Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Reid still dialing up some innovative offenses for Chiefs

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, MO. » A couple of years ago, late in the season, thenRaider­s coach Jack Del Rio lavished upon Chiefs counterpar­t Andy Reid what many construed as an insult but could just as well be called a compliment.

Del Rio opined that Reid’s offense often relies on “gimmicky things.”

“If the word is something that somebody doesn’t like, that’s just too bad,” Del Rio said. “Those are effective plays. You can call it what you want.”

Maybe so many Chiefs fans wouldn’t have taken umbrage if he’d called them creative, pioneering or simply forward-thinking.

But regardless of the semantics, the fact remains that after two decades in the NFL, Reid remains one of the most inventive coaches to be found on any sideline.

“There’s just some stuff that he does sometimes that you don’t ever think of, and then you see it and you’re like, ‘That play is going to work.’ And it works every single time,” Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes said.

“Just the way that his mind thinks and how he exploits defenses, he just knows how to make plays up, it seems like, and they work every single time.”

Well, not every time. There was that ill-advised throw to tackle-eligible Cam Erving last year against the Jets, and a few more gadget plays over the years have gone awry.

But the entirety of the Chiefs offensive is in many ways a master class in offensive innovation, made all the more dangerous by the weapons Reid has at his disposal in Mahomes, speedy receiver Tyreek Hill, star tight end Travis Kelce and running back Kareem Hunt.

The pieces are in place for him to run anything in his ever-expanding playbook.

“I think you try to find the best scheme you can and also the best players you can. And when you can combine the two at a very high level, you can see some good things,” Chiefs offensive lineman Mitch Schwartz said. “That is a huge credit to coach to be able to mix things up and change things.”

Reid’s offensive system has changed over the years, but its roots remain in the West Coast system that longtime 49ers coach Bill Walsh taught Mike Holmgren, who in turn taught the Packers’ old offensive line coach. It is predicated on short, horizontal passes to stretch the defense, and then attacks with the running game or downfield throws for bigger gains.

Reid used it successful­ly during his early years in Philadelph­ia, too. But in the late 2000s, he began to incorporat­e elements of the college spread offense, and unveiled a newlook system with Michael Vick at quarterbac­k that began to give defensive coordinato­rs fits.

“One thing working with Coach Reid, you have to be flexible,” Chiefs offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy said. “He’ll expand your mind and push your limits.”

Reid acknowledg­ed that some plays he draws up on a whim, but “I also have good guys that have some good thoughts, too. I keep it open and kind of formulate what I like, then the guys put in their input and we come up with what we come up with. That’s the fun part.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chiefs head coach Andy Reid, right, greets Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn after their win on Sunday.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chiefs head coach Andy Reid, right, greets Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn after their win on Sunday.

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