Canadian Duvernay-Tardif waived no-trade clause to allow Chiefs to send him to Jets
There was no surprise or astonishment when Canadian Laurent Duvernay-Tardif learned his time with the Kansas City Chiefs was over.
The Chiefs dealt the veteran offensive guard to the New York Jets on Tuesday before the NFL’s trade deadline. Duvernay-Tardif told reporters Wednesday he’d been talking with the Jets for roughly three weeks and felt comfortable enough about making the move to New York that he waived his no-clause with Kansas City to pave the way.
“When you look at the way things were going in Kansas City, the fact I wasn’t dressing for most of the games, it was an open conversation with the Chiefs,” Duvernay-Tardif said. “Of course, I had that no-trade clause so we had to come to an agreement with both the Chiefs and I and the Jets, we thought this was the best opportunity for me.”
The six-foot-five, 321-pound Duvernay-Tardif, a native of Mont-Saint-Hilaire, Que., started 57-of-60 career games with Kansas City after being taken in the sixth round of the ’14 NFL draft out of McGill. Duvernay-Tardif made his first NFL start in 2015 and his last with the franchise was its 31-20 Super Bowl win over the San Francisco 49ers on Feb. 2, 2020.