Kansas City Chiefs News & Rumors

Disagreement On Suspension Length Leading To September Rashee Rice Hearing?

AUGUST 15: The league proposed a suspension spanning double-digit games in this case, NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reports (video link). The NFLPA and Rice’s representatives took issue with such a ban given the lack of precedent for suspensions of that length in situations such as his. Time still remains for a compromise to be worked out, but in the absence of one the wait for finding out the exact length of Rice’s absence will stretch well into the campaign.

AUGUST 14:Rashee Rice is expected to be suspended for a chunk of the 2025 season. The Chiefs wide receiver’s criminal discipline has been levied, and it had been assumed an NFL suspension would be handed out before the season.

Now, Kansas City could have its top wideout to open the year but be without him for much of the midseason stretch. An NFL disciplinary hearing is set for September 30; the wideout’s suspension length will almost definitely emerge in the wake of that summit. While Rice’s case is certainly different from Deshaun Watson‘s high-profile 2022 suspension saga, the hearing component is similar.

The NFL, NFLPA and Rice’s camp could not agree on discipline in this case, ESPN’s Dan Graziano reports, leading to the hearing. The Sept. 30 date stemmed from disciplinary officer Sue Robinson’s availability. Robinson’s availability potentially determining which games Rice is available for certainly represents an interesting wrinkle here. Based on the lack of agreement here, it can be assumed the NFL is intending to suspend Rice for a significant stretch.

Rice was hit with eight felony charges in connection with a March 2024 hit-and-run incident. His criminal case concluded last month with a sentence of five years probation and a 30-day prison term. Rice received deferred adjudication, so completing the probation process will close the case and allow him to avoid serving time in prison.

However, Rice also was accused of punching a photographer at a nightclub following that freeway street-racing incident. While Rice was at SMU, Rice or a member of his party fired gunshots into an empty vehicle belonging to a Mustangs basketball player. That was believed to have been on the table to be folded into an NFL investigation. Although the accuser in the nightclub assault matter declined to press charges, these two lower-profile incidents may impact his NFL suspension duration.

The Chiefs’ September slate consists of games against the Chargers, Eagles, Giants and Ravens. The six games following the hearing go: Jaguars, Lions, Raiders, Commanders, Bills and Broncos. While Rice stands to be available for the three-time reigning AFC champions’ early slate, his reemergence from an LCL tear would then be paused due to a ban. The sides could preempt a hearing by reaching a settlement beforehand, however. That is how the Watson matter produced an 11-game ban, as the NFL was aiming to have the Browns trade acquisition suspended for all of the 2022 season. A compromise stopped the offseason-overshadowing matter from dragging on even longer than it had. In her role with the NFL, Robinson has only heard the Watson case.

The Chiefs have seen a number of regulars run into off-field trouble during Andy Reid‘s time at the helm; only some produced suspensions. While Tyreek Hill‘s domestic violence arrest occurred while he was in college, a separate scandal led to a 2019 NFL investigation. A lack of cooperation by a Kansas district attorney’s office, however, helped keep the wideout from being suspended. The Chiefs also waived Kareem Hunt — who has since returned to the team — after video surfaced of him shoving and kicking a woman at a Cleveland hotel. Hunt’s eight-game ban came when he was with the Browns in 2019. The Chiefs, however, saw Frank Clark banned two games midway through the 2022 season in connection with two gun-related arrests. One of their post-Clark options, free agent signee Charles Omenihu, was suspended six games for a domestic violence arrest to open the ’23 season. Backup wideout Justyn Ross also landed on the commissioner’s exempt list in 2023 for a domestic battery incident.

If/when Rice is suspended, the Chiefs will — as they did last year during his injury hiatus — lean on Xavier Worthy. Marquise Brown is also positioned to be available this year, after he missed most of last season. Those two will be Kansas City’s primary receiving weapons alongside Travis Kelce. It will be interesting to see if Rice joins these pass-game principals in Week 1 or reaches a resolution to serve his ban to open the season.

Hearing Date Set For Chiefs WR Rashee Rice

The matter of potential league discipline in the case of Rashee Rice is still unresolved at this point. That will continue through the start of the coming season.

