5 training camp battles to watch for the Chiefs

Keep an eye on these five position battles throughout #Chiefs training camp:

The Kansas City Chiefs begin their 2022 training camp with a full 90-man roster on Wednesday.

The team will have five padless practices before they begin integrating pads and contact into their routine. Once the pads come on, the coaching staff and front office will begin to narrow down the roster, with the first wave of cuts coming on August 16th.

As the players hit the practice fields, the coaching staff will work to figure out who will best fill specific positions that remain up for grabs. The Chiefs don’t have a ton of spots available, but they also have brought in quite a bit of competition at several key positions.

Here’s a look at the top training camp battles for the Chiefs this year and some of the key names to watch:

Parsons, Cowboys incumbents shaping up as one of NFL’s top 2021 position battles

NFL.com’s Bucky Brooks sees one of the incoming Dallas linebackers becoming the new centerpiece of the defense… possibly this year.

Every coach wants competition in training camp. Whether it’s through the signing of veteran free agents at key spots or the restocking of the roster via the draft, the goal is to let on-the-field action during summer determine who is still on the field when autumn rolls around.

And while some competitions are a mere formality, there are some positional battles whose outcomes are truly up in the air and could genuinely result in a changing of the guard when final depth charts are announced.

The Cowboys may have one of the league’s most interesting such battles brewing in the middle layer of Dan Quinn’s defense. So says NFL.com analyst Bucky Brooks, who believes “it is only a matter of time” before the club’s first-round pick in 2021 pushes out one of the team’s veteran linebackers.

Penn State’s Micah Parsons, selected 12th overall in this year’s draft, is expected to make waves in the Dallas defense in his very first year. While it would be a welcome turn of events for Cowboys fans who were frustrated by 2020’s porous play, an uptick in the team’s linebacker play could come at the eventual expense of either Leighton Vander Esch or Jaylon Smith.

“Perhaps the Cowboys will find a way to feature Parsons, Smith and LVE as the starters in their 3-4 scheme,” Brooks writes. But sooner or later, he continues, Parsons will likely become the centerpiece of the defense:

“Parsons is an ultra-explosive athlete with exceptional instincts, awareness and pass-rush ability. He adds a dimension to the defense with his playmaking skills, and it will be hard for the veterans to fend off the youngster in a battle. That said, Dallas defensive coordinator Dan Quinn might come up with a few packages that enable Parsons to complement what Smith and LVE do as tackle-to-tackle defenders with big thump ability.”

While Parsons, Vander Esch, and Smith may indeed share time as a three-headed monster this season, it seems unlikely that the trio will remain intact in the long term. The Cowboys have already declined Vander Esch’s fifth-year option, making the upcoming campaign something of a prove-it year for the Boise State product who has endured multiple injuries of late. 2021 also marks the last of the guaranteed money on Smith’s current megacontract; his recent play wouldn’t seem to be living up to the front office’s sizable investment.

And while Parsons could conceivably make one of those veterans expendable, don’t forget that Dallas also has Jabril Cox looking to force his way onto the team. The LSU linebacker lasted until the fourth round of the draft, but has already been named the biggest steal of the incoming rookie class.

Of course, there’s also free agent safety Keanu Neal, who is undergoing a switch from safety and is already listed on the team website as a linebacker… and third-year project Luke Gifford, a diamond-in-the-rough at the position who’s simply had terrible luck with preseason injuries.

Vander Esch, Smith, Parsons, Cox, Neal, Gifford. A competitive positional battle in training camp is one thing. But the 2021 Cowboys’ linebacker corps might just have a full-blown cage match on its hands.

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Dallas Cowboys 2020 Fantasy Football Preview

The Dallas Cowboys have one of the most potent offenses in the league and in fantasy football as well. They were the only team in 2019 to have a top-10 finisher at quarterback (Dak Prescott – 2nd), wide receiver (Amari Cooper – 9th) and running back …

The Dallas Cowboys have one of the most potent offenses in the league and in fantasy football as well. They were the only team in 2019 to have a top-10 finisher at quarterback (Dak Prescott – 2nd), wide receiver (Amari Cooper – 9th) and running back (Ezekiel Elliott – 4th).

They went out and made an upgrade at WR3 and got rid of an offensive head coach many thought held back the full-game explosiveness of the parts. How will things shape up in 2020? Here’s a look at what’s new and what camp battles may take place that impact the production.

This content appears in print in the Sports Weekly NFL Fantasy Football Preview.

What’s new

The football gods dropped a future WR1 into the Cowboys’ lap when Oklahoma wideout CeeDee Lamb made it to No. 17. Dallas, seemingly primed for a defensive pick, wisely made the selection. He will eat up snaps vacated by Randall Cobb and many of the looks that went to Jason Witten at tight end. Each saw 83 targets last season, and with Amari Cooper and Michael Gallup demanding WR1 and borderline WR2 attention, Lamb could thrive.

Blake Jarwin averaged 3 more yards per catch than Witten, so he’ll soak up targets and could be a steal in the late rounds. Ezekiel Elliott will have more opportunities to roam free as the first premier back new head coach Mike McCarthy has had since Eddie Lacy’s slender days. The horizontal West Coast approach should mix well with Kellen Moore’s vertical attack, allowing Dak Prescott his best year. An increase in snaps for EPA monster Tony Pollard should make him a nice flex option depending on the matchup. He should definitely be rostered as a handcuff to Elliott if you can pull it off, but as a stand alone there’s a lot of upside for the NFL’s shiftiest back in 2019.

Camp battles

The weaponry is set in stone atop the depth chart. The fourth receiver could be veteran Devin Smith, but youngsters could push for snaps. None is roster-worthy, though. The offensive line is where the battles will occur as Connor Williams, Connor McGovern, rookie Tyler Biadasz and veteran Joe Looney will compete for left guard and center.

Whoever wins will be cogs in what should be an offensive juggernaut limited only by how often the defense gets the ball back.

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