Wednesday brought the shocking news that the Kansas City Chiefs are trading cornerback Trent McDuffie — a former first-team All-Pro selection — to the Los Angeles Rams for a package of draft picks centered around this year’s 29th-overall selection.

There is no shortage of immediate takes surrounding the trade and what general manager Brett Veach might do now, armed with three of the top 40 selections in next month’s draft. An immediate ramification that can be overlooked is the erasure of the $13.6 million salary McDuffie was due in 2026.

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Entering the day at about $8.5 million over the salary cap, the trade alone would have put the Chiefs into positive financial territory. Another move on Wednesday, however, drew much less attention.

Hours after the McDuffie news broke, the Chiefs officially released tackle Jawaan Taylor, presumably after failing to find a trade partner. So the scheduled $20-million cap assigned to Taylor is off the books as well.

After accounting for the two moves, Spotrac has the Chiefs now at $23.3 million under the salary cap.

While the Chiefs are presumably not done clearing room for future moves, the front office has ample ability to get started when free agency kicks off next week. Most free-agent contracts will be structured to pay out the first year via signing bonus, and that is spread over the life of the contract for cap purposes. Basically, Kansas City is free to chase any desired and available player.

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A benefit of already being under the salary cap is that the Chiefs do not have to cut any more players before the team is able to negotiate with potential replacements. Eventually, Kansas City may move off of moderate non-guaranteed 2026 salaries for linebacker Drue Tranquill and tight end Noah Gray. However, the team can easily carry the contracts until after the draft to ensure cost-effective talent at the positions.

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