Chiefs operate through COVID-19 pandemic

The Kansas City Chiefs are currently operating from home to prepare for the 2020 draft, and whatever the future may hold.

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Sports

April 3, 2020 - 4:29 PM

Head coach Andy Reid of the Kansas City Chiefs talks to press after defeating San Francisco 49ers by 31 - 20 in Super Bowl LIV at Hard Rock Stadium on February 02, 2020 in Miami, Fl. Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images/TNS

The sixth-winningest coach in NFL history is sitting at his desk, with a large computer monitor, a laptop and an iPad stationed on a brown antique coffee table his wife provided.

Chiefs coach Andy Reid has the essentials nearby — sticky notes, Extra chewing gum and hand sanitizer. He’s in a rolling office chair, though this room is nothing like an office in the traditional sense.

It’s his basement.

Amid a coronavirus pandemic that has prevented NFL teams from accessing their facilities, the blueprint for a Super Bowl championship defense is being outlined here, on the bottom floor of Reid’s home in Kansas City.

“You know what?” he said. “It’s not bad.”

The Chiefs removed employees from their offices two weeks ago to abide by suggested guidelines from the CDC, restrictions that have since been enforced throughout the NFL.

But the work marches on.

The NFL’s free agency period opened last month, and the Chiefs have acquired offensive lineman Mike Remmers, cornerback Antonio Hamilton and quarterback Jordan Ta’amu. The NFL Draft will progress as scheduled later this month, albeit remotely.

And there is self-evaluation and scheme analysis to be done. The Chiefs are conducting meetings via online video-conference calls on Zoom and WebEx. Every day, defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo meets online with the defensive coaches while offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy does the same with coaches on his side of the football.

“We’re doing everything from home — working our social distancing from far away here,” Reid said Thursday during a teleconference call he took from his basement. “It’s interesting. For old guys like me, learning all this new technology is pretty good. These young guys, they just whip right through it. For us old guys, we have to learn everything.”

The NFL has announced it will delay the start of offseason on-field programs due to COVID-19, but the length of the face-to-face hiatus remains unknown. Reid has prepared for several scenarios, mapping out plans for different stages of an offseason in which the NFL aims to eventually allow teams back into their respective buildings.

Until then, it’s business as usual in the NFL.

But in a most unusual manner.

“I think it could help in a positive way,” Reid said of the league continuing its calendar through the pandemic, but emphasizing the uncertainty. “But again, I know it’s a sensitive area. There’s two sides to it. There are people that are suffering and dying from this. The league is very aware of that.

“On the other hand, I think it could be a real positive; it gives a little bit of life back to the country right now. I’m sensitive to both sides of that, as I know the league is.”

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