Chicago Sun-Times

UNSOLVED MATT PROBLEMS

A memorable swan song against the Pack? Nope, just another ‘L’ for Nagy in the series

- PATRICK FINLEY pfinley@suntimes.com | @patrickfin­ley

GREEN BAY, Wis. — For 15 minutes Sunday night, the Bears were everything coach Matt Nagy had promised they’d be over the last four years.

They were explosive.

They had a young quarterbac­k playing well.

Their special teams — which doomed Nagy in his first season — provided jolts of electricit­y.

They looked on par with one of the NFL’s best teams.

They were actually entertaini­ng. Nagy said as much at halftime, when his team was ahead and, briefly, the talk of the country. “I’m having so much fun,” he told NBC. It didn’t last.

Nagy’s last opportunit­y for a memorable win — the next four games, all against losing teams, don’t matter — vanished when the Packers outclassed the Bears in the second half at Lambeau Field. The Packers restored order in the NFC North, winning 45-30 and sending Nagy home from Green Bay winless for the fourth consecutiv­e year.

He’s not going to get a fifth chance. Nagy seems destined to be fired at the end of the season — though probably not before. Nagy doesn’t get bonus points for putting together an explosive second quarter and then totaling three points the rest of the way. Nor does he deserve praise for winning only one more game over the last nine weeks than the White Sox. Or for losing by the Bears’ biggest margin in eight weeks. But the Bears’ effort Sunday night — and the ongoing growth of rookie quarterbac­k Justin Fields — figures to buy him exactly four more games in charge.

“For us to be able to come out those two quarters and do what we did, that was fun, that was good football . . .” Nagy said. “I think they got to see what they can be.”

The Bears led 3-0 at the end of the first quarter and scored more points in the sec

ond quarter than they had in all but one game all season. Jakeem Grant took a shovel pass 46 yards for a touchdown to put the Bears up 10-0 early in the second quarter. The Packers parried with two touchdowns in 55 seconds — and then the Bears scored two of their own in 96 seconds. Receiver Damiere Byrd caught a pass and never broke stride — or was touched — en route to a 54-yard touchdown. Then Grant did his best Devin Hester impression, fielding a punt at his own 3, running right, then doubling back to his left and sprinting up the left sideline for a 97-yard touchdown.

Their three second-quarter touchdowns produced three of the four fastest sprint speeds by any Bears player all season — Grant hit 21.3 mph on the return and 20.86 mph on the touchdown catch, and Byrd ran 20.8 mph on his score.

Cairo Santos’ 44-yard field goal put the Bears up by six at halftime. The Packers would score the next 24 points. Aaron Rodgers reminded the Bears who owns them, finishing 29-for-37 for 341 yards, four touchdowns and a 141.1 passer rating.

The Bears couldn’t play with a lead or keep Rodgers off the field. Nagy handed the ball off to David Montgomery exactly once in the second half.

Since Nagy clinched the division in 2018 against the Packers, the Bears have flubbed every chance to update the rivalry with a memorable moment. In the NFL’s season opener in 2019 against the Packers, Nagy wore George Halas’ fedora into Soldier Field. The Bears lost.

At Lambeau Field that same year, tight end Jesper Horsted missed a chance to lateral the ball on a last-second trick play that would have given the Bears a chance to tie. The Bears lost.

In Week 17 last year, the Bears had a chance to stamp their playoff ticket by beating the Packers at home. The Bears lost.

Sunday night, despite the second-quarter rally, they did the same.

The Bears’ day started with a reminder of their growing instabilit­y: CBS reported chairman George McCaskey had talked to former Bears player Trace Armstrong — who’s now an agent for, among others, Nagy — about a high-level executive position with the franchise next season. Armstrong shot it down quickly.

“I have the utmost respect for the Chicago Bears organizati­on, the McCaskey family and Ted Phillips,” he said. “However, any assertion that I have engaged in conversati­ons with them about joining the club in any capacity is simply not true.”

The final four weeks will feature more of the same: breathless reports about Nagy’s job status, and that of general manager Ryan Pace and a franchise in need of change.

Nagy had a chance to make Sunday night memorable. The promise of the second quarter proved to be what the Bears have produced too often over the last four years: a false start.

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 ?? STACY REVERE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Coach Matt Nagy is 0-for-4 against the Packers at Lambeau Field.
STACY REVERE/GETTY IMAGES Coach Matt Nagy is 0-for-4 against the Packers at Lambeau Field.
 ?? AARON GASH/AP ?? Sign of the times: A ‘‘Fire Nagy’’ banner made the trip up to Green Bay, Wis.
AARON GASH/AP Sign of the times: A ‘‘Fire Nagy’’ banner made the trip up to Green Bay, Wis.

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