Patrick Mahomes greets the Chiefs’ new coach with a playful message that quietly puts Travis Kelce in the spotlight.

The Kansas City Chiefs are officializing moves on the coaching staff. However, everything was fine and well, until the team posted a reel of Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes announced it, but the tight end got a surprising answer from his quarterback in a plain, simple question.

Travis Kelce asked Patrick Mahomes who was his best friend on the team and he only could pick one. Mahomes answer was simple: “Eric Bieniemy.” Now, everyone expected him to say Kelce, after all they even have a porterhouse together. Instead of getting mad, Kelce said it was a good one, and as the cherry on top, he said, “Running this thing like Eric Bieniemy’s back.”

Obviously a skit, Mahomes and Kelce are in fact real best friends. But, what is true is they are both clearly happy to see Bieniemy back as the team’s offensive coordinator. Under him, they both had career years.

Có thể là hình ảnh về bóng đá và văn bản cho biết '色 1G A CO BREAKING 00'

What does the Bieniemy hire mean for Kelce?

Travis Kelce’s future was up in the air. It was rumored that he’d might be retiring after this season. However, it seems he might delay his retirement thanks to Bieniemy’s return. Bieniemy has the character and creativity to bring positivism back into a team that saw plenty of setbacks this season.

With Bieniemy as OC, the Chiefs ranked first three times, third, and sixth in total yards. Then Matt Nagy came, and the offense dipped, ranking ninth, 17th, and 20th in his tenure. While Andy Reid is calling the plays, this still means the coordinator is important for the offense to click. It seems like Kelce knows it, and he might think a career-resurgence could be brewing.

The Chiefs need Bieniemy to be the answer

The Chiefs are desperate to get back in Super Bowl contention. After all, they spent from 2018 to 2024 at least going to the Conference Final. This year they didn’t even get to the playoffs, hence they want to avoid the end of their dynasty.

If Bieniemy doesn’t solve the problem on offense, then that means the Chiefs offense is severely undertalented. That’s also something that has been talked about. Hence, the Chiefs really trust Bieniemy can turn things around, or else they will have to compromise themselves looking for weapons.

Related Posts

Alex Gonzaga Reveals the Gender of Her Baby with Mikee Morada!

   Alex Gonzaga Reveals the Gender of Her Baby with Mikee Morada! Introduction Alex Gonzaga has thrilled fans worldwide by revealing the gender of her unborn child…

Alex Gonzaga and Mikee Morada Reveal Baby Room Under Construction for Their Child

Introduction Excitement filled the air as Alex Gonzaga and Mikee Morada gave fans a first look at the nursery they are preparing for their upcoming child. The…

TAMMY WYNETTE SAID HE WAS THE ONLY SINGER WHO COULD HOLD A CANDLE TO GEORGE JONES — AND THIS ONE SONG PROVED IT. Vern Gosdin didn’t just sing this song. He bled through every single word of it. His co-writer Max D. Barnes had buried his 18-year-old son in a car accident — then carried that unspeakable grief in silence for over a decade before it finally became lyrics. This isn’t some barroom ballad. It’s an old widower’s quiet, devastating warning to a young fool who doesn’t yet know what real loneliness feels like — the kind that only comes when the person you love is beneath the ground. With that impossibly pure baritone — the voice Tammy Wynette herself bowed to — Gosdin delivered those words with such unbearable tenderness that grown men wept alone in their trucks. He didn’t dramatize the pain. He simply named it. And naming it was enough to break you. Some say what happened next in Gosdin’s career made this performance even more heartbreaking than anyone realized at the time…

Tammy Wynette Said Vern Gosdin Was the Only Singer Who Could Hold a Candle to George Jones — and This Song Showed Why Some songs sound good…

HE JOINED THE GRAND OLE OPRY AT 24 — BEFORE HE EVER HAD A RECORD DEAL. 65 YEARS LATER, THEY TOLD HIM HE WAS “TOO OLD AND TOO COUNTRY.” Stonewall Jackson lost his father at two. Grew up under an abusive stepfather on a dirt farm in south Georgia. Lied about his age to join the Army at sixteen. When he finally walked into Nashville with nothing but a demo tape and a prayer, the Opry said yes within twenty-four hours — making him the only artist in history to become a member before releasing a single song. One hit conquered both the country and pop charts, and for over a decade, he was untouchable. Then the industry quietly erased him. His last public performance? Singing goodbye at George Jones’s funeral. Sixty-five years of loyalty — and in the end, the stage he built his life on told him he was no longer welcome.

Stonewall Jackson’s Long Road From Georgia Hardship to Grand Ole Opry Glory Stonewall Jackson’s life never moved in a straight line. It began in pain, carried through…

“WE’LL NEVER FORGET YOU, LEGEND.” — GEORGE STRAIT AND ALAN JACKSON STOOD SIDE BY SIDE TO SAY GOODBYE TO CHUCK NORRIS, AND THE ENTIRE ROOM BROKE DOWN. The room was heavy with grief. Family, friends, fans — all waiting in silence. Then George Strait and Alan Jackson walked to the stage together. No big introduction. No spectacle. Just two country legends honoring a man who meant everything. From the first note, Strait’s smooth voice blended with Jackson’s raw delivery, and something shifted in the room. People leaned into each other. Tears fell quietly. Every chord carried decades of respect, every lyric felt like a living memory of Chuck’s courage and kindness. When the last note faded, nobody moved. The silence said everything — George Strait, Alan Jackson, and a farewell that no one in that room will ever forget.

When George Strait and Alan Jackson Took the Stage, the Room Fell Silent It was an evening filled with grief, reflection, and deep admiration. Family, friends, and…

“THIS SONG WAS NEVER MEANT TO BE HEARD” — VINCE GILL RECORDED A SECRET TRACK ABOUT HIS FATHER AND LOCKED IT AWAY FOR YEARS. Vince Gill never needed to prove anything. His voice alone could carry more grief than most people dare to speak out loud. 20 Grammy Awards — more than any male country artist in history. Yet the song that meant the most to him was one he never released. After losing his father, Vince walked into the studio alone. No band, no engineer. Just a guitar and a voice barely holding together. He recorded a song about the man who taught him everything — then locked the tape away and told no one. Years later, that recording quietly surfaced. And when his voice cracks on the second verse — still raw, still aching — you realize some music isn’t made for charts. It’s made to say what a son never could while his father was still alive 😢

“This Song Was Never Meant to Be Heard” — The Vince Gill Recording That Stayed Hidden for Years Vince Gill has spent a lifetime singing the kinds…