Patrick Mahomes was quite unhappy with the way the Chiefs’ first half ended

Patrick Mahomes was less than happy with Eric Bieniemy’s call to shut it down at the end of the first half against the Colts.

It’s not uncommon for players and coaches to argue on the field when things go wrong. But you don’t often see Kansas City Chiefs quarterback and offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy going at it in such a fashion.

This did happen, however, at the end of the first half of the Chiefs’ Week 3 game against the Indianapolis Colts. The Chiefs had third-and-14 at their own 42-yard line after running back Jerick McKinnon gained six yards with seconds left in the first half. Mahomes wanted to run another play, while Bieniemy wanted to head into the tunnel up 14-10.

Mahomes was not amused by this response as the clock ran out. Head coach Andy Reid, who has had his share of late-and-close clock management issues, had to intervene.

Given the Chiefs’ general “score as many points as possible” philosophy, you can understand why Mahomes might have been a bit put off.

Chiefs line up in ‘choir huddle’ to honor the late Len Dawson

The Chiefs lined up in their old-school “choir huddle” as a fitting tribute to the late, great Len Dawson.

It could easily be said that in peak value, Patrick Mahomes is the most important quarterback in Kansas City Chiefs history. But from a career value perspective, Mahomes still has a way to go before he’ll match Len Dawson. The Hall-of-Famer, who passed away Wednesday at age 87, played for the Chiefs from 1962 (their last season as the Dallas Texans) to 1975. Dawson played in two Super Bowls, including Super Bowl I against the Green Bay Packers, and he was the Most Valuable Player of Super Bowl IV in Kansas City’s 23-7 win over the Minnesota Vikings. Dawson was a seven-time Pro Bowler, a two-time First-Team All-Pro, the 1973 NFL Man of the Year, and a broadcasting legend both calling Chiefs games, and for his time with HBO’s “Inside the NFL” from 1977 through 2001.

On Thursday night, the Chiefs honored Dawson by replicating the “choir huddle” the team lined up in during Dawson’s time with the team. Mahomes came out to run it, the Chiefs were called for a delay of game penalty, and then Mahomes left the field to be replaced by backup Chad Henne.

It was a lovely and fitting tribute.

Mahomes was also seen wearing a Len Dawson hoodie in warm-ups.

Charles Goldman, editor of our Chiefs Wire site, was one of many who wanted to see this happen.

The Chiefs didn’t run “65 Toss Power Trap” — a nod to head coach Hank Stram’s utterly brilliant and hilarious miked-up segment in Super Bowl IV — but they got everything else just right.