Yuma Sun

Bieniemy introduced Thursday as Commanders offensive coordinato­r

- BY STEPHEN WHYNO

ASHBURN, Va. – Eric Bieniemy knew he was almost certainly leaving the Kansas City Chiefs before they won a second Super Bowl in four years.

After interviewi­ng 16 times for 15 different NFL head coaching jobs in past years, he also knew this time he probably was not getting another look to run a team. So, the longtime successful Chiefs offensive coordinato­r kept an eye out for his next challenge.

That turned out to be joining the Washington Commanders as offensive coordinato­r and assistant head coach, a gig under Ron Rivera that should give Bieniemy the chance to show what he can do out of the shadow of Andy Reid and two-time MVP Patrick Mahomes.

Bieniemy is ready – “fired up,” as he said multiple times at his introducto­ry news conference Thursday – to make Washington’s offense his own, call plays and shut out all the noise about why he isn’t an NFL coach in his own right.

“Being a head coach right now, it hasn’t happened,” Bieniemy said. “It’s not anything that’s going to impact me moving forward because the only thing I need to be concerned with is what’s important today. Today I got to be the best person that I can be. I got to be the best coach that I can be.”

Bieniemy, who turns 54 during training camp in August, became the best candidate out of more than a half-dozen interviews after Rivera went through the first week of interviews wanting to find someone quickly and started watching the playoffs instead. He saw what the Chiefs could do on offense and envisioned some of those characteri­stics with the Commanders, who relied on a stout defense to get to 8-8-1 last season.

“We’ve got our guy,” Rivera said proudly in introducin­g Bieniemy. “We really, truly feel we found the right guy. We found the guy that we believe can step up and be the guy that we’re looking for.”

Rivera also found a coach he was fortunate to scoop up as an assistant after Bieniemy was previously interviewe­d to coach the Atlanta Falcons, Arizona Cardinals, Carolina Panthers, Cincinnati Bengals, Denver Broncos, Detroit Lions, Houston Texans, Indianapol­is Colts, Jacksonvil­le

Jaguars, Los Angeles Chargers, Miami Dolphins, New Orleans Saints, New York Giants, Philadelph­ia Eagles – and the New York Jets twice.

Rivera sees a little of his path in his new play-caller after being a linebacker-turned defensive coordinato­r under a defensive coach, who had to go work for someone on the other side of the ball to get a head job.

“I interviewe­d eight, nine times before I got my opportunit­y. And I know it’s the same thing for him: Eventually he’s going to get that opportunit­y,” Rivera said, also citing Sean Mcdermott’s path from a coordinato­r under Reid to coach of the Buffalo Bills.

Bieniemy, who was running the Chiefs’ offense during their run of five consecutiv­e AFC championsh­ip game appearance­s with three trips to the Super Bowl, said he was only worried about two letters of the alphabet: “a W or an L.”

There have been far more losses than wins for Washington over the past couple of decades compared to Kansas City, and yet he was still ready to leave in what could be the middle of a modern day dynasty.

“One thing in this profession you learn is comfort is the enemy of progress,” Bieniemy said. “I don’t like being comfortabl­e, so I’m about accepting challenges and moving forward. This presents a challenge to me.”

Bieniemy inherits an offense that ranked 20th in the league last season and a second-year quarterbac­k in Sam Howell, who has one

game of pro experience and trails Mahomes by 228 NFL touchdown passes.

“I’m just super excited to have (Bieniemy) here,” said Howell, the 2022 fifthround pick out of North Carolina who goes into offseason workouts as the starter. “Obviously he came from an organizati­on with Patrick Mahomes, so they had a lot of success together. Hopefully we can kind of bring some of that over here.”

Asked why he chose this job, Bieniemy said, “Why not Washington?” and pointed to the talent already in place in offense. That starts with top wide receiver Terry Mclaurin, who’s signed long term and will be working under his third different play-caller since entering the league in 2019.

Mclaurin said Bieniemy “brings a championsh­ip-caliber” approach to Washington, which has not won the Super Bowl since the glory days of Joe Gibbs and Co. in the 1980s and early ‘90s.

Fresh off celebratin­g his second Super Bowl victory, Bieniemy did not wear his first championsh­ip ring to the team facility Thursday.

The several players from Howell and Mclaurin and beyond already know that, and Bieniemy hopes to show it to them starting next season, yet another as an assistant with coaching his own team a worry for down the line.

“I have to be accountabl­e to these men, so all that stuff about being a head coach, we could talk about that next year some time,” he said. “Right now, I’m focused on the job at hand.”

 ?? LUIS M. ALVAREZ/AP ?? ERIC BIENIEMY talks after being introduced as the new offensive coordinato­r and assistant head coach of the Washington Commanders during a press conference in Ashburn, Va. on Thursday.
LUIS M. ALVAREZ/AP ERIC BIENIEMY talks after being introduced as the new offensive coordinato­r and assistant head coach of the Washington Commanders during a press conference in Ashburn, Va. on Thursday.

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