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Andrew Walter Reid (born March 19, 1958) is an American professional football coach who is the head coach for the Kansas City Chiefs of the National Football League (NFL). [1] Reid was previously the head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles from 1999 to 2012. [2] From 2001 to 2012, he was also the Eagles' executive vice president of football ...
Don Shula, the winningest head coach in NFL history Andy Reid has recorded the most wins in franchise history for two teams, the Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs. The following is a list of the National Football League (NFL) head coaches by wins. Don Shula holds the current records for regular season wins at 328. Shula’s tenure ...
Belichick won 31 postseason games during his career while Reid's career total now sits at 28. Below are the 10 coaches to log 12-plus playoff wins during their coaching careers: Bill Belichick: 31
Andy Reid's coaching career. Reid's coaching career began in 1982 while working as a graduate assistant at BYU. He then went on to coach offensive lines at San Francisco State, Northern Arizona ...
The Chiefs hosted the conference championship game for the NFL-record-tying third consecutive year, the other instance was during Andy Reid's tenure with the Philadelphia Eagles. [ 146 ] In Super Bowl LV against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers , Mahomes threw for 270 yards and two interceptions in the game as the Chiefs lost 31–9.
Andy Reid will face his former team, ... Chiefs’ victory over the Buffalo Bills in this season’s AFC championship game was the 28th postseason victory of Reid’s career, second all-time ...
Andy Reid was born February 26, 1954, in Hamilton, Ohio. He attended Robert A. Taft High School in that city. Reid played baseball and football in high school, starring as a halfback for the Tigers. The son of former University of Georgia and Green Bay Packers player Floyd "Breezy" Reid, [4] Andy
Back in September when Andy Reid notched his 270th career victory to tie Tom Landry for fourth place on the NFL career wins list, it triggered a thought that was part imagination and part logic: