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Kansas City Chiefs Sports Betting News

Kansas City Chiefs History

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High-profile attorney among candidates for NFL commissioner NFL Football 08/04/2006
Cleveland Mayor Michael White, who worked with Nance on several major projects. ``He is the total package. He is extremely bright. He has got vision and he has the unique ability to be able to turn extremely difficult situations into a win, win.''

Kansas City Chiefs coach Herman Edwards doesn't believe Nance's candidacy should be viewed as anything but a qualified person getting an opportunity to advance. Edwards, who is black, looks forward to the day when race is not part of the equation.

``The first thing

Rain could chase Chiefs indoors and out of Wisconsin NFL Football 08/02/2006

RIVER FALLS, Wis. (AP) -If it keeps raining in Wisconsin, the Kansas City Chiefs may head for Minnesota.

Heavy rain forced the Chiefs to cancel their morning practice Wednesday for the second day in a row. The grounds at their practice field in River Falls were dry enough for a brisk afternoon workout. But if they hadn't been, the Chiefs were ready to make the 45-minute trip to the indoor facility at the University of Minnesota.

``We have the ability to go to the University of Minnesota if we have to go in

Chiefs acquire RB Bennett from Saints NFL Football 08/02/2006
River Falls, WI (MySportsbook) - The Kansas City Chiefs acquired running back Michael Bennett from the New Orleans Saints Wednesday in exchange for an undisclosed draft choice in 2007. Bennett, a five-year veteran, started six of 16 games last season for the Minnesota Vikings and rushed for 473 yards on 126 carries with five total touchdowns. The University of Wisconsin alum was signed to a two-year deal by New Orleans in the offseason. After selecting Reggie Bush second overall in the 2006 NFL Draft and with
After being out of football 2 years, Turley is key for the Chiefs NFL Football 08/01/2006
g weights, carefully monitoring what he ate, training, sweating and hurting.

But he never quit. Now with a look of determination, as well as a thick patch of chin stubble on his stern visage, he's braving the broiling sun of training camp with the Kansas City Chiefs.

``It's been a long time for me,'' he said. ``I've been going at it for two years trying to correct this thing and now my back's healthy.''

But without appearing in a game since 2003, can he retain the form that made him one of the NFL's most po

Chiefs rookie gets his U.S. citizenship NFL Football 08/01/2006

RIVER FALLS, Wis. (AP) -Do you know how many stars are on the Stars and Stripes? And what they stand for? Or who wrote the U.S. Constitution?

Kansas City Chiefs rookie Tamba Hali does.

The defensive end missed two grueling practices Monday for what coaches agreed was a good reason. Hali flew to his home state of New Jersey and took the test to become a U.S. citizen.

A a native of Liberia who fled that country's civil war 12 years ago at the age of 10, Hali wound up waiting about eight hours to go through

Texans ink CB McCleon NFL Football 07/30/2006
Houston, TX (MySportsbook) - The Houston Texans signed veteran cornerback Dexter McCleon on Sunday. McCleon played in 11 games for the Kansas City Chiefs last season and had 20 tackles and two interceptions. In nine NFL seasons, with both St. Louis and the Chiefs, the former Clemson star has amassed 318 tackles with 30 interceptions and 4 1/2 sacks.
Texans add veteran CB McCleon NFL Football 07/30/2006

HOUSTON (AP) -The Houston Texans signed former Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Dexter McCleon on Sunday, adding depth to a secondary depleted by an injury a day earlier to Demarcus Faggins.

McCleon was cut by the Chiefs in March along with teammate Eric Warfield when it appeared that the team would be several million dollars over the salary cap.

The Texans didn't have much experience in their group of cornerbacks before Faggins, whose fractured foot will require surgery. But that injury made adding a veteran

Edwards sets tone as former player in camp NFL Football 07/29/2006

RIVER FALLS, Wis. (AP) -It's close to 100 degrees in normally balmy western Wisconsin, and Herman Edwards is wearing a sweat shirt.

If his players have to be hot and miserable, then he'll be hot and miserable, too.

The first-year coach of the Kansas City Chiefs learned a lot during his playing career as a Pro Bowl defensive back, especially about how much players appreciate the little things in their coach.

``When they look at me, they know I'm sweating, too,'' he said Saturday as the Chiefs went through their first two-a-day drills. ``So keep working. I've always done this. I've done it my whole career as a coach. I've got to get my mind right, too.''

