The Kansas City Chiefs made a shocking decision Tuesday night by officially terminating the contract of running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire.

The move came only days before Kansas City begins a crucial OTA period while preparing for the pressure surrounding the upcoming 2026 NFL season.
According to multiple reports, team executives completely lost confidence after months of monitoring the veteran running back’s physical condition and off-field behavior.
Clyde Edwards-Helaire was once viewed as one of the most explosive running backs in football because of his vision, receiving skills, and big-play ability as a former first-round pick out of LSU.
Throughout his professional football career, the former standout running back recorded more than 1,904 rushing yards and scored 12 touchdowns across multiple NFL seasons, while also adding nearly 800 receiving yards and 7 receiving touchdowns.
Many around the league believed Edwards-Helaire still possessed enough talent and experience to become a reliable depth contributor inside Kansas City’s high-powered offensive system this season.
However, concerns reportedly began growing after the veteran repeatedly appeared on injury reports throughout the past several months inside the Chiefs organization.
According to internal sources, Clyde Edwards-Helaire frequently used muscle soreness, lower body discomfort, and other physical issues as reasons to avoid mandatory rehabilitation and conditioning sessions.
Shortly afterward, several people connected to the organization reportedly spotted the running back multiple times out late in Kansas City’s nightlife scene.
Those reports quickly spread across the fanbase and created growing frustration among Chiefs supporters who value accountability and professionalism from veteran players.

Kansas City’s coaching staff reportedly held several private conversations in hopes of helping the veteran regain focus before the situation spiraled beyond control internally.
“We gave him countless opportunities to fix things, more than most players ever receive in this league. We stood behind him, remained patient, and honestly believed he could turn everything around. But eventually, there comes a point where you realize someone has to want to save their own career before anyone else can help them do it.” — Andy Reid
Despite those efforts, the situation reportedly never improved as Edwards-Helaire continued missing multiple conditioning evaluations throughout Kansas City’s offseason preparation program.
The breaking point reportedly came earlier this week when the veteran running back failed the mandatory physical examination conducted by Kansas City’s medical department.
Team doctors determined he was not physically prepared to participate in the high-intensity training program leading into the upcoming NFL campaign.
The decision to release him was reportedly finalized almost immediately following an internal meeting involving Andy Reid and Kansas City’s football operations department.
Several veteran players inside the locker room were also reportedly becoming frustrated with what they viewed as increasingly unprofessional behavior from the running back.
The Chiefs organization has spent years building and protecting a disciplined locker room culture centered around accountability, toughness, and complete team commitment.
Andy Reid reportedly wanted to send a clear message throughout the roster that no individual player stands above Kansas City’s long-term team culture.
Even so, many Chiefs fans remain disappointed because Clyde Edwards-Helaire was once considered one of the most promising young talents and a key part of the team’s earlier championship runs.