The question of whether Chiefs coach Andy Reid would walk away with a second Super Bowl win disappeared as quickly as it bubbled up.
Reid has a little to do with it, too. Yes, Mahomes has a lot to do with it. Heโs currently fifth on the all-time wins list with 247, based on 24 straight years of coaching.
Coach Andy Reid said after Super Bowl LVII that he planned to coach the Chiefs again in 2023.
He would join a list of four head coaches with at least three Super Bowl wins if he gets another one, and the Chiefs appear in position to at least be strong contenders again next season. Reid is the 14th head coach to win at least two Super Bowls. Whenever that time is right for him, we'll embrace it.
The coach captured his second title in three tries with Kansas City on Sunday night.
After a pregame report that he'd consider retiring with a win, Reid sure sounded ready to keep coaching Sunday night.
The longtime Chiefs coach is a lock for Canton one day. However, he's having ideas about retiring at the end of the season, according to Fox Sports' Jay ...
"'The biggest difference between this Super Bowl for me and the years past, I'm trying to enjoy these," Reid told Glazer. At 64 years old, Reid is third-oldest head coach in the NFL. However, he's among the oldest coaches in the NFL and has more than done enough to call it quits, if he so chooses. I have a decision I have to make after this game.'" A potential last ride for Andy Reid? "But he said, 'Look, I'm not getting any younger, I still have a young quarterback.
Andy Reid, awash in celebratory confetti following his Kansas City Chiefs' Super Bowl LVII win over the Philadelphia Eagles, said he's staying put as the ...
With his second Super Bowl win with the Chiefs, Reid became the 14th NFL head coach to claim multiple Super Bowls and did so against his old squad, the Philadelphia Eagles. "The coaches for getting at the young guys, you know, the young guys played well today. And following the Chiefs' second Super Bowl win in four seasons, he's headed back as Kansas City continues to make its argument as the NFL's next dynasty. "Credit to my staff for all the hard work in the offseason," Chiefs general manager Brett Veach told NFL Network's James Palmer after the game. I'm good with what I'm doing right now. I still enjoy doing what I'm doing.