Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

BEARS GO FROM PEERS TO TEARS

Team was on par with Rams in 2018 but couldn’t keep up; now McVay’s squad is on cusp of another Super Bowl berth

- JASON LIESER jlieser@suntimes.com | @jasonliese­r

The Bears spent all of last offseason claiming everything was fine.

Don’t worry, they said, about the alarming holes at left tackle and cornerback. And never fear, the competent veteran quarterbac­k of their dreams was here. The best part, of course, was that Matt Nagy just knew the fourth year was when the offense finally would click.

It was perfectly appropriat­e that the Rams were the ones to expose all that fraud. They undressed every single one of the Bears’ lies and laid waste to the false hope in a season-opening beatdown that gave the national-TV audience a clearcut view of the truth: The Rams were the real thing, and the Bears weren’t even close.

Throughout the Bears’ backslide from their surprising success in 2018, the Rams provided a glimpse into an alternate reality of how they might have looked if they had gotten everything right.

What if the Bears had swung a deal for a game-changer at quarterbac­k?

What if Ryan Pace hadn’t run out of moves to sustain the incredible defense that carried the Bears in 2018?

What if the coach the Bears hired actually was an offensive guru rather than someone who had to give up play-calling two years in a row? Well, then they’d be the Rams. The Rams have had the right answer at every turn since hiring coach Sean McVay in 2017, the year before the Bears chose Nagy, and now they’re one win away from playing in the Super Bowl as they host the 49ers in the NFC Championsh­ip Game on Sunday.

No one would be shocked if they won it all. There’s no mirage, no empty promises with them. They are everything the Bears pretended to be.

In 2018, both were among the elite — the Bears because of an overwhelmi­ng defense and the Rams because McVay already had engineered an offensive machine even with Jared Goff at quarter

back. The Bears’ 15-6 victory on “Sunday Night Football” was seen as a precursor to the NFC title game.

The teams went a combined 25-7, with the Bears falling on the “double doink” and the Rams running into the Patriots in the Super Bowl. Both teams thought it was just the beginning. Only one was correct.

The Bears swooned to a 22-27 record over the next three seasons, including 5-18 against playoff teams, scored the sixthfewes­t points in the NFL and fired Pace and Nagy. The Rams went 31-18 in that span, won a playoff game as a wild card last season and — still unsatisfie­d — went all in by trading for Matthew Stafford nearly a year ago.

As the Bears shopped the clearance aisle for Andy Dalton, McVay was in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, recruiting Stafford as the Rams put together a trade package that included two first-round picks. The Bears were interested, too, and oddly, Nagy was in Cabo when the deal went down. He was curiously squirrelly when that came up shortly before the opener.

“I think it might have been a coincidenc­e,” he said.

The Bears pivoted from that idea to the moonshot of trading for Russell Wilson, hoping he instantly could fix all that ailed them. And that’s another key divergence between their path and the Rams’. Stafford catapulted them from good to great, but the Rams still would have been solid — and maybe even an NFC contender — even if they had been stuck with Goff. That’s because so many other parts of their team were in place.

Consider wide receiver Van Jefferson, for example. He had 50 catches for 802 yards and six touchdowns, and he’s probably better than anyone the Bears have. He’s the Rams’ third option behind Cooper Kupp and Odell Beckham Jr. And longtime star Robert Woods tore his anterior cruciate ligament in November.

When Bears general manager Ryan Poles draws up plans to surround Justin Fields with proper personnel, he should take a good look at what the Rams have done.

They’re an ideal team in the modern NFL — built to pass and stop the pass. Their defense is centered around seven-time All-Pro defensive tackle Aaron Donald and outside linebacker­s Von Miller and Leonard Floyd.

Remember Floyd? Pace drafted him No. 9 overall in 2016, and he averaged 4.6 sacks in four seasons. He has 20 in his first two seasons with the Rams.

With that pass rush, the Rams were third in the NFL with 50 sacks and had the fifth-best opponent passer rating at 83.8. Predictabl­y, that led to them being third in intercepti­ons.

And most important for their long-term viability, the Rams have McVay. He took a team that had gone 60-131-1 in its previous 12 seasons, and he has yet to finish worse than 9-7. The players will come and go, but he looks as if he will be their coach for at least a decade. That’s not just continuity for continuity’s sake. That’s finding the right coach and letting him do his thing.

As Poles and new coach Matt Eberflus try to steer the Bears out of a rut of getting it wrong at nearly every turn, this is what it looks like when a team gets everything right.

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 ?? ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Ram sc oac hS ean McVay upgraded at quarterbac­k by trading for Matthe w Stafford.
ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES Ram sc oac hS ean McVay upgraded at quarterbac­k by trading for Matthe w Stafford.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Linebacker Leonard Floyd, the Bears’ first-round pick in 2016, has become a sack master with the Rams.
GETTY IMAGES Linebacker Leonard Floyd, the Bears’ first-round pick in 2016, has become a sack master with the Rams.

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