Mansoor Delane says he didn't see it coming.
Despite being an obvious fit at a position of significant need, the LSU cornerback said that any pre-draft communication with the Kansas City Chiefs had been minimal. When the team's number showed up on his phone on Thursday night, early in the first round of the 2026 NFL Draft, the emotions hit immediately.
"When they called me, I just started crying," Delane told reporters in his introductory press conference. "I don't know who was talking. I was just saying, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you." Once he settled down, Delane remembered speaking with Andy Reid and Brett Veach. He also realized that the Chiefs had traded up to get him. "I wanted to go to the Chiefs, but I just wasn't expecting it," he said. "That's when the emotion came to me."
The Chiefs entered the draft with a significant hole in their secondary after trading Trent McDuffie to the Los Angeles Rams and watching fellow starting corner Jaylen Watson follow him to California in free agency. Kansas City moved up from No. 9 to No. 6, sending picks No. 74 and No. 148 to Cleveland to land Delane, who was widely considered the top cornerback in the class.
The Chiefs cornerback was stunned by his big moment at the top of the 2026 NFL Draft.
Delane earned that reputation at LSU, where he was a unanimous All-American in his only season with the Tigers. He finished with 45 tackles, 2 interceptions, and 11 pass deflections while allowing just 14 catches on 357 coverage snaps despite battling a core muscle injury throughout the year. Pro Football Focus ranked him the second-best coverage cornerback in the FBS among qualifiers.
Asked about joining a contender as a top-ten pick, Delane was direct. "There's no better opportunity. A lot of top ten teams, they're really not that good. But that's not a situation here. We have a championship team that just had one low down year, but we're right back to it." The Chiefs chased him to be a key part of that resurgence, and Delane sounds ready for it. "The league is such a passing league and everybody wants to score points," he said. "I'm here to shut it down."