National Post (National Edition)

`Our locker-room isn't going to flinch'

FEAR ISN'T PART OF CHIEFS COACH REID'S MAKEUP, OR HIS TEAM

- SALLY JENKINS

Nothing is easier than to punt. In so many situations we defer, and let events decide us. Which is why you root for the Kansas City Chiefs to be in a close one, just to see Andy Reid do it again, conjure up a fourth-down play that turns the game.

The pressure mounts as the last strip of sun lowers over the stadium rim, his players exhale in plumes, the fans pulse in their arterial red, all of them awaiting his call, while Reid calmly studies that laminated play card like he's the only man on the field who isn't anxious. Like he's about to sharpen a pencil.

The ticking time clock multiplies the tension as Reid gazes at that densely packed card, which by game's end is as smeared as a kid's placemat. Then he murmurs into a headset, and suddenly everything moves — and shifts into organized flights. Over and over again during the last two Super Bowl seasons, Reid has summoned a decisive fourth-down call, chosen creative action over inertia, and defied expectatio­ns with what tight end Travis Kelce has called his ability to “mirror stuff up.” Along the way he has rewritten his legacy, going from the amiable guy who couldn't win the big trophy to the most feared aggressor in the game.

“If the coaches are flinching, if the players — your leaders — are flinching, it's not going to happen,” Reid said last week. “And our locker-room isn't going to flinch.”

For most coaches, fourth and short (defined as three yards or less) is a torturousl­y problemati­c decision. A 2018 analysis by Michael Lopez, a professor at Skidmore and the NFL's director of data and analytics, showed that a more aggressive fourthdown strategy would increase team win totals by almost half a victory per season. Yet, while coaches are bolder than they used to be, many of them still balk. For good reason. Men are not data. They can fail to execute.

As Bill Cowher has said, “There is so much more involved with the game than just sitting there, looking at the numbers and saying, `OK, these are my percentage­s, then I'm going to do it this way,' because that one time it doesn't work could cost your team a football game, and that's the thing a head coach has to live with, not the professor.”

What's more, data can be deceiving. A followup study by Lopez in 2019 based on tracking player movement showed that fourth-down success depends heavily on the exact distance. Coaches who went for it on fourth and inches had a 79 per cent conversion rate. But on fourth-and-one distances of a long yard or more, the rate fell to 55 per cent. The variables of player behaviour, formations, audibles, motion, the ability of opponents to react, in the space of just a yard, can make fool's gold out of the probabilit­ies.

“Football is really hard to solve,” Lopez says, “and the teams doing it best blend the numbers with all that's going on in coaches' heads.”

Somehow, Reid cuts through all the doubts in his head. He has a confidence on fourth down that his adversarie­s simply don't — especially in the playoffs.

In the last five post-seasons, NFL coaches have gone for it on fourth-andshort just 37.6 per cent of the time. Reid? He's gone for it fully 60 per cent of the time. In the last two games alone, he's elected to go for it three times, and he hasn't come up shy yet. He's three for three.

“It goes to the core of what he stands for, his core motto that he wants to live by and coach by, which is, `Fear nothing,' ” says Washington quarterbac­k Alex Smith, who spent five seasons with Reid in Kansas City. “He's not gonna play scared or coach scared. He's not gonna be conservati­ve. He's gonna be aggressive. He would always say, `When in doubt, go deep.' ”

Still, it's one thing to gamble, and another to win. Any fool can throw dice. Reid isn't gambling on those calls — they're highly deliberate­d moves by the game's most intricate thinker and effective judo thrower. Twice now in AFC championsh­ips, Reid has used early fourth-down daring to switch the momentum.

A year ago, the Chiefs trailed the Tennessee Titans by 10-0 when they faced a fourth and two from field goal range. Reid called for a rope-line of a pass from Patrick Mahomes to Kelce, and the Titans never recovered.

Same thing last week against the Buffalo Bills. The Chiefs trailed by 9-0, with a fourth and one at the Bills' 23. What did Reid do? He declined the field goal and instead put Mahomes in the shotgun for a nine-yard completion — and with that, the wheels popped out of the ditch and the Chiefs went on a tear of three straight scoring drives to take a 21-12 lead into halftime.

As former Pro Bowl safety turned ESPN announcer Ryan Clark observed, “These boys play the AFC Championsh­ip Game like a game of H.O.R.S.E. against your li' l cousins.”

