Many successful NFL coaches find success with their second team, which bodes well for Rivera’s takeover with the Redskins.
When it comes to head coaches in the NFL, most of them age like a fine wine. That’s not to say that some can’t be great in their early years as the top-guy on a coaching staff — look at Kyle Shanahan, Sean McVay, or Mike Tomlin — but most coaches start to find their groove a bit down the line.
In fact, it is usually on a coach’s second team where he really finds the sweet spot, and success starts to reveal itself. Take Andy Reid, or Bill Belichick, for example. Reid spent 14 solid years with the Philadelphia Eagles, but it wasn’t until he came to Kansas City where he finally got a Super Bowl ring this season with the Chiefs. For Belichick, arguably the greatest coach of all-time, four of his first five years as a head coach with the Cleveland Browns were major disappointments. Of course, he’s found great success with his second team, winning six rings with the New England Patriots.
This all bodes well for Ron Rivera, who is moving into his second head coaching gig in the NFL with the Washington Redskins. Rivera spent eight years with the Panthers, winning two Coach of the Year awards and making it to the Super Bowl 50 against the Denver Broncos.
Now, having that experience of success, with the addition of learning from his mistakes after being fired near the end of the 2019 season, Rivera will be able to start fresh in Washington and hopefully build a winning team with the Redskins.
If history is any indication, his coaching prime is on the way.
The Chiefs won Super Bowl LIV by staying true to their offensive plan, and unleashing what they had learned through tape study.
Every coach studies opponent tendencies. The most effective coaches put their players in the best possible positions to attack those tendencies and win. In their 31-20 win over the 49ers in Super Bowl LIV, the Chiefs’ offensive coaches, led by head coach Andy Reid, offensive coordinator Eric Bienemy, and quarterbacks coach Mike Kafka, did a masterful job of creating big plays when they were most needed. This was never more evident than on the Chiefs’ two most explosive plays of the game — the 44-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes to Tyreek Hill with 7:13 left in the fourth quarter, and Mahomes’ 38-yard completion to Sammy Watkins with 3:44 remaining.
Each play was desperately needed. Kansas City was down 20-10 on the drive that contained the Hill catch, and the Chiefs ended that drive four plays later with a one-yard touchdown pass to Travis Kelce. The Hill catch came on third-and-15 from the Kansas City 35-yard line, and it pushed the ball to the San Francisco 21. Three Mahomes incompletions followed, but a 20-yard pass interference call against safety Tarvarius Moore set the ball at the one-yard line for the Kelce score. Without that Hill catch, though, the game likely has a very different result.
The Watkins catch came on second-and-7 from the San Francisco 48-yard line. It put the ball at the San Francisco 10-yard line. Mahomes then ran for six yards, was sacked on the next play, and then found running back Damien Williams for a five-yard score. That put the Chiefs up 24-20 and gave them the lead they would not relinquish.
Perhaps the most interesting thing about both plays is that they played specifically to San Francisco’s defensive tendencies, and Kansas City’s coaches and players were smart enough to dial them up even as their offense had been severely challenged to that point by Robert Saleh’s squad. Early in the game, San Francisco kept him to shorter stuff with their pass rush, which he told me after the game.
“That was just how the game turned out,” he said. “Those guys were getting upfield — obviously that’s a lot of great defensive linemen, and they were covering downfield. So, we hit some short stuff, and when I saw their safeties coming up [in the box], we tried to take some shots later on in the game.”
The 44-yard Hill play has all kinds of levels to it. As ESPN’s Dan Orlovsky explained, the Chiefs love to test defenses with a play with a three-by-one set in which Kelce and one of their speed receivers (Hill in this case) will each run inside routes, with the outside receiver (Watkins in this case) running either a go route or an in-cut based on the coverage.
There’s a version of the play, also based on attacking coverage rules, in which Hill runs what looks like the inside route, and then, he’ll break out to the corner route. That was what broke San Francisco’s defense up.
“They were playing this kind of robber coverage all game long, where the safety was coming down and robbing our deep crossing routes,” Mahomes said. “We had a good play call on where [tight end Travis] Kelce did a little stutter deep cross. We had Tyreek getting one-on-one with that safety, and the biggest thing is that we needed really good protection. It was a long route. It was actually the same play we ran against New England in the playoffs last year [in the 2018 AFC Championship Game], getting him down the sideline. We had great protection, I put it out there, and Tyreek made a great play.”
