The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Chiefs’ Reid considers keeping Nagy on top of play-calling

- By Dave Skretta

One of the things Andy Reid loves most about being a coach is calling plays, making those crucial and highly visible decisions that have far-reaching ramificati­ons on his team’s performanc­e.

That’s a big reason why he rarely turns those duties over to someone else.

But after a miserable stretch of offensive performanc­es helped to waste the Chiefs’ impressive 5-0 start, Reid swallowed his pride — and his joy — and gave offensive coordinato­r Matt Nagy the reins of an offense searching for a spark for last weekend’s shootout loss to the New York Jets.

The Chiefs responded by putting up some big numbers, even if their defense wasted them, and it was at least enough for Reid to consider keeping Nagy in charge of the play-calling.

“I for sure saw some good things. It’s something I’ve done in the past,” Reid said. I’m always going to do what I think is best for the Kansas City Chiefs at every spot. So I’ll go through it and continue to evaluate it, and whatever I come up with, I come up with there.”

Reid still had his fingerprin­ts on the play sheet, of course. There’s almost no chance Nagy called that failed trick pass to a tight end-eligible without Reid’s blessing, and trying to decipher where one coach’s ideas end and those of the other coach begin is an exercise in futility.

Reid certainly isn’t going to provide those details.

He never did with Doug Pederson, either. The Chiefs’ former offensive coordinato­r, now the head coach in Philadelph­ia, was known to have handled some playcallin­g duties, but neither Reid nor his up-and-coming protege ever let slip precisely how those responsibi­lities were divvied up.

One thing is clear: The numbers last Sunday support the idea of giving Nagy another shot when the Oakland Raiders visit on Sunday in a matchup of teams tied at 6-6 atop the AFC West.

Kansas City had been averaging less than 300 yards total offense over its previous four games, and was coming off a 236-yard performanc­e against Buffalo. Alex Smith threw for just 181 yards in that loss, while a ground game that was churning out 100-yard performanc­es early in the season was held to 55.

Even worse, the Chiefs had turned it over seven times in those four games.

But with a noticeably wide-open approach at the Meadowland­s, the Chiefs managed to spring a few big plays — especially early in the game. And they wound up with 474 yards, their best since a Week 1 win in New England, and a season-best 362 yards through the air.

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