Chris Jones calls on Chiefs to reunite with a former veteran DT — believes he can steady Kansas City’s “inconsistent” defense
Posted October 17, 2025
Interior defensive star Chris Jones has proposed a familiar fix for the Kansas City Chiefs’ run-defense weakness: bring Mike Pennel back.
Speaking before a pivotal AFC West matchup against the Raiders, Jones didn’t hide his desire to reunite with his former teammate. “
Hopefully life comes full circle when we get my guy back. Mike is a tremendous locker-room presence… We’ve got to get my brother back,” Jones said, stressing that the defense is
“missing everything” without Pennel anchoring the middle.
Pennel is a well-known figure in Kansas City after two stints with the team: 2019–20 and 2023–24. He helped win two Super Bowls
before leaving in the offseason to join the Cincinnati Bengals. With Cincinnati, the 1.93 m, 150 kg lineman has appeared in seven games and recorded 15 tackles (four solo).
For the Chiefs, the defensive picture is mixed: they rank 12th league-wide in overall defense but remain uneven against the run, allowing opponents an average of 119.2 rushing yards per game
(19th). The absence of a true early-down A-gap anchor who can absorb double-teams—and free Jones to wreak havoc at 3-tech—has been evident on early downs.
Pennel’s impact was clear last season in Kansas City:
17 games (seven starts), 25 tackles, three sacks, and one fumble recovery. He re-signed on a one-year deal in March but was released August 26 in final roster cuts. Days later, he joined the
Bengals’ practice squad, was elevated in Week 1, and logged four tackles in a 17–16 win over the Browns. According to PFF, Pennel currently ranks 67th of 192
qualifying interior defensive linemen.
Even without their familiar “anchor,” the Chiefs’ run defense executed well in Week 6, holding Jahmyr Gibbs to 65 yards on 17 carries in a
30–17 win over the Lions. Still, if they’re to push toward a fourth straight Super Bowl run, a plug-and-play presence like Pennel is viewed as a key piece to raise the
floor of the front—especially with a schedule that still features opponents leaning on outside zone and counter concepts.
At present, the spot next to Jones has largely belonged to Omarr Norman-Lott
, a second-round rookie from Tennessee (1.91 m, 143 kg), who has four tackles and one sack through four games. While promising, Norman-Lott still needs live-snap accumulation and NFL-speed diagnostic reps.
From a personnel standpoint, Pennel fits Steve Spagnuolo’s blueprint: an early-down anchor for base looks and short-yardage/goal-line packages, allowing Kansas City to preserve its four-man rush without over-relying on the
blitz. On 3rd & long, the Chiefs can pull Pennel for a specialized pass-rush package—maximizing Jones’ current role.
The feasibility of a reunion will hinge on the Bengals’ motivations
and the price Kansas City is willing to pay. Given Pennel’s profile as a proven run-stuffer, a reasonable cost likely falls in the range of a conditional Day 3 pick
(tied to snap/production thresholds). If the cash and cap mechanics are handled via familiar tools (base-to-bonus conversions, spreading charges), this is a move that could be executed in-season.
Bottom line:
Jones’ appeal isn’t just emotional. Mike Pennel—a scheme-ready “anchor” who understands the system, boosts locker-room chemistry, and absorbs punishment so Jones can devastate from 3-tech—looks like a quick, clean, and targeted answer to the Chiefs’
“inconsistent” run defense. At a sensible price, it’s a deal worth considering.
Former Eagles Star with Two Super Bowl Rings Returns to Philadelphia After Announcing Retirement in the Offseason, Right After the Win Over the Vikings
Philadelphia, PA — Right after the win over the Minnesota Vikings, the Philadelphia Eagles sent the locker room buzzing by confirming the return of former cornerstone Brandon Graham. Just a few months after announcing his retirement in the offseason, the defensive icon of the City of Brotherly Love has decided to lace up again as the team seeks additional edge pressure and a leadership voice for a pivotal stretch of the season.
Graham returns to a wave of excitement tempered by realism: he missed training camp and the first half of the season, which means he’ll need a carefully designed ramp-up plan. The coaching staff is expected to stage the workload day by day, monitor his recovery after each session, and then gradually increase his snaps from a rotational role. The immediate goal is to help him regain contact rhythm, hand feel, and takeoff timing in short areas.
From a football standpoint, Graham’s presence immediately gives the Eagles a disciplined leverage player at defensive end, a reliable set-the-edge option on early downs, and a veteran who can execute interior stunts/twists within pressure packages. While no one should expect a sudden surge in sacks, his biggest value lies in tightening the perimeter of the defense, forcing runs back into traffic, and elevating the unit’s collective pursuit.
In passing situations, Graham will likely be used selectively by package: rushing from 5- or 4i-technique and syncing with interior defenders to create steady pressure built on power and timing rather than pure speed. His savvy—reading drop points and triggering counter moves—has been missing at times as injuries thinned the edge rotation.
The locker-room dimension may be even more important. For years, Graham has been a standard-setter for practice intensity and mental consistency. For the young edge group, a teacher on the field—someone who calibrates eyes, shoulders, and hands in rhythm—can shorten the learning curve more than any meeting.
Procedurally, the two sides are expected to begin with standard medicals, then finalize a short-term deal through the end of the season with flexible structure: veteran minimum base plus incentives tied to snaps, benchmarks, and team results. From a roster-management angle, the Eagles will need to open a spot on the 53 (IR/waive/practice-squad adjustments) before activating Graham.
The upcoming schedule leaves little room for error, which is why a veteran who already speaks the language of this system—no playbook “translation” required—is such a snug fit. Graham’s return doesn’t preclude additional reinforcements; it positions the Eagles to strengthen depth internally while keeping options open if the trade market presents value.
Big picture, this is a low-risk move with a high ceiling for cultural and organizational impact. If the ramp-up progresses smoothly, the Eagles will have a dependable edge-setter right as the season enters its series of stress tests. And for Philadelphia fans, Graham’s message says it all: he can’t yet leave football—or this city—and the next appointment is back on the field.