Post-Tribune

Getsy ‘impressed’ with Fields

3 things we heard from Bears offensive coordinato­r at the end of rookie minicamp

- By Brad Biggs

The offense the Chicago Bears are beginning to install is based on versatilit­y, and the team is seeking as many players as it can find who can master multiple tasks.

That’s according to offensive coordinato­r Luke Getsy, who spoke with the media Sunday morning after the Bears wrapped up a three-day rookie minicamp at Halas Hall that should get the newcomers up to speed when they’re mixed in with veterans later this month.

From the meeting room to the weight room to the huddle, first-year players got a crash course in how the Bears will conduct business. An update from Getsy was timely because so much change is expected for an offense that consistent­ly has ranked near the bottom of the league in many key categories.

The Bears might open the season with only four offensive starters who were in the same role in Week 1 of 2021: left guard Cody

Whitehair, wide receiver Darnell Mooney, running back David Montgomery and tight end Cole Kmet.

Here are three topics Getsy addressed.

1. The developmen­t of second-year quarterbac­k Justin Fields is paramount in the rebuilding process.

If Fields solves the Bears’ decades-long struggle at the position, everyone from general manager Ryan Poles to coach Matt Eberflus and Getsy would get a huge head start in this process.

“I’ve been super impressed with him,” Getsy said. “There’s no one in this building that works harder than him. There’s no one that cares more than him. We’re off to a great start.

“He’s really accepted this challenge. We’re asking a lot of him to learn a lot of new things. He’s been a pleasure to work with.”

Getsy said the dynamic between him and Fields has been excellent and a buy-in

from all parties is the only way Fields can perform dramatical­ly better than he did as a rookie.

“I was raised on that — that the play caller and the quarterbac­k have to have a great relationsh­ip,” Getsy said. “We have to be on the same page always.

“That’s where I’ve felt like he’s grown. He’s communicat­ing with me so well now, things that he’s feeling, things that he sees, so that part of it has just been tremendous for a young guy to be able to do that. These three or four months that we’ve been together, it’s been a lot of fun.”

Getsy said the receiver group — which is led by Mooney and includes Byron Pringle, Equanimeou­s St. Brown and thirdround pick Velus Jones — is growing more comfortabl­e with Fields.

Getsy said “guys were spinning a little” during the voluntary minicamp last month, but more time on task with Fields — with the receivers running routes on air — has helped.

“Of course everybody wants Davante Adams,” Getsy said. “But Davante wasn’t Davante until he became Davante. I think the system will enable some of these guys to play at their potential. We’ll give them an opportunit­y to show what they’ve got.

“It’s just that experience of playing with the quarterbac­k and teaching him the body languages, the signals you want to send to him when you’re ready to make a break. You can see that happening every single day, how much more comfortabl­e these guys are getting and how comfortabl­e Justin is getting with those guys.”

3. Rookie receiver Velus Jones is all business.

Getsy said Jones arrived Thursday wearing a suit, and the former Tennessee and USC wideout also bought a whiteboard to aid with learning the offense on his own and has proved to be a good note taker.

“He’s a physically mature dude,” Getsy said. “He can handle this league — you can see that already. The speed just jumped at you on the tape. When that guy gets the ball in his hands, he looks like 4.3 on the field. Not many guys can do that, and that is what stood out about this guy. He has a chance to score every time he touches the ball.”

The key to Jones’ developmen­t will be helping him master different roles in the offense without stunting his progress. That can be a challenge for young wide receivers adjusting to the NFL.

“That’s what the whole offense is built around, the versatilit­y of everyone,” Getsy said. “We want guys that can do a bunch of different things. We don’t want just one guy that can run down the field ... (or) one guy that can run a choice route.

“He definitely has that versatilit­y, so that’s really cool. It was fun to see this weekend.”

2. Public concern about the depth chart at wide receiver does not reflect how the team feels.

 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Offensive coordinato­r Luke Getsy greets players during Chicago Bears minicamp April 19 at Halas Hall.
BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Offensive coordinato­r Luke Getsy greets players during Chicago Bears minicamp April 19 at Halas Hall.

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