He even wore sweat shirts during practice as an assistant coach to Tony Dungy in steamy Tampa Bay.

``Everybody looked at me like I was crazy,'' he said. ``I did it every day. Tony looked at me like I was crazy. I said I'm going to keep wearing it until somebody runs me out of it.''

In ways big and small, Edwards is busily putting his personal stamp on the Chiefs and erasing many earmarks of his predecessor, Dick Vermeil. One key difference that became instantly apparent is the length of training camp practices.

Where Vermeil might work his players more than two hours, sometimes three, Edwards keeps it shorter, usually about one hour, 45 minutes or less.

In the unusual heat which has descended upon the North Woods, he's also careful to rest veterans. Temperatures this weekend were forecast to reach 100 for the first time in River Falls in 14 years.

``We'll change practice around a little bit,'' Edwards said. ``We'll do some things different. The time will stay the same, but the way we go about practice will be different. I'll let the big guys in 15 minutes early and keep the receivers and (defensive backs) out a little later and probably take the pads off of them.

``You've got to protect these guys. You don't want to kill your team on the practice field.''

It's something he learned the hard way in Vermeil's Philadelphia Eagles camp in the 1970s, rising from undrafted free agent to starting cornerback in the Super Bowl and Pro Bowl.

``I was fortunate,'' he said with a laugh. ``When I practiced, I had coach Vermeil and he brought in 125 guys. But now with only 80-90 guys, you've got to be careful because what happens is the reps fall on the other guys' shoulders, and that's not good.

``I just think the more you sit in this chair as a head coach and being a former player, it helps you make decisions like that.''

His approach has not gone unnoticed.

``I noticed he has a sweat shirt on,'' said deep snapper Kendall Gammon. ``People notice.''

If not for the traces of gray in his hair, the lean, muscular 50-something head coach could easily be mistaken for a player.

``He's probably got a couple of series in him,'' Gammon said. ``I don't know if he's got a whole game, but he's got at least a couple of series.''

Five-time Pro Bowl cornerback Ty Law said Edwards was one reason he signed a free-agent contract with the Chiefs last week. The two became close last year when Edwards was head coach and Law a starting cornerback for the New York Jets.

``From a player's perspective, it means something when you've been there,'' Law said.

He said there have been times when he wanted to question coaches who had never played in the NFL: ``OK, do you really know what it's like when Marvin Harrison is running at you full speed? Do you really understand what I'm talking about?''

The reality of the game is sometimes difficult for coaches who never played in the NFL to grasp, Law said.

``Sometimes that's hard to fathom for coaches,'' he said. ``They can say, 'Backpedal,' 'Do this,' or 'Break on this,' but when you're out there on that field it's a different ballgame. (Edwards) knows. You can't tell him anything that he hasn't experienced. That goes a long way.''

One worrisome injury cropped up during Friday's workouts. Pro Bowl left guard Brian Waters injured his foot in the morning.

``It's a mid-foot sprain and right now it's day-to-day,'' Edwards said. ``We don't know how long it's going to be. The good thing is that the X-rays show there's no break, just a sprain.''

Copyright © 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

Roaf reportedly set to retire; Chiefs hope he reconsiders NFL Football 07/28/2006

RIVER FALLS, Wis. (AP) -Willie Roaf says he's retiring and going back to college. The Kansas City Chiefs are holding out hope the 11-time Pro Bowl tackle will return for a 14th season.

The 36-year-old Roaf told The Kansas City Star on Friday that he was retiring, a move that would leave a large hole on the Chiefs offensive line.

Carl Peterson, president and general manager of the Chiefs, said neither he nor coach Herm Edwards had spoken with Roaf in several weeks and they were ``leaving the door open.''

Chiefs sign Hali and Croyle NFL Football 07/28/2006
Kansas City, MO (MySportsbook) - The Kansas City Chiefs agreed to terms with first-round draft pick (20th overall) Tamba Hali on a five-year contract and with third-round pick Brodie Croyle on a four-year contract on Thursday. Hali, a defensive end out of Penn State, recorded 11 sacks and 65 tackles last year with the Nittany Lions. A consensus All-American, the 6-foot-3, 275- pounder was named first team All-Big Ten and the conference's Defensive Lineman of the Year. In 47 career games at Penn State, Hali rec

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