Chicago Sun-Times

HOW WILL NAGY FIRE UP OFFENSE?

Despite Bears’ 4-1 start, coach Nagy is losing patience with offense, but options are limited

- JASON LIESER jlieser@suntimes.com | @JasonLiese­r

After a weekend apart, Bears coach Matt Nagy and his offensive players looked to make peace in the aftermath of his fiery criticism of virtually every aspect of the offense.

Nagy took a softer tone and spoke in generaliti­es, as opposed to the shots he leveled at his players for sloppy routes, inaccurate passes and poor blocking when his emotions ran hot and unfiltered the morning after the Bears upset the Buccaneers 20-19. And some players said they were fine with him unloading on them.

“Yeah, as he should,” wide receiver Allen Robinson said.

“He’s completely right,” right guard Germain Ifedi added.

It’s common for coaches to vent, then change very little, and Nagy talked around the issues when asked if future playing time depended on players getting on board with the demands laid out in his public critique Friday and again in a team meeting Monday.

“The frustratio­n that I felt . . . was more on just overall details,” he said. “It wasn’t so much specific personnel or certain plays, per se. It’s just more of the big picture is where I’m coming from, and they understand it.”

So everything’s fine now that they all have their talking points aligned? It’s back to being everyone’s fault with no specific culprits?

Nagy was closer to the truth when he let it rip.

But such rants ultimately fall flat because coaches usually don’t have many options to make personnel changes. Nagy is no different. The guys he has kept on the bench are there because he’s certain they won’t do any better.

As the Bears prepare for their game Sunday at Carolina, they’re doing so with a depleted offensive line. They’ve already made a quarterbac­k change and have little wiggle room with wide receiver snaps.

And while Nagy remembered to include his play- calling in the list of problems that ail the Bears’ offense, it comes after an offseason dedicated to committing to the run. It’s fair to mention the Bears have played from behind nearly 70% of the time, but here are the early

results from the ground game: They’re 29th in carries per game and 17th in yards per rush.

They ran 16 times in the loss to the Colts and 14 times against the Bucs for a combined average of 2.1 yards per carry. The Bears are the only team with multiple games rushing 16 times or fewer.

“I have a lot of faith in our run game — I really do,” Nagy said. “There is no panic at all. For me, [it’s] exciting to figure out ways to get it back on track.”

This week would be a convenient time to do so. While the Panthers are better than projected at 3-2, they’re in a rebuild and no longer have five-time AllPro Luke Kuechly at middle linebacker. They have allowed the second-most yards per carry in the NFL at 5.4.

“THE FRUSTRATIO­N THAT I FELT ... WAS MORE ON JUST OVERALL DETAILS. IT WASN’T SO MUCH SPECIFIC PERSONNEL OR CERTAIN PLAYS, PER SE. IT’S JUST MORE OF THE BIG PICTURE IS WHERE I’M COMING FROM, AND THEY UNDERSTAND IT.” MATT NAGY, Bears coach, on his criticism of the team after the 20-19 victory against the Buccaneers

As Nagy, whose 2019 team set the franchise record for fewest rushes in a game with seven, fights the ongoing internal conflict over running the ball, the Bears’ passing game isn’t exactly a well- oiled machine.

Nick Foles has been a marginal improvemen­t over Mitch Trubisky, and their collective 85.4 passer rating ranks 26th. The Bears average the fifthfewes­t yards per pass ( 6.2) after sitting last in 2019 and 17th in 2018.

Whom to blame for those shortcomin­gs is always a moving target, but the point is there’s a lot to fix. The Bears are strong enough defensivel­y to meander their way into the playoffs, but there’s still a ton of work to do if they want to make a run.

 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES ?? David Montgomery ran the ball 10 times for 29 yards against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the Bears’ 20-19 victory at Soldier Field.
JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES David Montgomery ran the ball 10 times for 29 yards against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the Bears’ 20-19 victory at Soldier Field.
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