Chiefs Add Sports Psychologist to Front Office — What It Means for the Field

How Kansas City's latest hire signals growing NFL demand for sport psychology professionals

By Derek Bianchi, CMPCReviewed by SportsPsychology.org TeamUpdated July 13, 202624 min read
Chiefs Hire VP of Performance Psychology: NFL Trend Explained

What you’ll learn in this article…

  • The Chiefs hired Dr. Tyler Bradstreet as VP of Performance Psychology.
  • It marks the first executive-level psychologist role in NFL history.
  • Aspiring NFL performance psychologists need a doctorate, licensure, and applied experience.

The NFL's investment in performance psychology has graduated from sideline consultant to front-office executive. On July 12, 2026, the Kansas City Chiefs hired Dr. Tyler Bradstreet as Vice President of Performance Psychology, the first such executive-level title in league history.1 A licensed psychologist and certified mental performance coach, he reports directly to the vice president of sports medicine and performance. For aspiring sport psychology professionals, the hire signals that doctoral-level specialization in applied performance psychology is increasingly valued at the highest tiers of professional sports. It also reflects a tightening credential standard: NFL teams prioritize practitioners with extensive experience bridging clinical rigor and elite athletic culture.

What the Chiefs' New Performance Psychology Hire Means

The Kansas City Chiefs' appointment of Dr. Tyler Bradstreet as Vice President of Performance Psychology signals a deliberate investment in the mental side of elite football.1 This is not a standard addition to the medical staff; it is a strategic front office hire that places psychological performance on par with physical training and sports medicine.

A New Leadership Role in Mental Performance

Dr. Bradstreet reports directly to Rick Burkholder, the team's Vice President of Sports Medicine and Performance. This reporting structure elevates performance psychology to a senior organizational tier, ensuring it influences daily operations, player development, and staff decision-making. He brings a decade of experience across professional, Olympic, and collegiate settings, anchored by a doctorate from Texas Tech University and licensure as a psychologist in Texas and Arizona.2 His sport psychology certification as a mental performance coach underscores a dual competence in clinical care and performance enhancement.

Bringing Cross-Sport Expertise from the Diamond to the Gridiron

Before joining the Chiefs, Bradstreet spent four seasons as the director of performance psychology for the Milwaukee Brewers.1 There, he developed an integrated health and performance system that addressed everything from pre-game routines to leadership development and mindfulness. With 15 peer-reviewed publications and over 50 professional presentations, including talks on building speed systems and the psychological architecture of elite performance, his approach is research-backed and applied.3 The shift from baseball to football is less about sport-specific tactics and more about understanding high-pressure environments and sustained excellence, skills that translate directly to the NFL.

Expanding In-House Health and Wellness Capabilities

Chiefs President Mark Donovan described the hire as expanding "in-house capabilities across health and wellness."1 Operationally, this means the organization now has a dedicated executive focused solely on mental performance, not just injury rehabilitation or crisis management. Bradstreet's role will likely involve creating proactive mental skills programs, supporting coaches in communication strategies, and building a culture where psychological readiness is treated as a core performance metric. His co-founding of Strength With Heart, a program focused on men's health and masculinity, signals a commitment to addressing mental health in ways that resonate with athletes.

Building on a Legacy of In-House Care

The Chiefs are not new to in-house psychological services. Bradstreet is the second in-house clinician in franchise history.1 However, his title and scope differ significantly from the existing clinician role, which is more clinical in nature. While that role focuses on diagnosis, treatment, and mental health support, Bradstreet's position is oriented toward performance optimization and organizational systems. This dual-clinician model represents a best-practice structure in elite sport, where sports psychology career paths in mental health and mental performance are distinct but complementary disciplines.

Performance Psychologist Vs. Team Clinician: Understanding NFL Roles

When you look at mental health roles in the NFL, you'll quickly notice two distinct functions: the performance psychologist and the team clinician. One focuses on optimizing the already healthy athlete's mental game, while the other provides clinical care and crisis support. The Kansas City Chiefs' hiring of Dr. Tyler Bradstreet as Vice President of Performance Psychology spotlights the performance side, but the team clinician role remains a mandatory foundation. Here's how they differ and why both matter.

