Patrick Mahomes‘ status as the league’s most accomplished active quarterback notwithstanding, the Chiefs’ megastar has not been nearly as productive over the past two seasons compared to his stratospheric first five as Kansas City’s starter. The two-time defending champions attempted to reignite their cornerstone player by revamping their receiving corps this offseason, but injuries intervened.
Rashee Rice is out for the season, and Marquise Brown is done for at least the regular season. Xavier Worthy is still developing, not yet offering much consistency despite his first-round draft status. With JuJu Smith-Schuster going down with a hamstring issue in Week 7, the Chiefs gave Mahomes another piece by acquiring DeAndre Hopkins from the Titans. Hopkins, who cost only a conditional fifth-round pick to acquire, debuted for his new team in Week 8.
[RELATED: Bills, Steelers Discussed Kupp With Rams]
The Chiefs had pursued Hopkins in a trade with the Cardinals last year and then made him an incentive-laden offer in free agency. Although they had done plenty of work on the potential Hall of Famer, the Chiefs may have been more interested in a player who recently came up in trade rumors. Before finalizing a Hopkins swap, the Chiefs engaged in talks with the Rams on Cooper Kupp. Kansas City looks to have preferred Kupp to Hopkins, per the Washington Post’s Jason La Canfora, but multiple factors kept the former Super Bowl MVP in Los Angeles.
The Rams may well have dangled Kupp, but they were mostly believed to be on the receiving end of calls rather than making them. L.A. wanted a second-round pick, and while the team was open to taking on some of Kupp’s remaining base salary (nearly $9MM ahead of Week 9), Kansas City was not in position to acquire a player with a lofty paragraph 5 number. The Chiefs and Titans are splitting the Hopkins tab, with the acquiring team having the 12th-year vet on its 2024 payroll at $5.56MM.
Kansas City restructured Jawaan Taylor‘s contract to create space for Hopkins, who is playing out a two-year deal worth $26MM. The Taylor adjustment, per ESPN.com’s Field Yates, created $5.3MM in cap space. Kansas City has not seen the right tackle addition live up to expectations, and the base-to-bonus restructure will make him more difficult to part ways with down the line. Taylor’s 2025 salary is already guaranteed, however, so this adjustment would stand to affect a 2026 separation.
As for Kupp, the Rams effectively took him off the market not long after the trade rumors swirled. Kupp and Puka Nacua returned in Week 8, helping the Rams upset the Vikings. L.A. is one game out of the NFC West lead and figures to use its standout receivers to make another playoff push, health-permitting, rather than unload a player who has contributed so much to the cause since he was drafted in Sean McVay‘s first year as HC.
Indeed, multiple GMs informed La Canfora they do not expect the 31-year-old wideout to be moved. Kupp’s injury past and the Rams’ high asking price never seemed to support a trade. Kupp is still signed through the 2026 season; $5MM in guarantees remain on the three-year, $80.1MM contract following this season.
The Chiefs will move forward with Hopkins, who stands to help free up space for Worthy, Travis Kelce and Co. as a now-defense-powered version of Andy Reid‘s juggernaut will attempt to hold off challengers in the coming months.
Route tree abilities with Any Reid seem to support that fit to me. Could’ve been a good combo.
Both Kupp and Hopkins come with age questions, but either one is a former “best receiver in the league” type who can still play. The Chiefs’ bad run in WR luck dictates their sore need for someone who can step in immediately and carry a heavy workload, and for a mere fifth, trading for Hopkins was a great transaction value-wise.