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How the Cutler Trade Could Bury Kansas City
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How the Cutler Trade Could Bury Kansas City
April 5th, 2009 @ 3:45 pm; by Nathan Kent
972 Views l 7 Comments

Jay Cutler is a good quarterback. Kansas City fans have spent the past three years denouncing his ability, downplaying (or outright disregarding) the fact that he’s already one of the league’s better technicians at the position. They take his youthful brashness as an indication that he’s another Jeff George–a physical specimen with the leadership qualities of a gerbil. His proclamation of his superiority to John Elway and unwillingness to bury the hatchet with new coach Josh McDaniels as prima facie evidence of this, failing to take into account that Elway, former Broncos hero and current Raider Girl domestic partner, was the original crybaby quarterback who forced a trade by refusing to play for his team.

Further evidence to Chiefs fans is the fact that the offense led by Cutler never carried the Broncos into the playoffs, which is something that Elway did frequently, even early in his career. This, of course, fails to take into account that Elway was never as good without Sammy Winder or Terrell Davis–only three of his ten playoff berths came without one or the other. Cutler hasn’t had his Sammy Winder or Terrell Davis yet. He hasn’t even had his Bobby Humphrey. Also, let’s not discount Elway’s defenses, which frequently sported four or more Pro Bowlers. That, from what I understand, helps quite a bit in terms of winning games and staying competitive. On the flip side, even with Champ Bailey and Elvis Dumervil, Denver’s defense was a joke during the entirety of Cutler’s tenure.

To say Elway got a fairer shake is a monumental understatement.

So where does that leave Cutler? It leaves him in a different division to prove whether he’s closer to Elway or George. For the Chiefs, this is a good thing. Leadership qualities aside, it’s a given that Cutler is going to complete a lot of passes, and, as we very painfully witnessed last season, the Kansas City Chiefs cannot play the pass.

And where does that leave Denver? In terms of the quarterback position, it leaves them with Kyle Orton. Kyle Orton is the David Eckstein of signal callers. On his best day he’s never going to be anything better than average, but his lack of tools won’t stop him from winning games. The term “gritty” was invented for guys like this. They’re good guys to have around–ask any hardcore Chiefs fan about Mike Maslowski and they’ll tell you so.

For the Broncos, Orton is a breath of fresh air. They’ve spent the last decade focused on one thing only: replacing John Elway. Thus far they’ve burned through two Pro Bowlers and a two-time Pro Bowl alternate, but, like Bono (the mediocre singer, not the mediocre quarterback), they still haven’t found what they’re looking for. That’s something older Chiefs fans can easily relate to. Aside from fleeting trysts with Steve DeBerg, Joe Montana, and Rich Gannon, the Chiefs had nothing but heartache between Len Dawson and Trent Green. Orton has the ability to win games, but the state of Colorado won’t lean on him to do so because they know he’s not that guy. He’ll never be asked to assume the Atlas pose forced upon Brian Griese, Jake Plummer, and Cutler. Orton gives the team a chance to step away from that pursuit and focus on addressing their other needs, most notably at guard/center and linebacker.

…. which brings us to the 2009 NFL Draft. With the 12th, 18th, 48th, 79th, and 84th pick in the 2009 NFL Draft, the Denver Broncos select players at every position the Kansas City Chiefs wish the Broncos wouldn’t. This draft is deep at every position they badly need, and that spells bad news for the other three teams in a division on the decline. They might be out of contention for a top flight player like Aaron Curry, but they’ll be in fair contention for Alex Mack, Max Unger, Duke Robinson, Antoine Caldwell, Andy Levitre, Jonathan Luigs, Ray Maualuga, James Lauranaitis, Clay Matthews, and Brian Cushing. They could easily take three of the above, then continue to shop from solid 2nd tier guys like Darryl Beckwith and A.Q. Shipley.

Ouch.

