmaker Dexter McCluster, run stopping extraordinaire Tyson Jackson, starting linebacker Akeem Jordan, starting free safety Kendrick Lewis, dynamic kick returner and dime safety Quentin Demps, and would eventually cut Pro Bowl corner Brandon Flowers. Whatever you think of some of the players individually, that is objectively a lot of talent to replace. Once these players left Kansas City, they all went to sign contracts with new teams for a combined $100 million. ($140 million if you count Flowers' new deal this past offseason.) That's right. John Dorsey allowed $100 million in talent to walk out the door, with roughly a tenth of that in cap space with which to replace said players. It was impossible to imagine a world where the Chiefs emerged from this offseason stronger than they were entering it, missing this much talent. So armed virtually no money, Dorsey's free agent signings were meager, but solid, it's crazy to see how much he built the team for 2014 (and 2015!) with so little:
Now, it is worth mentioning that the Chiefs' limited cap space arguably did cause them to lose out on free agent WRs Emmanuel Sanders and DeSean Jackson. But by otherwise refusing to make any ridiculously-structured, ultra-back-loaded contracts that would have saddled the Chiefs' cap in future years, the cap came mostly clean in 2015, allowing the Chiefs to pay studs OLB Justin Houston, WR Jeremy Maclin, and DE Allen Bailey bundles of cash in the coming year and still have close to $30 million in clean cap space in 2015. However, it should be mentioned that John Dorsey was just getting started. Check out this draft class from 2014, even without a 2nd rounder due to Alex Smith:
It's worth summarizing for emphasis: With little cap space, $100 million in departing free agents, and no second round pick, John Dorsey made the Chiefs a better team in 2014. Almost every team needs those splashy free agency signings to help put it over the top. But those quiet offseasons, where teams confidently stuck to the plan and didn't make any egregious errors out of impatience or impertinence, are just as important, and Dorsey aced it. |
|
The depth that he's built on this team in a short time is pretty remarkable. I've said it before and I'll say it again, I love how he's building this team for longterm success
|
Damn lucky to have him.
|
He is the franchise's MVP if you ask me.
|
It should be noted that John Dorsey also brought in the following players in 2014:
Promising RB breakout Spencer Ware Promising DE Nick Williams |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I would like to have kept Albert if he could stay healthy, and Swartz at a reasonable contract. But the fact is, they are all just jags, and the teams that gave them that money overpaid them, and for the most part are likely regretting the coin they dropped to sign them. Quote:
You are seriously overstating the work, though. The depth is better, and that has been a contributing factor in this streak, but the reality is that this team is winning because the guys that were here before Dorsey, DJ, Hali, Poe, and Berry are all playing exceptionally well and leading this team. |
Quote:
He brought in Ware/West in 2014, and that has kept our run game thriving, which Alex Smith needs. His restraint in 2014 allowed us cap space to bring in Maclin, whom Alex Smith needs, as well as Albert Wilson for essentially free. And he bargained Smith down to a "middle class QB" contract in 2014. Dee Ford has been critical the past couple weeks, as has Zach Fulton and Laurent Duvarney-Tardif. The 2014 offseason is a significant reason the Chiefs are 9-5. But your point about the soul of the defense being almost entirely constructed prior to Dorsey's arrival is also very significant. |
Quote:
I would hope the **** so. |
Quote:
QB play is so atrocious in the NFL that even middle class QBs have all the leverage over their teams. We've got a fair deal that doesn't hurt the rest of the team, cap-wise. |
Quote:
This is a huge credit to Dorsey |
To be fair to milk, Kelce was acquired in 2013 and Peters in 2015, so they aren't as relevant to this discussion as you think.
|
Quote:
He has. But Direckshun has oversold it with his observations. Some of, if not all, those free agent losses have been insignificant, while many of the free agent signings have been okay, at best. |
Quote:
And a couple of those were set up so that those teams could cut their losses if needed after a couple of seasons with minimal negative cap implications. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:30 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.