No. 12 has always carried a little more weight than a random jersey number in Kansas City. On the Chiefs’ roll call, it’s tied to a quarterback who slipped away, a receiver who turned into a steal, a tight end still trying to find his footing, and a Super Bowl moment that landed in the middle of the whole story.
Rich Gannon is the name that still hangs over it. He signed with the Chiefs in 1995 and spent two seasons behind Steve Bono before 1997 finally gave him a real opening.
With Elvis Grbac hurt, Gannon steered Kansas City to a 5-1 record, and the locker room clearly responded to him. But when the playoffs arrived, Marty Schottenheimer handed the job back to Grbac.
Kansas City then lost 14-10 to Denver as the favorite, and Gannon’s Chiefs chapter was basically over after that. He and Grbac split time the next year before both moved on to the Raiders, where Gannon became a star, made four straight Pro Bowls, won the 2002 MVP award, and reached Super Bowl 37.
For Kansas City, he’s the quarterback they never really should have let get away.
There’s also a much happier kind of success story in Albert Wilson. The Chiefs brought him in after the 2014 draft as an undrafted free agent out of Georgia State, where he had already stood out as the most decorated receiver in a program that had only been around since 2010.
John Dorsey’s staff went after him hard, and Wilson made them look smart. He not only earned a spot on the 53-man roster as a rookie, but settled in as a dependable slot option over four seasons.
His best stretch came in 2017, when he put up 42 catches for 554 yards and 3 touchdowns, then turned that season into a three-year free-agent deal with the Miami Dolphins.
Mecole Hardman’s connection to No. 12 came out of necessity, but it still ended up producing one of the biggest moments attached to the number. When the Chiefs traded for him from the Jets in 2023, his usual No. 17 was already taken by Richie James, who couldn’t switch numbers midseason while on injured reserve.
Hardman also couldn’t go back to No. 4, his college number, because Rashee Rice had it. So he landed on No. 12 - and then caught the game-winning touchdown in Super Bowl 58 wearing it.
Not every No. 12 story in Kansas City has been so bright. Brodie Croyle owns the roughest line of the bunch.
The former third-round pick from Alabama went 0-10 as a starter for the Chiefs from 2006 to 2010, and his 67.8 career passer rating tells you plenty about how it went. Injuries made the picture even messier.
Still, Croyle is also described as a role model off the field, someone who works to help provide a home and healing for at-risk children at Big Oak Ranch. None of that changes the record, though: 0-10 is 0-10.
Then there’s Jared Wiley, who arrived with a chance to grow into something meaningful at tight end. The former fourth-round pick from TCU was supposed to develop behind Travis Kelce and Noah Gray and eventually inherit a larger role.
Instead, his rookie season was wiped out by injury, and his second year didn’t produce much impact. As his third season approaches, his standing is uncertain.
The Chiefs haven’t added anyone else to the position, so Wiley has another shot to make his case, but the clock is clearly ticking if he can’t start showing something.
A few other names round out the number’s history. Tom Flores wore No. 12 for one season as Len Dawson’s backup and won a Super Bowl IV ring, making him one of only two men, along with Mike Ditka, to win a Super Bowl as a player, assistant, and head coach.
Jimmy Hill, a cornerback who had already made three Pro Bowls with the Cardinals, showed up in Kansas City for a three-game stint in 1966 after Fred Williamson was injured. Gehrig Dieter is also part of the No. 12 ledger.
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