Rolling it back to the Chiefs’ 2018 AFC Championship loss to the Patriots was a fascinating reveal by Mahomes, coming as it did right after the Super Bowl win. Compare Hill’s 44-yarder in the Super Bowl…
…with this 42-yard play against the Patriots. It’s the same concept, flipped to the other side of the field.
Get the defense thinking Hill’s going to run the crosser based on tape, have him blast to the corner, and there’s just no way the deep safety is going to be able to adjust to that.
Another wrinkle here — Kafka told Peter King of NBC Sports that in the first half, the Chiefs ran a version of the play that had Hill staying inside on the crosser. One example of a similar concept is this 10-yard pass to Damien Williams with 4:59 left in the second quarter. Here, both Hill and Kelce work inside, and linebacker Kwon Alexander (No. 56) bumps Hill near the line to affect his route before taking off to try and tackle Williams. Ward, meanwhile, is skating off to the deep third of coverage.
This defensive iteration might have worked more effectively than the one the 49ers had on the 44-yarder.
The Chiefs have an implicit understanding of how Hill’s speed off the line and through his routes affects coverage, and they’re brilliant at exploiting it. The 49ers had done a great job of combining pass rush and tight coverage, but this is about when the Chiefs started raining down Kryptonite all over the field.
The Watkins play was interesting more in s specific matchup and technique sense. After the game, Watkins referred to a 65-yard completion from Aaron Rodgers to Davante Adams in the NFC Championship game as fodder for how the Chiefs would challenge Sherman specifically.
“I just knew it was one-on-one from film study,” Watkins said. “On a play where he was covering Davante Adams, I saw [Sherman] coming off an inside release when he’d been playing heavy outside the whole game. I knew Pat could make the throw, and that’s why we work on those types of situations.”
And then, the dagger.
“I just thank Davante Adams because I saw him kill [Sherman] on the inside release.”
Devastating, and accurate. Here’s the Adams play. Watch how Adams (No. 17, bottom of the screen) takes an outside jab step on Sherman, gets Sherman going one way, and then takes it inside.
And now, the Watkins version. It’s the same outside-to-inside jab step, and a similar result. As great as Sherman as been throughout his career, quick angles are the best way to beat him off the line.
Another common denominator here is how the safety over Sherman (Jimmie Ward in both cases) has eyes to the strong side of the formation before coming back. That leaves Sherman with iffy help over the top. When Watkins mentioned the one-on-one, that likely means the Chiefs saw Ward’s involvement to the three-receiver side (probably working off Kelce, who went in motion and back pre-snap), and could win to that side of the field.
Perhaps the most admirable aspect of what the Chiefs put together late in Super Bowl LIV was that, when they were down 20-10 late in the fourth quarter, they didn’t coach scared. They didn’t implode. They had studied what the 49ers did — and perhaps more importantly, what they couldn’t do — and unleashed the right concepts when they were needed the most.
Coming back from double-digit deficits in each of their three postseason games? Well, that’s not great for the blood pressure, but if there’s one thing the 2019 Chiefs proved true, it’s not how you start, but how you finish. And if you want to finish with the Lombardi Trophy in your hands, you’d better get cracking on the tape.
Touchdown Wire editor Doug Farrar previously covered football for Yahoo! Sports, Sports Illustrated, Bleacher Report, the Washington Post, and Football Outsiders. His first book, “The Genius of Desperation,” a schematic history of professional football, was published by Triumph Books in 2018 and won the Professional Football Researchers Association’s Nelson Ross Award for “Outstanding recent achievement in pro football research and historiography.”
Andy Reid told reporters the morning after beating the Niners that once Mahomes became the starting quarterback at Texas Tech, Brett Veach — who is now the Chiefs’ general manager — was all about him.
Andy Reid told reporters the morning after beating the Niners that once Mahomes became the starting quarterback at Texas Tech, Brett Veach — who is now the Chiefs’ general manager — was all about him.
Andy Reid told reporters the morning after beating the Niners that once Mahomes became the starting quarterback at Texas Tech, Brett Veach — who is now the Chiefs’ general manager — was all about him.
