The Hamilton Spectator

Year 25 might be the best coaching job yet for Andy Reid

A steady hand in an uneven season

- ROB MAADDI

Andy Reid celebrated his 25th season as a head coach with a masterful performanc­e on the sideline and in the locker-room.

The Kansas City Chiefs are one victory away from becoming the first National Football League team in 19 years to win back-to-back Super Bowls. They will face the San Francisco 49ers despite a midseason slump that could’ve ruined their repeat hopes.

Reid kept them steady.

This isn’t the best team Reid has coached but it just might be his best coaching job.

Sure, he still has Patrick Mahomes. But the two-time NFL and Super Bowl MVP had a subpar season by his lofty standards. He didn’t get much help from his wide receivers at times. They led the league in drops. Mahomes once again counted on star tight end Travis Kelce, who had a slight dip in production to go with a massive increase in global attention due to his relationsh­ip with Taylor Swift.

Reid made sure Kelce’s newfound celebrity status didn’t become a distractio­n.

After starting 6-1, the Chiefs lost five of eight games. At 9-6, they even had a shot to miss the playoffs and ended up with their most losses since 2017.

No chance Reid would let them stumble further. The Chiefs won the next two games to clinch their eighth straight AFC West title and have kept on winning in the playoffs, beating Miami at home in the wild-card round, going on the road to beat Buffalo in the divisional round and No. 1-seeded Baltimore in the AFC Championsh­ip Game.

“Coach Reid just challengin­g every single person in this building to up the ante just one more step and just keep taking it up a notch every week from here on out,” Kelce said.

“That’s why we love the big guy. You never fall astray from that kind of mentality no matter how many losses you have, no matter how close the games are and you’re just not finishing them.”

Reid credits Mahomes and Kelce for their leadership, setting the tone for how the team should practise. He also praised general manager Brett Veach for adding players who fit that mentality.

“You’re not going to dog it with Pat Mahomes going full speed, Kelce going full speed,” Reid said.

A loss to the Raiders on Christmas was the third straight defeat at home and led Reid to make some adjustment­s. The offensive coaching staff decided to simplify a complex offence and five wins later the Chiefs are back in the Super Bowl for the fourth time in five years.

“I think it gave our guys a nice little — for (lack of ) a better term a wake-up call that, ‘Listen we need to step things up here. Things aren’t just going to fall in our lap,’ ” Reid said of the loss to Las Vegas. “We’re taking everyone’s best shot, here’s a team that went through some adversity, and they stepped up and were able to present themselves like they did. We were able to learn from it and move on. I felt all along though (that) we had the ability to do that, like I said, we need a little kick in the tail there.”

 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE GETTY IMAGES ?? Andy Reid of the Kansas City Chiefs credits Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce for their leadership, setting the tone for how the team should practise.
JAMIE SQUIRE GETTY IMAGES Andy Reid of the Kansas City Chiefs credits Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce for their leadership, setting the tone for how the team should practise.

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