National Post

Bears roll out the welcome Matt

GM calls his new coach ‘a proven winner’

- John Kryk JoKryk@ postmedia. com Twitter. com/ JohnKryk

An hour before the Oakland Raiders rolled out Jon Gruden to make that hiring finally official, the Chicago Bears introduced Matt Nagy Tuesday as that founding NFL franchise’s 16th head coach.

The 39- year- old looked more than a little nervous, and daunted, by the big moment.

“It’s a dream and I’m still pinching myself. Everything happens really fast,” said Nagy, who until both sides came to agreement Monday, had been Andy Reid’s offensive co-ordinator on the Kansas City Chiefs.

In his introducto­ry remarks Nagy proceeded to thank more people than the longest- winded Oscar winner.

Perhaps the biggest newsworthy thing that came out of his conference didn’t even have anything to do with the Bears, but rather the Chiefs.

Nagy said he was t he one who called all the offensive plays for the Chiefs after halftime of Saturday’s ruinous 22- 21 home- field wild- card playoff loss to the Tennessee Titans, in which the Chiefs blew a 21- 3 halftime lead and, inexplicab­ly, handed the ball off to the league’s leading rusher, rookie Kareem Hunt, only five times after the first quarter.

“I called every single play in the second half,” Nagy said, which hadn’t been revealed, as Reid deliberate­ly covered for Nagy after the game, saying that he and Reid called all the plays that didn’t work, and Nagy all the others.

“That’s a learning situation for me,” Nagy said. “I’ve gone back and I’ve looked at it. There are some scenarios where I wish I would have made some different choices with the play call. But for me, that was a failure for me, in my book. For me.

“But I’ ll grow from it and I’ ll learn from it, I promise you that ... I felt terrible for my team, for our organizati­on …. I called every play in that second half. I stand by that. And I promise you I’ ll learn from it.”

Nagy took over sole playcallin­g responsibi­lity from Reid only in the last half of this season. Yet Nagy said without hesitation Tuesday he will call plays for the Bears offence, which will be spearheade­d by quarterbac­k Mitchell Trubisky, who is coming off a decent but not great rookie year.

Bears GM Ryan Pace lauded Nagy — following two rounds of interviews with him on Sunday — as “a proven leader, he’s a winner, he’s intelligen­t, he’s innovative, he has strong character, he’s got a great family, and he shares the same passion for the game that I have.

“Coach Reid believes in Matt Nagy and so do I.” Eagles akin to the Browns?: Philadelph­ia OT Lane Johnson ended his two- week media boycott on Tuesday. He lambasted those who have so heavily criticized his Eagles, the NFC’s No. 1 playoff seed — and who have dismissed their chances of even defeating the visiting Atlanta Falcons this week in the divisional playoff round, let alone of making further playoff noise — because backup QB Nick Foles struggled so much over the final three weeks of December, after Carson Wentz went down with a torn ACL.

“We were 12- 2 and we were treated like we were the (winless Cleveland) Browns,” Johnson said.

Well, not quite. But he has a point. The Eagles are loaded at all positions on both sides of the ball. Another Panthers Shakeup: In the past seven months the Carolina Panthers have fired a GM ( Dave Gettleman), seen their once respected principal owner (Jerry Richardson) put the team up for sale in disgrace over charges of chronic and long-standing workplace sexual harassment, traded their top wide receiver ( Kelvin Benjamin) and, on Tuesday, fired their offensive co- ordinator of seven years ( Mike Shula). Quarterbac­ks coach Ken Dorsey also lost his job Tuesday.

At least head coach Ron Rivera is returning, after signing a new contract extension, as is star offensive performer Cam Newton. With defensive coordinato­r Steve Wilks lining up headcoach job interviews left and right, it truly will be a newlook Panthers franchise — and team — in 2018.

Brady Takes I s s ue: Tom Brady told a Boston radio station on Tuesday he hotly disputes at least the part of last week’s blockbuste­r ESPN report that claimed the New England QB felt “l iberated” when backup J i mmy Garoppolo was traded at the end of October to San Francisco.

“I think that is such a poor c haracteriz­ation,” Brady said. “In 18 years I have never celebrated when someone has been traded, been cut … It is so far from what my beliefs are about my teammates.”

Both Pats owner Robert Kraft and head coach Bill Belichick also have denied principal allegation­s and some root facts in the story, which claims strife between Kraft, Brady and Belichick might be tearing apart the Patriots dynasty.

Extra Points: At his joint season- ending news conference with head coach Sean McDermott, Buffalo Bills GM Brandon Beane s ai d Richie Incognito’s comments to Jacksonvil­le Yannick Ngakoue — which Ngakoue alleges were “weak racist slurs” — “may have been misunderst­ood.” Beane would not elaborate. The NFL is investigat­ing. Incognito still has not commented … Baltimore promoted defensive assistant Don Martindale to defensive coordinato­r … Green Bay executive Eliot Wolf interviewe­d Tuesday with the Cleveland Browns and has an offer at “a high- ranking position” to join the Raiders, per ESPN.

 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL / GETTY IMAGES ?? General manager Ryan Pace, left, and new head coach Matt Nagy of the Chicago Bears after an introducto­ry news conference on Tuesday in Lake Forest, Ill.
JONATHAN DANIEL / GETTY IMAGES General manager Ryan Pace, left, and new head coach Matt Nagy of the Chicago Bears after an introducto­ry news conference on Tuesday in Lake Forest, Ill.

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