
KANSAS CITY, MO — Arrowhead Stadium was supposed to be electric for the season opener against the Chargers. Instead, it became the scene of a jaw-dropping scandal that left the Chiefs stunned before a single snap was played.
On what should have been a defining NFL debut, one rookie learned the hard way that talent means nothing without discipline.
Just hours before kickoff, a young offensive lineman — signed as an undrafted free agent — stumbled into the locker room late, glassy-eyed, and reeking of alcohol. According to multiple team sources, teammates immediately knew something was wrong.
It didn’t take long for head coach Andy Reid to react.
“You want to party?” Reid snapped, loud enough for stunned players nearby to fall silent.
“Fine. Party on your own. Pack up. You’re done.”

The rookie, identified as Derrick Wallace, an offensive tackle out of Oklahoma State, had reportedly spent the team’s night-before stay in Kansas City at a late bar crawl, rolling back into the team hotel in the early hours of game day. Instead of recovering and preparing, he showed up to the stadium disoriented — a direct violation of the Chiefs’ culture.
“This isn’t college anymore,” one veteran Chiefs lineman said. “You show up drunk on game day? You’re disrespecting every single guy in this room.”
Tate was immediately escorted out of Arrowhead, stripped of his uniform before even suiting up, and placed on waivers that afternoon. The Chiefs released a short statement hours later confirming the move, but did not elaborate further.
For a franchise chasing a historic three-peat behind Patrick Mahomes, the timing was beyond embarrassing. On one of the most-watched Week 1 matchups of the season — Chiefs vs Chargers on national TV — Kansas City was forced to publicly discipline a rookie before millions of fans.
Reid later explained the move bluntly:
“The logo on your helmet means something. At the Chiefs, you either live up to the standard — or you don’t belong here.”
Tate, once praised in college for his toughness and versatility, may never get another NFL shot after a mistake this costly.
The Chiefs still took the field against the Chargers, but for one rookie, the game was already over before it even began.
