Imperial Valley Press

Chicago Bears fire coach John Fox after a 5-11 season

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LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) — The Chicago Bears fired John Fox on Monday after three losing seasons, ending one of the least successful coaching stints in team history.

The dismissal came one day after the Bears lost at NFC North champion Minnesota to finish 5-11.

“Today is the tough part of our results-oriented business,” Fox said in a statement.

Chicago has had four consecutiv­e losing seasons — each with 10 or more losses. The Bears haven’t finished above .500 since they let Lovie Smith go following a 10-6 finish in 2012. They haven’t been to the playoffs since 2010.

Fox was 14-34 in his three years with Chicago, a .292 winning percentage that ranks as the second lowest for the Bears. Only Abe Gibron was worse — 11-30-1 (.274) from 197274.

Even so, cornerback Prince Amukamara said there were plenty of hugs for Fox when he met with the team Monday.

“Great, passionate coach,” he said. “Didn’t give up on us, didn’t quit on us and that’s very special for a head coach. . One thing we did appreciate about him is he always pointed the thumb and not the finger so he takes all blame, and we love him and I know guys are going to miss him.”

For the next head coach, topping the to-do list will be getting the most out of Mitchell Trubisky. After all, general manager Ryan Pace staked his reputation to the quarterbac­k when he traded up a spot with San Francisco to draft him with the No. 2 overall pick last spring.

Fox is 133-123 in 16 seasons as a head coach and is one of six coaches to lead two teams to Super Bowl appearance­s, joining Don Shula, Bill Parcells, Dan Reeves, Dick Vermeil and Mike Holmgren.

Fox helped orchestrat­e quick turnaround­s while leading Carolina and Denver to a combined six division titles and seven playoff appearance­s in 13 years before he took over Chicago in January 2015. But his time with the Bears was forgettabl­e.

Hired shortly after the Bears brought in general manager Ryan Pace, Fox helped restore some of the profession­alism that was missing under former GM Phil Emery and coach Marc Trestman. The progress in the locker room didn’t translate to victories. And Fox’s conservati­ve approach and some questionab­le decisions during games were sore spots.

The Bears went from six wins in 2015 to three in 2016 to five. They were 3-15 against the NFC North and dropped all six division games this year.

“I think he built a foundation,” linebacker Sam Acho said. “I think the success that he had here, we’re not going to see until later. Whether I’m on this team or not, I think you’re going to see success in the future.”

Injuries exposing a lack of depth have been a major issue since the regime change.

The Bears have had some big hits in the draft such as star running back Jordan Howard (2016, fifth round) and notable misses such as oft-injured receiver Kevin White (2015, first round). They have had a shaky record in free agency and struggled to replace some key players no longer with the team such as receivers Brandon Marshall and Alshon Jeffery, tight end Martellus Bennett and kicker Robbie Gould.

 ??  ?? Chicago Bears head coach John Fox speaks during a news conference after an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday in Minneapoli­s. AP PHOTO
Chicago Bears head coach John Fox speaks during a news conference after an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday in Minneapoli­s. AP PHOTO

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