Of course, it was only a year ago that Kansas City had their very own Miracle Gro crop of draft choices. The 2008 NFL Draft was the saving grace the Chiefs needed, right? Right. The problem is that they squandered those cushy 3rd round picks on complimentary skill position players, rather than bolstering an ailing interior line and linebacking corps. No matter how much I like Brad Cottam and Jamaal Charles (I won’t include DaJuan Morgan because he hasn’t given me anything to like as of yet), I have to think they would have been better off addressing positions that are more important than blocking tight end and change-of-pace tailback.

Unlike the 2007 Chiefs, the 2008 Broncos are entering the upcoming draft from a position of strength. For a team with so many obvious holes, they also went 9-7, 7-9, and 8-8 over the last three seasons. They have talent. They have as good of an offensive tackle tandem as there is in the league right now. They continually prove that a star running back isn’t a necessity to having a solid running game (though it helps–they made the playoffs a lot more when they had one). If they can keep their jailbird star receiver out of trouble, they very well might be able to make do with Orton for two or three years while searching for a suitable replacement. On defense, they have a quality young defensive end in Elvis Dumervil and a future Hall of Fame cornerback in Champ Bailey. If they can find a few extra linebackers to put next to Champ’s little brother, they might see a return to their glory days in the blink of an eye.

The Chiefs, on the other hand, traded one of their three good players–the youngest one, no less–to stock up on role players. That’s the sort of thing payroll-challenged baseball teams do. Maybe the Chiefs need to move out of Truman Sports Complex, because it’s starting to seem like there’s something in the water.

In the end, Kansas City’s saving grace could be that Denver covets either Matt Stafford or Matt Cassel enough to trade away some of their prime draft real estate. As much fun as it might be to watch my team spend the #3 pick drafting a defensive tackle to replace the one they drafted with the #5 pick a year ago, I think I’d rather see them acquire somebody to compete with Demorrio Williams and Wade Smith for their starting jobs. Last year was a strong free agency and an average draft, and the Chiefs missed out. This year is a weak free agency and a strong draft, and the Chiefs are slated to miss out again. Given the price they’re paying by missing out on all of those aforementioned prospects, Cassel had better be the next Brett Favre.

Also, kudos to anyone who caught both Boss references in the last sentence of the 10th paragraph.




This entry was posted on Sunday, April 5th, 2009 at 3:45 pm. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS feed. Have something to say about this post? Please leave a comment.

7 Comments

  1. there are several differences right now that you did not address.

    1. The difference (or saving grace, whichever you prefer) is in last year’s draft we had dumb and dumber (carl and herm) running the show. This year we have pioli and haley. I have a lot more confidence in these 2 than the other 2.

    2. Denver has no one eye (shanahan) anymore. McDaniels has yet to prove that he can find his own talent. He just played the ones that Pioli and Belicheck found in N.E.
    Pioli has proven he can find talent.

    3. Realistically, how much better can Denver’s offense be with out the cry baby (cutler). And how much better will our offense be without the “musical chairs” quarterbacking this next year, as opposed to last year.

    4. if i remember right we had 6 picks in the first 3 rounds last year, and that has yet to blossom as we expected. its a gamble on whether any draft pick will work out in the nfl, there is no guarantee that they will perform up to the hype and be stars. that goes for any team. i have more confidence in our front office. at least a ray of hope.

    my point in all this is that both teams are “starting over” with new head coaches and staff, playbooks, etc.

    I LIKE OUR CHANCES!!!!!

    only time will tell.

    But nice food for thought, Nathan

    Comment by dennis — April 5, 2009 @ 4:35 pm


  2. oh, and did i mention, NO MORE “21 POINTS, THATS ARENA LEAGUE FOOTBALL” guy is GONE!!!

    also, Mike Priefer is in Denver!! (lol)

    Comment by dennis — April 5, 2009 @ 4:37 pm


  3. In terms of drafting, Pioli hasn’t proven any more or less than McDaniels. There is no clear cut evidence that Pioli was the personnel guru (there’s no evidence against it either, of course). Besides, New England’s drafts haven’t exactly been stellar. They’ve been adequate at best, and sometimes they’re downright awful.

