The Kansas City Chiefs came out of OTAs and minicamp with encouraging early signs from both of their first-round picks, though the reviews weren’t identical.
Defensive tackle Peter Woods appears to have made the stronger first impression. Nate Taylor of ESPN, in a broader roundup of first-rounders around the league, noted that “several veterans were quick to notice Woods' athleticism and explosiveness in the offseason program, whether on the practice fields or in the weight room.”
That kind of buzz matters for a player the Chiefs don’t need to thrust into the starting lineup right away. Woods is expected to be a key rotational piece, and Taylor also pointed out that he could help as an interior pass rusher alongside Chris Jones.
Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo was also upbeat about what he’s seen so far.
"I've been really, really impressed with Pete," defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo said. "Not only [with] what he does on the field but the way he carries himself in the [classroom]."
That praise stands out when compared with the chatter that followed Woods out of Clemson last season, when the defense underperformed and some of the talk around him suggested motor concerns. The early reports from Kansas City paint a different picture, with professionalism and burst showing up in the offseason program.
Cornerback Mansoor Delane’s early run was more uneven. He drew positive attention during OTAs, but a shoulder injury kept him on the sideline for most of minicamp. The expectation is that he’ll be back for training camp at the end of July, and Taylor said he should get plenty of one-on-one work with Spagnuolo once he returns.
Even with the injury, Delane’s absence gave the other corners more chances to work, which matters because the Chiefs have a real competition brewing at the position. Kansas City also needs more depth there as it continues to reshape the secondary, so the battle should only sharpen the group heading into camp.
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