Logo

Chiefs Have Found Gold in Rookie Safety, Patrick Mahomes Amazed: “He Is Unbelievable.!”

On a desert night in Glendale that was supposed to be routine preseason work, the Chiefs found something rarer than a tidy August script: a safety who changes the math inside the 20. Jaden Hicks — long strides quiet, eyes louder than the stadium — sank under a flat route and stole a red-zone throw from Kyler Murray, the kind of take that flips a drive chart into a cautionary tale. No chest-thumping, no wasted steps — just a ball secured, a sideline buzzing, and a defense that suddenly felt a click tighter.

What made it pop wasn’t the clip; it was the process. Hicks disguised depth, held the window with patience, then triggered without panic — pedal, plant, take. In Steve Spagnuolo’s world, that’s currency: safeties who pattern-match without grabbing, squeeze throws with leverage, and finish plays that tilt field position and mood. One interception in August doesn’t crown anyone. But a red-zone interception? That’s coach’s catnip.

He is unbelievable.! You feel it in the huddle — the speed, the instincts, the calm. Plays like that aren’t flashes to me; they’re habits. If he keeps stacking days like this, he won’t just help our defense, he’ll change the way we close games.” Patrick Mahomes said afterward, the half-smile teammates recognize turning into something closer to approval.

Kansas City has been hunting for exactly this presence as rotations settle: a safety who lets corners play to their strengths, buys the rush a heartbeat, and keeps the call sheet wide open on third-and-medium. Hicks’ camp tape already hinted at it; now there’s a live-fire sample. Expect the staff to test him in late robber spins that erase crossers, in quarters-match where his trigger shrinks outbreakers, and in big-nickel groupings that keep speed on the field without bleeding explosives.

There’s context, too. The room around him is sharpening: Christian Roland-Wallace stacked two takeaways in the opener — a fumble recovery on the opening kickoff and a later interception — proof the depth is more than lines on a page. Pressure creates clarity; clarity creates roles. Hicks’ takeaway didn’t just end a drive, it intensified the competition for snaps.

Sober eyes know turnover production can be noisy. Over the next two weeks, the test is sustainability: clean transitions from pedal to break, angles that survive empty formations, communication through motion and bunch, discipline with the hands at the catch point. If those habits hold, Hicks’ floor is uncuttable — core special teams plus sub-package closer — and his ceiling is the chess piece that lets Spags call red-zone defense on his terms.

For one August night, though, it was enough to feel the temperature shift. A ball in the air, a safety with the right read, and an offense on the other sideline suddenly aware: down here, there’s less room than it looks.

Chiefs Head Coach Announces Chris Jones to Start on the Bench for Standout Rookie After Costly Mistake vs. Jaguars
  Kansas City, MO —The Kansas City Chiefs’ coaching staff confirmed that Chris Jones will start on the bench in the next game to make way for rookie DT Omarr Norman-Lott, following a mistake viewed as pivotal in the loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars. The move is framed as a message about discipline and micro-detail up front, while forcing the entire front seven to re-sync with Steve Spagnuolo’s system. Early-week film study highlighted two core issues. First, a neutral-zone/offsides penalty on a late 3rd-and-short that extended a Jaguars drive and set up the decisive points. Second, a Tex stunt (tackle–end exchange) that broke timing: the call asked Jones to spike the B-gap to occupy the guard while the end looped into the A-gap, but the footwork and shoulder angle didn’t marry, opening a clear cutback lane. To Spagnuolo, this was more than an individual error—it was a warning about snap discipline, gap integrity, pad level, and landmarks at contact, the very details that define Kansas City’s “January standard.” Under the adjusted plan, Omarr Norman-Lott takes the base/early-downs start to tighten interior gap discipline, stabilize run fits, and give the call sheet a cleaner platform. Chris Jones is not being shelved; he’ll be “lit up” in high-leverage situations—3rd-and-long, two-minute stretches, and the red zone—where his interior surge can collapse the pocket and force quarterbacks to drift into edge pursuit. In parallel, the staff will streamline the call sheet with the line group, standardize stunt tags (Tex/Pir), shrink the late-stem window pre-snap, and ramp game-speed reps in 9-on-7 and 11-on-11 so everyone is “seeing it the same, triggering the same.” Meeting the decision head-on, Jones kept it brief but competitive: “I can’t accept letting a kid take my spot, but I respect the coach’s decision. Let’s see what we’re saying after the game. I’ll practice and wait for my chance. When the ball is snapped, the QB will know who I am.” At team level, the Chiefs are banking on a well-timed hard brake to restore core principles: no free yards, no lost fits, more 3rd-and-longs forced, and the return of negative plays (TFLs, QB hits) that flip field position. In an AFC where margins often come down to half a step at the line, getting back to micro-details—from the first heel strike at the snap to the shoulder angle on contact—remains the fastest route for Kansas City to rebound from the stumble against Jacksonville.