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The Kansas City Chiefs agreed to trade wide receiver Tyreek Hill to the Miami Dolphins for a package of draft picks on Wednesday, according to Adam Schefter.

Adam Schefter @AdamSchefter

Chiefs are trading six-time Pro-Bowl WR Tyreek Hill to the Miami Dolphins for five draft picks: a 2022 1st-round pick (No. 29), a 2nd-round pick (No. 50) and a 4th-round pick, as well as 4th- and 6th-round picks in the 2023 draft, sources tell ESPN.

According to the agent, Hill agreed to a new four-year, $120 million extension with the Dolphins, making him the highest-paid wideout in the league. The market was reset when Davante Adams signed with the Las Vegas Raiders.

He has been one of the most dynamic players in football. He was a major part of the Kansas City Super Bowl-winning team, catching 58 passes for 860 yards and seven touchdown in 12 games.

He had 17 catches for 213 yards and two scores in the playoffs.

In 2020, he caught 87 passes for 1,276 yards and 15 touchdown, and added two rushing scores to his impressive tally. The Chiefs returned to the Super Bowl, but Tom Brady and the Buccaneers ruined their chances of repeating.

He caught over a thousand passes for over a thousand yards and nine scores.

Hill and Kelce gave Patrick Mahomes a pair of incredible weapons in the passing game.

He will provide the Dolphins with a field-stretching threat and an elusive player with the ball in his hands who frequently breaks off big scoring plays. There is no question that he is a dynamic player on the field and one who could change the offense of Miami.

In March of this year, he was investigated by the police for possible child abuse, including an instance when his three-year-old son suffered a broken arm.

Audio was also publicly released of a man who was telling his fiancée, Crystal Espinal, that she needed to be terrified of him as well.

The NFL did not suspend him, even though he was not charged by authorities.

In August 2015, Hill pleaded guilty to domestic assault and battery by strangulation of Espinal and was sentenced to three years of supervised release. His conviction was dismissed and expunged as part of his plea agreement.

The Chiefs banned Hill from all team-related activities in the off-season while the league investigated him, but he returned to the club after the league found no conclusive evidence that he violated the personal conduct policy.