The Day

Bears turn to Nagy as new head coach

- By ANDREW SELIGMAN AP Sports Writer

Lake Forest, Ill. — The Chicago Bears were looking for a coach to get the most out of quarterbac­k Mitchell Trubisky and help a founding NFL franchise emerge from one of its worst runs.

They believe Matt Nagy is the right man.

The Bears hired Kansas City's offensive coordinato­r as their 16th head coach Monday, hoping he can develop their promising quarterbac­k and turn around a struggling team.

The Bears announced the move a week after firing coach John Fox, who went 14-34 in three seasons for a .292 winning percentage that is the second-lowest in team history. Chicago was 5-11 this season and hasn't finished above .500 since letting Lovie Smith go following a 10-6 finish in 2012, two years after its most recent visit to the playoffs.

The 39-year-old Nagy spent the past 10 seasons working under Andy Reid in Philadelph­ia and Kansas City. He did not call plays until late this season, but drew praise for his work with Chiefs quarterbac­k Alex Smith.

In Chicago, the former quarterbac­k at Delaware and then the Arena Football League will be trying to develop Trubisky, last year's No. 2 overall draft pick.

“He's a good football coach, first of all,” Reid said. “I appreciate the way he comes to work and the attitude he brings. He puts his own flare on things. I think that's important to know. Everybody does it their way.”

Nagy coached in high school and was still working in real estate when he served as a coaching intern with the Eagles during training camp in 2008 and 2009. He got a big break, though it came with a pay cut, when he took the job as a coaching assistant during the 2010 season.

Bears general manager Ryan Pace has plenty riding on him.

Pace put his reputation on the line when he traded up a spot with San Francisco to draft Trubisky even though he made just 13 college starts at North Carolina. It's up to Nagy to help polish a quarterbac­k who showed some promise with his strong arm and quickness after he took over for Mike Glennon.

If Trubisky succeeds, there's a good chance the Bears start winning. That would likely mean a long future in Chicago for Pace, who recently got a contract extension through the 2021 season.

The Bears were 3-15 against the NFC North under Fox and dropped all six division games this past season. That will be one of the many things Nagy will need to help solve.

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