Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

NO MORE EXCUSES

Nagy either develops Fields into a pro QB or Bears coach gets exposed as a fraud

- JASON LIESER jlieser@suntimes.com | @jasonliese­r

There’s a big difference between inheriting a project and building your own from the ground up, and Bears coach Matt Nagy gets the rare gift of being able to shape rookie quarterbac­k Justin Fields from the first moment of his NFL career.

It is an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y in his career. He was with the Chiefs when they landed Patrick Mahomes, but left after one season and missed out on where that was headed. He took the job in Chicago and tried to reprogram Mitch Trubisky, but that effort was calamitous and brief.

His timing is finally perfect. After general manager Ryan Pace improbably pulled off a trade to get Fields at No. 11 overall, it’s in Nagy’s hands from here.

No more exasperati­on with a quarterbac­k he didn’t choose.

No more subtly pointing out that he got stuck with someone who struggled to read coverages and didn’t fully grasp the offense. No more excuses.

If Nagy is truly an offensive guru and quarterbac­k whisperer and not just benefittin­g from standing next to Andy Reid for years, he’ll prove it with Fields.

Nagy couldn’t have been happier as he contemplat­ed his new reality with Trubisky long gone and Fields awaiting his guidance. He imagined what he might do with a quarterbac­k that Ohio State coach Ryan Day referred to as “absolutely . . . a generation­al talent” in a phone call last year.

Fields’ skills are unlike any Nagy has coached, and there’s good cause to believe he can pump voltage into the Bears’ lifeless offense. Nagy was supposed to do that, by the way, but the Bears scored the seventh-fewest points in the NFL over the last two seasons. Enter Fields.

He has the speed of a wide receiver. He was the most dominant college quarterbac­k other than Trevor Lawrence the last two seasons. And his deep ball is so precise that Nagy was ready to throw out the well-worn “touchdown-to-checkdown” mantra he has been pounding for years.

“Maybe with him we’ve gotta go [with a] touchdown-to-touchdown mentality — get some of that,” Nagy said. “That’s where that needs to go with all of our quarterbac­ks, but you’re hitting to the point of what one of his strengths is.”

The Bears plan to defer the thrill of Fields taking over the city with his rocket arm until 2022, though. Nagy saw how the Chiefs gave Mahomes a red-shirt season behind Alex Smith and hopes to do the same with Fields and Andy Dalton.

Here’s hoping that plan changes because it’ll be hard for anyone in Chicago to sit through another parade of punts this season.

Sure, it would be ideal if Dalton could carry the Bears to the playoffs while Fields watches and learns, but no one can guarantee Dalton is still an NFL starter at this point in his career. While it’s too early to anoint Fields the starter, it’s also too early to rule out Dalton getting bumped to the bench.

“Is it gonna be the same thing [the Chiefs did with Mahomes]? I don’t know,” Nagy said. “But at least we have some type of blueprint to work off of . . . and see where it goes.”

He added later, “I promise you every single person will know, including Justin, when it’s the right time. And that’s naturally how it happens.”

Regardless of how soon that scenario materializ­es, Nagy had better read it flawlessly. It’s precisely why the Bears hired him.

He got this job off his reputation for developing quarterbac­ks, and it’s time to prove that’s more than a myth. He has been handed a prototype. He had significan­t input on the pick. He can save his job and shape the franchise’s next decade. It’s all on him now.

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 ?? AP ?? Bears coach Matt Nagy didn’t exactly turn quarterbac­k Mitch Trubisky into a star. He gets a second chance with Justin Fields.
AP Bears coach Matt Nagy didn’t exactly turn quarterbac­k Mitch Trubisky into a star. He gets a second chance with Justin Fields.
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