The Team Clinician: A Mandatory Clinical Role

Since 2024, the NFL has required every team to have a licensed behavioral health clinician on staff.1 This role is held by a board-certified psychiatrist, a doctoral psychologist, or a master's-level counselor. Training typically spans 7, 10 years and includes 3,000, 4,000 hours of supervised clinical practice.3 The clinician's scope covers diagnosis, treatment, psychotherapy, and crisis intervention. They serve players, coaches, staff, and even family members who may need support with anxiety, depression, substance abuse, or life transitions.2 Reporting lines often run through player services or player engagement departments rather than the sports performance pyramid. Critically, sessions with the team clinician are protected health information, governed by the same confidentiality laws that apply in any healthcare setting. This firewall ensures players can seek help without fear of it bleeding back to coaches or teammates.

The Performance Psychologist: An Optional, Performance-Driven Role

Unlike the team clinician, a performance psychologist is not mandated by the league.3 Teams add this role voluntarily to gain a competitive edge. The typical credential is a master's degree in sport psychology or a Certified Mental Performance Consultant (CMPC) designation, requiring about 2, 3 years of training and no clinical hours.3 The focus is squarely on mental skills training for healthy, high-performing athletes: imagery, self-talk, attention control, pre-game routines, and leadership development. Dr. Bradstreet's new role with the Chiefs fits this mold. He reports to the Vice President of Sports Medicine and Performance, placing him inside the performance staff structure. Because his work is about enhancement rather than therapy, it naturally integrates more with coaching feedback loops. While he is a licensed psychologist and CMPC, in this role his primary job is not diagnosing or treating disorders but building the mental tools that help athletes excel under pressure.

How the Two Roles Complement Each Other

The distinction between clinician and performance psychologist is not about better or worse; it's about different missions. The clinician protects the whole person, managing risks and ensuring well-being. The performance psychologist optimizes the performer, sharpening the mental edge that wins championships. Understanding the difference between a sports psychologist and a sports psychiatrist can also clarify where each role sits within a team's broader support structure. When both are present in an organization, athletes get comprehensive support. A player struggling with performance anxiety might first see the clinician to rule out an underlying clinical condition, then work with the performance psychologist on breathing techniques and focus drills. This complementary model is becoming the gold standard in the NFL, with the Chiefs' latest move signaling a commitment to both sides of the mental health equation.

How the Chiefs Built an Nfl-Leading Mental Performance Program

The Kansas City Chiefs have constructed one of the most forward-thinking mental performance programs in the league by layering performance psychology services on top of the league-mandated mental health framework. Rather than stopping at compliance, the organization has built a multi-tiered system that addresses both clinical well-being and peak performance, a model that puts psychological readiness on par with physical training.

The Foundation: NFL Mental Health Mandates

Since the late 2010s, the NFL and NFL Players Association have required each club to retain a licensed behavioral health clinician. The mandate emerged from a broader push to destigmatize mental health care in professional sports and ensure players have confidential access to support for depression, anxiety, substance use, and transitional stress. Typically, these clinicians operate as part of the sports medicine staff and focus on diagnosis, counseling, and crisis intervention. While the mandate standardized a baseline of care, it did not require teams to invest in applied sport psychology or performance-focused mental conditioning. That gap left room for organizations like the Chiefs to differentiate themselves.

Going Beyond the Baseline: Adding Performance Psychology

The Chiefs' hiring of a Vice President of Performance Psychology signals a deliberate move beyond the clinical baseline. This role, filled by a licensed psychologist with performance psychology certification credentials, sits inside the front office and reports to the Vice President of Sports Medicine and Performance. By embedding a senior performance psychology executive within the leadership structure, the Chiefs elevated mental performance from an ancillary service to a core pillar of player development. The position focuses on mental skills training, concentration under pressure, emotional regulation during high-leverage moments, and post-game recovery routines, areas that a traditional team clinician might not address.

