Midway through the second round of the NFL draft last Saturday, the brain trust of the Chiefs, from owner to general manager to coach to scouts, was getting antsy from inactivity. Kansas City had selected LSU defensive end Tyson Jackson with the No. 3 pick just 25 minutes into the draft, and then, lacking a second-round choice or a trade partner with whom they could swing a deal that would allow the Chiefs to move up, they spent five hours at the team's Arrowhead Stadium headquarters watching the selection process slowly play out on television. "Hey," new G.M. Scott Pioli said to his colleagues, "we have to remind ourselves: We did get Matt Cassel and Mike Vrabel for our second [pick]."
Indeed, that trade, plus one other major deal Pioli made after being lured from the Patriots' front office in January, has changed the makeup of a once-proud team that had become undisciplined in stumbling to a 6--26 record over the past two seasons. Pioli dealt K.C.'s second-round pick to his former club for a presumptive quarterback of the future, Cassel, and a positive tone-setter in the locker room, veteran linebacker Vrabel. Then, two days before the draft, Pioli sent All-Pro tight end Tony Gonzalez to the Falcons for a 2010 second-round pick. If Cassel proves over the long haul to be as good as he showed in New England last year—when, despite not having started a game since high school, he led the Pats to an 11--5 season in place of the injured Tom Brady—Pioli will have in effect given up an elite tight end with a good year or two left and gotten offensive and defensive leaders who can kick-start the program that Pioli and his hand-picked rookie coach, Todd Haley, are putting in place.
Instead of going for a headliner to replace the juice lost with Gonzalez's departure, Pioli drafted blue-collar starting with the 6'5", 295-pound Jackson, who through most of the predraft process had not been projected to go in the top 10. He and Glenn Dorsey, the team's first-round pick last year and another LSU product, should wind up the starting ends in the 3--4. "I can play all three downs, sir, and I can play inside and outside," Jackson told SI, in a tone more befitting a job interview. "They want a mean and physical player at the point of attack on all three downs, and that's what they'll get." One of the reasons Pioli wanted Jackson: his love of the game.
The youthful rotation up front figures to include the Chiefs' third-round pick on Sunday, defensive tackle Alex Magee of Purdue. Fourth-round corner Donald Washington of Ohio State is a 6-foot battler who was a scouting-combine star and is expected to be a special teams standout. Fifth-rounder Colin Brown of Missouri will compete for the No. 3 tackle spot.
Kansas City hungers for the sort of organizational success with which Pioli made his name during eight years in New England, when he and Bill Belichick built a three-time Super Bowl champion. "Scott Pioli can own this town if the Chiefs win," restaurateur Michael Garozzo said last Friday night. "There's nothing the fans of this city want more than for the Chiefs to matter again. The people who come in here like what they see so far."
All around the league, new regimes put their stamps on teams through the draft.
• Lions G.M. Martin Mayhew, on the job for eight months, and rookie coach Jim Schwartz took Georgia quarterback Matthew Stafford with the No. 1 pick, then did him two favors: They overpaid Stafford with a six-year, $72 million contract, including a rookie-record $41.7 million guaranteed; and handed him the best blocking-receiving tight end to come out in several years, Oklahoma State's Brandon Pettigrew, the 20th pick.
• New Broncos coach Josh McDaniels, already under fire for trading franchise passer Jay Cutler, broke with team tradition by drafting a running back, Georgia's Knowshon Moreno, high (No. 12) in the first round. Six picks later he selected Tennessee's Robert Ayers, a one-year starter at defensive end, then traded up to No. 37 to grab a 5'9" corner, Alphonso Smith of Wake Forest.
• The Browns saved probably $8 million in cap room by trading down 12 spots with the Jets, from No. 5 to 17, and picking up some of new coach Eric Mangini's favorites from his old team in New York, including safety Abram Elam, who will start immediately.
• Mangini's successor with the Jets, Rex Ryan, and G.M. Mike Tannenbaum dealt their two first-day picks (Nos. 17 and 29) to take USC quarterback Mark Sanchez at No. 5. On Sunday they moved up again to draft Iowa running back Shonn Greene with the first pick of the third round.