Donnie Edwards recalls the start of his career, Chiefs teams of the 1990s

#Chiefs Wire’s Ed Easton Jr. spoke to Donnie Edwards about the start of his career in Kansas City and his pursuit of a Super Bowl title. | @EdEastonJr

The Kansas City Chiefs of the 1990s went through many changes to remain competitive. The team had projections for the postseason and beyond each year but could not capture the elusive Super Bowl appearance.

Former Chiefs linebacker Donnie Edwards was in many big games early in his first stint with the Chiefs throughout the late 1990s. Chiefs Wire’s Ed Easton Jr. spoke to Edwards about the start of his career in Kansas City and coming up short in his pursuit of a Super Bowl title.

“I remember my rookie year, it was mini camp,” Edwards began. “I’m standing next to a guy named Martin Bayless. Bayless was a safety. He played probably 13 years in the league. A big safety, but more importantly, Bayless had free football camps in San Diego. He used to play for the Chargers, and I was obviously part of his free football camp because we couldn’t afford to go to a football camp.

“It was pretty ironic to be standing next to him in the NFL, with the person responsible for helping me get to this point, and we’re looking at each other. He [looked] at me, he’s like, ‘I know you’, and he’s like, ‘Oh, my God, I’m getting old. You’re the first graduate who made it to the NFL as part of my free football camps’. That was amazing. You talk about someone paying it forward and giving other kids an opportunity.”

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The late 1990s Chiefs teams were loaded with talent, and Edwards admired his teammates, who made Kansas City a powerhouse in the AFC.

“Now it’s time to earn a starting spot and contribute to the team,” Edwards continued. “We had a great team in ’96 and ’97—the first tenure. I know ’96. I think we missed the playoffs by about one game at the end. It was disheartening, too, because the year before, ’95, the Chiefs went to the playoffs, and I believe they lost to Denver.

“Fast forward to ’97, that year we went 13-3. Elvis Grbac goes down. He breaks his collarbone. And then remember Rich Gannon comes in. And I think we win 12 games straight. We were rolling, and we had Spider-Man (Andre Rison). We had Greg Hill. We had Marcus Allen that year. I mean, we had a great team.”

The Chiefs lost great players due to tragedy, free agency, and retirement as time passed. The breakout season of 1997 ended unexpectedly at the hands of the eventual Super Champions, the Broncos.

“We’re gelling and, unfortunately, we had a bye in the playoffs,” Edwards said. “I think about this; it just puts a pit in my stomach. We lost 14 to 10 to the Broncos. We played them three times that year… Now that I’m retired, looking back to those years, I think that was the year I truly had the opportunity, and then in ’98. That was a challenging year. That was the last year [of] Marty Schottenheimer.”

Gunther Cunningham and Dick Vermeil would follow as head coaches until Edwards’ last season in 2001 for his first tenure in Kansas City.

To learn more about Donnie Edwards’ work with military veterans, visit the Best Defense Foundation’s website.

Former Ravens QB Trent Dilfer still bitter about post Super Bowl XXXV split

Former Baltimore Ravens quarterback Trent Dilfer is still bitter the team moved on from him after winning Super Bowl XXXV.

With the 20th anniversary of the Baltimore Ravens’ first Super Bowl win — Super Bowl XXXV — happening last week, former Ravens quarterback Trent Dilfer reflected back on Baltimore’s abrupt turn in the offseason.

Following the Super Bowl XXXV victory, Dilfer was set to hit free agency. Surely Baltimore would want to re-sign their Super Bowl-winning quarterback? Unfortunately for Dilfer, no. The Ravens had Dilfer as their third option, according to ESPN’s Jamison Hensley, and eventually signed Elvis Grbac to a five-year $30 million contract.

“You know, I’ve been through a lot in my life and I try not to be bitter about anything,” Dilfer said, according to ESPN’s Jamison Hensley. “I’d say that’s one I’m still harboring a little bit of bitterness because of the why. It was so poorly evaluated on their behalf. They knew I was hurt.”

Now the head coach of a high school in Nashville, TN, Dilfer agreed that he hadn’t played well but said the Ravens knew it was because he was hurt.

“There’s legendary stories of how bad I was in practice, and they’re all true,” Dilfer said. “I had some of the worst practices in the history of football for a quarterback. If my high school quarterback practiced like I did sometimes that year, I wouldn’t play him. But I was hurt. There was a reason for it. It wasn’t that I wasn’t trying. I didn’t suck. I sucked physically.”

Regardless of whether Baltimore’s decision to let Dilfer leave was unwise, their decision to sign Grbac turned out to be a bust. Grbac was dreadful in 2001, throwing just 15 touchdown passes to 18 interceptions and finishing with a 71.1 passer rating on the season. After refusing to rework his contract and being cut Grbac retired from the NFL with offers on the table from other teams, according to the Associated Press.

Dilfer’s bitterness seemingly extends beyond the team as well for what he says was Grbac not having enough mental or physical toughness.

“I’ll take a shot at Elvis because it doesn’t bother me at all,” Dilfer said. “The core value of that team was toughness. And Brian didn’t realize that. It wasn’t their coaching. It wasn’t their talent evaluation. It wasn’t all the things that they think it was. The core value of that team was mental and physical toughness, and that’s who I am and that’s the opposite of who Elvis is. They set their identity back light years by getting it wrong.”

Baltimore would make the playoffs in just two of the next six seasons before owner Steve Bisciotti fired coach Brian Billick, hiring John Harbaugh to replace him. Dilfer signed as a backup with the Seattle Seahawks, starting just 12 games over four years before fizzling out with one-year stints with the Cleveland Browns and San Francisco 49ers.

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