Chicago Sports

Bears’ O-line working to protect a speedy Justin Fields

Braxton Jones had to recalibrate the clock in his head.

The Bears’ rookie left tackle typically has a good sense of when a quarterback will throw the ball. With Justin Fields, though, he needs to be doubly sure. A few times during training camp, he expected coaches to blow a play dead — only for Fields to keep it alive with his legs.

“Then, two seconds later,” he said, “my guy’s reacting to the play.”

The Bears’ offensive line has more question marks entering the season than any other position group. Last year, the Bears allowed Fields to get sacked on 11.8 percent of his dropbacks, the highest percentage in the league. Bears general manager Ryan Poles overhauled the line — but filled holes with players who have question marks. Three of the five projected starters have a combined 10 NFL starts among them.

Fields’ mobility will save the line — “He has a phenomenal ability to extend plays,” center Sam Mustipher said — but it also presents a challenge for his blockers.

“I got more used to it,” Jones said. “You just don’t stop. Can’t really stop. You just keep on going.

“That’s why I say you live and die by it. I’d say I live by it more times than not.”

The Bears think they’re better-equipped this season to block for a scrambling quarterback. Shortly after Poles and head coach Matt Eberflus were hired, they decided their linemen needed to lose weight and add speed to block in the Bears’ outside zone run scheme. That helps when Fields runs, too.

“You gotta finish your block a little bit longer,” guard Cody Whitehair said. “Because he is so mobile, he gets out of tackles easily.”

If Rule No. 1 is to never stop blocking — “Play through the echo of the whistle,” Mustipher said –then No. 2 is not to hold. Because blockers have their back to Fields, they’re the last to know when he starts scrambling. Pass-rushers see it first, and often jerk themselves away from the blocker to chase Fields down.That can lead to holding calls — at a spot on the field where officials can easily see the penalty.

“You don’t wanna get a hold,” right tackle Larry Borom said. “You’ve got to have that awareness and let go.”

This preseason, the Bears offensive line has been called for only one holding penalty. That’s a good sign for a unit with a lot of questions.

The Bears’ willingness to mix-and-match linemen while trying to find the right combination is a noble one. They need to find the best five players — both for this year and whenever their next good team will take the field. But that shuffling has come at the expense of chemistry.

It will continue throughout the season. Wednesday, the Bears claimed former Raiders first-round pick Alex Leatherwood, who took backup snaps at right tackle in practice. Thursday, they worked out former Pro Bowl guard Kelechi Osemele, who’s played in only eight games the last three years. Friday, they added their own former draft pick, Zachary Thomas, back to the practice squad.

The Bears figure to churn their line all season long, until they find what they want.

“It does matter to be out there and play with your teammates and gel,” said assistant general manager Ian Cunningham, who, like Poles, is a former offensive lineman. “I do think the room matters, too, and the depth matters. So, versatility on the back end …

“You can never have too many offensive linemen. And then being in that room, bonding together, out on the practice field, we have a great group. All of that matters.”

Especially when Fields has the ball in his hand.

“Just try to protect him in any way possible,” Mustipher said.

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College Football Playoff will expand to 12 teams by 2026

The university presidents who oversee the College Football Playoff voted Friday to expand from four to 12 teams no later than the 2026 season.

A person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press that the presidents would like to have the new format in place as soon as the 2024 season. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because an official announcement was still forthcoming.

A process that started 141/2 months ago with an optimistic rollout of an ambitious plan, and then was derailed as conference leaders haggled over details and questioned each other’s motivations, is now finally moving forward.

There are still issues to be hammered out by conference commissioners who comprise the CFP management committee, which is scheduled to meet next week. Most notably whether the logistical hurdles can be cleared in time for a new playoff to be up and running by 2024.

Last month, the CFP locked in sites for the championship games to be played after the 2024 and 2025 seasons. But the 11 presidents who make up the Board of Managers ultimately decide what happens with the playoff, and they took matters into their own hands to push the ball forward.

