Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

COUPLE OF WISE GUYS

Super Bowl opponents Reid, Arians are proof that age has its advantages among NFL coaches

- RICK MORRISSEY rmorrissey@suntimes.com | @MorrisseyC­ST

Can we get a little love for the old-head head coaches in Sunday’s Super Bowl?

The Buccaneers’ Bruce Arians is 68, and the Chiefs’ Andy Reid is 62. This is nice. This is good. It makes those of us of a certain vintage feel like some things are still possible. Like climbing Mount Everest. Or learning a new language. Or making peace with smartphone­s, which are stealing our personal informatio­n, emptying our bank accounts and relieving us of our souls, even as we speak.

There is nothing wrong with being young. You can’t get to old without going through Youngstown. But all those life experience­s we collect are supposed to add up to something better and richer by the time we’re gray. Nothing against 41-year-old Kyle Shanahan, who led the 49ers to the Super Bowl last season, or 35-year-old Sean McVay, who coached the Rams to the Super Bowl the season before. But just because they’ve spent most of their relatively short adult lives staring at game tape doesn’t

mean they know a lot about life.

Do you need to know a lot about life to be a football coach? The very existence of monosyllab­ic coach Bill Belichick is a strong argument that you don’t. But even the Patriots’ 68-year-old coach has come a long way from the dour 39-year-old Browns coach he was in 1991. He actually smiles once in a while now, although when he does, I wonder whether he’s thinking of a joke in which a Jew, a Catholic and a Muslim walk into a crossbar.

When I look at Reid and Arians, I see two men in complete control of their worlds. Both calm. Both collected. If you want to make the argument that you’d also feel in control of your world if you had Patrick Mahomes (Chiefs) or Tom Brady (Buccaneers) at quarterbac­k, you won’t get much disagreeme­nt here.

But when Arians took over as the Cardinals’ coach in 2013, he went 10-6 with Carson Palmer as his quarterbac­k. The next year, he went 11-5 with Drew Stanton starting eight games. So Brady isn’t the only reason for the Buccaneers’ excellence this season.

Apropos of nothing other than your profound pain, the Bears could have had Arians as their head coach in 2013, but thengenera­l manager Phil Emery chose Marc Trestman instead.

As I said, pain. Deep, enduring pain. Where was I? Age. Old = good.

The Bears’ connection to the wise Reid is that they hired his offensive coordinato­r, Matt Nagy, then 39, as their head coach in 2018. We knew then that the apple had a chance of falling about a mile from the tree. That’s not necessaril­y a shot at Nagy. It’s an acknowledg­ment that it has taken Reid years to get where he is in his developmen­t as a coach. Just because you stood next to him on the sideline doesn’t mean you absorbed his acumen.

ESPN.com had a feature story Friday about Eric Bieniemy, Nagy’s replacemen­t as the Chiefs’ offensive coordinato­r. The headline was “The secret to Eric Bieniemy’s unstoppabl­e offense.” Anybody in their right mind knows the “secret” is Mahomes. The other “secret” to the Chiefs’ offense is Reid. He designed it, and he’s the primary playcaller. It’s a shame that Bieniemy hasn’t gotten his shot as a head coach, but come on.

Good NFL coaching is not all about age, obviously. The Eagles hired Reid to be their head coach in 1999. He was 41. Six seasons later, he had them in the Super Bowl. He lost to a chipper, 52-year-old Belichick.

Maybe the best way to put it is that you’re more likely to be hurt by youthful inexperien­ce than you are by a large accumulati­on of birthdays. I don’t know what 41-year-old Packers coach Matt LaFleur was thinking when he called for a field-goal attempt instead of going for it on fourth-and-goal late in the NFC Championsh­ip Game. I’d like to think a 61-year-old LaFleur will know better in a similar circumstan­ce.

Of the seven new head coaches hired this offseason, two are 38, one is 39 and another is 41. That’s a lot of youthful energy. But what about wisdom?

Pope Francis is 84. President Joe Biden is 78. There is no mandatory retirement age for U.S. Supreme Court justices, and although the framers of the Constituti­on probably didn’t think judges would live as long as they do today, the idea behind it was smart: Older people bring a lot of wisdom to the table.

(But wait, Rick, aren’t you the same guy who criticized the White Sox in October for hiring 76-year-old Tony La Russa as their manager? Yes, I am. My issues with La Russa had less to do with age and more to do with inactivity — he hadn’t managed in nine years — and his ability to relate to young players. No one ever has mistaken him for Mr. Congeniali­ty.)

I don’t know what the sweet spot is in terms of age for an NFL head coach. It’s not a healthy lifestyle, given the stress, the hours on the job and the lack of sleep. But if a man can navigate through all that, can build up knowledge and still be coaching into his 60s, maybe he’s better equipped to be the best he can be.

Brady has been on this planet 43 years. He still has a very good arm. When you put that arm together with all the football knowledge he has in his head, you have a dangerous quarterbac­k. Same with the Packers’ Aaron Rodgers, who is 37, which used to be considered an advanced age for a quarterbac­k.

Perhaps you can see a theme here. Getting Older: What’s Wrong With That?

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Andy Reid, 62, of the Chiefs and Bruce Arians, 68, of the Buccaneers (shown with the Cardinals in 2015) have just about seen it all in their long NFL coaching careers.
GETTY IMAGES Andy Reid, 62, of the Chiefs and Bruce Arians, 68, of the Buccaneers (shown with the Cardinals in 2015) have just about seen it all in their long NFL coaching careers.
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 ?? AP ?? Bill Belichick, now a coaching icon at 68, was just 39 in his first season leading the Browns in 1991.
AP Bill Belichick, now a coaching icon at 68, was just 39 in his first season leading the Browns in 1991.

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