Andy Reid told reporters the morning after beating the Niners that once Mahomes became the starting quarterback at Texas Tech, Brett Veach — who is now the Chiefs’ general manager — was all about him.
Kansas City sits atop Touchdown Wire’s final 2019-20 Power Rankings, but coaching moves spur movement up and down our postseason list.
When we compiled the last Touchdown Wire Power Rankings of the regular season, we based them strictly on how teams fared in the 2019 season. That’s a tried and true formula and a fair way to judge how a team performed in that season.
Now, we’re going to take a slightly different approach. That’s because there already have been a lot of changes this offseason — coaching changes, changes at the top of the quarterback hierarchy and plenty of speculation about potentially significant player movement when the league year starts in March.
That’s why we’re taking a different approach to our postseason rankings. Yes, what a team did during the season will play heavily, but changes in 2020 also matter.
For example, the Washington Redskins were No. 31 in our rankings at the end of the regular season. But they’re moving up with the arrival of coach Ron Rivera, who will bring a sense of order that was previously lacking.
Now, that the Super Bowl has been played, it’s time for the final Touchdown Wire Power Rankings for the 2019-20 season.
32. Cincinnati Bengals
(2-14; Previous rank: 32)
The Bengals were consistently dismal all season, and that’s why they’re holding onto the No. 32 spot. Head coach Zac Taylor is lucky to be returning for a second season, but owner Mike Brown has been unusually patient through the years. Maybe that patience will pay off this time. The Bengals get a great reward for being so bad. They earned the first pick in the draft, and it’s almost universally believed they’ll use it on LSU quarterback Joe Burrow, the 2019 Heisman Trophy winner. Burrow might make a big difference right away. But he needs help. The offensive line needs an overhaul, and it’s imperative that the team re-signs receiver A.J. Green, who can make Burrow look good in a hurry.
31. Carolina Panthers
(5-11; Previous rank: 26)
We dropped the Panthers to No. 31 because they’ve had so many changes. And none of them are clearly for the better. Owner David Tepper continues to put his stamp on the team, and things are likely to get worse before they get better. Tepper fired coach Ron Rivera late last season. Rivera is highly respected around the league. Tepper replaced him with Matt Rhule, who has a reputation as a program builder on the college level but has never been an NFL head coach. Throw in Luke Kuechly’s surprise retirement and the parting of ways with tight end Greg Olsen, and the roster is worse today than at the end of the season. Plus, there’s no telling what the Panthers will do with injury-plagued quarterback Cam Newton.
30. Detroit Lions
(3-12-1; Previous rank: 30)
Head coach Matt Patricia and general manager Bob Quinn held onto their jobs despite a disastrous season. The only reason I can see for that is that owner Martha Ford gave Patricia a pass because he played much of the season without quarterback Matthew Stafford. The veteran Stafford isn’t a world beater, but he puts up stats and keeps the Lions competitive. Stafford’s return will help the Lions, but Patricia and Quinn have to go out and acquire more talent if they’re going to contend for a playoff spot. If they don’t, they’ll be gone.
29. New York Giants
(4-12. Previous rank: 28)
Head coach Pat Shurmur was fired, and that’s not a bad thing. But he was replaced by Joe Judge. That likely prompted many New York fans to say, “Joe Who?” because Judge wasn’t a household name. Judge was the special teams and wide receivers coach for the Patriots. His New England pedigree undoubtedly helped him land the job. But this is a tough gig. Shurmur and predecessor Ben McAdoo failed miserably. Judge doesn’t have a lot to work with besides quarterback Daniel Jones and running back Saquon Barkley.
28. Jacksonville Jaguars
(6-10. Previous rank: 29)
The Jaguars move up one spot in our rankings — mainly because they kept coach Doug Marrone but got rid of executive vice president of football operations Tom Coughlin. That should take pressure off Marrone, because Coughlin was a control freak and loomed over every move the coach made. Now this truly is Marrone’s team. His first big decision will be whether to start veteran quarterback Nick Foles or second-year pro Gardner Minshew. Neither is a bad choice.