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Concerts in Chicago this fall — our guide to the season’s music

Summer may be wrapping up, but that doesn’t mean the fun has to end. Attend a few more outdoor concerts before you move the party indoors for these fall shows in and around Chicago.

Death Cab for Cutie performs at the Salt Shed on Sept. 24.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

September

Florence and the Machine, Sept. 7. Huntington Bank Pavilion, Northerly Island, 1300 S. Linn White Dr. $135-$1,994; livenation.com.

Reggae Gold, Sept. 8-Jan. 26. Subterranean, 2011 W. North Ave. $10; subt.net.

Lyric Opera of Chicago, “Ernani,” Sept. 9-Oct. 1. Civic Opera House, 20 N. Wacker Dr. $40-$330; lyricopera.org.

The Selena Tribute Concert with Jennifer Pe?a, Grupo Met?l, Karla Perez, Mariachi Perla de Mexico and more, Sept. 9. Millennium Park, Pritzker Pavilion, Michigan and Randolph. Free; nationalmuseumofmexicanart.org

Luke Bryan, Riley Green & Mitchell Tenpenny, Sept. 10. Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre, 19100 Ridgeland Ave., Tinley Park. $49+; livenation.com.

Erykah Badu with Ravyn Lenae and KAINA, Sept. 11. Ravinia Pavilion, 200 Ravinia Park Rd., Highland Park. $44-$155; ravinia.org.

The Doobie Brothers, Sept. 14. The Chicago Theatre, 175 N. State St. $69.50+; tickemaster.com.

Norwood Park Fall Fest with The Breakfast Club, Second Hand Soul Band, 7th Heaven and more, Sept. 16-17. Norwood Park Train Station, 6088 W. Northwest Hwy. $5 suggested donation; npfallfest.org.

Riot Fest with My Chemical Romance, The Original Misfits, Nine Inch Nails, Bleachers, Yungblud, Ice Cube and more, Sept. 16-18. Douglass Park, 1401 S. Sacramento Dr. $99.98+; riotfest.org.

Punk rock, alternative rock and hip-hop fans enjoy Riot Fest in Douglass Park. This year’s festival runs Sept. 16-18.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

Handel’s “Jephtha,” Music of the Baroque Chorus & Orchestra, Sept. 18-19. North Shore Center, 9501 Skokie Blvd., Skokie and Harris Theater at Millennium Park, 205 E. Randolph Dr. $35-$100; baroque.org.

Ben Platt with Aly & AJ., Sept. 23. Wintrust Arena, 200 E. Cermak Rd. $32.50+; wintrustarena.com.

Death Cab for Cutie, Sept. 24. The Salt Shed, 1357 N. Elston Ave. $49.50-$129.50; saltshedchicago.com

Gordon Lightfoot, Sept. 26. Rialto Square Theatre, 102 N. Chicago St., Joliet. $49-$89; ticketmaster.com.

The Paper Kites, Sept. 26. Lincoln Hall, 2424 N. Lincoln Ave. $30; lh-st.com

Singer Brian McKnight will play alongside five other R&B artists at the Chicago R&B Music Experience at Wintrust Arena on Oct. 8.

October

The Head and the Heart with Shakey Graves, Oct. 1. Huntington Bank Pavilion, Northerly Island, 1300 S. Linn White Dr. $60-$360; livenation.com

Violent Femmes, Oct. 4-5. Thalia Hall, 1807 S. Allport St. $39.50-$59.50; thaliahallchicago.com

Chicago R&B Music Experience with Monica, Tevin Campbell, Brian McKnight, Tamar Braxton, Silk and Raheem DeVaughn, Oct. 8. Wintrust Arena, 200 E. Cermak Rd. $65+; wintrustarena.com.

Muse, Oct. 11. Riviera Theatre, 4746 N Racine Ave., $270-$750; jamusa.com.

’80s Night Out, Oct. 12. Metropolis Performing Arts Centre, 111 W. Campbell St., Arlington Heights. $35; metropolisarts.com.

