Orlando Sentinel

Spagnuolo glad Bell is on his side

Chiefs coordinato­r won’t need to scheme against RB

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The only member of the Chiefs that was available and willing to discuss Le’Veon Bell, arguably the biggest free-agent signing since the offseason, happened to be the defensive coordinato­r who won’t have anything to do with him.

Steve Spagnuolo is happy for that, too.

Spagnuolo already had plenty of headaches trying to stop Bell when the two-time All-Pro running back was with the Steelers. The longtime defensive whiz had five opportunit­ies to shut down Bell, who announced Wednesday that he was signing with the Chiefs, and each time Spagnuolo found himself grasping at straws.

“Look, it’s great always to accumulate good football players,” Spagnuolo said. “I haven’t seen him or gone against him in a long time. But he was so challengin­g to stop in that dual play the Steelers ran where he’d just sit back there and pick and weave. No matter what you did, it felt like you couldn’t stop him.”

The Chiefs follow a strict schedule for making coaches and players available to reporters, and coach Andy Reid, general manager Brett Veach and Bell weren’t available Friday. Bell could still be completing physicals and paperwork, and he must pass a six-day COVID-19 protocol or get an exemption before he’s allowed in the building, so not even some of the folks in the Chiefs organizati­on were quite sure when he would join the team.

That’s why Chiefs offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy was quick to say: “I know there’s been some discussion about a particular player. I’m going to defer all those questions to Coach Reid and Brett Veach.”

“Right now, our focus is on the Buffalo Bills,” Bieniemy said. “We need to make sure we get this chip off our shoulder.”

Bell won’t be able to help them by Monday night, of course. But he should provide a big lift for a struggling run game the rest of the season, especially as the Chiefs (4-1) chase a first-round playoff bye in the defense of their Super Bowl title.

Bell became a bona fide star with Pittsburgh, where he ran for at least 1,200 yards and caught 75 passes in three different seasons. But things went haywire after he skipped the 2018 season amid a contract dispute. Bell signed a four-year, $52.5 million deal with $35 million guaranteed with the Jets, but he never quite meshed with coach Adam Gase, and he was released this week.

Bell was reportedly considerin­g three teams before settling on the Chiefs, where he will back up Clyde Edwards-Helaire.

The rookie out of LSU, who was the Chiefs’ first-round pick in this year’s draft, raised eyebrows by running for 138 yards with touchdowns on the ground and through the air in his debut against Houston. But Edwards-Helaire had just 38 yards rushing the following week, 64 yards rushing each of the next two and 40 yards rushing last Sunday against the Raiders — when the Chiefs lost 40-32 to end their franchise-record 13-game winning streak.

“We drafted Clyde for a reason. Clyde is doing a heck of a job,” Bieniemy said. “The rest of that” — referring again to Bell — “I’m going to let Coach Reid address that.”

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ?? Ex-Jets running back Le’Veon Bell should be a welcome addition for the Chiefs.
MATT ROURKE/AP Ex-Jets running back Le’Veon Bell should be a welcome addition for the Chiefs.

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