Andy Reid is preparing for his 35th NFL season, but the Kansas City Chiefs head coach still sounds energized rather than close to finished.
The 68-year-old already has one of the greatest coaching resumes in league history, yet retirement does not appear to be on his immediate timeline.
That matters because Kansas City is coming off a 6-11 season, and Reid’s presence remains the franchise’s greatest stabilizer around Patrick Mahomes.
Andy Reid keeps Chiefs retirement question on hold
Speaking to Stephen A. Smith, Reid made it clear that his future still depends on his joy, energy, and whether he can maintain an operating standard at a championship level.
“Yeah, you know, I feel like we’re pretty lucky to be doing what we’re doing. We’re one out of 32 guys in the whole world. And as long as you still enjoy it, you do it, and if you can keep yourself at the highest level mentally and physically, then you’ve got a chance. I’ve got all these young guys around me that keep me young. Even though I look old.”
Reid’s NFL journey began in Green Bay under Mike Holmgren in 1992 before he made his name as HC for the Philadelphia Eagles from 1999 to 2012, and with Kansas City from 2013 onwards. He spent 14 seasons with the Eagles, led them to five NFC Championship games, and later turned the Chiefs into three-time Super Bowl champions.

His career record includes more than 270 regular-season wins, three rings, and one of the best quarterback-coach partnerships ever with Mahomes.
Reid is under contract through 2029, so another two to four years still feels realistic if his health and motivation hold. Kansas City has internal names to watch, including Matt Nagy, Steve Spagnuolo, Dave Toub, and Eric Bieniemy, but no obvious Reid replacement exists.
Chiefs’ Super Bowl hopes need a fast AFC West response
The Chiefs are no longer entering the season as the obvious AFC measuring stick.
ESPN lists Kansas City at 15-1 to win Super Bowl LXI, behind the Rams, Ravens, Bills, and Seahawks, while also giving the Chiefs a 10.5 win total and +160 division odds.
The AFC West looks tougher than it has in years. Denver’s defense, the Chargers’ rise, and a potentially improved Raiders team all make Reid’s margin smaller.
Still, Mahomes changes the math if healthy, and Reid’s offense should be more dangerous with added speed and a reworked staff.
Another ringless season will not automatically force Reid out, but age makes every disappointment heavier. If Kansas City misses the playoffs again, the retirement question will return much louder.
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