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Old 05-17-2005, 07:12 AM   Topic Starter
DaWolf DaWolf is offline
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Clark Judge: Chiefs give Cunningham the goods; now he has to deliver...

Apologies in advance if this is a repost...

Chiefs give Cunningham the goods; now he has to deliver
May 16, 2005
By Clark Judge
CBS SportsLine.com Senior Writer

As spring passes into summer, the heat in Kansas City is not on its defense. It's on its defensive coordinator.

"We have to make this work," said Gunther Cunningham.

The Chiefs assistant spoke the same words a year ago, only then there was a difference: He was operating with the same tired bodies that sank the club in 2003 and drove Greg Robinson out of the NFL.

Now, Kansas City has done what Cunningham asked and what common sense demanded. It went out and signed free-agent linebacker Kendrell Bell and safety Sammy Knight; traded for cornerback Patrick Surtain and defensive end Carlos Hall; and spent its first draft pick on linebacker Derrick Johnson.

"Now," said Cunningham, "there could be as many as six or seven new starters. But they still have to earn their stripes. And we have to coach them up."

That's never been a problem for the tireless Cunningham, who spent most of the past two decades squeezing all that he could out of his players. But then along came the 2004 season, when Cunningham returned to Kansas City and the Chiefs defense returned to the nasty habits that sabotaged the club the year before when it self-destructed down the stretch.

It wasn't supposed to happen this way. Cunningham, so effective as a coordinator the Chiefs named him to succeed Marty Schottenheimer as head coach in 1999, would correct things with a wave of his hand -- somehow gaining results from the same players who failed Robinson the year before.

But it never happened. The Chiefs not only didn't improve; they stepped backward, plummeting to 31st in total defense and dead last in pass defense -- surrendering 72 pass plays of 20 or more yards and 21 of 40 or more.

Yeah, I know, they lost linebackers Shawn Barber and Mike Maslowski, defensive end Vonnie Holliday and their starting safeties, but injuries happen to everyone. You're expected to overcome them. Only Kansas City didn't, and now the onus for the coming season isn't on the defense; it's on Cunningham, and he knows it.

In fact, he welcomes it.

"Last year was the toughest year I had in the league," he said. "I came here with one thing in mind, and that was that we have to give the offense a chance. After one year I saw what we needed to do, and (head coach) Dick Vermeil and (president) Carl Peterson and the front office went out and did it. They got the kind of players I'm used to."

The two key moves were adding Bell, the league's defensive rookie of the year in 2001, and making the trade for Surtain. If he can stay healthy, Bell improves a linebacking corps that lost Barber and Maslowski a year ago and desperately needed an upgrade.

Surtain, a two-time Pro Bowl player, is the steady cornerback the Chiefs missed the past two seasons. He's proven. He's 28. And he allows the club to move Eric Warfield to right cornerback and William Bartee to safety. Sure, the Chiefs were interested in a free agent like Ken Lucas or Samari Rolle, but they landed Surtain instead, sacrificing a second-round draft pick to make the trade.

In the end, I'm not sure that might not be the best move of all.

What I am sure of is with the Surtain deal, as well as the others, the Chiefs pushed Cunningham directly into the line of fire. You no longer can argue the club did nothing for its defensive coordinator. It did everything it could for the guy, with Peterson approaching Cunningham in January to discuss a wish list of defensive names.

Bell was on it. So was Knight. So was Hall. Even Surtain, then under contract with Miami, was on it.

"If we get them," Peterson asked, "will you be happy?"

Cunningham nodded. And that was before the club acquired Johnson, the best linebacker in the draft and one of its most decorated defenders.

"I couldn't expect them to do more than this," said Cunningham. "I can't tell you enough how indebted I am to them for what they did."

He doesn't have to. He simply has to demonstrate it. Because if the Kansas City Chiefs are to return to the top of the AFC West, it's not Trent Green or Priest Holmes or Tony Gonzalez who must push his game up a notch. It's Gunther Cunningham and his defensive unit, and what's new?

"This is the NFL, and I know what people want," said Cunningham. "They want results. The offense has been great, but if you talk to the real fans of Kansas City, they want to see us play defense, and that's what drives me more than anything -- those fans.

"I know what they're all about. I see them around town and pass them on the sidewalks and they tell me, 'Gun, we know you'll get it done.' If you want to talk about pressure, that's where I get it from. I get it from them. I don't know what I've done to earn their respect, but, more than anything, I want to pay them back."

Wait a couple of months. Then he'll have his chance.


Gunther Cunningham, in his second stint in Kansas City, knows what people expect -- results. (Getty Images)


Cunningham will have several new starters. (Getty Images)



Patrick Surtain is an elite cornerback. (Getty Images)


Kendrell Bell was top defensive rookie in '01. (Getty Images)


Safety Sammy Knight had 98 tackles in '04. (Getty Images)


Carlos Hall bolsters the defensive line. (Getty Images)


K.C. drafted Derrick Johnson in Round 1. (Getty Images)

Last edited by DaWolf; 05-17-2005 at 07:19 AM..
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