Chiefs Safety Room Just Got Hit With A Brutal Reality Check

The Kansas City Chiefs face scrutiny over their maligned safety group, yet remain confident in their revamped lineup's potential for success.

The Chiefs’ safety room is getting treated like an afterthought, and ESPN’s latest position rankings made that plain.

In Jeremy Fowler’s anonymous survey of NFL executives, scouts and coaches, Kansas City didn’t land a safety in the top 10. Baltimore Ravens star Kyle Hamilton checked in at No. 1 again, with L.A.

Chargers safety Derwin James right behind him. Even the honorable mention tier outside the top 10 didn’t include a Chiefs player, a sign of how little national buzz this group is carrying.

That’s not exactly a surprise given how the roster has been shaped. Kansas City lost Bryan Cook to the Cincinnati Bengals after his rookie contract expired, further thinning a spot that was already light in 2025. The response was to bring in veteran Alohi Gilman, a familiar AFC West name from his Chargers days, to add some stability to a young group.

Gilman, who will be 29 in September, still landed a three-year contract, which says plenty about how the Chiefs view him. He’s expected to bring experience to a unit that is still heavily built around players on their first NFL deals, a different setup from last year when Justin Reid left for the New Orleans Saints in free agency and the Chiefs didn’t replace him with another veteran.

The rest of the picture is a mix of opportunity and pressure. Chamarri Conner is set to have a more manageable workload in 2026 after handling a lot of slot corner duties in 2025.

Jaden Hicks, a former fourth-round pick many considered a steal when he slid to Kansas City, is entering his third season and is at a make-or-break stage. The Chiefs will give him every chance to become a regular third safety.

Chris Roland-Wallace is also part of the equation.

By the look of it, Kansas City may be rolling out one of the league’s weakest safety groups on paper. But the Chiefs clearly believe the whole can be greater than the sum of its parts. They’re betting on the committee approach to help push them back to the postseason after a six-win year, even without a headline name anchoring the back end.

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