The third-year Chiefs wideout has long been viewed as a candidate for a suspension stemming from his involvement in a March 2024 hit-and-run incident. His criminal case was concluded last month with a sentence of five years probation and a 30-day prison term. Rice received deferred adjudication, so completing the probation process will close the case and allow him to avoid serving time in prison. Shortly after that key development, one of the three civil suits associated with the case was settled.

[RELATED: Suspension Length Disagreement Led To Hearing]

Attention will now turn to the NFL’s investigation into the matter and any supplemental discipline which is handed down as a result. On that note, Thursday has seen a notable update in the Rice case. A league hearing is set to take place on September 30, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports. It is at that time, presumably, an announcement will be made with respect to any potential suspension. Schefter adds that judge Sue L. Robinson will preside over the hearing (having only previously done so in the Deshaun Watson case).

Today’s news means a firm timeline is now in place for Rice and the Chiefs to learn how long he will be unavailable in the event of a suspension. It also means, however, the 25-year-old will be available for Kansas City during the first four games of the campaign. That stretch covers contests against the Chargers, Eagles, Giants and Ravens.

An LCL tear limited Rice to just four games last season, one in which expectations were high regarding his production and role in Kansas City’s offense. The SMU product flashed as a rookie with 938 yards and seven touchdowns, and he could reprise his role as the Chiefs’ No. 1 receiver when on the field this season. Given today’s news, though, it will remain unclear well into the campaign how many games Rice will miss in 2025.

Kansas City’s WR depth chart also includes Xavier Worthy, who enjoyed a strong run during the playoffs (including the Super Bowl) during his rookie campaign. A step forward in Year 2 would be key for team and player in the former first-rounder’s case. The Chiefs also have the likes of Marquise Brown, JuJu Smith-Schuster and Skyy Moore in place entering the season. A more consistent showing on offense will be targeted as Kansas City looks to top the AFC once again in 2025.

Rice figures to play a role in that effort, at least during the first month of the season. Once his hearing takes place, the length of any suspension handed down will of course be a key storyline for he and the Chiefs.

Chiefs S Deon Bush Suffered Torn Achilles

Chiefs head coach Andy Reid said (via ESPN’s Nate Taylor) that veteran safety Deon Bush suffered a torn Achilles in a preseason loss to the Cardinals on Saturday night.

Bush was entering his fourth year in Kansas City and competing for a backend roster spot as a depth safety and core special teams contributor. He filled that role during the Chiefs’ back-to-back Super Bowl runs in 2022 and 2023, but only appeared in two games in 2024, both in the regular season.

Bush’s injury will also take him out of the 53-man roster competition with the Chiefs’ other depth safeties. Kansas City is returning 17-game starter Bryan Cook as well as nickel/safety hybrid Chamarri Conner with second-year Jaden Hicks and veteran Mike Edwards leading the reserves.

Given how often Conner drops into the slot, keeping Bush on the roster may have been appealing, especially given his NFL special teams experience that undrafted rookies Glendon Miller, Major Williams, and Jacobe Covington can’t match. Now, that trio might have a better chance of sticking around, though Kansas City could opt to carry an extra cornerback instead.

Bush, originally a Bears fourth-round pick in 2016, spent six years in Chicago with six starts on defense and a consistent role on special teams. The nine-year veteran will now spend the season on the sidelines as he rehabs from his injury and prepares for what would be his age-33 season in 2026.

Minor NFL Transactions: 8/8/25

Friday’s minor moves around the NFL:

Buffalo Bills

Dallas Cowboys

Indianapolis Colts

Kansas City Chiefs

  • Released from IR via injury settlement: CB Darius Rush

San Francisco 49ers

Tampa Bay Buccaneers 

Bills kicker Tyler Bass is currently dealing with pelvic area soreness, ESPN’s Alaina Getzenberg notes. As a result, the team recently worked out a number of free agents to handle kicking duties during tomorrow’s preseason game. Davis – an undrafted rookie – was recently waived by the Jets, but he will get at least one opportunity to audition for a roster spot.

Ahmed was recently taken down in a Colts practice by a hip-drop tackle. As a result, ESPN’s Adam Schefter and Stephen Holder report the veteran suffered an ankle injury. Ahmed’s attention will turn to rehabbing the ailment; unless he is released by way of an injury settlement, he will not play in 2025.

