When Eric Bieniemy talks about returning to the Kansas City Chiefs, he doesn’t frame it as a career move.
He calls it coming home.
The reunion began with a phone call from head coach Andy Reid, just one day after the Chicago Bears were eliminated from the playoffs. At the time, Bieniemy was serving as Chicago’s running backs coach. Reid didn’t waste time.
Within days, Bieniemy was back inside the Chiefs’ facility—back in his old office, breaking down offensive film, and already diagnosing what went wrong last season.
“Whenever Big Red picks up the phone,” Bieniemy said,
“that’s the one call you don’t ignore.”
Back Where It Started
Bieniemy previously served as Kansas City’s offensive coordinator from 2018 to 2022, a stretch that included Super Bowl titles, record-breaking production, and the rise of Patrick Mahomes into the face of the league.
Speaking on the Chiefs’ YouTube show Defending the Kingdom, Bieniemy described the emotional side of his return.
“I was here for 10 years. My family called this place home,”
he said.
“To reunite with people you’ve gone to battle with—that matters.”
So… What Needs to Change?
Bieniemy didn’t sugarcoat it. Fixing the Chiefs’ offense won’t come from flash—it will come from discipline, toughness, and accountability.
1. Smarter, Tougher Running Backs
Bieniemy was clear about his expectations:
“We need guys smart enough to handle our game plans
and tough enough to pick up a blitz—every single time.”
With Mahomes expected to drop back frequently (once he completes rehab from his knee injury), pass protection from the backfield is non-negotiable.
2. Run With Purpose
Speed alone won’t cut it.
“You have to run through somebody to make something happen,”
Bieniemy said.
He emphasized inside running, physicality, and second effort—turning short gains into momentum-shifting plays.
3. Win the Trenches
One lesson from Chicago hasn’t changed:
“It always starts up front.”
Offensive line play, Bieniemy stressed, must be the foundation. Without it, creativity doesn’t matter.
The ‘Finish’ Mentality
If there’s one word players will hear nonstop in training camp, it’s finish.
Bieniemy shared a moment from his playing days with the San Francisco 49ers, watching Jerry Rice complete every route through the end zone—every rep, every practice.
“That’s when it hit me,” Bieniemy said.
“Greatness isn’t accidental. Second effort becomes habit.”
His message to the Chiefs is blunt:
“There are a lot of great players in this league.
There aren’t a lot of great finishers.”
And that, in Bieniemy’s mind, is the real fix.
What This Means for Kansas City
This isn’t about reinventing the offense.
It’s about raising the standard again.
With Mahomes, Reid, and Bieniemy reunited, the Chiefs aren’t chasing innovation—they’re chasing execution.
Practice it right.
Finish every rep.
Then let Sundays take care of themselves.
