Le Journal

Elon Musk Promised Self-Driving Cars For Years. Tesla Finally Started Robotaxi Rides With No Safety Monitors

The Athletic’s Dane Brugler values ‘high-floor’ players in 2026 draft

This Is When 2027 Chevrolet Bolt Production Will End

Scout's Extended-Range EVs Are Front And Center In A New Dealer Lawsuit

Lively new seafood restaurant rides into prime Houston location
An Arizona-based seafood restaurant has set its sights on Houston. Buck & Rider is the latest addition to Central Park Post Oak, a 17-acre mixed-use development in the Galleria area.

BMW's Electric M3 Has Simulated Engine Sounds. Here's What BMW Used

A brand new name sets the tone for Houston nonprofit's gala

Chiefs’ decision on Trent McDuffie this offseason won’t be simple
The Kansas City Chiefs exercised Trent McDuffie’s fifth-year option last spring, locking the former first-round pick into the 2026 season at a fully guaranteed $13.6 million. On its face, the move was straightforward. McDuffie is one of the defense’s most dependable players, a multi-time All-Pro, and a foundational piece in defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo’s secondary. But as the cornerback market continues to inflate and the Chiefs face another cycle of financial decisions, McDuffie’s future has become a legitimate roster conversation. The question is no longer whether he’s good enough to keep — it’s whether keeping him at market value is the most efficient use of resources for a team that consistently operates near the salary cap. There is a strong case on both sides. The Case for Keeping McDuffie From a football standpoint, McDuffie checks nearly every box the Chiefs value defensively. He is scheme-flexible, assignment-sound, and reliable in all phases of play. Spagnuolo has deployed him inside, outside, in man coverage, and in match concepts. Few corners are trusted with that range of responsibility. Even in what could be described as a statistically uneven 2025 season, McDuffie still graded among the top dozen cornerbacks league-wide according to Pro Football Focus. His run-defense impact remained among the best at the position, and his overall evaluation reflected a player whose value extends beyond basic coverage numbers. That matters in a defense built on communication, leverage, and discipline rather than pure isolation coverage. McDuffie’s resume carries weight. He has earned multiple All-Pro honors, including first-team recognition earlier in his career, and was viewed as one of the league’s best corners as recently as 2024. Players with that combination of age, production, and versatility rarely become available without consequence. There is also a practical salary-cap argument for extending him now rather than later. While the fifth-year option locks McDuffie in at $13.6 million for 2026, an extension would allow the Chiefs to convert salary into signing bonus and immediately lower his cap hit. For a team already strapped for space, extending McDuffie isn’t just about long-term security — it’s also a way to create short-term flexibility. For a defense that has become a championship pillar, keeping a known, high-level performer — and smoothing the cap impact in the process — remains the safer option than trying to replace him through the draft. The Case for Trading McDuffie The counterargument begins with the same market realities. Cornerbacks are now being paid like elite receivers, and not all elite corners are valued equally. McDuffie is not a prototype boundary defender with rare size and length, and offenses have increasingly tested him with bigger receivers in contested situations. In 2025, the results were mixed. McDuffie allowed more touchdowns and a higher passer rating in coverage than in his All-Pro seasons. While his overall tape remained strong, the efficiency dip provides leverage for teams hesitant to pay top-of-market money. It also justifies the Chiefs exploring alternatives. Financially, the appeal of a trade is straightforward. Moving McDuffie would clear his entire $13.6 million cap hit from the 2026 books, a meaningful figure for a team that is routinely forced to maximize every dollar. That flexibility could be redirected toward the pass rush, offensive depth, or future extensions — all positions that tend to rise in cost. Recent precedent shows how aggressive teams can be when targeting elite defensive backs. The Colts’ acquisition of Sauce Gardner, which cost multiple first-round picks and a young offensive contributor, reset expectations for what top-tier corners can command. McDuffie would not reach that ceiling, but the deal reinforced the value teams place on premium coverage players. A realistic return for McDuffie would likely fall between a first-round pick and a strong Day 2…

Texas booms as 3rd best state for starting a business in 2026

Tesla’s Robot Dreams Hit Reality As Musk Warns Production Will Be 'Agonizingly Slow’

Looking at Chiefs OC Eric Bieniemy’s time away from Kansas City

