Chicago Sun-Times

MISS MATCH

Despite his defensive stance, Nagy’s decision to rob developing Trubisky of snaps just silly

- rmorrissey@suntimes.com | @MorrisseyC­ST

PRESEASON: BEARS 27, CHIEFS 20

We have two colliding truths in the Bears’ decision not to play their starters Saturday.

One is that preseason games don’t matter, have never mattered and, as long as there is heat, humidity, the possibilit­y of injury and the existence of fourth-stringers, won’t ever matter.

The other is that Mitch Trubisky has done nothing to prove he doesn’t need as many snaps as he can get, even if those snaps come against a high school team in a parking lot at midnight.

The second truth just tackled the first truth for a five-yard loss.

Trubisky started 13 games in college and 12 last season as a Bears rookie. In those 12 games under John Fox, he played in such a remedial, low-risk offense that he might as well have played in a fallout shelter.

Add to that the purportedl­y complex offense that new coach Matt Nagy has brought to the Bears, and the need for as much work as possible becomes more pressing. Lest we forget, it was Trubisky who said recently that every snap, practice and game matters.

But there the quarterbac­k was Saturday, standing on the sideline and cheering for his teammates as they battled the Chiefs at Soldier Field.

Has anyone seen Trubisky look anything close to dominant since he arrived last year? Lots of people view him as the Bears’ franchise quarterbac­k, but that has been more warm thought than fact. You say he’s young and to give him time. Yet that’s the exact argument for why he should have played against the Chiefs. He needs time and experience to get better. He needs more work, not less, before the Bears' opener Sept. 9 in Green Bay. He needs the 25 to 30 snaps he should have gotten Saturday.

‘‘I feel strongly that when we go into Week 1 that basically those 25-30 plays, it’s not going to sway it one way or the other,’’ Nagy said. ‘‘It’s really not. So if we win that game against Green Bay, trust me, it wasn’t because we didn’t play 25. And if we lose, it’s the same thing. I promise you that.’’

It has been a long training camp, and Nagy said Trubisky has taken lots of snaps in practice. But can we agree that game snaps are different and often more valuable than practice snaps? Can we also agree that the Bears are treating their quarterbac­k as if he’s an establishe­d player in the NFL

when he’s not?

Nagy’s defenders will say that the Packers rested Aaron Rodgers on Friday night. Trubisky isn’t Rodgers in anybody’s world.

But what if Trubisky had gotten knocked out for the season because of an injury suffered in a meaningles­s game Saturday? It’s a legitimate question and part of the reason he and the other starters didn’t play. But applying the same logic, the Bears should have kept him out of all the preseason games. And bubblewrap­ped him for the first six games of the regular season.

Chiefs starting quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, who along with Trubisky was a 2017 first-round pick, played into the third quarter Saturday. If Tom Brady can play in his team’s third preseason game, as he did Friday, then Trubisky should play in any game anywhere.

And Bears wide receiver Kevin White, Mr. Injury himself, played Saturday and the starters didn’t? My head is spinning.

I get it: Live to fight another day, and all that. But Nagy seems to be in love with the idea of a great quarterbac­k, rather than the reality of a quarterbac­k who needs as much game action as he can get. Trubisky might be excellent some day, but he’s not there yet.

‘‘This is going to take a little bit of time,’’ Nagy said of the offense. ‘‘This isn’t something that’s just going to come out here and start firing away. I told you that from the start. This is a process now. That’s OK. That’s no excuse, but that’s what’s real.’’

Which is precisely why Trubisky and the offense should have played Saturday.

The big-picture discussion is the very existence of preseason games. The more immediate discussion is that if the Bears and Trubisky stink it up against the Packers in the opener, you wouldn’t want to have the surname Nagy in Chicago the next day. The coach has opened himself up to the possibilit­y of the kind of abuse normally reserved for toppled Stalin statues.

On the first day of training camp, Nagy told the media he wanted his team to go into the regular season “callused.’’ His decision to rest the starters gives the impression that his players have smooth-enough skin to be hand models.

“I think we’ve gotten callused, I truly do,’’ he said. “We’ve had a lot of practices. We’ve had some grueling practices against Denver, some live reps in our last couple preseason games. If you remember correctly, I told you we’ll be callused, but we’ll be smart, too.’’

Football people call the third preseason game the “dress rehearsal’’ for the regular season. Starters usually play into the third quarter and then take the final preseason game off. Because the Bears played an extra exhibition game, against Baltimore in the Hall of Fame Game, they and the Ravens have had one more week of practice than other teams. Nagy’s argument is that those practices were enough to make Saturday’s game unnecessar­y for the starters.

He’ll be right if Trubisky plays well in Green Bay. He’ll be really wrong if Trubisky plays poorly.

“I FEEL STRONGLY THAT WHEN WE GO INTO WEEK 1 THAT BASICALLY THOSE 25-30 PLAYS, IT’S NOT GOING TO SWAY IT ONE WAY OR THE OTHER.’’

— MATT NAGY, Bears coach

 ??  ??
 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Coach Matt Nagy said quarterbac­k Mitch Trubisky has taken plenty of snaps in practice, but would anyone say practice reps are equivalent to game reps?
JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES Coach Matt Nagy said quarterbac­k Mitch Trubisky has taken plenty of snaps in practice, but would anyone say practice reps are equivalent to game reps?
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 ?? AP ?? Quarterbac­k Mitch Trubisky (10) suited up and took the field for warmups, but he remained on the sideline during the game against the Chiefs on Saturday.
AP Quarterbac­k Mitch Trubisky (10) suited up and took the field for warmups, but he remained on the sideline during the game against the Chiefs on Saturday.

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