Chicago Sun-Times

DECADE MAKES A DIFFERENCE

10 years after Cutler’s good fortune, Fields unlikely to follow suit

- PATRICK FINLEY pfinley@suntimes.com | @patrickfin­ley

Ten years ago last week — in Week 15 of the 2013 season — Bears quarterbac­k Jay Cutler took a snap at the Browns’ 45 and launched a fourth-quarter pass into the west end zone in Cleveland.

Receiver Alshon Jeffery caught Cutler’s go-ball with 11 minutes left to tie a game the Bears wound up winning by seven.

Eighteen days later, general manager Phil Emery signed Cutler to a seven-year, $126 million contract. The reason, Emery said, was the game against the Browns.

‘‘Being able to, from a physical aspect, throw a ball 45 yards in the air, being hit in two different directions, being on his back foot . . . the ball was in a place where [Jeffery] could come up with a catch,’’ Emery said in announcing the deal. ‘‘So from a physical standpoint, a toughness standpoint, emotional calmness, [Cutler’s] ability to win a tight game and to bounce back from adversity — to me, that game summed it up.’’

On Sunday — in Week 15 of the 2023 season — Bears quarterbac­k Justin Fields took a snap at the Browns’ 45 and launched a fourthquar­ter pass into the west end zone in Cleveland. It was batted around and intercepte­d, the clock expired and the Bears lost 20-17.

GM Ryan Poles won’t be using the game against the Browns as a reason to give Fields a huge contract extension. It seems unlikely he will give Fields an extension at all. The Bears’ offense — with plays called by coordinato­r Luke Getsy, quarterbac­ked by Fields and overseen by coach Matt Eberflus — isn’t working.

With three games left in the season, Fields has yet to prove he’s the Bears’ unquestion­ed franchise quarterbac­k, even though receivers Darnell Mooney and DJ Moore offered public endorsemen­ts after the loss Sunday.

The 45-yard Hail Mary falling incomplete crushed the Bears — namely Mooney, who had the ball drop into his lap as he fell to the ground in the end zone. A miracle, however, would have provided fodder for a false narrative about Fields’ future with the Bears.

The Bears are in line for the No. 1 pick in the 2024 draft. ESPN simulation­s give the Panthers, who owe them the pick, an 85% chance of landing it. The Bears seem more likely to build around USC quarterbac­k Caleb Williams than Fields, who captained an offense that went three-and-out on more than half its drives Sunday. The Bears had one touchdown drive against the Browns, and it took them eight snaps to go one yard. Getsy’s too-cute-by-half short-yardage calls were partly to blame — on that drive and in the fourth quarter.

Eberflus said the Bears needed to stay aggressive in the air, pointing to tight end Robert Tonyan’s dropped pass that would have been a 73-yard touchdown.

‘‘It’s important we keep taking the shots down the field because, when you do that, you back people off and it opens up the intermedia­te part of it,’’ he said. ‘‘You get people to play more shell [coverage] that way, and we feel that can get people to open up the run game for us, too.’’

Without the running game, the Bears were put in third-and-six or longer 10 times and converted only once.

‘‘It’s hard to win in this league on thirdand-longs,’’ tight end Cole Kmet said.

Fields’ numbers undoubtedl­y will get better the rest of the season. The Bears host the Cardinals, who have allowed the secondmost points in the NFL, on Sunday. They also have allowed a 103.8 passer rating, the second-highest in the league.

Beware the false positive.

A decade ago, the Bears wanted Cutler to give them a reason to believe and convinced themselves the game against the Browns was it. He went 12-23 the next three seasons before the Bears released him.

When the Hail Mary hung in the air Sunday, the Bears had a chance to win — and to squint and see what they wanted to see in Fields. Neither happened. For the latter, they ultimately might be grateful.

 ?? NICK CAMMETT/GETTY IMAGES ?? Nearly three seasons into his career, Justin Fields has yet to prove he can be the Bears’ franchise quarterbac­k.
NICK CAMMETT/GETTY IMAGES Nearly three seasons into his career, Justin Fields has yet to prove he can be the Bears’ franchise quarterbac­k.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States