Justin Reid hopes to help second-year Chiefs DBs avoid sophomore slump

#Chiefs safety Justin Reid intends to do everything he can to keep Kansas City’s second-year defensive backs on track in 2023.

The Kansas City Chiefs invested heavily in their defensive backfield last season, going so far as to draft five defensive backs in the 2022 draft.

That investment paid off, with the “fab five” of Trent McDuffie, Bryan Cook, Joshua Williams, Jaylen Watson, and Nazeeh Johnson all playing big roles on Kansas City’s Super Bowl LVII squad.

Now, entering year two, four of those five (Johnson not included due to a recent season-ending injury) make up the core of the Chiefs’ secondary unit. McDuffie is the team’s top cornerback option alongside veteran L’Jarius Sneed, while Williams and Watson project to have big roles. Cook, meanwhile, will start at safety next to sixth-year vet Justin Reid.

Reid, who enters his second season with the Chiefs, played a big role last season in making sure those newbies were ready to take on such important roles in year one.

“The biggest priority for me last year was, since we had so much work on the back end, was to make sure those guys were prepared as possible,” Reid said. “Work with them one-on-one, understand what it’s like to be a professional, practice like a professional, understand the differences in speed and alignments – just the minor details make a difference.

“I knew we (needed) them to come up big for us later in the season (and) they did. Those guys made huge plays for us. Jaylen (Watson had) multiple picks … that experience that we had is valuable for them.”

With the Chiefs leaning heavily on those same defensive backs in year two, Reid’s goal is to make sure there’s no fall in productivity.

“I’m going to stay on them to make sure there is no sophomore slump,” Reid said. “It’s easy to want to relax but you’ve got to keep the pedal to the metal in this league. Good teams turn to bad teams quick and bad teams turn to good teams quick … We’re a competitive group, but it’s a healthy competition, and we’re going to keep building.”

POLL: Which player will make the biggest second-year leap for Chiefs?

Our latest weekly poll asks #Chiefs fans to weigh in on the player poised to take the biggest second-year leap.

[crowdsignal poll=11125844]

The Kansas City Chiefs received a ton of production from their 2021 NFL draft class last season. Two players solidified themselves as starters on the offensive line (Creed Humphrey and Trey Smith) before training camp even arrived. Another player filled in a started double-digit games in relief at the linebacker position (Nick Bolton).

That trio of players is sure to follow up their rookie campaign with some measure of success, but who will make the biggest second-year leap in 2022? Will it be one of those three players? Will it be another player from that draft class or perhaps even an undrafted free agent signing?

You can make a case for a number of players taking a big step forward in 2022. It feels like the most eyes will be on fourth-round draft pick Joshua Kaindoh, who played just 46 snaps on defense last season before he was placed on injured reserve. He recorded no stats in those snaps, so he’s a virtual unknown at this point. Frankly, any production at all might be considered a big leap for him.

Then, there’s Cornell Powell, who was released from his rookie contract and signed to the practice squad last season. The receiver group is as competitive as can be right now, so he’s really going to need to impress just to make the 53-man roster in Kansas City.

One darkhorse candidate to make the biggest leap in Year 2 is an undrafted free agent signing who didn’t play a snap last year. Malik Herring was sidelined by an ACL injury, but he’s back, healthy and turning heads during the team’s offseason workouts in 2022. There’s certainly room for a player to step up and claim a role in the edge rusher rotation. Could Herring be someone to go from a redshirt year to becoming a key contributor on the defense?

Be sure to vote in our poll at the top of the page. Also, share your thoughts with us in the comment section down below or on Facebook and Twitter.

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