A Multi-Tiered Support System

The result is a layered care model. At the foundation, team clinicians provide confidential mental health treatment in accordance with league policy. Above that, a dedicated performance psychology unit works proactively with players, coaches, and support staff to build resilience, improve decision-making speed, and manage championship expectations. This tiered approach ensures that players who need clinical intervention get it without stigma, while the entire roster can access performance coaching as a routine part of their training regimen. Collaboration between the performance psychologist, athletic trainers, strength coaches, and coordinators allows sport psychology resources to be integrated into practices, film study, and game preparation.

By treating psychological performance as a key component of elite athletic success, the Chiefs have created a blueprint that blends league compliance with a competitive edge. As other franchises observe Kansas City's sustained success, this comprehensive model could become a standard for how NFL teams invest in the whole athlete.

How NFL Teams Integrate Sports Psychology Into Daily Operations

What does a sports psychologist actually do with an NFL team during a typical week? The role extends far beyond game-day sidelines. Performance psychologists embed themselves into the daily rhythm of the organization, often beginning before players hit the practice field.

A Typical Week for an NFL Performance Psychologist

What does a sports psychologist do on a Monday morning? It might start with individual check-ins, brief 10-15 minute sessions where a player can discuss anything from weekend stress to lingering frustration after a loss. These are not therapy sessions; they are mental skills tune-ups. Pre-practice group sessions follow, where the psychologist might lead a 5-minute breathing exercise or guide the team through a visualization of the day's install plays. During practice, the psychologist observes from the sideline, noting body language and emotional responses, later sharing non-confidential observations with position coaches about focus levels or energy management. Evenings often involve film review integration: helping a quarterback mentally rehearse reads or a linebacker practice pre-snap calm. Game days include a quiet space in the locker room for players who need it, plus in-game support like reset cues after mistakes.

Core Mental Techniques on the Field and in the Film Room

Teams increasingly rely on evidence-based methods. Visualization or imagery rehearsal lets players mentally rep a route or coverage a dozen times before stepping onto the grass. Attentional focus cues are scripted into practices: a simple 'eyes on the linebacker's hips' primes decision-making. Self-talk protocols replace negative internal chatter with neutralizing phrases like 'flush it, next snap.' Arousal regulation uses diaphragmatic breathing or progressive muscle relaxation to dial energy up or down. Goal-setting moves beyond season stats to daily process goals, such as maintaining a pre-snap routine throughout a full scrimmage. These tools become as routine as a blocking assignment, not an extra task. Understanding why sports psychology matters for athletes helps explain why front offices are willing to invest in a full-time role rather than an occasional consultant.

Working Across Departments Without Crossing Boundaries

Coordination is delicate. A performance psychologist might meet weekly with the head athletic trainer to identify players whose physical rehab is being complicated by confidence issues, yet the psychologist shares only that the player is ready for mental work, not the content of private conversations. Strength and conditioning staff collaborate on integrating focus exercises into lifting sessions. With position coaches, the psychologist can flag general trends (e.g., 'tight ends seem to lose focus during two-minute drills') without naming individuals. This ecosystem respects the psychologist's distinct lane: fostering mental performance, not diagnosing or treating clinical conditions unless additionally licensed and in a separate clinical role.

Building Trust and Handling Confidentiality

The confidentiality line is the foundation of the program. Players must know that what they share won't reach the general manager or even the head coach. Psychologists clearly explain, usually in the first meeting, what stays private and what (like imminent safety risks) cannot. Coaches learn to ask performance readiness questions ('Is he in a good headspace to execute?') rather than prying into personal details. The Chiefs' recent hire of Dr. Tyler Bradstreet underscores this: his dual license as psychologist and mental performance coach allows him to navigate both confidential clinical and non-confidential performance conversations under clear ethical frameworks. Those considering a career in performance psychology coaching will find that this boundary management is one of the most important skills the role demands. Trust grows when players see the psychologist celebrating wins and sitting with losses, never leaking confidences, and advocating for mental resources as openly as ice tubs and protein shakes.

Direct team listings versus independent third-party channels: when tracking how the NFL adopts mental performance roles, you can take two distinct paths to gauge the league-wide picture. The first route digs into official team websites and league reports, sources controlled by the clubs themselves. The second relies on professional networks, news outlets, and academic pipelines that offer an unfiltered view of who is actually working behind the scenes.

