Kansas City Chiefs

Kaiir Elam

Age
25
·
Sleeper ID
8296
Verdict scores
Trade Value 2,244
Win-Now 7.8/10
Consistency 0
Positional Rank 228
Trade Value Tier B
Trend → Stable
Scouting report

Summary

Kaiir Elam, a 24-year-old corner, has seen a 67.3% average defense snap share in 2025, trending downward after a 100% mark in Week 3. As the Chiefs’ secondary depth chart is uncertain, Elam’s dynasty value is tied to his ability to maintain and grow his defensive role in Andy Reid’s complex west coast system.

Projection Rationale

Elam’s defensive production is capped by limited usage in the Chiefs’ secondary. He posted 22 solo tackles, 1 TFL, and 0 sacks in 16 games, with a 67.3% average defense snap share trending downward. The 2025 baseline shows a limited floor given his role and snap count, with no clear path to a significant increase in usage or opportunity.

Injury Risk

Elam is not listed with any reported injuries in the 2025 season data.

Opportunity Notes

Elam’s snap share has trended downward after a 100% mark in Week 3, averaging 67.3% across 16 games. The Chiefs’ secondary depth chart is uncertain, and Elam’s dynasty value is tied to his ability to maintain and grow his defensive role. No clear path to a significant increase in usage or opportunity exists.

Scheme Fit Analysis

Elam fits within Andy Reid’s complex west coast system, which emphasizes zone coverage with well-timed blitz packages and disguised pre-snap looks. However, his limited usage and downward trend in snap share suggest a lack of growth potential within the system.

Trend Assessment

Declining Verdict’s dynasty score model tags Elam as declining, reflecting his 67.3% average defense snap share across 16 games in 2025 and decreasing trend.

Ceiling / Floor

Ceiling tracks near 2025’s 22-solo-tackle floor given limited usage and a downward trend in snap share. A mid-season injury or a significant increase in defensive depth chart competition could lead to meaningful regression below that line.

Comparable Player

His role as a mid-rotation corner in a complex west coast system draws comparisons to Marlon Humphrey from 2019–2020 Baltimore — similar young corner, similar mid-rotation usage, similar zone-heavy coverage emphasis.