

The Kansas City Chiefs may have three Super Bowl rings and the game’s most gifted quarterback in Patrick Mahomes, but as they eye a potential fourth Lombardi, one glaring issue remains, with the left side of their offensive line being full of question marks.
The Chiefs‘ latest roster shuffle saw them trade away All-Pro left guard Joe Thuney to the Chicago Bears.
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Thuney’s departure leaves a massive void in front of Mahomes, one the team hasn’t addressed in free agency. And as it stands, their best option appears to be sliding Kingsley Suamataia into a guard role and hoping he adapts quickly.
To patch up the line, Kansas City signed Jaylon Moore, who spent the past four seasons as a backup left tackle in San Francisco behind the great Trent Williams. But Moore has only five career starts under his belt and limited experience at guard, making him far from a guaranteed solution.
Without Thuney, Mahomes is the one who suffers
NFL analyst Jeffri Chadiha didn’t sugarcoat the issue in a recent breakdown, warning that Mahomes is the “loser” in all of this uncertainty.
“Here’s the problem for Mahomes: the left side remains a huge uncertainty,” Chadiha said. “Moore has been a backup behind Trent Williams for the last four years in San Francisco, which means there’s no guarantee he can be an effective option.
“Thuney was the insurance policy the Chiefs turned to late last season,” Chadiha added. “He assumed left tackle duties with four games left in the regular season, but he’s gone.”
Kansas City still boasts elite pieces along the line. Center Creed Humphrey and right guard Trey Smith-both returning-give the Chiefs a strong interior on one side, and both were drafted in the same class by general manager Brett Veach in 2021.
That same draft magic will need to reappear this April, as Veach and the front office search for a solution to shore up Mahomes‘ blindside.
The Chiefs‘ consistency and playoff dominance under Andy Reid and Mahomes have given them the benefit of the doubt, but this offseason gamble is one that can’t be ignored. No matter how dynamic Mahomes is, even he needs time in the pocket.
It’s not about calling Mahomes a “loser” of the offseason, as some headlines have framed it-it’s about recognizing that even a three-time Super Bowl MVP can only do so much behind a deteriorating wall.
With free agency options thinning and draft day approaching, the Chiefs’ ability to protect their most valuable player may end up determining whether or not they can stay atop the NFL mountain.
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