Neither method gives a complete snapshot alone, but together they reveal a clear trend: a growing number of franchises now invest in full-time performance psychology staff beyond the mandated behavioral health clinician.

Using Team Websites and Front Office Listings

The most direct way to spot dedicated performance psychology hires is to browse each team's official site. Navigate to the "Staff" or "Front Office" section and look under tabs like "Player Performance," "Sports Medicine," or "Wellness."

  • Official titles vary: You may see Director of Mental Performance, Peak Performance Coach, or Vice President of Performance Psychology. Clinician roles often appear under medical staff, while performance psychologists sit closer to the coaching or sports science departments.
  • Limitations: Not every franchise clearly labels these roles, and some fold mental performance into broader sports science positions. Still, comparing staff pages over consecutive years gives a rough count of full-time additions.

A handful of clubs have made their psychology hires prominent in news releases, making it easy to confirm dedicated positions. Others bury the role inside larger departments, so patience and careful reading pay off.

Searching Professional Directories and News Reports

Outside team control, professional bodies like the Association for Applied Sport Psychology (AASP) and the American Psychological Association (APA) maintain directories of certified practitioners. While these lists rarely tag a specific NFL team, you can cross-reference names with recent articles from outlets such as The Athletic or ESPN.

  • Certification clues: Look for individuals who hold both a CMPC (Certified Mental Performance Consultant) and a state psychology license, credentials often required for front office roles.
  • News cross-checks: When a team announces a hire, search the practitioner's name to uncover conference presentations, prior collegiate roles, or Olympic assignments that signal their performance psychology focus.

News archives also reveal departures, expansions, and shifts in title, offering a timeline of how a team's commitment to mental performance has evolved. For a broader look at where sports psychologists most are needed, these same directory and news-tracking methods apply across professional leagues and settings.

Tracking Academic Alumni Placements

Sport psychology graduate programs frequently highlight alumni working in professional sports. University websites, program newsletters, and faculty LinkedIn profiles can surface graduates currently serving on NFL staffs.

  • Placement lists: Some programs publish broad lists of alumni employers. Cross-reference those names with team directories or press releases to verify active roles.
  • LinkedIn and professional bios: Practitioners often update their own profiles with position changes long before a team issues a formal announcement. Following key departments and faculty members at institutions known for applied sport psychology can yield a steady stream of placement data.

This academic pipeline underscores a larger trend: NFL clubs increasingly recruit from rigorous, evidence-based training programs rather than relying solely on retired players or general mental health counselors. Those curious about careers in sports psychology will find that the path to an NFL front office typically runs through doctoral programs, supervised clinical hours, and performance-specific certifications.

Reviewing League-Level Aggregated Data

The NFL's own annual player health and safety report sometimes includes aggregate information about mental health and wellness staffing across all 32 teams. While it rarely breaks down the specific title of each hire, it tracks whether clubs are expanding their in-house capabilities.

  • Trend language: Terms like "enhanced mental health resources" or "integrated behavioral health staffing" signal growing investment.
  • Complementary sources: Combine this macro view with team-specific news and directory listings to build a reliable picture of how the trend is playing out franchise by franchise.

Questions to Ask Yourself

Are you more drawn to performance optimization or athlete mental health?
Your answer steers you toward CMPC certification and kinesiology for performance, or a clinical doctorate with licensure for mental health roles. Both paths lead to NFL opportunities but require distinct preparation.
Are you willing to earn a doctorate and complete thousands of supervised clinical hours?
Most NFL sports psychologist positions mandate a PhD or PsyD plus state licensure and board certification. If that timeline feels unworkable, consider mental performance coaching at the collegiate level instead.
Do you thrive under the win-now pressure of professional sports?
NFL teams demand measurable results and total buy-in to a competitive culture. Honest self-assessment here prevents burnout and mismatched expectations in your career.

Career Pathway: How to Become an NFL Performance Psychologist

The Kansas City Chiefs' hiring of Dr. Tyler Bradstreet as VP of Performance Psychology highlights a growing professional pathway. Aspiring NFL performance psychologists typically follow a structured credentialing ladder that combines doctoral education, licensure, and extensive applied experience.