Chiefs Giving Jaylon Moore Guard Reps; RT Jawaan Taylor Underwent Knee Surgery

The Chiefs cycled through four left tackle starters last season, seeing their final O-line form — one with Joe Thuney kicking out to LT — shredded in Super Bowl LIX. Big changes came on the left side of Kansas City’s front this offseason, with two LT options added and Thuney traded to Chicago.

Kansas City first added Jaylon Moore on a two-year, $30MM deal and then drafted Josh Simmons in Round 1. The Chiefs had not drafted an O-lineman in Round 1 since Andy Reid‘s first draft, when Eric Fisher — as part of an underwhelming 2013 prospect pool — was drafted first overall. The Chiefs have not been able to find a long-term replacement for Fisher, whose tenure wrapped in 2020, but Simmons is moving toward locking down the job despite entering the offseason with injury concerns.

Coming back from a patellar tendon tear that affected his draft stock (along with character concerns), Simmons is taking regular first-team snaps at left tackle and looking likely to open the season there. That would leave Moore in limbo. Moore would be an overpriced backup, at $15MM per year, but Jawaan Taylor‘s 2025 salary guarantee would place him as such as well. Taylor is due a fully guaranteed $19.5MM this season. The Chiefs are experimenting with a “best five” scenario that could keep Moore among the top quintet.

Moore has seen reps at left guard, according to ESPN.com’s Nate Taylor. Mike Caliendo and 2024 second-round pick Kingsley Suamataia, converted from tackle after an early-season benching last year, had been viewed as the LG competitors in St. Joseph, Mo. (the Chiefs’ training camp home), but Moore’s presence would change the equation. Nate Taylor notes Moore and Suamataia look to represent the primary competition here.

This presents an interesting competition since both players have not logged notable reps at guard. Moore has logged 827 career offensive snaps; all have come at either left or right tackle. Suamataia played 31 guard snaps as a rookie. Moore established a nice market by filling in for Trent Williams last year. Though advanced metrics did not view him favorably, the Chiefs pounced. It would be odd if Moore became a backup, but with Simmons taking all the first-team LT reps (per Taylor), that is a realistic outcome here.

The Chiefs handed Suamataia their Week 1 LT job last year, but after a poor showing against Trey Hendrickson in Week 2, the BYU product did not receive another chance. The Thuney trade, however, led to the Chiefs trying him at guard.

Taylor could be released with modest dead money in 2026, as no guarantees remain on his deal after this year. The penalty maven has underwhelmed on a $20MM-AAV contract, not justifying his contract, but he did play through a knee injury last season. Taylor underwent arthroscopic surgery to address a knee ailment sustained in Week 5 last season, Nate Taylor adds. Jawaan Taylor said he did not consider surgery in-season on what he called a partially torn meniscus; the ex-Jaguar did not miss any games due to injury last year.

Taylor began Chiefs camp on the active/PUP list, giving Moore some work at a more familiar position. But Taylor is expected to keep the RT gig. A 2026 Chiefs O-line configuration housing Simmons at LT and Moore at RT, after a Jawaan Taylor release, has surfaced as a potential outcome. For now, Taylor — Pro Football Focus’ No. 61 tackle last season — will be positioned for a third season as the Chiefs’ RT starter.

Minor NFL Transactions: 8/2/25

Saturday’s minor moves around the NFL:

Arizona Cardinals

Atlanta Falcons

Dallas Cowboys

Detroit Lions

Jacksonville Jaguars

Kansas City Chiefs

Los Angeles Rams

  • Activated from active/PUP list: TE Mark Redman

New York Jets

  • Claimed off waivers (from Broncos): CB Mario Goodrich
  • Waived (with injury designation): S Jaylin Simpson

Philadelphia Eagles

  • Released from IR via injury settlement: WR Danny Gray

Pittsburgh Steelers 

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Washington Commanders 

Watkins and Campbell are among the notable veterans who are out for the season unless they wind up being released via an injury settlement and later signing with another team. Watkins left Arizona’s practice early on Thursday, and subsequent evaluation has clearly confirmed a notable injury occurred.