Celebrating David Bowie with Todd Rundgren, Royston Langdon, Angelo Moore and more, Oct. 14. Copernicus Center, 5216 W. Lawrence Ave. $35-$150; copernicuscenter.org.

Cuarteto Latinoamericano, Oct. 15. Nichols Concert Hall, 1490 Chicago Ave, Evanston. $30-$50; musicinst.org.

Southern Nights: Michael Ingersoll Sings Glen Campbell, Oct. 17-18. Marriott Theatre, 10 Marriott Dr., Lincolnshire. $55; mariotttheatre.com.

Marcus King, Oct. 21. Byline Bank Aragon Ballroom, 1106 W Lawrence Ave. $69-$322; livenation.com

Halloween Spooktakular with the New Philharmonic Orchestra, Oct. 22-23. McAninch Arts Center, 425 Fawell Blvd., Glen Ellyn. $53; atthemac.org

Noah Cyrus, Oct. 27. House of Blues Chicago, 329 N. Dearborn St. $29.50-$125; houseofblues.com/chicago

Echosmith with Phoebe Ryan and Band of Silver, Oct. 28. Bottom Lounge,1375 W. Lake St. $25-$79; bottomlounge.com

Noah Cyrus headlines House of Blues on Oct. 27.

Getty Images

November

Carly Rae Jepsen, Nov. 5. Byline Bank Aragon Ballroom, 1106 W. Lawrence Ave. $75-$283; livenation.com

The Smashing Pumpkins with Jane’s Addiction and Poppy, Nov. 5. United Center, 1901 W. Madison St. $39+; ticketmaster.com.

Bazzi, Nov. 6. Riviera Theatre, 4746 N. Racine Ave., $39.50+; jamusa.com

Paramore, Nov. 9. The Chicago Theatre, 175 N. State St. $333+; chicagotheatre.com

Arcade Fire with Beck, Nov. 12. United Center, 1901 W. Madison St. $79.50+; ticketmaster.com.

Black Lips, Nov. 16-17. The Empty Bottle, 1035 N. Western Ave. $25; emptybottle.com

Hotel California — A Salute to the Eagles, Nov. 19. Des Plaines Theatre, 1476 Miner St., Des Plaines. $29; desplainestheatre.com

Windborne’s The Music of Queen withThe Chicago Philharmonic, Nov. 25. Auditorium Theatre, 50 E. Ida B. Wells Dr. $33.50-$153.25; auditoriumtheatre.org

Demi Lovato headlines the Rosemont Theatre on Oct. 5.

AFP via Getty Images

Stevie Nicks, Sept. 8-10. Ravinia Pavilion, 200 Ravinia Park Rd., Highland Park. $85-$280; ravinia.org.

The Killers, Sept. 21. United Center, 1901 W. Madison St. $45+; ticketmaster.com.

Deadmau5, Sept. 23. Huntington Bank Pavilion, Northerly Island, 1300 S. Linn White Dr. $87-$434; livenation.com.

Keith Urban, Sept. 24. Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre, 19100 Ridgeland Ave., Tinley Park. $35-$3,300; livenation.com.

Demi Lovato, Oct. 5. Rosemont Theatre, 5400 N. River Rd., $52+; ticketmaster.com.

The Who, with Steven Page. Oct. 12. United Center, 1901 W. Madison St. $41+; ticketmaster.com.

Lizzo with Latto, Oct. 16. United Center, 1901 W. Madison St. $109.50+; ticketmaster.com.

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Bears’ president Ted Phillips is retiring. The McCaskeys aren’t.

Bears fans were celebrating Ted Phillips’ retirement announcement Friday, until it dawned on them that team chairman George McCaskey would hire Phillips’ replacement. Then they went back to their worldview that all hope is lost.

They know from experience that you don’t want a McCaskey, any McCaskey, taking the measure of a prospective employee, in the same way you didn’t want Phillips involved in the hiring of a coach or a general manager. It always ends in something that is not a Super Bowl title.

