New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Bears look to KO defending champs

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LAKE FOREST, Ill. — Not long after he was hired, Matt Nagy watched the Super Bowl with his wife at a bar near the Chicago Bears’ practice facility. His good friend Doug Pederson was coaching the Philadelph­ia Eagles to their first Super Bowl championsh­ip.

The place was just about empty. He even had to ask for the game to be turned on.

“It was awesome,” he recalled.

Nagy hopes things don’t go so well for his pal when the NFC North champion Bears host the Eagles on Sunday in a wild-card game packed with storylines.

Chicago (12-4) is in the playoffs for the first time since the 2010 team won the division, making a huge jump in Nagy’s first season after four straight last-place finishes. The Bears are on a 9-1 tear; the Eagles (9-7) have won five of six.

Chicago quarterbac­k Mitchell Trubisky will make his first playoff appearance.

Eagles quarterbac­k Nick Foles — last year’s Super Bowl MVP — will try to deliver another standout performanc­e while filling in for Carson Wentz. He’s 6-0 in those situations the past two seasons.

Foles was particular­ly good the past three games with Wentz sidelined by a back injury. He tied Philip Rivers’ NFL record in last week’s win over Washington by completing 25 consecutiv­e passes. He will start this one after leaving with a chest injury against the Redskins.

Alshon Jeffery will play in Chicago for the first time since the star receiver left the Bears after five seasons to sign with Philadelph­ia in 2017. Chicago’s Trey Burton will try to beat the Eagles this time after throwing a touchdown to Foles on a trick play — “Philly Special” — in the Super Bowl victory over New England.

There will be Long brothers — Chicago guard Kyle and Philadelph­ia defensive end Chris — on opposing teams.

And there will be two coaches on opposite sidelines with a strong bond formed while working under Andy Reid in Philadelph­ia and Kansas City.

“I told him at the owners meeting this past offseason, he got that Super Bowl, right. I’m trying to follow his lead here,” Nagy said. “He probably doesn’t want to hear that right now, but I want to stick on that path. Ton of respect for him.” The feeling is mutual. “Right away, you (could) tell that he was going to work himself up the

ranks,” Pederson said.

ON TARGET

Like Foles, Trubisky is on a roll.

The No. 2 overall pick in the 2017 draft, he threw three intercepti­ons in a 15-6 victory over the Los Angeles Rams on Dec. 9 after missing the previous two games because of a shoulder injury. Since then, he’s been making all the right reads.

Trubisky has a 109.7 rating the past three games, completing 63 of 83 passes for 644 and three touchdowns without an intercepti­on.

MOVING ON?

Bears defensive coordinato­r Vic Fangio insisted he was preparing only for the Eagles, not any head coaching interviews.

“I’ve done zero on that second part,” he said.

The 60-year-old Fangio never has been a head coach. But he has interviewe­d for several openings, including the one that went to Nagy in Chicago.

In his four seasons with the Bears, Fangio has transforme­d a defense that ranked among the worst in team history. The Monsters of the Midway led the NFL in rushing defense, takeaways (36) and intercepti­ons (27) while tying for third in sacks (50).

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