Itās been a disaster of a year for defensive tackle Chris Jones and the Kansas City Chiefs. With the regular season now over, the DT probably wished that the frustrations still lingering would fade away with time. But with the news of yet another Chiefs coach possibly departing, he couldnāt help but vent.
On Friday, Adam Schefter reported that Chiefs defensive line coach Joe Cullen interviewed with the Washington Commanders for their open defensive coordinator job. Jones saw it and summed it up the only way he could.
āOh sh!+ā¦ā¦.,ā he wrote on X.
For a team thatās lived in January for most of the past decade, this kind of uncertainty isnāt something Jones is used to. But after a 6ā11 season that ended without a playoff spot, Andy Reid made it clear that changes were coming. The shakeup has already started.
Earlier in the week, the Chiefs moved on from wide receivers coach Connor Embree, after three seasons marked by drops and no 1,000-yard receiver. On top of that, offensive coordinator Matt Nagy isnāt expected to be back, having already taken interviews for head coaching jobs with the Tennessee Titans and Las Vegas Raiders, along with the Arizona Cardinals also on his schedule.
Even defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo has interviewed for a head coaching role with the Titans. So when Cullenās name popped up, Jones probably reached his breaking point. Cullen is highly respected as one of the leagueās best defensive front teachers. He joined Spagnuoloās staff in 2022 and helped anchor a run that included three straight Super Bowl trips.
In Cullenās first two seasons in Kansas City, Chris Jones piled up 24 sacks combined. Even in 2025, during a down year for the team, he still led the Chiefs with seven sacks and remained one of the leagueās most productive interior pass rushers since Cullen arrived.
Itās not just about Jones. The defense, particularly against the run, held together better than most. Kansas City allowed only two 100-yard rushers all season, tied for eighth in the league, and finished ninth overall in rushing defense at 105.7 yards per game. There is a lot of deadwood this team needs to get rid of, but Cullen is definitely not one of them.
The potential loss of a respected coach like Cullen is a symptom of the larger dysfunction that plagued the Chiefs all season. The teamās play-by-play announcer, Mitchell G. Holthus, recently broke down what went wrong for the club.
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Holthus identifies the pillars of the Chiefsā breakdown
Itās tough to find many bright spots from this season. The rough parts, though, are easy enough to list. Holthus didnāt mince words, starting his list of failures with the teamās schedule when looking back at what went wrong in 2025.
āIt was the logistics of the schedule, throw in Brazil which was a real clunky trip then you throw in a Sunday night on the road, a Monday night on the road all before Columbus day,ā he said.
A 10-hour flight to Brazil certainly didnāt help the Chiefs. But thatās the cost of being one of the leagueās marquee teams. You get rewarded (or punished) with international games. And still, Kansas City wasnāt alone. The Giants and Lions both faced similarly difficult slates, with opponent win percentages of .574 and .571.
From there, Holthus turned to the offenseās inconsistency and subsequent injuries.
āOffensively, it was a series of things, never getting into a consistent rhythm, losing Simmons when they did, the injuriesā¦. it was always off,ā he added.
It always starts with Patrick Mahomes. In past years, if the game was tight late, fans almost assumed heād find a way to finish it. That feeling wasnāt there this season. A year ago, the Chiefs were 12ā0 in close playoff games. This time around, they went 1ā9 in those same situations.
Mahomes finished with 3,587 yards, 22 touchdowns, and 11 interceptions. Those numbers arenāt disastrous. But the late-game edge wasnāt the same. And when you talk about inconsistency, itās hard to pin it all on him. The injuries made things so much worse.
The Arrowhead team lost both starting tackles, Josh Simmons and Jawaan Taylor, in week 13. Their replacements, Jaylon Moore and Wanya Morris, dealt with their own issues in the weeks that followed, leaving the Chiefs scraping the bottom of the roster. The season ultimately ended with Mahomes tearing his ACL.
The defense couldnāt bail them out either.
āDefensively, the inability at critical times to get teams off the field on 3rd and long. Itās all of those things combined.ā
The pass rush was the clearest problem. The Chiefs finished tied for 22nd with 35 sacks and struggled to get steady pressure from anyone besides Chris Jones, who himself had a slow start. Turnovers were an issue, too, with Kansas City tied for 26th at just 14 takeaways.
As the coaching staff splinters and the front office faces a crucial offseason, Chris Jonesās simple, frustrated tweet speaks for a fan base bracing for more change. The Chiefs arenāt just rebuilding a roster; theyāre trying to salvage a championship culture that appears to be eroding.
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