27. Washington Redskins
(3-13. Previous rank: 31)
Washington scooped up former Carolina coach Ron Rivera to replace the fired Jay Gruden and interim replacement Bill Callahan. That was the best coaching hire of the postseason. Now, the Redskins have an adult running the show. Rivera, a former linebacker for the Chicago Bears, is known as a players’ coach. That’s only partly true. He also is a no-nonsense coach, who is firmly in control of his team. His specialty is defense, but his first task in Washington will be to find out if the Redskins can win with second-year quarterback Dwayne Haskins.
26. Miami Dolphins
(5-11. Previous rank: 27)
Remember all the early talk last year about how the Dolphins were tanking and could go 0-16. That looked like a possibility for a bit. But coach Brian Flores held his team together, and the Dolphins started winning games, including the season finale at New England. They took themselves out of contention for the No. 1 overall draft pick. But they still could land their quarterback of the future with the fifth overall pick — perhaps Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa or Oregon’s Justin Herbert. In the meantime, veteran Ryan Fitzpatrick will be around to guide the offense until a replacement is deemed ready for action.
25. Los Angeles Chargers
(5-11. Previous rank: 25)
Next season will be one of change for the Chargers. They’ll be moving into a new stadium they’ll share with the Rams. More importantly, they should have a new look on the field. Veteran quarterback Philip Rivers is almost certainly done after 16 seasons with the franchise. That has fueled wild speculation that New England quarterback Tom Brady could be coming to the Chargers. There’s some logic to this one. Brady has said he’s open to playing for another team. He owns a home in Los Angeles. The Chargers need wins. They also need help at the box office. There might not be a bigger drawing card than Brady. Maybe this is a pipe dream, but it’s not an impossibility.
LeBron James congratulates Travis Kelce, Andy Reid and the Kansas City Chiefs for winning the Super Bowl.
LeBron James watched with all of us as the Kansas City Chiefs came back from down 10 points in the fourth quarter against the San Francisco 49ers to win Super Bowl LIV 31-20. Following the victory, King James shouted the Chiefs All-Pro TE, Travis Kelce, out on Twitter along with their head coach Andy Reid.
Like James, Kelce is a native of Northeast Ohio having graduated from Cleveland Heights High School before starring at the University of Cincinnati on his way to the NFL. Kelce scored a pivotal touchdown late in the Super Bowl while finishing the game with six catches and 43 yards.
Meanwhile, Andy Reid finally cashed in a long-awaited Super Bowl victory after being the coach with the most wins in NFL history without winning the big game. He had previously led the Philadelphia Eagles to a Super Bowl that they lost to the New England Patriots.
Happy as hell for the big guy Andy Reid!! Congrats Coach!!! 👏🏾🙏🏾
Kansas City QB Patrick Mahomes was named the MVP of Super Bowl LIV after guiding the Chiefs to the 11-point victory. He finished 26-of-42 for 286 passing yards and two passing touchdowns, adding 29 rushing yards and one score on the ground.
During the second quarter, LeBron made his only commercial appearance of the game promoting a new all-electric Hummer by General Motors.
Andy Reid is going to celebrate with a very well-earned cheeseburger.
Andy Reid had already solidified his status as one of the best and most influential coaches in NFL history before Super Bowl 54, but after the Chiefs came from behind in the fourth quarter to stun the 49ers, Reid finally captured the championship trophy that had eluded him for so long. After 21 seasons as an NFL head coach, Reid is now a Super Bowl champion – and he can’t wait to celebrate with a massive cheeseburger.
Reid joined NFL Network after the game and said he wanted to celebrate by getting “the biggest cheeseburger you’ve ever seen…. might be a double.”
Andy Reid's going to get the biggest cheeseburger he can find, might make it a double pic.twitter.com/BjTeYvtPsb
In the end — this end, at least, the one everyone will remember now — Andy Reid didn’t have to make a decision about when to call time out. His quarterback didn’t vomit or not vomit in the huddle. Nothing came apart.
Reid kept the same mildly bewildered, mildly perturbed look on the mustachioed face he scrunches in between his hat brim and coat collar, even as his Kansas City Chiefs pulled away for a 31-20 win in Super Bowl LIV. He clutched that play card, the way he always does. Nothing about him said anything. Like usual. It had been this way for most of 22 seasons as an NFL head coach.