There are two disparate views of Phillips, who will be retiring in six months. There’s the view of him from ownership, which thinks he’s the consummate professional, if not a member of the family. And there’s the view of him from Bears fans, who think he’s an interfering paper pusher who, if asked to tell the difference between a football and a foot fetish, would request more time.

There is no in-between here, no nuance. It’s one or the other: great businessman or an embodiment of all that is wrong with the Bears.

His legacy will be that of a person willing to do whatever the McCaskeys asked of him, even when it was clear to others that zigging at the family’s direction was reason to zag immediately. He was their point person on construction projects, from Soldier Field renovations to a new practice facility to a proposed stadium in Arlington Heights. He helped the McCaskeys make a lot of money.

He took the brunt of the abuse for the renovated Soldier Field, which critics said was ugly and too small. Those shortcomings are why the Bears are now looking to build in the suburbs.

Phillips’ poor public image wasn’t all his doing, at least at the start. Whenever the Bears called a press conference to talk about another failed season or to introduce a new coach or general manager to replace the latest failed coach or general manager, he was front and center. He often had the look of a man who had accidentally swallowed a Swiss army knife, one that had just opened in his large intestine. His presence at these events was at the behest of George McCaskey, who knew he didn’t know anything and wanted to spread the ignorance around. So there was Phillips, a bookkeeper by trade, talking about the elements of winning football to the masses.

I don’t think Phillips was born this way. He’s what happens after prolonged exposure to the McCaskeys. He never should have been one of the faces of the franchises, and he should have begged to stay far away from microphones. Instead, he answered questions, and despite his insistence that he wasn’t involved in the football operation, it became obvious after a while that he certainly was. The Bears had gone through so many coaches and GMs that what you saw was what you got: McCaskey and Phillips by themselves with no one to rely on other than a consultant or two who had time traveled from the 1950s.

Phillips didn’t know football, but he was thrust into a position in which he was expected to help hire coaches and GMs. Then he started to think he did know football. That’s the Bears right there.

Who to replace him? Despite the public gushing over the job new general manager Ryan Poles is doing – which sounds a lot like the public gushing that once washed over his predecessor, Ryan Pace – I’d like to see a football man as team president. Not an accountant. Not someone with an MBA. Someone to oversee the football department, which is the only department that should matter to a football team.

The problem, of course, is that George McCaskey will make the decision on Phillips’ successor. He’ll surely rely on the opinions of confidantes, but if you question McCaskey’s judgment on hires, then you have to question his judgment on confidantes, too.

If you haven’t liked any of his and Phillips’ other big decisions – Marc Trestman, Phil Emery, Matt Nagy, etc – why would you like who’s coming next?

Phillips was with the team since 1984, and maybe that’s a clue to what the Bears will look for when deciding on his replacement. The McCaskeys want people owner Virginia McCaskey is comfortable with. It’s how they seem to end up with the same kind of people at Halas Hall year after year, decade after decade — people who think and act like the family does.

The last, true football bigfoot the Bears had was Jim Finks. He was phenomenal. He was also hired by George Halas, not a McCaskey.

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College Football Playoff will expand to 12 teams by 2026

The university presidents who oversee the College Football Playoff voted Friday to expand from four to 12 teams no later than the 2026 season.

A person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press that the presidents would like to have the new format in place as soon as the 2024 season. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because an official announcement was still forthcoming.

A process that started 141/2 months ago with an optimistic rollout of an ambitious plan, and then was derailed as conference leaders haggled over details and questioned each other’s motivations, is now finally moving forward.

There are still issues to be hammered out by conference commissioners who comprise the CFP management committee, which is scheduled to meet next week. Most notably whether the logistical hurdles can be cleared in time for a new playoff to be up and running by 2024.

Last month, the CFP locked in sites for the championship games to be played after the 2024 and 2025 seasons. But the 11 presidents who make up the Board of Managers ultimately decide what happens with the playoff, and they took matters into their own hands to push the ball forward.

