Chiefs had pre-draft talks with LBs Nick Bolton, Isaiah McDuffie

A pair of linebacker prospects revealed they’ve been talking with the Kansas City Chiefs ahead of the draft.

Could the Kansas City Chiefs be targeting a linebacker early on in the 2021 NFL draft? It’d seem rather odd to address the position again after investing a Top 100 pick on Willie Gay Jr. just a season ago. The front office in Kansas City is, at the very least, doing its due diligence with linebacker prospects in the upcoming class.

Two prospects have recently revealed that the Chiefs are among the teams they’ve been talking to ahead of the 2021 NFL draft. Here’s a quick look at each of those prospects and their potential fit with the team:

Saints call Boston College LB prospect Isaiah McDuffie for virtual interview

The Saints are among a crowd of teams that have virtually interviewed Boston College LB Isaiah McDuffie, a 2021 NFL draft prospect.

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The Draft Network’s Justin Melo reports that a linebacker prospect has gotten on the New Orleans Saints’ radar: Isaiah McDuffie, out of Boston College. He’s been a standout on special teams throughout his college career, having started on the kicking units as a true freshman before earning starter’s minutes with the Eagles defense. He ultimately appeared in 31 games, missing most of his 2019 junior season with a knee injury before bouncing back to lead Boston College in tackles (107) as a senior.

And he makes sense for the Saints as a late-round prospect. They need to reload on special teams after losing ace gunner Justin Hardee to the New York Jets, and heavy contributors Craig Robertson and Alex Anzalone each remain unsigned free agents. McDuffie probably wouldn’t figure into the starting competition at middle linebacker, but you never know. The Saints don’t have many great options there.

Limited by his size (6-foot-1 and 224 pounds) and adequate-but-unspectacular movement skills, he could be a hotly contested undrafted rookie if he doesn’t hear his name called during the 2021 NFL draft. Melo reported a list of a dozen teams that have interviewed McDuffie virtually, and the draft is still more than a month away. So remember his name once the Saints get on the clock during the event’s third day.

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Notre Dame at Boston College: Second-Quarter Analysis

It took a little longer than anyone would have like, but Notre Dame slowly is finding its rhythm against Boston College.

It took a little longer than anyone would have like, but Notre Dame slowly is finding its rhythm against Boston College. Of course, no Irish fan truly will rest until those 1993 demons have been vanquished. For now, they’ll be happy that their team has a 31-16 lead going into halftime.

Phil Jurkovec continues to be on a mission, as evidenced by a 34-yard completion to Jaelen Gill in which he barely avoided taking a sack on third-and-15. Two plays later, he took the ball himself for a 17-yard gain. The Irish’s defense locked down after that, but Aaron Boumerhi kicked a 31-yard field to break a 10-10 tie. The Eagles then tried to really seize momentum with an onside kick and nearly were successful but for a block that took place before Isaiah Pryor was able to touch the ball.

Given new life, the Irish’s offense made the most of it. Ian Book had a 20-yard run, then completed a 48-yard pass to Avery Davis from midfield. C’Bo Flemister only needed 2 yards to put the Irish back ahead with a touchdown. Near-disaster had turned into great fortune.

After the Irish’s defense forced a three-and-out, a fair-catch interference allowed the offense to begin its next possession at midfield. Book went right back to work, finding Javon McKinley twice for first downs. He then gave Ben Skowrenek his second touchdown of the game from 13 yards out. That made it clear that the Irish were intent on pouncing on anything that would give them an extra opportunity or advantage.

The Eagles weren’t ready to go into the locker room quietly, however. Jurkovec found Gill for a 40-yard completion on the following possession to set up a 35-yard field goal on Boumerhi. They then looked poised to get even closer after Chibueze Onwuka forced a Kyren Williams fumble that Isaiah McDuffie recovered. But that chance was wiped out when their own fumble was recovered by Daelin Hayes.

Out of that, Book was able to guide one final drive to end the second quarter. He mainly kept it on the ground with the longest play being a 16-yard run he executed himself to set up first-and-goal with time almost gone. After spiking the ball, he found Skowronek again, and the receiver completed the hat trick with a 4-yard touchdown catch.

Talk about a tale of two halves of a quarter.

Notre Dame at Boston College: Second-Quarter Analysis

It took a little longer than anyone would have like, but Notre Dame slowly is finding its rhythm against Boston College.

It took a little longer than anyone would have like, but Notre Dame slowly is finding its rhythm against Boston College. Of course, no Irish fan truly will rest until those 1993 demons have been vanquished. For now, they’ll be happy that their team has a 31-16 lead going into halftime.

Phil Jurkovec continues to be on a mission, as evidenced by a 34-yard completion to Jaelen Gill in which he barely avoided taking a sack on third-and-15. Two plays later, he took the ball himself for a 17-yard gain. The Irish’s defense locked down after that, but Aaron Boumerhi kicked a 31-yard field to break a 10-10 tie. The Eagles then tried to really seize momentum with an onside kick and nearly were successful but for a block that took place before Isaiah Pryor was able to touch the ball.

Given new life, the Irish’s offense made the most of it. Ian Book had a 20-yard run, then completed a 48-yard pass to Avery Davis from midfield. C’Bo Flemister only needed 2 yards to put the Irish back ahead with a touchdown. Near-disaster had turned into great fortune.

After the Irish’s defense forced a three-and-out, a fair-catch interference allowed the offense to begin its next possession at midfield. Book went right back to work, finding Javon McKinley twice for first downs. He then gave Ben Skowrenek his second touchdown of the game from 13 yards out. That made it clear that the Irish were intent on pouncing on anything that would give them an extra opportunity or advantage.

The Eagles weren’t ready to go into the locker room quietly, however. Jurkovec found Gill for a 40-yard completion on the following possession to set up a 35-yard field goal on Boumerhi. They then looked poised to get even closer after Chibueze Onwuka forced a Kyren Williams fumble that Isaiah McDuffie recovered. But that chance was wiped out when their own fumble was recovered by Daelin Hayes.

Out of that, Book was able to guide one final drive to end the second quarter. He mainly kept it on the ground with the longest play being a 16-yard run he executed himself to set up first-and-goal with time almost gone. After spiking the ball, he found Skowronek again, and the receiver completed the hat trick with a 4-yard touchdown catch.

Talk about a tale of two halves of a quarter.