USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Chiefs’ top assistant coach leaving, lands play-calling job

- Chris Bumbaca

Eric Bieniemy’s next job won’t be a promotion to the top rung of coaching from the offensive coordinato­r job he held with the Kansas City Chiefs.

The Washington Commanders announced Bieniemy as the team’s new assistant head coach and offensive coordinato­r last week. In Washington, Bieniemy will be charged with improving an offense that ranked 24th in scoring and 27th in yards per play last season.

Bieniemy will also call plays for the first time in his NFL coaching career. In Kansas City, head coach Andy Reid was responsibl­e for the play-calling, while Bieniemy had an extensive role in developing the game plan. In Washington, there will also be a significant question mark at quarterbac­k. Head coach Ron Rivera said secondyear quarterbac­k Sam Howell has the inside track for the starting job for the 2023 season, with veteran Carson Wentz still on the roster as of now.

Bieniemy, 53, was the Chiefs offensive coordinato­r since 2018. With Patrick Mahomes as quarterbac­k, the offense consistent­ly ranked among the best in the league. He helped the Chiefs win Super Bowl 54 to cap a season in which Kansas City had the top-ranked offense. This past season, Mahomes captured his second career MVP award as the Chiefs won Super Bowl 57.

After the game, Reid specifically mentioned Bieniemy as a catalyst for the Chiefs’ success. During owners meetings last year, he made a passionate plea for Bieniemy to receive a head coaching opportunit­y, per multiple reports.

“Eric Bieniemy has been tremendous for us and I think he’s tremendous for the National Football League,” Reid said. “I’m hoping he has an opportunit­y to go somewhere and do his thing, where he can run the show and

be Eric Bieniemy.”

Bieniemy also interviewe­d for the head coaching role with the Indianapol­is Colts, who hired former Philadelph­ia Eagles offensive coordinato­r Shane Steichen.

Eric Bieniemy’s trajectory

Prior to his promotion to offensive coordinato­r, Bieniemy was the Chiefs running backs coach (2013-17). He held the same role with the Minnesota Vikings from 2006 to 2010.

Bieniemy began his coaching career at his alma mater, Colorado. He coached running backs in 2001-02 and was the running backs coach at UCLA from 2003 to 2005, adding the title of recruiting coordinato­r his final year there.

In 1990, Bieniemy won the national championsh­ip as a senior running back for the Buffaloes and was named a consensus All-American.

He was drafted in the second round of the 1991 draft by the then-San Diego Chargers and played eight seasons in the league.

Advocates for racial representa­tion among coaches feared the odds of Bieniemy landing a head job job as head

coach dwindled with each passing year. Bieniemy’s plight has been emblematic of the upward mobility obstacles many Black coaches in the league face.

According to USA TODAY Sports research, which tracked interviews using team announceme­nts and news media reports, 15 different teams have interviewe­d Bieniemy in the past five hiring cycles.

Now, he’s heading to the Commanders, still as an offensive coordinato­r.

Who replaces Bieniemy in Kansas City?

In accordance with the Rooney Rule, the Chiefs will have to interview at least one external minority candidate for their offensive coordinato­r vacancy. Quarterbac­ks coach Matt Nagy, however, is a leading candidate for the job, NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported.

Nagy served as the Chiefs offensive coordinato­r from 2016 to 2017 before being hired as the Chicago Bears head coach. He returned to the staff this past fall after he was let go by the Bears.

 ?? USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Eric Bieniemy was the Chiefs offensive coordinato­r five seasons. K.C. won two Super Bowl titles.
USA TODAY SPORTS Eric Bieniemy was the Chiefs offensive coordinato­r five seasons. K.C. won two Super Bowl titles.

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