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Chicago Bulls Urged to keep an eye on Derrick Rose

Derrick Rose is a player that the Chicago Bulls are familiar with and an organization with which the player is also familiar. Indeed, he arguably made his name in the NBA with the franchise before moving on and into a career that has seen him go from team to team.

However, while he may have started out at the Bulls, it seems some are urging the Chicago-based franchise to keep an eye on his movements this offseason and potentially look to try and trade for him should the New York Knicks make a move for him.

Screen Shot 2022 09 02 at 12.21.25 PM

Derrick Rose could be traded, and the Bulls should keep an eye on it

A former star of the Bulls – in which the veteran managed to make a blistering start to his NBA career as he was named Rookie of the Year, MVP, and a three-time All-Star all in his first four years – it seems he could be a potential contender on the trading block.

Rose has shown that while he has had some injuries that he has had to contend with, including several problems to his knees, he managed to be incredibly effective for the New York Knicks in his second spell for the organization.

He proved he could be influential in scoring from the bench, as he helped the franchise to achieve a playoff seed the season before last. However, injuries once again blighted his time and with the Knicks looking to restructure once again, there are some suggestions that the 33-year-old veteran could be on the trading block.

And, should he become available, there will be high demand for his signature across the league, according to one league executive as Rose is the most tradeable player on the Knicks’ roster. Telling Heavy.com, the unnamed exec said:

“He’s older now obviously and whatever happened off the floor with him, on the floor he has been such a pro everywhere he has gone. His contract is good ($14.5 million for 2022-23, player options at $15.6 million for 2023-24), he has become a very good three-point shooter, he brings energy, he likes coming off the bench.”

Bulls need to consider bringing Rose back

So, why should the Bulls be looking to bring back their 1st overall pick in the 2008 draft?

Indeed, while the injury concerns will undoubtedly be a concern and something that the franchise would need to consider wisely, there is no denying that he could potentially help them out of their own injury problems at the moment.

For instance, Lonzo Ball’s current knee injury and his extended period of recovery from the surgery he had to his left knee provide the team with a degree of uncertainty, and having a player like Rose on the roster could help to limit the potential impact that Ball’s absence may have on their chances of reaching the NBA playoffs.

The team will want to build on what they had managed last season, which was a First Round exit to the Milwaukee Bucks (1-4), and there will be punters that will want to see improvement from the team, especially if they decide to take advantage of the sports betting options available to them.

Indeed, there are a number of exceptional sports betting sites in Illinois available to residents and visitors to the state who will be watching the Bulls when they take to the court in the upcoming NBA season, where they will be able to get a range of odds and markets to place a wager on.

Of course, those who do decide to place a bet on the organization will want to ensure the franchise is in the best position possible to compete on the basketball court. So, will Rose be an excellent addition to allow them to have that confidence?

What did Rose accomplish during his previous tenure with the Bulls?

Screen Shot 2022 09 02 at 12.23.11 PM

While it has been many seasons since he last played for Chicago, there is no doubt that Rose could be successful if he were to have a homecoming to Illinois, the state in which he was born.

Of the seven years he had for the team since being selected as the No. 1 overall pick in the 2008 NBA Draft, he managed to help the franchise make an appearance in the playoffs on five occasions. This included being named the MVP in the 2010/11 season as he managed to produce exceptional numbers before the team was ousted in the Eastern Conference Finals to the Miami Heat.

Even in the year that he missed (2012/13), the Bulls managed to reach the playoffs and get as far as the Eastern Conference Semifinals before being beaten by the Heat once again. While Rose did not play a single game that year, you can imagine his influence on the team in the locker room.

Although injuries clearly continue to be a problem for the 33-year-old, he is even more experienced now and has shown that he can still have a solid impact on the basketball court when available. He helped the Knicks get to the playoffs in the season before last and produced significant numbers, even if they lost the series to the Atlanta Hawks 4-1 in the First Round.

Should the Bulls look to make a move for him if available?

If the Knicks were to make Rose available for a trade this summer, should the Chicago Bulls be looking to reunite with the point guard?

