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Vahe Gregorian: Why Chiefs' Nikko Remigio embraces 'the most chaotic, frantic of times'

Vahe Gregorian, The Kansas City Star on

Published in Football

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Chiefs have played in five of the last seven Super Bowls and won three of them for countless reasons.

Most are obvious: A first-ballot Pro Football Hall of Fame-bound coach, quarterback and tight end. One of the greatest defensive coordinators in NFL history. A marvelous kicker. Sheer organizational synergy.

At some level, though, it’s also about the more mundane elements.

Like in the trenches — a point reverse-amplified, alas, by their Super Bowl losses — and in the margins. And the sum of it all.

“The strength of our team is the team, right?” long snapper James Winchester said after the Chiefs beat Buffalo, 32-29, in the last AFC championship game.

To win that day, and many days last season, took about everybody — including the seldom-seen Nikko Remigio unfurling a pivotal 41-yard punt return.

That came a week after Remigio made his NFL return debut in the AFC divisional round against the visiting Houston Texans by taking the opening kickoff 63 yards to jump-start what became a 23-14 win.

No wonder special teams coordinator Dave Toub remains enamored of Remigio during the team’s training camp at Missouri Western State. He just keeps getting better, Toub said the other day, and he’s “far and above everybody else right now.”

So put that all together, and the 25-year-old might be tempted to conflate having finally made it last year with having it made now.

Instead, he approaches every day like the undrafted free agent he was coming out of Fresno State in 2023 — a guy on the outside looking in who finally got called up from the practice squad last December in the wake of Mecole Hardman going on injured reserve.

“Scratching and clawing,” as Remigio put it Friday.

And, alas, he best see it that way.

Because he’s the embodiment of the legion of legitimate hopefuls vulnerable to the churn of the NFL numbers game.

Imagine being the best at what you do, at least thus far this camp, in a significant role for a perennial Super Bowl contender … and that it might not be good enough to make the team.

No matter how much Toub touts him.

Heck, last year Remigio didn’t make the initial 53-man roster even after Toub said he’d be “pounding the table” for him.

This time around, he could find himself left out because he’s an undersized (listed at 5-9) receiver who doesn’t make up for that enough with average speed (around 4.5) — something that he more than overcomes as a returner because of his first burst and feel for the flow.

But the Chiefs seem unlikely to keep seven receivers and he doesn’t figure to be one of the top six in a group that features Rashee Rice, Hollywood Brown, Xavier Worthy, rookie Jalen Royals, JuJu Smith-Schuster and camp standout Tyquan Thornton.

(The timing and length of the presumptive NFL suspension awaiting Rice in the wake of legal resolution to his appalling role in a high-speed crash last year also could factor in that).

 

And that might mean others who’ll make the team on offense or defense, such as running back Brashard Smith, cornerback Nohl Williams, Royals or Thornton, will get those return jobs … even if they don’t do it as well as Remigio.

So, sure, it’s nice to know Toub will advocate for him and to hear that he perceives Remigio as “far and above everybody else” and all.

But …

“I take it with a grain of salt,” Remigio said, smiling. “I think the thing that I’ve learned in this business is that if you get too comfortable you’re going to get got.

“And I worked too damned hard to get to this point of my career … to let it slip through my fingers.”

That helps explain a spectacle on Tuesday during a 2 1/2-hour-plus practice with the heat index exceeding 100.

Many players were laboring. But no one appeared to be suffering more than Remigio, who was nearly doubled over several times as he came off the field and never sought a break.

Worrisome as it was to watch him, he was doing what you do when you feel like you can’t flinch or let anything stop you.

“Coach (Andy) Reid talks a lot about during training camp (that) you’re going to have to get to a dark place,” he said. “And that dark place resembles the space in your head that you’re going to have to get to in the AFC championship, in the playoffs, when you’re down in the Super Bowl. And there’s a lot that goes into that.”

When I asked him if he drew on his broader journey when he was clearly in distress, Remigio laughed and said, “To be honest, there’s not a lot going on in my head at that point in time. You’re kind of just flailing around all over the place. You’re drenched in sweat. It’s hot. Your skin is stinging because it’s hot.”

But this much is in his head, whether in real time or not:

On those days, he knows, Reid’s intention is to evaluate “if you can still do your job in the most chaotic, frantic of times with the most extreme circumstances. So that’s what I know is going on in the back of my mind: ‘Can I still score a touchdown? Can I still catch a ball? Can I still square up a punt in the most extreme of conditions?’ ”

Now the most extreme of questions is if he’ll prevail with a job when the Chiefs open the season against the Chargers on Sept. 5 in Brazil.

No, this isn’t quite the talk of camp — like Mahomes or Kelce or rookie left tackle Josh Simmons, etc. And even if Remigio is relegated to the practice squad, the same scenario as last season could take place with him called into play later.

But this still will be a significant decision for a franchise that last season won 12 one-score games and enters this season with an NFL record 17 straight such victories.

Chances are there won’t be much margin for error again this season — and that the differences will be made not only by the stars but also by the ones who eke through the numbers game.

Here’s hoping one of those is Remigio, whose attitude and perspective make him easy to admire and root for.


©2025 The Kansas City Star. Visit kansascity.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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