Which Kansas City Chiefs from Super Bowl LIV have the best Hall of Fame chances?

KANSAS CITY, MO - FEBRUARY 05: Kansas City Chiefs owner Clark Hunt hoists the Vince Lombardi Trophy during the Kansas City Super Bowl parade on February 5, 2020 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Kyle Rivas/Getty Images)
KANSAS CITY, MO - FEBRUARY 05: Kansas City Chiefs owner Clark Hunt hoists the Vince Lombardi Trophy during the Kansas City Super Bowl parade on February 5, 2020 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Kyle Rivas/Getty Images) /
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1. Andy Reid

The only person in the Chiefs organization with a better chance at making the Hall of Fame than Travis Kelce is his head coach Andy Reid. For nearly 20 years the question plagued “Big Red” about whether or not he could win the big game. Could he lead his team to a championship? After coming up short four times in Philadelphia, and then at least two more times in Kansas City, the question was legitimate.

In Super Bowl LIV, those questions all became a thing of the past. Reid is the second-winningest active coach in the NFL (behind Belichick), and his 207 wins are sixth all-time in NFL history. And, while we do not know how much longer he’ll stay on the sidelines in Kansas City (as long as he wants to, truthfully), we can predict that he’ll win at least 10 games per season (he’s averaging nearly 12 per season in Kansas City). If he coaches another five seasons, he could reasonably wind up fourth all-time in wins after passing Tom Landry with 250.

But it really does not matter where he ends up. Andy Reid has coached in six conference championship games, two Super Bowls and hoisted one Lombardi (so far). He has cemented his place near the top of the NFL’s all-time greatest coaches, and will be appropriately recognized in Canton as such.

Next. Which position groups are the strongest in Chiefs history?. dark