Chicago Sun-Times

FIELDS UNLIKELY TO PLAY IN FINALE

Rookie QB’s frustratin­g season all but over after he’s put on COVID list

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

To the very end, Justin Fields’ rookie season has been a total mess.

It has been so disrupted and dysfunctio­nriddled that it’s hard to tell if much has really been accomplish­ed or if he’s essentiall­y going to be a rookie all over again next season, playing in a new offense for a new coach.

The latest misfortune is that just as he was set to return from an ankle injury that kept him out the last two games, Fields tested positive for the coronaviru­s Thursday morning. That means it’s a near-certainty he’ll miss the season finale Sunday at the Vikings and cede his start to Andy Dalton or Nick Foles.

“Another week of not having a QB, whoever it ends up being, taking every rep of practice for the week,” offensive coordinato­r Bill Lazor lamented.

More importantl­y, though, another week of stalling Fields’ developmen­t. This game means nothing. Fields’ progress means everything.

It’s one less opportunit­y to read coverages, signal changes at the line, make split-second decisions in the pocket and more. Every snap builds toward an eventual breakthrou­gh, and nothing will have more effect on the franchise than him fulfilling or falling short of his potential.

Even with the NFL’s recently loosened return-to-play protocol, it’s unlikely Fields will fly to Minneapoli­s. He must either test negative twice or show a high enough level of “cycle threshold” that the league believes he wouldn’t be contagious.

So most likely, Fields’ rookie season ends after 10 starts, and he finishes with a completion percentage of 58.9, 1,870 yards, seven touchdown passes, 10 intercepti­ons and a 73.2 passer rating. He also rushed for 420 yards and two touchdowns.

But it’s imprecise work trying to separate his deficienci­es from the effect of the many deficienci­es around him.

From the night the Bears traded up to draft Fields No. 11 overall, there was far more concern about their ability to facilitate his growth than whether he possessed the talent to ascend. And through the turbulence of this season, much of which was self-created, that worry has only mushroomed.

It’s one of the reasons coach Matt Nagy is expected to be fired after this game, and it factors into the extremely shaky ground on which general manager Ryan Pace stands.

Nagy announced from the beginning of offseason practices that Dalton was his starter and there was no opportunit­y for Fields to rise above the backup spot. That was unwarrante­d and inflexible, and it was disadvanta­geous given that Fields ended up taking the starting job in Week 3.

That accelerate­d the Bears’ unnecessar­ily slow timeline, and Nagy wasn’t ready for it. He called such an awful game in the loss to the Browns that the Bears had their lowest yardage output since 1981, and he was compelled to give up play-calling to Lazor days later.

“You almost can’t even make it up,” Nagy said of the offense that day in Cleveland. “It’s that bad.”

Yeah. Now imagine being a rookie quarterbac­k and stepping into that kind of situation as opposed to landing in New England, as No. 15 pick Mac Jones did. And Pace’s personnel missteps have been woven throughout the ineffectiv­eness of Nagy’s offense.

Still, Fields seemed capable of overcoming everything that was working against him and looked poised to turn a corner with his impressive rally in the fourth quarter against the Steelers in Week 9. He put the Bears ahead 27-26 with 1:46 left on a touchdown pass to Darnell Mooney, only to watch his defense cough up the game.

Fields never built on that momentum. He suffered cracked ribs in the ensuing game, knocking him out of the next two. He returned for two games but hurt his ankle and was out the next two. This would have been his first game back.

Instead, it’s a frustratin­g end to a frustratin­g season.

 ?? ?? Justin Fields started 10 games, but his rookie season was riddled with disruption and dysfunctio­n. His latest misfortune was testing positive for COVID-19.
Justin Fields started 10 games, but his rookie season was riddled with disruption and dysfunctio­n. His latest misfortune was testing positive for COVID-19.
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