Chiefs No 21 Carries More Franchise History Than Fans Realize

Discover how the number 21 has become synonymous with unforgettable moments and legendary players in Kansas City Chiefs history.

No. 21 has a pretty clear lane in Chiefs history: it belongs to defensive backs, with a little bit of offensive flair mixed in. The number has been worn by an All-AFL corner, a first-round safety who stuck around for a decade, and the player who intercepted Jimmy Garoppolo in Super Bowl LIV. But when you sort through the full run of Chiefs history at 21, one name rises above the rest.

Jerome Woods is the standard. Drafted 28th overall in 1996, he spent his entire career in Kansas City and gave the Chiefs exactly what they needed from the back end.

His best statistical season came in his second year, when he piled up a career-high 132 tackles and four interceptions on a defense that allowed just 14.5 points per game, the best mark in the NFL. Woods didn’t earn his first and only Pro Bowl selection until after he came back from a broken right leg that cost him the 2002 season.

In 2003, he started all 16 games and delivered two pick-sixes, including a 79-yard return off Brett Favre at Lambeau Field. By the time he was done, Woods had 545 total tackles, 15 interceptions, 12 forced fumbles and five sacks.

Before Kansas City became Kansas City, No. 21 already had a name attached to it. Dave Webster played for the franchise when it was still the Dallas Texans in 1960 and 1961, and he made an immediate impact.

The Prairie View product intercepted 11 passes in two seasons, including two that he returned for touchdowns as a rookie, which led the AFL. He made first-team All-AFL in his second season, but a broken leg in a preseason game heading into year three ended his career before it could really continue.

Mike Garrett’s Chiefs story is remembered most for the touchdown he scored on 65 Toss Power Trap in Super Bowl IV. He took the handoff after the fake toss and went untouched into the end zone to make it 16-0, with a mic’d-up Hank Stram laughing on the sideline.

Garrett’s path to Kansas City was its own story. The 1965 Heisman winner slid to the 20th round of the AFL draft because of a false rumor that he had signed with the Raiders, and the Chiefs signed him for $500,000.

He went on to become a two-time AFL All-Star and finished his Kansas City run with 3,246 rushing yards and 24 touchdowns, plus 141 catches for 1,231 yards and seven receiving scores.

Bashaud Breeland’s time in Kansas City was shorter, but the plays were huge. After a previous $24 million deal with the Carolina Panthers collapsed because of a foot injury he suffered on vacation, he landed with the Chiefs and made the most of it.

In 2019, he returned a fumble 100 yards for a touchdown against the Detroit Lions, broke up a fourth-down pass to Julian Edelman that clinched the division against the Patriots, and then picked off Jimmy Garoppolo two plays into the second quarter of Super Bowl LIV. He came back on a one-year deal in 2020 before finishing his career with the Minnesota Vikings in 2021.

Sean Smith also carved out a notable run in No. 21.

John Dorsey made him one of his first major free-agent additions, signing him away from the Miami Dolphins on a three-year deal worth up to $18 million in 2013. The Chiefs needed size and physicality at corner, and Smith gave them both.

Working under Al Harris and Emmitt Thomas, he developed into one of the league’s most underrated coverage defenders and made Pro Football Focus’s All-NFL team in 2014. His next stop, with the Oakland Raiders, went very differently: a benching, a felony assault case and a release after two seasons.

Jaden Hicks is the current man in the jersey, and his Chiefs future is still being shaped. Two years into his career after arriving as a universal “steal” in the 2024 draft, he has seen his playing time limited by a lack of trust from the coaches.

That has slowed his development and left the unit thin, with less athletic depth than it needs. The expectation is that Hicks factors into the Chiefs’ plans in 2026 as a third safety alongside Alohi Gilman and Chamarri Conner.

A few other names round out the number’s history. James Saxon spent four years as a fullback after being picked in the eighth round of the 1988 draft, then later returned to the team as running backs coach from 2001 to 2007.

Javier Arenas came over in the Tony Gonzalez trade and was eventually dealt for fullback Anthony Sherman. Eric Murray, a fourth-round pick, was traded to Cleveland in 2019 for Emmanuel Ogbah in a rare player-for-player swap with former boss John Dorsey.

Kolby Smith was pushed into action in 2007 after Larry Johnson’s injury and Priest Holmes’ retirement, then ran for 150 yards on 31 carries against the Raiders in his first career start and won AFC Offensive Player of the Week. Dennis Homan, a former Cowboys first-round pick and Alabama All-American, caught 14 passes for Kansas City in the early 1970s.

Martin Bayless also wore the number.

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