Campbell is dealing with a knee ailment, ESPN’s Todd Archer notes. Injuries have been a near-constant issue for the 28-year-old, who has played a full season only once so far in his career. The Cowboys marked Campbell’s third consecutive NFC East team, but instead of competing for a roster spot he will once again turn his attention to recovery.

Wallace has 96 games and 72 starts to his name, although his 35% defensive snap share with the Broncos last season was by far the lowest of his career. The 30-year-old will head to Jacksonville in time for the preseason. A strong showing through the remainder of training camp could allow him to occupy a backup role in the Jags’ secondary this season.

NFL Minor Transactions: 8/1/25

Here are the first minor NFL moves in August:

Arizona Cardinals

Atlanta Falcons

Buffalo Bills

Cleveland Browns

Denver Broncos

Indianapolis Colts

Jacksonville Jaguars

Kansas City Chiefs

Miami Dolphins

Minnesota Vikings

Philadelphia Eagles

Pittsburgh Steelers

San Francisco 49ers

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Washington Commanders

Minor NFL Transactions: 7/30/25

Here are today’s midweek minor moves:

Cincinnati Bengals

Cleveland Browns

Green Bay Packers

Kansas City Chiefs

Miami Dolphins

Minnesota Vikings

New England Patriots

New Orleans Saints

New York Jets

Philadelphia Eagles

Pittsburgh Steelers

Seattle Seahawks

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Washington Commanders

The Chiefs have signed Lassiter, fresh off a spring season with the UFL’s Memphis Showboats, to help cover for the lack of camp bodies at the position. Xavier Worthy, Skyy Moore, and Marquise Brown are all currently sidelined with injuries.

In other Chiefs-related news, Niang will get a new opportunity in Washington for training camp. A former third-round pick in Kansas City, Niang was tried at starter for a bit before ultimately getting demoted to the practice squad last year. The Chiefs released him from the p-squad in November, and he’s been a free agent ever since.

Chiefs Aiming To Extend CB Trent McDuffie Before Week 1

The Chiefs extended two members of their 2022 draft class already this summer, and according to ESPN’s Nate Taylor, they’re hoping for a third agreement — with cornerback Trent McDuffie — before Week 1.

Negotiating a new contract with McDuffie will force the Chiefs to wade into a cornerback market they have largely avoided in recent years. They let Charvarius Ward leave in free agency in 2022 and traded L’Jarius Sneed to the Titans last offseason rather than sign him to an extension. While Kansas City did sign Kristian Fulton to a two-year, $20MM deal this offseason, the rest of their cornerback room is largely made up of recent Day 3 picks.

The Chiefs seem more inclined to keep McDuffie after a stellar start to his NFL career. They traded up to the No. 21 pick to draft him in 2022, and he has since developed into one of the league’s best cornerbacks. He earned a first-team All-Pro nod in 2023 while playing primarily in the slot with seven passes defended, five forced fumbles, four tackles for loss, and three sacks. The former Washington Husky earned a second-team All-Pro berth for his efforts with his first two interceptions and 13 passes defended, but he fewer impact plays after moving to the boundary full-time.

Extending McDuffie will be a costly proposition after cornerback pay exploded this offseason. Fellow 2022 first-rounders Sauce Gardner and Derek Stingley both reached $30MM per year on their new contracts, and McDuffie will likely be demanding a similar sum. He missed six games due to injury as a rookie but has been healthy since, giving him a better record of availability compared to Stingley. McDuffie also put up a stronger 2024 season than Gardner in several categories, which should position him for a $30MM APY extension.

That will likely be the number required to get a deal done before the regular season starts. The Chiefs already picked up McDuffie’s fifth-year option for 2026 (worth $13.6MM), giving them a long runway to agree on terms before they worry about losing their star corner.

Minor NFL Transactions: 7/27/25

Here are Sunday’s minor transactions to close out the weekend:

Arizona Cardinals

Buffalo Bills

Detroit Lions

Green Bay Packers

  • Activated from active/NFI list: RB Amar Johnson

Kansas City Chiefs

New York Jets

Arizona is adding the brother of Stephon Gilmore after placing two cornerbacks on injured reserve earlier today. Thomas-Oliver was released by the Lions a day after suffering a hamstring injury in practice. He had returned to practice only three days ago from the active/non-football injury list.