SHOCKING MOVE: Chiefs Snag Former Bills Cornerback Kaiir Elam — Is This the Game-Changing Signing Kansas City Needs?

After trading away one first-round cornerback from the 2022 NFL Draft class, the Kansas City Chiefs signed another in the quest to rebuild the team’s secondary on the fly.

According to Mike Garafolo of NFL Network, former Buffalo Bills, Dallas Cowboys and Tennessee Titans cornerback Kaiir Elam has agreed on a contract to play in Kansas City.

It will be his fourth stop for his fifth season after being selected with the 23rd pick in the draft, two picks after former Chiefs, now Los Angeles Rams, cornerback Trent McDuffie.

He will add to the current duo of Chiefs’ outside cornerbacks: Nohl Williams and Kristian Fulton. Elam has rarely aligned in the slot when he’s in formation.

Elam has started 19 games in a career that obviously has not lived up to expectations so far. The soon-to-be 25-year-old has just two interceptions, eight defended passes and four tackles for loss to his name. Buffalo traded Elam to Dallas last offseason after declining in the Bills’ lineup over three seasons.

For Dallas, Elam started seven games for one of the NFL’s worst pass defenses in 2025, leading to the Cowboys waiving him in late November. He finished the season in Tennessee, but didn’t record any starts.Chiefs are reportedly signing former Bills cornerback Kaiir Elam - Yahoo  Sports

The former Florida Gator will be looking for a fresh start in Kansas City, hoping to recapture the reputation he had as a high-profile draft prospect. This play is a great rep against current Detroit Lions wide receiver Jameson Williams, showcasing Elam’s pressing and jamming abilities on top of the effort to finish through the hands.

At the NFL Scouting Combine, Elam had standard measurables, coming in 6 feet 1 3/8 inches tall and 191 pounds with arms just under 31 inches long. However, he ran the 40-yard dash in 4.39 seconds, a number that boosted his draft stock considering the physicality he proved to play with.

Since being drafted, there has been little positive momentum in Elam’s career, but he has gained experience that Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo and defensive backs coach Dave Merritt can work off of to improve his performance.

Related Posts

Sad News: Alex Gonzaga, 4th Pregnancy Miscarried — A True Story of Hope, Grief and Recovery

Today, the emotions of thousands of supporters were once again stirred when the family of Alex Gonzaga and his wife Mikee Morada shared the sad and painful…

Manny Pacquiao Will Give a House to Eman Bacusa: Jinky Pacquiao Supports, One Step to Get Her Son Back!

In this era where news about celebrities and athletes is full of controversy and scandal, another big story is making waves across the Philippines and even abroad….

THE REVIVAL OF COUNTRY MUSIC: DOLLY PARTON, REBA MCENTIRE, GEORGE STRAIT, WILLIE NELSON, TRACE ADKINS, AND GARTH BROOKS UNITE TO REKINDLE THE TRUE SPIRIT OF AMERICAN COUNTRY – A MOVEMENT THAT WILL RESHAPE THE NATION’S HEART AND SOUL

Introduction **THE REVIVAL OF COUNTRY MUSIC: When Six Legends Reignited the Soul of American Country** **Grand Ole Opry, Nashville — March 2026** It was the night country…

A COUNTRY SONG HIT #1 IN 1953 — BUT HANK WILLIAMS WROTE EVERY WORD OF IT IN THE BACKSEAT OF A CAR, SITTING RIGHT NEXT TO HIS NEW WIFE, THINKING ABOUT THE ONE WHO LEFT HIM. Montgomery to Nashville. The highway stretched on for hours. Billie Jean, his second wife, sat beside him humming something soft. But Hank wasn’t listening. He grabbed a scrap of paper from his coat pocket and started writing. Every line was aimed at Audrey — the woman who’d walked out, taken the house, and left him with nothing but a guitar and a bottle. Billie Jean glanced over and asked what he was writing. He just said, “Somethin’ that needed to come out.” By the time they reached Nashville, every word was done. The song was released after his death at just 29 — and climbed straight to #1. He wrote it for a woman who had already stopped listening. But seventy years later, the whole world still hasn’t.

A Country Song Hit #1 in 1953 — But Hank Williams Wrote It in a Car, Still Haunted by the Woman He Couldn’t Forget Some songs feel…

TOWNES VAN ZANDT NEVER HAD A #1 HIT IN HIS LIFE. STEVE EARLE STILL CALLED HIM “THE BEST SONGWRITER IN THE WHOLE WORLD” — AND SAID HE’D STAND ON BOB DYLAN’S COFFEE TABLE IN COWBOY BOOTS TO PROVE IT. They said his voice was too rough. His songs too dark. Too poetic for country radio. Nashville called him “a weird recluse” who’d show up, hand over a tape, and vanish. For most of his career, he played to crowds of fewer than 50 people in half-empty bars. But Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard took his “Pancho and Lefty” to #1. Emmylou Harris turned “If I Needed You” into a country classic. Guy Clark called him “the biggest single influence on my writing.” Bob Dylan owned every album he ever made. He was born into one of Texas’s wealthiest families — with a county named after them. He chose a tin-roofed shack outside Nashville with no heat, no plumbing, no phone. He didn’t want fame. He wanted truth. He died at 52 on New Year’s Day 1997 — the same calendar date Hank Williams died 44 years earlier. He never charted a single song under his own name. And yet, every songwriter who came after him knows exactly who he was…

Townes Van Zandt Never Needed a Number One to Become a Legend Townes Van Zandt never had a No. 1 hit with his own name on it….

THREE QUEENS. ONE THRONE. THE NIGHT NASHVILLE BOWED DOWN — INSIDE THE UNFORGETTABLE “HONKY TONK ANGELS” REUNION THAT SHOOK COUNTRY MUSIC FOREVER

Introduction In 1993, as country music surged into a new era of commercial expansion and shifting identity, something far more enduring was quietly taking shape behind the…