On Monday afternoon, reports of the Kansas City Chiefs’ reunion with cornerback L’Jarius Sneed rolled in after news of a visit with his former team was reported last week.
It has been three years since Sneed was the shutdown cornerback in Kansas City, a role that led to the 2024 offseason trade that sent him to the Tennessee Titans for a third-round pick. Since that move, both parties have failed to meet the high expectations each has earned: Sneed has played just 12 games in two seasons, while the Chiefs
fizzled out with a losing record in 2025 after being blown out in Super Bowl LIX.
Will this move provide a spark for both sides that is big enough to get the team back to the top of the NFL? Here are four takeaways from the signing that point towards that conclusion.
1. The cornerback room is deep
Sneed will add to a room that was headlined by young playmakers in rookie Mansoor Delane and Nohl Williams, with former top-60 pick Kristian Fulton rounding out a group that has a lot of upside regardless of the unit’s current experience.
Sneed fills in for any of the “veteran experience” that the position was missing as a whole. After years as a versatile Nickel for defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, Sneed transitioned to more of a full-time role on the outside and became one of the league’s hardest coverage players to get open against by the end of the 2023 season.
Any of his previous experience with the Chiefs, both inside and outside, gives the defense a reliable presence in a secondary that went through significant change this offseason. If the duo of young, playmaking cornerbacks is ready for the challenge on the outside right away, Sneed could be a complementary piece in the slot — or if he needs to fill in on the outside, there are still a handful of options that can fill the Nickel role.
2. The potential flexibility to deal Fulton for another piece
With the newfound depth, there is a possibility that the room as a whole performs well enough for one of the four cornerbacks capable of “starting” to be dealt. Fulton fits the bill if Sneed comes back as a dependable playmaker and the younger players behind the experienced ones develop as we’ve seen in the past under defensive backs coach Dave Merritt.
By the time the 2026 regular season arrives, there’s a chance general manager Brett Veach finds a trade partner, one who needs a cornerback to start and has a pass rusher it is willing to expend.
It’s important to have cornerback depth, but the Chiefs may have to weigh the position’s depth against the talent available up front to create pressure. Fulton does feel like the only real option to be traded, and it could be tough with a $13 million cap hit in 2026 and an $8 million dead cap, according to Spotrac.
3. Sneed could boost the pass rush
In 2025, the Chiefs’ defense struggled with the pass rush, even while blitzing at the third-highest rate in the NFL (31%).
In 2023, Spagnuolo kept Sneed in coverage for the most part, but between the 2021 and 2022 seasons, Sneed was blitzed 86 times and produced 4.5 sacks among 17 total pressures. He also batted down two passes.
Sneed is instinctual as a tackler and around the line of scrimmage. If that is his role more than coverage as he begins his return to Kansas City, it could be a way for the team to improve a defense that finished 25th in sacks last year.
4. The slot could have a dependable presence
If Sneed were to be a more featured part of the team’s pass rush, it’s because he is manning the slot.
Because he has done it in the past, it’s not hard to envision Sneed playing the Nickel, but it’s also worth looking at the performance of safety Chamarri Conner in that role recently, and considering the similarities Sneed has in terms of play strengths, Sneed seems like a good fit for what Spagnuolo desires in an early-down slot defender while also providing more reliability in coverage.
The signing of Sneed, after two weeks of offseason practices, may signal a perceived weakness in the slot, with players like Kader Kohou and rookie Jadon Canady competing in that position. None of the team’s top three cornerbacks before the addition of Sneed played significant snaps in the slot for Kansas City last year (Delane played 39 of his 623 defensive snaps in the slot for LSU).
If the Chiefs have dependable starters on the outside and in the slot, with solid depth behind each of the spots, the revamped secondary feels like it’s in a much stronger place than it was just a few days ago.











