Chicago Sun-Times

CHUCK KNOWS HE’S IN LUCK

But Pagano realizes that with great defense comes great responsibi­lity

- JASON LIESER BEARS BEAT jlieser@suntimes.com | @JasonLiese­r

BOURBONNAI­S — It’s a stretch to say anybody could coach the Bears’ loaded defense. Then again, the way Khalil Mack has been blowing things up in training camp, it does look pretty easy for new coordinato­r Chuck Pagano.

The top jobs on any coaching staff usually come open because something went sideways, but this is the opposite. This defense was so dominant last season that it propelled former coordinato­r Vic Fangio to become coach of the Broncos. This is the NFL’s most fearsome starting 11, and most of them played together last year, when the unit allowed

the fewest points in the league. Fangio left behind the keys to a Lamborghin­i.

“I walked into the very best situation ... that anybody could walk into,” Pagano said after practice Thursday. “It’s just our job to make sure that we do the right thing and put these guys in the right spots, so that they can play fast and continue to build on the foundation that’s already been laid.”

There certainly are a lot of advantages for Pagano, none greater than Mack, but they come with immense pressure. There are few concerns about the Bears heading into this season, but the transition from Fangio to Pagano is one of them. Pagano has tweaked the scheme, he’ll have different play-calling tendencies and he’s teaching players new terminolog­y. With all of that going on, any drop-off from last season almost certainly will be blamed on Pagano.

“We all know what we signed up for,” he said. “Players and coaches, we understand what the expectatio­ns are.”

Truthfully, his job is harder than it might seem.

The Bears needed someone proven to replace Fangio, and Pagano has been coaching defense since before any of his players were born. This is his 18th NFL season after a long college career, and he was most recently the Colts’ coach from 2012 through ’17. That experience is especially important with the Bears, where coach Matt Nagy runs the offense and gives his defensive coordinato­r autonomy.

The Bears want their defense to be fiercer and more aggressive this season, and blitz-happy Pagano has spent the last few months devising ways to blend his strategy with the talents of the players he inherited.

That process is going well so far, and Nagy said the new-look defense is “way past where I thought they were going to be.”

That side has thoroughly handled the offense in training camp, and Mack has been a wrecking ball. He torpedoed a red-zone drill Thursday by smacking the ball the moment it left Mitch Trubisky’s fingers and catching it for an intercepti­on. Even if the offense manages to avoid Mack, the Bears have Pro Bowl defenders looming at every level.

“I don’t think there is any other defense in the NFL that I’d rather go against in practice every day,” Nagy said. “These guys fly around, they do different things and it makes us better . . . . But it’s definitely challengin­g.”

Pagano quickly endeared himself to players with his energy and his backstory as a man who survived cancer during the 2012 season. There was instant respect. Mack called him “one of the best people that I’ve had the chance to work with.”

Pagano is also recharged after sitting out last season, the first time he has been out of work since beginning his career as a graduate assistant at USC in 1984. Not that this guy would ever need a reminder to appreciate each day, but he’s particular­ly grateful to be coaching again.

“It’s what I love to do,” he said. “Thirty-three straight years, man, and [last season] you don’t have a team? My family, my wife, my kids don’t have anybody to root for. Now we’ve got a team again.

“And, again, it’s as good a situation as I could have ever come into. I’m truly blessed to be here.”

 ?? BRIAN O’MAHONEY/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? Bears defensive coordinato­r Chuck Pagano (left) inherited a great unit from the man he replaced, Vic Fangio.
BRIAN O’MAHONEY/FOR THE SUN-TIMES Bears defensive coordinato­r Chuck Pagano (left) inherited a great unit from the man he replaced, Vic Fangio.

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