of moves this past week Cheap Kareem Hunt Jersey , the Kansas City Chiefs added two safeties to the squad: picking up free agent veteran Ron Parker and trading for Miami Dolphins safety Jordan Lucas. On the surface, the Chiefs are adding some more depth to a concerning position.But it’s much deeper than that.The Chiefs now boast an entire safety group that can play in all three phases that Bob Sutton asks of that position: deep coverage ability, apex/slot defender ability, and box/hook defender ability.It’s no secret that the Chiefs prefer versatile safeties. They’ve specifically targeted them in their acquisitions, even prior to this offseason. It’s why a safety like Tre Boston (a free agent this past offseason) would have been a tough fit into the Chiefs defense. While he could play the deep safety role that is one part of the Chiefs defense, he didn’t have the ability to play the other two phases of the game that Sutton employs.However, after the acquisition of Parker and Lucas, I saw some confusion about the ways these players were deployed. So I took some time to head down to the Nerd Squad Lab, fired up the tape and crafted some examples from last year that show the flexibility and responsibilities that will once again be asked of the safety group in 2018.Let’s take a look.Here’s a prime example of the safeties swapping roles for the 2017 Chiefs. Initially, Daniel Sorensen is in the box opposite the trips side of the New England formation. As the running back is lined up to the same side as the bunch, Sorensen has the play-side B-gap if a run is called out of an RPO. Ron Parker starts off as the deep safety with Eric Berry playing in man against tight end Ron Gronkowski. As the motion man comes across, the safeties shift to account for the balancing of the formation, and this moves Parker into the box as a hook defender/medium sideline zone and moves Sorensen into the deep safety role.Here’s another example of a shift between the two deep safeties, changing their coverage responsibilities on the fly. As the Chiefs are in their 3-4 defense, there are only two safeties on the field this play. It’s a simple thing, having Sorensen spin down to cover the motion tight end while Parker drops deep into coverage—but it’s not something that every team in the NFL does. Knowing that Sorensen can hold his own against the TE and knows the coverage scheme from multiple positions allows the Chiefs to rotate, rather than forcing their safeties to follow.Due to the safeties’ abilities to handle multiple different coverage responsibilities at an NFL level, the Chiefs can make that shift instead of having a linebacker in the zone or a safety chasing the offensive alignment all game. This flexibility allows them to not get caught in poor matchups as easily.In this example, the Chiefs have their 2-3-6 personnel on the field. The Patriots are in a 3x1 alignment, and the Chiefs are showing a split safety look with Parker and Berry. Sorensen is matched up in man coverage against Ron Gronkowski. This means that there is an empty space at the strong side hook. Parker sits at the goal line Cheap Steven Nelson Jersey , then closes on the slant attacking that empty space, making the stop for a short gain. A similar example here, with Sorensen filling the hook role after the snap. This is out of the Chiefs’ 4-2-5 nickel defense with three safeties, and safety Eric Murray is tasked with covering Philadelphia Eagles slot wide receiver Nelson Agholor while linebacker Kevin Pierre-Louis is covering the tight end. Parker shifts to the deep safety, and Sorensen comes down into the hook after linebacker Derrick Johnson moves out to cover the running back in the flat.In both these examples, the Chiefs were able to utilize the personnel that was on the field to make a stop against up-tempo offenses. The ability to have a safety fill the hook role, have another safety line up as an apex defender and have a third safety able to play deep is crucial, but having the ability to interchange the three on a whim is invaluable.In conclusionThe Chiefs pass defense has thrived with versatile safeties in Sutton’s tenure in Kansas City, only finishing once outside of the top 13 in DVOA (last year) and only twice outside of the top seven (both years Eric Berry was injured). Berry, Parker, Husain Abdullah and Tyvon Branch have all found success as multi-faceted players from multiple safety positions. Another year of development from Murray, adding Lucas and Armani Watts, and the returning Parker should give the Chiefs’ secondary the desired flexibility on the back end, even with Sorensen starting the season on IR.As NFL offenses find more and more ways to create mismatches by forcing the defense into specific personnel, having a group that can be flexible and play at multiple levels of the defense gives the Chiefs a leg up on more rigid defenses in those scenarios.And if you didn’t know how the Chiefs used their versatile safeties before, you do now.Eric Berry won’t practice Wednesday, plus other injury updates As promised, Kansas City Chiefs head athletic trainer (VP of sports medicine and performance) Rick Burkholder provided an injury update regarding starting safety Eric Berry’s sore heel on Wednesday morning.The news was not optimal.“I know there has been a lot of questions about Eric Berry,” Burkholder said. “I know coach (Andy Reid) has said that it’s day to day. It is literally day to day. He won’t practice [Wednesday], but he’s spent a lot of time with us. He’s improving www.kansascitychiefsteamonline.com , he’s getting better every day and so we’ll continue with that process.”Berry has not practiced since August 11.The other major player of note was S Daniel Sorensen, who injured his knee in the preseason and is thus expected to miss regular-season time. Sorensen is currently on the Chiefs’ injured reserve list. “It was four weeks ago [Wednesday] that he had the surgery,” Burkholder said of Sorensen. “He’s been with us constantly doing pool work. Every day, he’s in. He’s going to meetings, all that. We won’t know anything for two more weeks before we study that, but he’s where he’s supposed to be right now. He’s working hard, so in a couple weeks, we’ll give you an update on that.”Finally, Burkholder updated the media on wide receiver Byron Pringle (hamstring).“[Pringle] pulled his left hamstring,” Burkholder said. “When we did an MRI, we found that he had a left inguinal hernia, and that hernia needed immediate attention, so he had surgery [Tuesday] at the Kansas University Medical Center by Dr. John Alley, and so he’s got an extended recovery ahead of him for the hernia, and in the meantime the hamstring will also get attention, but the hamstring will clear up quicker than the hernia will, so he’s going to miss some time.”