    That’s not a prediction of what I anticipate from Pioli, however. It’s just an observation. I remain cautiously optimistic.

    Comment by nathanKent — April 5, 2009 @ 9:49 pm


  4. in the blink of a young girl’s eye. I caught it nathan.

    Comment by mark f. — April 6, 2009 @ 11:00 am


  5. Uggghhh… I hate these posts. The grass is always greener…How about if we went the opposite way and talked about how the chiefs only spent a second rounder and landed a franchise QB and that leaves all of our other picks to do as we please. We then laugh at how much Chicago traded to land their franchise QB and we go along our day. Or we talk about how long it took Denver to find a QB like Cutler and we talk about how much longer it will take them.

    I don’t like that either…

    The truth is…The Chiefs had the youngest team in the league last year. They lost 8 GAMES by a TOUCHDOWN or less…8 GAMES! Now, that does say that they were in each game and could not find a way to finish. The pieces from last year that we have cut such as Edwards and Surtain were injured most of the time anyway. Denver, on the other hand, out of the 8 games Denver lost, only two of them were by a touchdown or less. That is with a kickass QB and a sorry Defense. Note, that QB is gone to Chicago.

    Point is, KC is not as bad as you think. They’re very talented and just young. However, they do have the central piece of the puzzle…QB. Will the Cutler trade help Denver acquire talent…of course. However, it took them a good long while to find a AB like Jay Cutler…my money is betting lightning doesn’t strike for them so soon.

    Comment by meo04d — April 7, 2009 @ 1:18 pm


  6. Let us also keep in mind that Matt Cassel May not be a “franchise quarterback” yes he is good and yes i think that he was worth the 2nd round pick, however he inherited a lamborghini when he took over for tom brady in NE and now he has to drive around in a beater that is being restored.. you get my drift here.. lets wait and see how the guy does with half of the weapons that new england had and an o-line that will have him looking over his shoulder before we label him a “Franchise Quarterback” and the savior of a city. furthermore if the chiefs somehow move larry johnson and thus remove the running threat how good will he be when teams arent stacking the box and forced to stop the run and they can sit back and defend the pass all day long..?
    bottomline there are a lot of question marks with cassel yet to be answered

    Comment by longshot — April 9, 2009 @ 5:28 pm


  7. Nathan I agree with most of your opinions, but as far as Denver goes I think they have a lot further way to go now than we do. They “should” have a lot of talent on offense still even without Cutler, but the team is not the same without Cutler either. This will be a new Denver and if none of McDaniels QBs can stay healthy then they are in a world of trouble. The defense will be better ONLY if Brian Dawkins can be Brian Dawkins and not get injured.

    Kansas City’s secondary I think will blossom this year, providing we get just a little more pressure on the QB and with the changes we have made already this is a no brainer that it it will happen.. With that alone we had some decent interceptions last year, especially by Page who had 4, and Flowers with 2. All were pretty damn impressive plays if you go back and watch them. Flowers PICKED OFF FARVE TWICE in the same game, ran 1 back for a TD while flying right past him as he at the turf (wow that was awesome!!). Some guys never pick off Farve their whole careers, granted A LOT of them have too :)

    Pioli has definately not proven anything in terms of players he can draft. As you said Nathan, Pioli was part of the “system” that New England bathes in, so who knows what he REALLY did there. I’m sure he can take credit for a few players, but who would ever know who they were? I believe we have a very good “experiment” to play with for the next 2-3 years or so in TJ as Pioli actually admitted that he reminded him of a Richard Seymour that he claims NE built their defense around. If he can be that player, then I think we as Chiefs fans can sit back and enjoy the show!

    Comment by RedNGold4LIFE — May 10, 2009 @ 11:46 am


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