Chicago Sun-Times

HONEYMOON OVER FOR GETSY, FIELDS

Second-year offensive coordinato­r, third-year quarterbac­k must deliver better results in ’23

- JASON LIESER BEARS BEAT jlieser@suntimes.com | @JasonLiese­r

MOBILE, Ala. — Bears offensive coordinato­r Luke Getsy considered himself a mastermind years ago, long before any NFL team thought about hiring him.

After a nice run as Akron’s quarterbac­k and a training-camp stint with the 49ers, Division II West Virginia Wesleyan signed him to be their offensive coordinato­r for about $30,000. Getsy practicall­y strutted into the job.

“I was a know-it-all,” he said with a laugh. “You’re the 24-year-old that thinks you know everything and you’ve figured it out.

“Then they start asking you questions and you don’t have answers.”

It was humbling and illuminati­ng. Getsy ended up taking a fairly convention­al path of working up from grad assistant to position coach to coordinato­r, but his stop at Wesleyan gave him an early glimpse of what he wanted to become.

“I learned more about myself as a coach that year than any other year,” he said. “It was an opportunit­y to really put myself in the fire and challenge myself to learn the entire thing, not just the quarterbac­k.”

Fifteen years into his career, with influences ranging from Dave Wannstedt to Matt LaFleur, he’s as confident as ever — but with much more basis for it. And that’s good because he’s trying to solve a problem that has hindered the Bears for much of their modern existence: scoring.

If Getsy has the answer, he’ll get the headcoachi­ng job he has coveted.

He got an interview with the Broncos last year, but that feels like forever ago to him after everything he picked up from coach Matt Eberflus this season.

“I’m so much more tuned in and dialed into the whole package,” he said. “Way more prepared for when that opportunit­y does come.”

Given that the Bears stripped their roster and had a second-year quarterbac­k in Justin Fields, whose rookie season was mostly wasted, Getsy’s first season was good. The offense started slowly but averaged 25.3 points over a seven-game span before crumbling because of injuries.

But the criteria gets stricter now that the teardown is done. Like everyone else at Halas Hall, Getsy will be graded on concrete results like wins, points and Fields’ production next season rather than unmeasurab­le progress like “establishi­ng championsh­ip habits,” as Eberflus says.

At the moment, he doesn’t have all the pieces to the puzzle. When asked this week, while he’s coaching the American team at the Senior Bowl, about scheming for next season, he asked the same thing everyone wants to know from general manager Ryan Poles: “Who do we have?”

The biggest component, though, is Fields. He’ll have as much at stake as Getsy next season.

“It’s important that you find that relationsh­ip,” Getsy said. “You lay it out and you put the work in and you find this trust between

the two of you, and then that trust continues to grow.”

Fields took a step under Getsy this season, but it’s time to make a leap.

Going into his third season, and playing for an administra­tion that didn’t draft him, he’s short on time. He was the most electric runner at his position this season and improved in his efficiency as a passer, but the passing production wasn’t there.

He averaged 149.5 yards passing per game, which was last among qualifying quarterbac­ks and simply not viable. It’s great that

Fields can run like no other, but as Getsy noted this week, that needs to be merely a part of his game rather than the majority of it.

In some ways, this season wasn’t all that different from Getsy’s immersion as offensive coordinato­r at Wesleyan. A lot of it was new. He’d never worked with Eberflus, nor any of his position coaches. He inherited a quarterbac­k fresh off a year of dysfunctio­n under Ryan Pace and Matt Nagy.

And he made it work.

Now, for the Bears’ sake and his own, he needs to make it better.

 ?? MICHAEL REAVES/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Bears’ offense started slowly this season as Justin Fields and offensive coordinato­r Luke Getsy got to know each other.
MICHAEL REAVES/GETTY IMAGES The Bears’ offense started slowly this season as Justin Fields and offensive coordinato­r Luke Getsy got to know each other.
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