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Chiefs report to Missouri Western Thursday; first practice Friday at 3:30

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Tuesday they’ll report to Missouri Western State University for their 2011 training camp on Thursday and begin practicing Friday afternoon.

Players will meet as a group in Kansas City Thursday afternoon and then drive to St. Joseph to report and check-in at Scanlon Hall at MWSU.

The first practice will be Friday at 3:30 p.m., and they’ll also practice at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.  All outdoor practices in St. Joe will be open to the public.

Family Fun Day is tentatively scheduled for August 6 and Chiefs’ President Mark Donovan said Tuesday that there will be multiple night practices during their time at Missouri Western.

Click here for a map of training camp at Missouri Western.

Statement from Chiefs’ Chairman and CEO Clark Hunt

“Today, a new labor agreement was reached between the NFL and the NFL Players Association,” Chiefs Chairman and CEO Clark Hunt said. “I want to commend Commissioner Roger Goodell, DeMaurice Smith, the players’ executive committee and the NFL clubs for working together to find a mutually-beneficial solution that will allow our game to thrive for many years to come.

“Most importantly, I want to thank our fans for their enduring passion for football and the tremendous patience they have demonstrated throughout the challenges of the last several months. Our entire organization has been working hard to prepare for the 2011 season, and we are excited to get back to football when we open training camp at Missouri Western in St. Joseph, Mo.”

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Chiefs’ Vrabel retires to coach at Ohio State

Associated Press

Former All-Pro linebacker Mike Vrabel is retiring from the Chiefs and returning to his alma mater as an Ohio State assistant coach.

“I am extremely appreciative of the teammates, coaches, and great fans who surrounded me during my NFL career, and am honored to have been a part of three tremendous organizations in the Pittsburgh Steelers, New England Patriots, and Kansas City Chiefs,” he said in a statement.

Vrabel confirmed this morning the end of his 14-year career and that he had taken the job as linebackers coach with the Buckeyes. The position was previously held by his college roommate and teammate, Luke Fickell, who was elevated to interim head coach when Jim Tressel resigned May 30.

Vrabel played for Pittsburgh and New England before closing out his career with the Chiefs. He announced his retirement through the statement issued through his agent. He was acquired by the Chiefs with Matt Cassel for a second-round pick from New England in 2009.

Vrabel played eight seasons with the Patriots, winning three Super Bowl titles as a hybrid defender and a spot short-yardage and goal-line offensive player.

Chiefs TE Pope saves six-year old boy

Associated Press

Kansas City Chiefs tight end Leonard Pope, whose nickname is “Champ,” lived up to the moniker last weekend when he saved a 6-year-old boy from drowning in a swimming pool.

The Chiefs’ backup tight end on Saturday saved the son of a longtime friend from drowning in his hometown of Americus, Ga.

“My heart dropped. It could have been any child … I just knew I had to do something,” Pope said in an interview with “ESPN First Take” on Tuesday. “I wasn’t waiting on anyone else … to try to pull him out. I just felt because I have kids of my own I would want someone to do that for my kids, also.”

According to his bio on the Chiefs’ website, Pope has two young daughters.

The boy’s mother, Anne Moore, told the Americus Times Recorder that Pope was the only person at the party who knew how to swim. Pope said he learned how to swim when he was 9 or 10 years old.

“He saved my son’s life, and I am so thankful that he was there for me and my child,” she told the newspaper.

Pope jumped into the pool — wearing all of his clothes, “cell phone, wallet and everything” — and pulled her son, Bryson, from the water.

“I was coming out of the house, I heard Anne cry. She was like ‘get, get him, he’s drowning!’ I couldn’t see Bryson. All I could see was his fingertips at the top of the water and I couldn’t see his head,” Pope said.

The NFL’s lockout turned out to be good fortune for Moore and her son.

“The fact that he is normally at camp and could have been in Kansas City just proved to me that he was placed here to save my son from drowning, and I thank God that he was here,” she told the newspaper. “He truly lived up to his nickname ‘Champ’ because he was truly a champion for me and my son this past weekend.”

The Chiefs are an organization that has dealt with a similar tragedy. It was 28 years ago this month that star running back Joe Delaney drowned while trying to save three children from drowning in a Louisiana pond. Two of the children died.

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