Patrick Mahomes Weighs In On Kansas City Chiefs Trading Away Trent McDuffie In Blockbuster Move
Patrick Mahomes has won three Super Bowls, thrown for over 30,000 career yards, and orchestrated more fourth-quarter comebacks than most quarterbacks manage in a lifetime. The man is not easily rattled. So when the Kansas City Chiefs sent All-Pro cornerback Trent McDuffie to the Los Angeles Rams on Wednesday, and Mahomes’ entire public response was a single, devastating “Damn..”
No paragraphs. No press conference diplomacy. Just two letters, a period, and a second period for emphasis. That extra dot did a lot of emotional heavy lifting.
What the McDuffie Trade Actually Means for Mahomes and the Chiefs
The Chiefs traded McDuffie to the Rams in exchange for the No. 29 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, a fifth-rounder, a sixth-rounder, and a 2027 third-round selection. On paper, that’s a solid return for a cornerback in the final year of his rookie deal who was due a guaranteed $13.6 million in 2026.
Kansas City is in cost-cutting mode. They’ve already restructured Mahomes’ contract, released Mike Danna and Jawaan Taylor, and now they’ve moved their best corner. This is a team that missed the playoffs for the first time since 2014 and finished with one of their worst seasons in recent memory. Rebuilding isn’t fun. Rebuilding while your franchise quarterback is deep in ACL rehab? Even less fun.
Mahomes, for his part, had surgery in December after tearing his ACL and LCL in a season-ending loss to the Chargers. He’s been grinding through rehab ever since, targeting a Week 1 return. He’s watching all of this unfold from the training table.
Mahomes Knew What McDuffie Meant To This Defense
McDuffie wasn’t just a good player; he was the backbone of Steve Spagnuolo’s defense during Kansas City’s back-to-back Super Bowl runs. In his four seasons with the Chiefs, he recorded 246 tackles, 3 interceptions, 34 pass deflections, and 12 forced fumbles. He earned First-Team All-Pro honors in 2023 and Second-Team All-Pro honors in 2024. He was a cornerstone.
Mahomes knows better than anyone that championships aren’t won by quarterbacks alone. It takes a defense that can hold a lead. It takes corners who can lock down receivers when the game is on the line. McDuffie was that guy in Kansas City. And now he’s gone.
What Does This All Mean Going Forward For the Chiefs and Mahomes
The Chiefs’ offseason isn’t over. They hold two first-round picks now, their own at No. 9 and the Rams’ at No. 29, which gives them serious ammunition to rebuild through the draft. Whether that means taking a cornerback to replace McDuffie, adding a playmaker on offense to help Mahomes, or packaging picks for a trade-up, the options are real.
But let’s not pretend this doesn’t hurt in the short term. Replacing a First-Team All-Pro isn’t something you patch with a late first-rounder and good intentions. The Chiefs are betting on the future while Mahomes bets on his knee.
The Rams, meanwhile, are going all-in. With Matthew Stafford at 38 and a roster built to win now, they gave up a first-round pick and three more for a 25-year-old elite corner who could anchor their defense for the next decade. It’s a bold swing. It might just work.
For Mahomes, the task is simple, even if it isn’t easy: get healthy, get back, and drag this franchise out of its darkest stretch in over a decade. He’s done harder things.
