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Former 3× Pro Bowl Chiefs Star Agrees to Pay Cut to Return and Help Team Overcome CB Injury Crisis

Kansas City, September 27, 2025

As the Kansas City Chiefs navigate a mounting injury crisis at cornerback, a familiar face has stepped forward, willing to sacrifice to help his former team: Marcus Peters.

 
 

At 32 years old, Peters—the ball-hawking corner who won Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2015 and earned three Pro Bowl selections—still brings sharp instincts and veteran savvy. He left the Chiefs in 2018 and made stops with the Rams, Ravens, and Raiders. But with the Chiefs’ cornerback room thinned by injuries and depth concerns, the possibility of a reunion has surged to the forefront.

In a recent interview, Peters moved Chiefs Kingdom with a clear message:
Money has never been everything to me. I grew up in this league wearing red in Kansas City, and if the team needs me, I’m ready to take a pay cut to come back. Putting on that Chiefs jersey one more time means more than any lucrative contract.

The sentiment quickly rippled across social media, where fans called for the front office to make it happen. “He’s not just a playmaker—he’s a tone-setter,” one fan wrote. “This secondary needs his edge and leadership right now.”

The Chiefs have not issued an official statement, but team sources acknowledge they are evaluating options to reinforce the roster. Peters’ potential return would do more than stabilize the cornerback rotation; his experience in high-leverage moments could help tighten communication on the back end and elevate the defense’s confidence in critical two-minute and red-zone sequences.

As Kansas City enters a pivotal stretch of the 2025 season, the homecoming of a proven playmaker like Peters could be the spark the locker room needs to weather the storm—and a reminder that championship standards are built as much on sacrifice as on talent.

Raiders Reunite with a Former Starter to Fortify the Offensive Line
Las Vegas, NV   The Las Vegas Raiders have brought back a familiar face in a move that screams both urgency and savvy: versatile offensive lineman Jermaine Eluemunor is returning to the Silver & Black on a one-year deal (terms not disclosed), reuniting with the franchise where he logged some of the best football of his career and immediately fortifying a position group that has been stretched thin. Eluemunor, 31, started for the Raiders from 2021–2023, showing rare position flexibility across right tackle and guard while anchoring pass protection against premier edge rushers. His technique, anchor, and ability to handle long-arm power made him a steadying force during multiple playoff pushes. After departing Vegas, Eluemunor spent time elsewhere refining his craft, but a confluence of roster needs and scheme familiarity has set the stage for a timely homecoming. For the Raiders—fighting to keep pace in a rugged AFC—this is about stability and fit. Injuries and week-to-week availability on the right side of the line have forced constant shuffling; protection packages have leaned heavily on chips and condensed splits to survive obvious passing downs. Eluemunor’s return allows the staff to plug him at RT or slide him inside at RG, restoring balance to protections and widening the run-game menu (duo, inside zone, and the toss/ pin-pull that Vegas fans love when the edge is sealed). “Jermaine knows who we are and how we want to play,” a team source said. “He brings ballast. Assignment sound, physical, and smart—he raises the floor for the entire unit.” Beyond the X’s and O’s, there’s an unmistakable emotional charge to this reunion. Eluemunor was a locker-room favorite in his previous stint—professional, detail-driven, and accountable. The belief internally is that his presence stabilizes communication on the right side (IDs, slides, and pass-off rules vs. games and simulated pressures), which in turn unlocks more vertical concepts and keeps the quarterback cleaner late in games. On social media, Raider Nation lit up the timeline with a simple refrain: “Welcome back, Jem.” Many fans called the deal the exact kind of “rival-poach, ready-to-play” move a contender makes in October: low friction, high impact, zero learning curve. What it means on the field (immediately): Pass pro: Fewer emergency chips, more five-out releases—OC can re-open deeper intermediate shots without living in max-protect. Run game: Better edge control on toss/duo; more confidence running to the right on money downs. Depth & versatility: One injury doesn’t force a cascade of position changes; Eluemunor can cover two spots with starting-level competency. The timetable? Swift. Because Eluemunor already speaks the language—terminology, splits, cadence rules—he could suit up as early as this weekend if the medicals/check-ins continue to trend positive. The message is clear: the Raiders aren’t waiting around for the line to gel—they’re engineering it. If Jermaine Eluemunor plays to his Raider résumé, this reunion could be the precise mid-season jolt that steadies the offense and keeps the Silver & Black firmly in the postseason race. Raider Nation, the question writes itself: Plug-and-play stopgap—or the catalyst that reclaims the right side