It looked all the same as it always had, just the way Andy Reid would want it, right up until the moment the orange gatorade hit him and he turned and shouted, releasing years of pent-up frustration, vanquishing the doubts caused by losing Super Bowl XXXIX, putting to rest any already ridiculous notion that he isn’t one of the better coaches in NFL history.
“Big Red” had trouble finding words to describe his feelings as the confetti showered him and his team. He appeared to not hear the question a Fox reported asked him, then replied with a brief cliche and let Patrick Mahomes step in.
It’s not like football coaches, on the whole, are very knowable. They strive to never say much. They’re often stern and serious, sometimes comically so (looking at you, Bill Belichick press conferences.) All of which is probably the product of having to lead 50-some elite athletes playing a brutal, exacting sport.
But Reid has been more of an enigma than most. The average NFL fan may have come into Sunday thinking he was a good but not great coach who was large and wore Hawaiian shirts and happened to appear in two sort-of-funny videos:
Reid was so consistently successful (except in the big games) that he sort of faded into the background of a league where young geniuses tend to make headlines. When he crossed over into the national conversation, it was too often because he’d long ago become the avatar for poor clock management (and that was overblown, as things tend to be.)
Before joining the Chiefs, Reid coached in Philadelphia for 14 seasons, endearing himself to fans by orchestrating a turn around in his second year and then leading the team to four-straight NFC East first-place finishes, losing in three NFC championship games before reaching the Super Bowl and losing to the Patriots. The Eagles then sandwiched fourth-placed finishes around another division title, and Philly fans, craving something more than an effective and steady coach, began tiring of Reid. He wasn’t retained after the 2012 season — the Eagles had just failed to make the playoffs in consecutive years for the first time in Reid’s tenure — and the city exhaled.
Reid was then, and remains now, often drab. His players and friends say he jokes around off the field, and has myriad interests, but he rarely showed it. Nor was he liable to shout or snarl. He’d mumble through injury updates and then he’d drop what became his signature line when it was time for reporters to ask questions: “Time’s yours.”
That was Reid: efficient and uninterested in ostentation. Which can be grating when the team isn’t winning.
The Eagles, though, sent this perfect tweet after the game:
Players appear to adore Reid. By most accounts he’s an extremely hard worker who is honest with them. Which is what players want. He’s considered a players coach — he wants them to show their personalities, there’s no overriding Eagles or Chiefs way — who gets his message across when he needs to.
Reid’s life has hardly gone without tragedy; his oldest son Garrett, died of an overdose at Eagles training camp in 2012. Garrett and another brother, Britt, had previously served time in prison on drug charges. Britt is now a coach on the Chiefs staff. I’m looking forward to reading the story of those two finally getting a quiet moment in the next few days to reflect on all they’ve been through .
There was some question in Philadelphia last week about whether Eagles fans should delight in Reid winning a Super Bowl. There was only ever one serious answer to that question. Reid deserved to win a Lombardi Trophy as much as anyone can, and football is so often a sport where that doesn’t actually matter.
Which is probably why Reid, at his moment of triumph, did not suddenly find his words. There were no epic speeches or proclamations. What he seemed most interested in, what the cameras caught here and there, and reporters on the scene described, was giving bear hugs. Because with those, the message could not be more clear.
Andy Reid is a Super Bowl champion head coach, at last.
After 21 seasons as an NFL head coach, Andy Reid finally won his first Super Bowl in a thriller against the 49ers. Patrick Mahomes and the underrated Chiefs’ defense combined to engineer a 10-point comeback in the final quarter, and outscored San Francisco 21-0 in the fourth to win Super Bowl 54.
Reid’s victory is a feel-good moment for nearly everyone in the football world, and his players lined up to celebrate with him on the sideline once the game was sealed.
As a @Broncos fan it’s crazy watching the @Chiefs win but I met Andy Reid a week after my injury back in 2010 while in ICU and he would literally text me the first play of every game for the rest of year. So I will always wish nothing but the best for him. Congrats coach
I couldn’t be happier for Andy Reid. Such a kind and wonderful human being who reserves this more than anything. After all he and Tammy have been through including the loss of a child, imagine how that embrace felt ❤️ Time’s Yours Coach. pic.twitter.com/mtPj2GGBrr