New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

What exactly does Bieniemy need for head coaching job?

- By Kevin B. Blackiston­e

Twice during the classic sports comedy “The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings,” about a fictional barnstormi­ng Negro Leagues baseball team when the major leagues still refused Black men, Richard Pryor’s character tries to pass as another melanated ethnicity or race the majors might find more tolerable. The first time, Charlie Snow pretends to be Cuban. Near the film’s end, he shaves the sides of his head and claims he is a Native man. Neither ploy works.

But if I were Eric Bieniemy — who just won a second Super Bowl ring as offensive coordinato­r for Kansas City, orchestrat­ing scoring drives on all four of his unit’s second-half possession­s for a comefrom-behind 38-35 win against the second-ranked defense in the NFL, a defense so good that its coordinato­r Jonathan Gannon was just scooped up by the Cardinals to be their head coach — I’d try Charlie Snow’s gambit. Camouflage your Blackness, since it is clearly a disqualify­ing characteri­stic for almost all NFL head coaching aspirants, as last year’s Washington Post investigat­ive series illustrate­d. Claim being, say, biracial, like Mike McDaniel, who despite being 14 years younger and an offensive coordinato­r in San Francisco for just one season, was hired by Miami after the 2021 season. What’s Bieniemy got to lose?

I don’t know Bieniemy. I don’t know if he’ll be the next Mike Tomlin — who guided the Steelers to a Super Bowl trophy in just his second season and has yet, after 16 years to have a losing campaign — or the next Marion Campbell. Look him up. Actually, don’t.

But I am absolutely certain that after all Bieniemy accomplish­ed this season and his previous four directing Andy Reid’s offense, he deserves a chance at least to fail as a head coach. In his first season as Reid’s offensive coordinato­r, his side led the NFL in yards gained and points scored. He helped Patrick Mahomes become the second quarterbac­k in NFL history behind Peyton Manning to throw for 5,000 yards and 50 touchdowns in a season. Over the next four seasons, no team won more games, scored more points or gained more yards than Kansas City. Volunteere­d Reid to the football world in the immediate aftermath of Sunday’s Super Bowl victory: “Eric Bieniemy was phenomenal.”

So what could possibly give league owners, team presidents and general managers cold feet on Bieniemy other than his skin color? Hygiene? Does he require an Amharic translator? None of the criticisms against him were prohibitiv­e for White coaches in the same situation who went on to get head jobs - maybe even bomb at them, and then go on to get yet another. The Bieniemy case feels like one of those fair housing tests where a would-be Black renter or buyer and a hopeful White home seeker of the same means show up for the same property, but the hopeful Black home hunter is summarily and inexplicab­ly dismissed. This is why onetime NFL head coach Brian Flores, who is Black, is suing the league for discrimina­tion. Bieniemy should join the suit.

Take, for example, the criticism against Bieniemy that it is his offensive genius of a boss, Reid, who really calls the plays that Mahomes, their two-time Super Bowl MVP, turns into magic. Well, Doug Pederson, who is White, apprentice­d as Reid’s offensive coordinato­r in Kansas City during the first half of the last decade, and Philadelph­ia didn’t see it as an impediment to hiring him as its coach in 2016.

Reid and Bieniemy, who succeeded Nagy, watched Mahomes blossom into a wunderkind at quarterbac­k. He proved Sunday in the Super Bowl that he is the standard-bearer of field generalshi­p in the new, wide-open offensive NFL. Some wonder: Who wouldn’t be successful with such a generation­al talent?

Well, Josh McDaniels, who is White, not only was a barely 30-year-old offensive coordinato­r for arguably the greatest coach in NFL history in Bill Belichick, but was also sketching plays for undoubtedl­y the greatest quarterbac­k the game has seen in Tom Brady. But Denver didn’t discount that. It hired McDaniels as its coach in 2009 when he was 32, after three seasons riding in the back seat behind Belichick and Brady.

Not only that, but after McDaniels flopped with the Broncos, Belichick and Brady brought him back, returned some shine to his image with the glint of three more Lombardi Trophies, and then Las Vegas decided to give him a second chance running the whole show. And he’s still not as aged as Bieniemy.

It is now being suggested that for Bieniemy to get the biggest coach’s office in an NFL franchise’s building, he should fly the cocoon of success under Reid and go elsewhere as a coordinato­r to prove he isn’t just a cog in the wheel. One of the places said to be interested in his services is Washington. I’m not sure what is more insulting: arguing that a lateral move for Bieniemy from a Super Bowl champion would actually be beneficial for him, or having him consider showcasing his talent in the competitiv­ely challenged and organizati­onally malfunctio­ning franchise based in Ashburn, which would unquestion­ably be a step down.

At this point, Bieniemy would be better served taking a year off. Changing his name. And coming back as Cablinasia­n.

 ?? Jill Toyoshiba/TNS ?? Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy, left, and head coach Andy Reid.
Jill Toyoshiba/TNS Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy, left, and head coach Andy Reid.

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