What is Reid's secret? Inspiratio­n? Instinct? Actually, it's something far more banal: practice. Washington coach Ron Rivera, who spent five years under Reid as an assistant from 19992003, says, “I can guarantee you it is very, very well practised and rehearsed. He leaves very little to chance.”

Reid's taming of uncertaint­y is made easier by the galvanic arm and legs of the best quarterbac­k in the game, Patrick Mahomes, and all but unguardabl­e receivers like Kelce and the fleet Tyreek Hill. But what makes the 25-year-old Mahomes and company so effective is that they're so well-schooled, giving Reid myriad options. Reid has always been a renowned teacher of the game — he has spawned 10 playoff coaches from among his former assistants — but the best job he has ever done, arguably, is in imparting the full picture of his vast offence to Mahomes, aided by his offensive co-ordinator, Eric Bieniemy.

“You understand why they're calling the plays,” Mahomes says. “And not just the play that's called, but what they're building up to. I understand exactly why we're calling every single play we're calling.”

The result is a mutual conviction between Reid and his players on those critical fourth downs: to grab hold of the game before it ebbs away.

“In this league, you've got to stay aggressive all the time. I mean, teams are just too good,” Reid said this week. “... There's so much parity in this league, and such a small margin between winning and losing, even in the regular season, that you're not going to be using too many four corner stalls. That's just not how you're going to roll.”

Still, that doesn't explain how Reid found the nerve to make the single most audacious play call of this post-season, that stunner of a fourth-and-one pass with 1:17 left in the divisional round to ice the Cleveland Browns, when backup Chad Henne had to take over for a concussed Mahomes.

“There was no doubt with anybody,” Reid said later.

Just before he sent in the play calling for the pass from Henne to Hill — again from the shotgun — Reid turned to Bieniemy and asked, “You ready to roll?”

Bieniemy answered, “Absolutely.”

Reid and Bieniemy had hashed out an array of potential fourth-down calls earlier in the week, and went over it again on Saturday evening.

“We talk through the plan the night before,” Bieniemy said earlier this season. “There is a plan and there is a conversati­on. Sometimes those conversati­ons can be a little heated, sometimes they're very easy to have, but they're always exciting.”

When Henne casually lined up in the shotgun, fully seven yards behind the line of scrimmage for a play that needed just inches, no one in the stadium thought a pass was on. CBS analyst Tony Romo assumed the Chiefs were just trying to draw the Browns offside, and Alex Smith, watching at home on TV, also assumed it was “fake snap, a dummy play, just like everyone else.”

Then the ball was snapped and Henne sprinted out, and Romo started hollering:

“ONLY ANDY REID GETS IN SHOTGUN ON FOURTHAND-AN-INCH AND THROWS THE BALL WITH HIS BACKUP QUARTERBAC­K!!!”

It was a classic instance of Reid crossing up the opponent, a mirror trick played on their assumption­s about what they were seeing. Reid's penchant for showing a certain look only to double back against expectatio­ns is the upshot of exhaustive study film study, not just of opponents' tendencies, but of his own.

Smith observes, “He does a good job of evaluating himself, every game.”

His ability to make opponents out-think themselves is something of a standing joke among his former assistants.

“We would sit in meetings and say, `They know that he knows that they know,' ” Rivera says.

But none of it would matter if Reid didn't possess one quality above all: the willingnes­s to accept consequenc­es for his decisions. Until last season, remember, Reid's record in the playoffs was 1314.

“There are two sets of consequenc­es, right?” says Rivera. “Positive consequenc­es. Negative consequenc­es.”

Somehow, Reid found a way to live with the losses, and kept making the hard calls. His gift, Rivera says, is the ability to block out fear of the repercussi­ons and not let them cloud his judgment.

“The more you think about the negative consequenc­es, the more often you make a bad call,” Rivera says.

Lately, there have been nothing but good calls.

 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Part of what makes Chiefs head coach Andy Reid the NFL's most aggressive play-caller is the galvanic arm and legs of Patrick Mahomes, the best quarterbac­k in the game.
But what makes Mahomes so effective is that he's so well-schooled by Reid.
JAMIE SQUIRE / GETTY IMAGES FILES Part of what makes Chiefs head coach Andy Reid the NFL's most aggressive play-caller is the galvanic arm and legs of Patrick Mahomes, the best quarterbac­k in the game. But what makes Mahomes so effective is that he's so well-schooled by Reid.

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