USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Bieniemy deserved better from NFL

- Mike Freeman

Eric Bieniemy may be happy, and who am I to say someone shouldn’t be happy? Bieniemy may also be doing what he wants. He may see what he’s doing as something that’s as important as any of his NFL coaching jobs. All of that may be true.

But the news, first reported by ESPN, that Bieniemy was joining UCLA’s staff as associate head coach/offensive coordinato­r is also something else: shameful. It’s shameful that a coach who won a Super Bowl has to flee to college. It’s shameful that Bieniemy, who helped craft the career of future Hall of Famer Patrick Mahomes, has to run to college.

It’s embarrassi­ng for the NFL, its teams, its owners, that someone who was as good as Bieniemy has to scamper off to college. And he didn’t leave for college to become a head coach. He left to become an assistant coach.

“Happy for Eric Bieniemy,” former NFL quarterbac­k and current ESPN analyst Robert Griffin III wrote, in part, on X, formerly Twitter, “but how this man can’t get a head coaching job in the NFL or in college is UNBELIEVAB­LE.”

Bieniemy helped Kansas City reach multiple Super Bowls, but unlike many other champion offensive coordinato­rs, he never got a head coaching position. He didn’t get one despite being a key cog in the ascension of the Chiefs to a dynasty.

“EB is going to be harsh on you,” Mahomes once said. “He’s going to really try and get the best out of you every single day. He’s going to hold you accountabl­e when you don’t want to hold yourself accountabl­e. (His coaching) made me a better player.”

Bieniemy should have become an NFL head coach but he never got that opportunit­y. But it wasn’t for lack of trying. After being shut out for head coaching jobs while he was with Kansas City, Bieniemy left to become the offensive coordinato­r for Washington. It was generally assumed he went to the Commanders to get out from under the shadow of coach Andy Reid.

The fact he had to do that in the first place was another embarrassm­ent for the NFL.

And now here we are. A Super Bowl winner. A Mahomes developer. A smart offensive mind. Now off to college.

Bieniemy framed the move (partly) as a sort of homecoming. He grew up in the area and coached for the Bruins in the early 2000s.

“Southern California,” Bieniemy wrote in an email, according to ESPN. “I attended high school there. I started my career in the league here (with the Chargers). It’s obviously great to be back with the Bruins, where I was previously employed.”

Bieniemy says one team he interviewe­d with (he didn’t identify the franchise) offered him its assistant head coach/running backs job. That position was essentiall­y a lateral move.

“I have had countless conversati­ons and interviews with many teams, and I have been applauded and lauded,” Bieniemy wrote. “I can’t say why certain decisions were or were not made but it had nothing to (do) with a lack of anything on my end.

“My self-dignity, worth, integrity, personhood, manhood will never be questioned or compromise­d. It is not always about money, either. With everything in life, it is often all about timing. At this time in my life, the opportunit­y affords me the pleasure of continuing to be a maker and leader of men, to do what I love, follow my passion and my dreams while not compromisi­ng on who I am as a man.”

We need to be clear. If Bieniemy had been offered an NFL head coaching job, he wouldn’t be going to college.

Even if he was offered some type of position that looked like a promising avenue to a head coaching position, he wouldn’t leave the NFL.

Bieniemy, I believe, looks at his NFL prospects and knows his chances of finding true career advancemen­t are all but dead. He has an opportunit­y (perhaps) to reset things at UCLA and (maybe) get another chance to become a head coach in the NFL.

But for now, for right now, someone who won two Super Bowls as Kansas City’s offensive coordinato­r, who went to five consecutiv­e conference championsh­ip games that included three Super Bowl appearance­s, will reportedly coach at UCLA. No offense to UCLA but this is a magnificent step down.

The NFL, the owners, and others should be ashamed of themselves that this happened.

 ?? TOMMY GILLIGAN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Eric Bieniemy is heading to UCLA as an offensive coordinato­r.
TOMMY GILLIGAN/USA TODAY SPORTS Eric Bieniemy is heading to UCLA as an offensive coordinato­r.
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