Behind closed doors in Kansas City, something has shifted.
Less than three weeks after their season ended, Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs are already deep into what insiders describe as the most ruthless offensive reset of the Andy Reid era.
This is not about tweaks.
This is about rescue.
After a season where Mahomes looked human more often than heroic, head coach Andy Reid and GM Brett Veach have drawn a hard line: the franchise quarterback will no longer be asked to survive chaos â he will be set up to dominate again.
A coaching shake-up that speaks volumes
The clearest signal came with the return of offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy.
During Bieniemyâs previous tenure, Mahomes played the most efficient football of his career. His comeback has immediately reignited belief inside the building â and even sparked quiet speculation about what it could mean for veterans like Travis Kelce.
But Kansas City didnât stop there.
Reid made the hardest move of all: choosing performance over loyalty.
Wide receivers coach Connor Embree, running backs coach Todd Pinkston, and offensive assistant Matt Nagy are gone. These were not symbolic changes. They were admissions that the offense had stagnated â and Mahomes had been left carrying too much of the burden.
Why the Chiefsâ offense broke down
The warning signs were there all season.
Dropped passes.
Inconsistent route timing.
A running game that never truly threatened defenses.
Mahomes didnât dodge responsibility.
âI think just compounding mistakes,â he admitted in January.
âSome of the red-zone interceptions⊠thatâs stuff I hadnât done in the past.â
That honesty is exactly why Kansas City believes this reset can work.
New wide receivers coach Chad O’Shea has already been hired, while Bieniemyâs background as a former running back is expected to bring clarity and accountability to a shaky backfield.
The message is clear: better teaching, cleaner structure, fewer excuses.
Fixing predictability â the silent killer
Perhaps the most damaging flaw in 2025 was predictability.
The Chiefs leaned heavily on run-pass options, calling RPOs on 14.3% of all plays. On a staggering 92.1% of those snaps, Mahomes kept the ball and threw it.
Defenses didnât need genius coordinators to figure that out.
With the departure of self-scouting assistant Mark DeLeone, Reid now has both an opportunity â and a responsibility â to rebuild how the offense diagnoses its own habits.
Mahomes knows evolution is non-negotiable.
âWe werenât consistent enough,â he said.
âThat starts with me⊠and then it has to feed throughout the entire offense.â
The final piece: health, hunger, and patience
Of course, none of this matters without a healthy Mahomes.
His aim is to be ready for Week 1 â but history urges caution. Even Tom Brady took time to regain peak form after a major knee injury.
The Chiefs understand that rushing their franchise icon back too soon would undo everything theyâre trying to fix.
For now, the focus is alignment. Structure. Accountability.
And above all â hunger.
âIt sucks watching these games,â Mahomes admitted.
âI want to be out there⊠and hopefully that gives us the motivation to come back stronger next year.â
Kansas City is betting that this combination â a humbled MVP, a fearless coaching reset, and an organisation finally willing to change â could be the spark that brings an old dynasty roaring back to life






