The Tennessee Titans have their new general manager. According to NFL Network insider Tom Pelissero, the Titans are hiring Kansas City Chiefs assistant general
Celebrity fans of the Kansas City Chiefs cheered the team’s victory over the Bills and looked ahead to the Super Bowl.
The Shawnee state senator claimed rules required 24 hour notice, but the hearing was announced only the night before. | Opinion
Led by Miles Barnstable's 16 points, the Saint Thomas-Minnesota Tommies defeated the Kansas City Kangaroos 68-65. Drake Dobbs added 13 points for Saint Thomas (16-6, 6-1, Summit League). Babacar Diallo finished with 21 points for Kansas City (10-12,
It's really fun to create stuff like this, to deliver it to people that you know are diehard fans," said Mike Elder.
The Titans’ new power structure may be different than the traditional model followed by many teams, but it certainly didn’t scare Mike Borgonzi away. A former assistant general manager for Kansas City, Borgonzi was introduced Wednesday as the Titans’ new general manager, replacing Ran Carthon, who was fired after two years on the job.
Mike Borgonzi has been hired as the next General Manager of the Tennessee Titans. Borgonzi, who previously served as Assistant General Manager with the Kansas City Chiefs, will arrive in Tennessee with an impressive background and great reputation.
The NFL playoffs continue on with just a small handful of teams still alive. Yet for a large number of franchises, it's time to move into offseason mode. Realistically, some of th
Dimitroff also was a scout for Kansas City, Detroit, Cleveland and New England, with the Patriots naming him director of college scouting in 2003, a job he held for five years. He interviewed with ...
For GM, the Jets have interviewed former NFL general managers Thomas Dimitroff and Jon Robinson ... assistant general manager Alex Halaby and Kansas City Chiefs assistant GM Mike Borgonzi.
The development group, led by area native Zach Molzer, is turning the old hotel into an apartment building with around 120 units, with studios and one-bedrooms, including 14 affordable units set aside for residents with lower incomes. The project will reflect an almost $40 million investment.
A reliable region-wide source of revenue is necessary for Kansas City area bus service to flourish in the future, transit advocates say.