Chiefs reached back 70 years for successful trick play on fourth down

Eric Bienemy and the Chiefs came up with a 70-year-old trick play to fool the 49ers in Super Bowl LIV.

Eric Bieniemy didn’t get any of the openings in this coaching carousel spin. And that’s bad on the teams who missed a chance to grab a bright mind and student of the game of football.

The Chiefs’ offensive coordinator was born in 1921 but that didn’t prevent him from coming up with a play that was used 20 years earlier when Kansas City faced a fourth down early in Super Bowl LIV.

You can’t always believe what you see is that the 49ers learned after being burned. Kansas City’s backfield looked like a choreographed boy band as it spun in unison. What San Francisco didn’t realize was quarterback Patrick Mahomes had moved behind the guard. That allowed Damien Williams to take a direct snap and run for the first down.

“You know what that game, that play comes from – if I’m not mistaken – a 1949 Rose Bowl (actually ’48),” Bieniemy said. “I probably shouldn’t be giving this away. The Rose Bowl Michigan vs. USC. And so, it’s just a play that we’ve been working and wondering when we can polish it off. It was fun to watch. It was fun to watch. And those guys did a great job of executing it. I mean all that hard work and practicing that play for the entire season, it just worked and it paid off.”

Michigan won that game 49-0 over USC to complete an undefeated season. Bienemy did a great job finding the play and using it to perfection in the Super Bowl.