Greenwich Time

Chiefs’ brain trust involves former head coaches on each side of the ball

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Patrick Mahomes remembers what Matt Nagy was like when he first arrived in Kansas City in 2017, just a fresh-faced rookie quarterbac­k whose stardom was still very much in the future.

Nagy was the Chiefs’ offensive coordinato­r at the time, and they spent countless hours together in meetings, practices and even on planes traveling to games.

Nagy left after that season for Chicago, where he spent four years as the Bears’ head coach.

But when he was fired in 2021, despite an NFC North title and two playoff appearance­s, Nagy returned to Kansas City and began to work with Mahomes again.

Only now, Nagy possessed the rare experience of having been an NFL head coach.

“I mean, you learn. You learn the good and the bad,” Mahomes said Thursday, “and he got to be around other coaches as well, so he has different ideas he brings, and you could see that last year and you can see it this year.”

Nagy was promoted back to offensive coordinato­r this past offseason, when Eric Bieniemy left for the same job in Washington. And that made the Chiefs exceptiona­lly unique in that they had two ex-head coaches as coordinato­rs.

Steve Spagnuolo, who led the Rams for three seasons and was an interim coach of the Giants, has run their defense the past five years.

No other team in the NFL this past season had two former head coaches as coordinato­rs, unless you count the Patriots and 49ers, who will face the Chiefs in the Super Bowl on Feb. 11 in Las Vegas.

New England had Bill O’Brien in charge of the offense while Bill Belichick was the de facto defensive coordinato­r, while San Francisco has Steve Wilks running the defensive side while coach Kyle Shanahan mostly runs the offense.

“I think what you have,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said, “is that both Nags and Spags are good leaders. And they’re not afraid to make decisions. Sometimes coordinato­rs that haven’t sat in that seat are afraid to do that. Both of them do a nice job with that.

“They’ve done a very good job with it, actually.”

The Chiefs’ offense has gone through fits and starts this season, but it has peaked at just the right time, helping them to beat Miami, Buffalo and Baltimore on the way back to the Super Bowl.

Their defense has been spectacula­r the entire way, though, ranking second in total defense while helping to keep Kansas City afloat as its offense tried to find its way.

“We really believe in our leaders, Spags and the coaches he has in place,” Chiefs linebacker Drue Tranquill said. “There are times in football, whether it’s high school or college or the profession­al level, where you’re just not sure about the game plan, and that hasn’t happened this year. When we go into a game, we’re like, ‘This is going to work.’”

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