Career pathway to become an NFL performance psychologist: bachelor's (4 years), doctoral (5-7 years), supervised practice (1-2 years), licensure and CMPC certification, applied experience (3-5+ years), then NFL role.

What Skills and Credentials Do NFL Teams Look For?

What specific credentials and skills do NFL teams prioritize when hiring a performance psychologist?

The Non-Negotiable Credentials

NFL teams looking to hire a performance psychologist typically require a doctoral degree (PhD or PsyD) in clinical, counseling, or sport psychology from an accredited institution. This advanced training ensures the professional can assess, diagnose, and intervene with the full range of psychological challenges athletes face. Along with the degree, state licensure as a psychologist is mandatory. Licensure guarantees the practitioner has completed supervised clinical hours and passed a rigorous examination, meeting legal and ethical standards for independent practice. Additionally, the Certified Mental Performance Consultant (CMPC) credential, issued by the Association for Applied Sport Psychology, has become a baseline expectation. If you are still weighing the path, understanding performance psychology versus sports psychology can help clarify which credential track fits your goals. The CMPC demonstrates specialized knowledge in mental skills training, performance enhancement, and ethical guidelines specific to sport settings. Together, these three credentials confirm both broad clinical competence and refined sport psychology expertise.

Applied Competencies That Win the Job

Beyond formal credentials, NFL teams prize a deep toolbox of applied skills. The most sought-after competencies include: - Imagery and visualization: Helping athletes mentally rehearse plays and situations to build confidence and automaticity. - Self-talk restructuring: Teaching players to replace negative internal dialogue with performance-enhancing thoughts. - Attentional control training: Sharpening focus amid stadium noise, high stakes, and constant distractions. - Arousal regulation: Managing pre-game jitters or mid-game emotional swings to maintain optimal intensity. - Team cohesion facilitation: Strengthening trust and communication across position groups and the locker room. - Crisis response readiness: Providing immediate support after injuries, losses, or off-field events that impact the team. - Leadership development: Mentoring captains and veteran players to model emotional resilience and guide younger teammates.

Cross-Sport Experience: Why It Matters

Dr. Tyler Bradstreet's journey through Olympic, collegiate, and Major League Baseball environments is not an outlier; it reflects what NFL teams actively seek. These organizations want professionals who have already thrived under high-pressure, high-visibility conditions. Experience across multiple sports proves the psychologist can adapt mental performance frameworks to different competitive cultures and demands. Working in pro baseball, for instance, teaches the patience of a 162-game season, while Olympic settings hone the ability to peak for a single defining moment. This blend of experiences signals the psychologist can handle the unique rhythm and intensity of an NFL season without a steep learning curve. For those interested in a similar trajectory, exploring how former athletes become sports psychologists shows how competitive backgrounds translate into professional credentials.

The Soft Skills That Make or Break Success

Clinical brilliance alone is not enough. The most effective NFL performance psychologists excel in building trust quickly with elite athletes who may be skeptical of mental health support. Cultural competence is essential given the diverse backgrounds of players, coaches, and staff. The ability to operate in a results-driven environment, where performance metrics matter daily, separates successful hires from those who struggle. Finally, these professionals must translate complex psychological concepts into plain language for coaches and front-office executives who need actionable insights, not jargon.

The Future of Sports Psychology in Professional Football

The Kansas City Chiefs' creation of a Vice President of Performance Psychology role may be the tipping point that moves sports psychology from a luxury to a standard front-office function across the NFL. The expansion signals a future where mental performance experts influence not just player well-being, but high-stakes decisions like draft evaluation, roster construction, and coaching philosophy.

From Draft Rooms to Locker Rooms: Expanding Influence

Performance psychologists are beginning to weigh in on pre-draft psychological profiling, helping teams assess mental toughness, coachability, and resilience before investing millions in a prospect. Beyond scouting, the role is evolving to include leadership development for captains, executive coaching for head coaches, and designing organizational culture playbooks that align with team values. In an era where "winning the locker room" is as critical as winning on the field, branches of sports psychology are expanding to make practitioners the architects of a team's mental infrastructure.

