Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

IT ALL DEPENDS ON FIELDS

Eberflus, Poles seem to be off to good start, but QB has to deliver

- JASON LIESER jlieser@suntimes.com | @jasonliese­r

Halfway through the first season of the Bears’ latest rebuild, there’s good cause for optimism. It’s still going to take awhile, perhaps until the 2024 season, for them to hit maturity as legitimate contenders if all goes well, but there are indication­s that it’s off to a good start.

Matt Eberflus seems capable of managing all the new responsibi­lities that have come with his jump from defensive coordinato­r to head coach.

His CEO-style approach to running the team has been a welcome change from Matt Nagy’s setup of focusing on offense and giving his defensive coordinato­r autonomy. Eberflus oversees everything, and if this works and his coordinato­rs and position coaches get plucked for promotions elsewhere, he should be in good position to replace them.

From a personnel standpoint, general manager Ryan Poles has gradually filled in deficienci­es and still has a long way to go. He acknowledg­ed he’d need more than one draft class to assemble a quality roster. There are many more problems to solve, but he has certainly added to the very small core of young talent he inherited.

But everything still hinges on quarterbac­k Justin Fields.

The Bears can — and should — address every detail of their roster and organizati­onal structure. But even if they get all those aspects fixed, it won’t matter unless they solve the riddle that has flummoxed them for decades.

They’ve already seen what happens when “everything else is there” besides the quarterbac­k, as president Ted Phillips put it last year. That path led the Bears to their current rebuild, while teams that have seemingly only a quarterbac­k always have a chance.

Fields’ next opportunit­y to fortify his case as the franchise quarterbac­k is Sunday against the Cowboys. It’s another game against a top defense. Dallas has allowed the second-fewest points at 14.9 per game and is seventh in opponent passer rating at 77.7.

If Fields keeps advancing and arrives by the end of the season, he’ll enhance all the subtle upgrades the Bears have made. If he doesn’t, the Bears doing all the other little things right won’t be enough to vault them into contention.

He has made impressive plays and had great halves and even some complete performanc­es such as the one he delivered in the victory over the Patriots on Monday, but the next checkpoint for Fields is to do it consistent­ly and establish baseline expectatio­ns. The Bears are still waiting for him to play three good games in a row.

He played one of his better games against the Vikings in Week 5 and was threatenin­g to at least force overtime before Ihmir Smith-Marsette got stripped with about a minute left. But Fields followed that by sputtering through a 12-7 loss to the Commanders at home.

The Bears had 10 days between that game and their Monday night visit to the Patriots and used that break to install designed runs for Fields. It activated him and their offense, and while opponents like the Cowboys will counter it with their defensive game plans, it looks like a viable part of the Bears’ offensive identity.

Fields turned in 179 passing yards and 82 rushing yards, his sixth-highest combined total. As the Patriots devoted more resources to restrictin­g him to the pocket, there was more space for receivers to get open. If Fields gets better at playing those strengths off each other, the production should increase.

It took the Bears and offensive coordinato­r Luke Getsy awhile to get there, but they finally seem to have tailored the offense to Fields’ talent.

While the overall picture is still far from perfect, and Fields will be playing behind a tattered offensive line Sunday, there should be enough here with which to work. Now it’s on him to thrive and elevate the players around him, particular­ly the receivers, because that’s what franchise quarterbac­ks do.

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 ?? MADDIE MEYER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Bears quarterbac­k Justin Fields has yet to put together three good games in a row.
MADDIE MEYER/GETTY IMAGES Bears quarterbac­k Justin Fields has yet to put together three good games in a row.

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