Naturally, a lot of the argument will be down to whether the veteran can keep himself healthy and fit enough to play a significant amount of basketball. Indeed, there is no doubt that there is a huge risk surrounding him, however he has shown that he can still make a difference.

For many, if he did not have the injuries that he has had throughout his career, he would be an NBA Champion by now. Perhaps he can achieve this by going full circle and making a return to his hometown and where his professional career all began.

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Report: Ted Phillips stepping down as Bears CEO/President

Ted Phillips has been with the Bears for a long time but is set to retire after the 2022 season

Reports came out Friday that the Chicago Bears CEO/President, Ted Phillips, plans to step down at the end of the season. Phillips has been the Bears’ CEO since 1999. He’s the fourth person to have that title for the Bears.

Dan Pompei of The Athletic broke the report that Phillips is retiring. According to the report, Phillips wanted to “slow down” and do whatever he wanted to do.

Phillips began working for the Bears in 1983 as the team’s comptroller. He worked his way from there to becoming the first CEO of the team not in the McCaskey or Halas family.

There had been rumors of Ted Phillips moving away from the football operations side of the business in 2021. It was a welcome idea to fans who wanted football knowledge at the helm over the shrewd business-like nature of the current Bears decision making.

It’ll be interesting to see who the Bears will choose as their next CEO/President. The Bears have a lot on their plate juggling a team with a likely franchise quarterback amid the franchise moving to a new stadium.

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Analyzing the Bears’ preseason — and predictions for 2022

With the season opener about a week away, the Sun-Times’ Patrick Finley breaks down the Bears’ biggest questions:

Where will Justin Fields rank among the NFL’s QBs this year?

FINLEY: As a second-year starter on a run-first team — sound familiar? — the Eagles’ Jalen Hurts ranked 27th with 209.6 passing yards per game, 22nd with an 87.2 passer rating and led all quarterbacks with 52.3 rushing yards per game last year. I expect a similar season out of Fields. He has more talent than Hurts — especially when it comes to deep throws — but less talent around him.

Did Ryan Poles do enough this offseason?

FINLEY: Absolutely not. He needed to give Fields better receivers to throw to and more established blockers in order for the general manager to properly evaluate his quarterback. Receiver. Only the Ravens — whose rushing offense resembles a military academy more than it does, say, the Rams — have spent less cap space on receivers than the Bears this season. Only seven teams have spent less on the offensive line.

The most glaring need the Bears have is …

Offensive line. Fields was sacked on 11.8 percent of his dropbacks last year, the highest rate in the NFL. Since 2000, only eight quarterbacks to attempt 250 or more passes in a season have been sacked more often. The Bears signed exactly one veteran to try to fix the line — and Lucas Patrick needed thumb surgery after the first week of camp.

A rookie who will make the biggest impact is ….

Receiver Velus Jones has the most obvious opportunity — he can inject speed and skill into the team’s worst position group. When Poles defended his offensive roster this week, he mentioned three people by name: receiver Darnell Mooney, tight end Cole Kmet and Jones, the third-round pick from Tennessee.

The team MVP will be ….

Defensive end Robert Quinn — if the Bears keep him all season long. Quinn is coming off a franchise-record 18 1/2 sacks and seems out of place on a rebuilding team. If a championship contender loses a pass-rusher to injury before the trade deadline, Poles might be tempted to see what he could get in a trade.

How will Roquan Smith fare in a prove-it year?

He’ll earn his first Pro Bowl berth in February and a contract extension in March.

What will the Bears’ record be in Matt Eberflus’ debut season?

6-11. Eberflus’ dedication to detail has turned the Bears into a try-hard team, which is sometimes used as a pejorative in the NFL. Ordinarily, that effort level would be worth an extra win or two toward the end of the season, when some teams have little to play for. Four of the five teams the Bears play in December and January will be motivated by a playoff push, though: the Packers, Eagles, Bills and Vikings.

