Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Reid, McDermott to match wits

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Ten years after firing Sean McDermott as his defensive coordinato­r, Kansas City Chiefs coach Andy Reid will stare across the field inside Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday and see his protégé trying to spoil his hopes of a Super Bowl repeat.

Funny thing: Even after firing him, Reid suspected deep down that McDermott was destined for big things.

“Very organized, very smart and very tough,” he explained this week. “He came from a coaching family – his dad was a heck of a coach. Sean just kind of picked up right from there. Very solid, very good.”

In fact, downright exceptiona­l. McDermott has the long-suffering Buffalo Bills playing in their first AFC championsh­ip game since beating Kansas City on Jan. 23, 1994, when they advanced to their fourth straight Super Bowl. They have won 11 of their past 12 games since losing to the Chiefs in Week 6, beating the Colts in the wild-card round and the Ravens in last week's divisional round.

“He deserves coach of the year, man. He's taken a franchise there, both he and his general manager, have put this thing together with some bold moves and production now,” Reid said.

“I think he's done a tremendous job. What a great thing for the NFL and for Buffalo. They love football in Buffalo and he's really done a nice job with that whole program.”

Not surprising­ly, the job McDermott has done with the Bills neatly parallels the job Reid has done in Kansas City.

Both took over downtrodde­n organizati­ons and quickly built them into juggernaut­s. Both have bright young quarterbac­ks in the Bills' Josh Allen and the Chiefs' Patrick Mahomes. Both have surrounded them with playmakers, such as the Bills' Stefon Diggs and the Chiefs' Tyreek Hill and Travis Kelce. And both have built defenses to not only complement two of the best offenses in the NFL, but capable of clinching wins under pressure, as each did last weekend.

Mahomes, who sustained a concussion last week against Cleveland, has been cleared to play after practicing all week.

McDermott never harbored any animosity toward Reid when he was fired from the Eagles on Jan. 15, 2011. Instead, he went to Carolina and over the next five years honed his craft and built his reputation to the point the Bills – who at the time had not made the postseason since 1999 – were willing to give him a shot in charge.

Buffalo reached the wild-card round in 2017 and again last year before reaching the brink of a Super Bowl this season.

“It's always an honor to go up against great coaches, and Andy will be a Hall of Fame coach here in the future sometime down the road,” McDermott said. “I've learned a lot from Andy in my time with him in Philadelph­ia, so I have a tremendous amount of respect for him and his family, the way they helped guide me then and still do today.”

Mahomes, who was knocked out of last week's game against Cleveland with a concussion, took first-team reps all week. He was finally cleared to play by team doctors and an independen­t neurologis­t on Friday.

“You have to take it day by day. I think that's the biggest thing,” Mahomes said. “You can only control what you can control. Try to come in with a positive attitude, make myself better, prepare myself like I was going to play and luckily enough, I didn't have any symptoms and now I can play.”

 ?? JAY BIGGERSTAF­F / USA TODAY ?? Bills coach Sean McDermott was fired by Chiefs coach Andy Reid 10 years ago. Now he’ll try to get revenge in the AFC title game.
JAY BIGGERSTAF­F / USA TODAY Bills coach Sean McDermott was fired by Chiefs coach Andy Reid 10 years ago. Now he’ll try to get revenge in the AFC title game.

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