Saturday, December 29, 2012

Go Ahead and Hold Your Breath


Pardon me for sounding cynical, but this week's post won't be an unbiased look at the X's and O's of today's game in Denver, because this game is almost entirely meaningless to me. This year, Peyton's offense outscores their opponent by 10.4 points on average. This season's average Chiefs game is an 11.9 point loss. A Chiefs fan might be better off rooting for the Jaguars this Sunday, more-so than their own own team. So, let's think about the future (some more) in order to keep this topic from getting depressing.

First, a much-needed dose of positivity: Jamaal, Tamba, Derrick Johnson, and Eric Berry are all Pro Bowlers entering the primes of their careers. Unless KC wins today, overcoming a 16 point spread and the inescapable malaise of a lost season, the Chiefs will have the first pick of the draft to rebuild around. There it is again: rebuild. That dirty, dirty word. I suppose that brings us to the big pile of negativity we have left to pick away at throughout the off-season.

Well, nobody came here to read a book, so I can't even list all the problems here at once. I'll be happily going into depth about all these issues in the coming months, but for now I'll be brief in addressing the most dire and immediate needs for this franchise. I'm not breaking any news or making a lot of bold statements here; the changes that need to take place are obvious to anyone paying attention. The real question- the variables up for analysis here- aren't about whether or not they should happen. Most of the issues now revolve around the If's and the When's. The off-season is really just a different season altogether, with different players playing different games while still hoping to reach the same successful outcome. So please, before the new (off)season begins, let's just try to get our ducks in a row here.

Let's start with an easy one; Matt Cassel's starting days in KC are over. I don't need any more proof of that after seeing him holding a clipboard while a career back-up took the reigns of the offense that was built around Cassel before this season began. Management made it very clear that Cassel had to really, seriously suck to lose his starting job, and that's exactly what he did. Keeping a guy like that around doesn't seem beneficial, and Matt probably wants out at this point, too. Whether Brady Quinn is a reliable back-up is an entirely different discussion, but it's low on a very long list of priorities.

So, who's next then? Let's go ahead and assume we'll be spending that draft pick on a QB, considering that to be the most obvious hole in the team. Thanks to our league-leading volume of failure, we've nearly ensured the first pick now, so all my hypotheses about Jason Campbell and Alex Smith and Michael Vick are officially going on the back-burner. For now. There will be plenty of time to break down Geno vs. Barkley, but today I'll only say that I'm leaning towards the freakishly athletic guy with a great arm over a product of a system that churns out perennial under-achievers like hotcakes. Neither one of them has been properly tested. Neither has shown signs of being Joe Montana or Tom Brady. Neither one has even played well against elite college defenses. There are no guarantees that we'll even go for these two guys. Why not go with a proven winner like AJ McCarron from Alabama? Why not pull one of those previously mentioned veteran QBs off the back-burner, then draft Manti Te'o to play next to Derrick Johnson and terrify offenses for years to come?

There's just too many options right now for me to have a strong enough opinion on the whole thing. I know I'm supposed to figure out my opinion and explain it passionately, but what can I say? The variables are countless, and the (off)season has yet to even begin. That's my opinion. These upcoming months will be long ones for Chiefs fan, but they will also be extremely intriguing. For that, I am totally passionate. I might dare say, hopeful.

I wish I could just end the article on that note. I wish I could sit back and dream about the pieces we have here, and allow that to give me enough hope to start theorizing about next year's epic journey to the Super Bowl. The unavoidable truth, though, puts all that hope in jeopardy. None of those pieces matter if they aren't properly utilized, and that will not happen unless the second and third most powerful men in the franchise are fired. All of these variables rest in the hands of someone who may or may not be in power for a week, a month, or five years. Everything hinges on the decision to fire Scott Pioli and Romeo Crennel, and only one man can make that decision. I don't know what Clark Hunt wants to do, and I don't know if he knows what he wants to do. Every moment the new beginning doesn't come is a waste of time, so these decisions need to come quickly, just to get the whole damn organization out of football Limbo.

Coach Crennel has to go. In a business where winning means everything, the men in control of the business have to cut their losses when no proper explanation for failure has been given. I need more than just my fingers and toes to count the times Romeo told the press "I don't know" when they asked him what went wrong, following one embarrassing loss after another. That's an irreparable problem. Or rather, it's an easily fixable problem involving an irreparable relationship between a coach and his beleaguered, deflated team.
Scott Pioli is the decision-maker behind every decision you hate as a Chiefs fan. Matt Cassel was unfairly presented as a franchise quarterback, and then lambasted accordingly. That was Scott Pioli's call. The overall discomfort and inconsistency that came from changing coaches and coordinators has crippled the team beyond comprehension. Every firing and every rehiring was a choice that Scott Pioli made. Maybe I'll have lots of time to explain why he should lose his job. Or maybe, he will be fired, quickly and mercifully at the season's end, and none of my complaints will matter anymore. We as fans can only hope, as Clark Hunt sits and thinks.

The way Romeo dealt with, and will continue to deal with witnessing his own player pulling the trigger on himself is just as commendable and inspiring as anything ever witnessed in professional sports. The same goes for Scott Pioli- someone for which I simultaneously harbor venomous resentment and the utmost moral respect. Although this game is capable of inducing powerful, raw emotion, the game, itself, is emotionless. At its core, it is a business. The business plan for the Chiefs' franchise isn't working properly with either of them in their positions, so they absolutely have to go. Speaking of Romeo, I like the man, but nobody likes the product he's provided, so you won't find many people disagreeing with the sentiment to replace him. Not as many seem sure that Hunt is willing to fire Pioli that quickly. If I were in the owner's shoes, I'd feel like I'd be doing the guy a favor by letting him go. Does Pioli really want to be here? Does this embarrassment help anybody or anybody's career?
So here we are, with few answers and countless questions, waiting for the ball to drop. After the regular season's final game, that totally different game begins, but until decisions about Romeo and Pioli are made, the Chiefs organization doesn't know how to play the game. They don't even get to read the rulebook. Without making the changes, nobody knows where they want the team to go, so until the moment changes are made, they're losing the game already.

My plea to Mr. Hunt is simple: don't make the mistake of waiting any longer than the end of the regular season. If he can't make the decision as early as many fans and myself would like, it will hurt, but not as much as if he made the wrong decision and Pioli was contracted to call the shots next year. It would hurt in the short term to waste time with deliberation, but making the wrong choice means crippling the organization long into the future. I guess I'm saying if it takes too much time to change what has to be changed, but it still happens, I'll save my tears for a later time.

We would all rather see Christmas come late than not come at all.