Halas Intrigue Bears Report

Expert analysis and reporting before and after every Bears game, from the journalists who cover the Monsters of the Midway best.

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Bears president/CEO Ted Phillips to retire in February

Ted Phillips, who has served as the Bears’ president and CEO since 1999, will retire in February, the team said Friday.

The Bears have already begun looking for his successor.

Phillips is the fourth president in team history — and the only one not related to founder George Halas. His son “Mugs” Halas held the job, followed by grandson Michael McCaskey. Phillips replaced Michael McCaskey after serving as vice president of operations from 1993-99. He was the team’s controller from 1983-87 and finance director from 1987-93.

“He started out with us as a financial expert,” said Bears matriarch Virginia McCaskey in a statement. “Anything that he was ever asked to take care of, he came through and did it very well. We’ve been very blessed to have him.”

Phillips’ focus was on the Bears’ business operations — he negotiated a deal to renovate Soldier Field when Michael McCaskey could not, although the Bears have since decided that playing at the lakefront stadium is not acceptable. McCaskey and Phillips led the Bears’ search for land upon which to build a new stadium. The Bears are currently in escrow on the former Arlington Racecourse site in Arlington Heights; it’s expected to close before Phillips retires.

Phillips presence at Bears’ season-ending press conferences irked some fans. The Bears won only three playoff games during Phillips’ tenure.

Phillips’ pending retirement seemed to be a possibility in January, when chairman George McCaskey said that, in a change, new general manager Ryan Poles would report to him and not Phillips.

McCaskey did not change the fundamental structure of Halas Hall then — and it’s unclear whether he will do so when hiring Phillips’ replacement. When the Bears install a new president/CEO for the first time in 24 years, they’ll have an opportunity to modernize their structure, separating the business side of the franchise from the football side. McCaskey, though, has resisted calls to do so in the past.

Organizational information gleaned from the Bears’ lengthy general manager interview process — they talked to 13 candidates — could inform how they Bears proceed in hiring Phillips’ replacement. One GM candidate, Steelers vice president of football and business administration Omar Khan, had a resume that seemed more in line with Phillips’ job than the vacant GM post. The Steelers, though, named Khan general manager four months later.

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The Chicago Bears honest ranking by NFL executives revealed

NFL executives are not impressed with the Chicago Bears

The Chicago Bears are getting ready for the regular season after going 3-0 in the preseason. The Bears’ performance in August didn’t seem to impress NFL insiders. The Bears are still adding pieces to their “fixer-upper” roster.

National media has been giving the Bears a lot of grief recently. Even in games when the team has looked competent overall. The Bears have played more disciplined football under the new Matt Eberflus regime. But more than the talking heads on TV are skeptical about this current team.

Mike Sando with The Athletic wrote an article about where NFL executives rank each NFC team this year. The Bears can be found by scrolling near the bottom of the page to tie with the New York Giants for a 13th median vote tally. Only the Seattle Seahawks and Atlanta Falcons were ranked lower by the five executives who voted. Here’s why they put the Bears so low:

The Bears did not do much personnel-wise to raise expectations this offseason. Theirs is a long-term view.

“They did not do enough to address their offensive line,” one of the voters said. “They didn’t have a first-round pick. They drafted a 25-year-old receiver in the third round (Velus Jones Jr.) who is a special teams guy. They are at the bottom of that division from a roster/talent standpoint. Detroit is a lot better. Minnesota is not going to fall because they do have offensive talent there.”

The Chicago Bears don’t have much time to better the team

The executives’ reasoning continues with the national narrative about the Bears. Recently, the team has acquired more help from waivers to address needs on the offensive line and wide receiver positions.

Will a disappointing former first-round pick in Alex Leatherwood be enough to fix the offensive line this year? Probably not. Neither will second-year wide receiver Ihmir Smith-Marsette be enough to make opposing secondaries worry about the Bears passing attack.

The Chicago Bears are a week away from playing their first regular season game. The coaching staff will have to gameplan with some combination on the offensive line and at wide receiver. Here’s hoping a dart sticks.

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