A Growing Career Pipeline with Executive-Level Rewards

For aspiring professionals, the career outlook is brightening. What once was a patchwork of hourly consulting fees is shifting toward salaried executive positions with titles, benefits, and real influence. Entry points are diversifying: graduates can now target analytics departments, player development units, or coaching staff apprenticeships where expertise in communication and motivation adds genuine value. While exact salaries are rarely disclosed, the move from part-time consultant to full-time executive signals a compensation leap, making the NFL a more viable long-term destination. Understanding how to become a performance psychology coach and which certifications carry weight is a practical first step for anyone targeting this path.

The Barriers That Remain: Stigma, Budgets, and Proving Value

The path is not without obstacles. Mental performance services still compete for budget against more established departments like strength and conditioning or sports medicine. Some players and coaches remain skeptical, viewing psychology as a sign of weakness rather than a competitive edge. Measuring return on investment is also difficult: how do you quantify the impact of a pre-game breathing routine or a leadership seminar on Sunday's final score? These questions mean that even with growth, sports psychologists must continually demonstrate their worth through data, testimonials, and cultural advocacy.

The Tipping Point: A Permanent Seat at the Table

The Chiefs' move mirrors the analytics revolution of a decade ago, when a few forward-thinking teams hired quants and the rest of the league scrambled to catch up. If the Chiefs see on-field dividends this season, expect a domino effect. Performance psychology could soon be as ubiquitous as a strength coach, embedded in every team's front office. For those entering the field today, that means the next five years may offer not just more jobs, but careers that shape how the game is played.

Frequently Asked Questions About NFL Sports Psychologists

As NFL teams deepen their investment in player wellness, questions about the roles and qualifications of sports psychologists are more common than ever. This FAQ breaks down what these professionals do, the evolving league requirements, and how the Kansas City Chiefs are setting a new standard in performance psychology.

What does an NFL sports psychologist do on a daily basis?
An NFL sports psychologist works with players and coaches on mental skills like goal setting, managing pre-performance anxiety, refocusing after mistakes, and using mindfulness or sleep strategies. They may also deliver cognitive-behavioral techniques for pain management and provide mandatory mental health education sessions as required by league policies.
What is the difference between a performance psychologist and a team clinician in the NFL?
A team clinician is a licensed mental health professional who handles diagnoses, therapy, and crisis intervention, as mandated for all 32 teams. A performance psychologist focuses on mental skills, resilience, and peak performance without necessarily treating clinical disorders. Some organizations employ both, like the Bears, who have a clinician and a separate director of mental skills.
Do all 32 NFL teams have a sports psychologist?
No, not every team employs a dedicated sports psychologist. However, all 32 teams now provide full-time mental health services through a licensed clinician, per a 2026 league mandate. Teams like the Chiefs, Bills (Dr. Desaree Festa), and Bears have added specialized performance psychology roles, but the presence of a pure sports psychologist remains uneven across the league.
How do you become a sports psychologist for an NFL team?
Most NFL performance psychologists hold a doctoral degree in clinical or counseling psychology, state licensure, and additional certification as a mental performance consultant. They typically gain experience working with elite athletes at the collegiate, Olympic, or professional level before being hired. Networking and demonstrated success in applied sport psychology settings are critical.
What credentials do you need to work as a psychologist in professional sports?
You need a doctoral degree (PhD or PsyD) in psychology, a license to practice in your state, and often the Certified Mental Performance Consultant (CMPC) credential. NFL team clinicians must also meet the league's mental health provider standards, which include licensure and experience with athlete populations. Additional training in sport performance is highly valued.
How do the Kansas City Chiefs use sports psychology?
The Chiefs hired Dr. Tyler Bradstreet as Vice President of Performance Psychology, making him the second in-house clinician in team history. He reports to the sports medicine VP, integrating mental performance with physical health. The Chiefs' approach signals a shift toward elevating performance psychology beyond the mandated clinician role, building a dedicated department for player mental wellness.

Recent News

Recent Articles