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Chicago Blackhawks finally have first win under Luke RichardsonVincent Pariseon October 16, 2022 at 11:00 am

The Chicago Blackhawks aren’t going to have anything come easy to them this season. They are a very bad team on paper that is going to have to grind all season long to get a few wins. On Saturday night, their final game of the season-opening road trip came to a close.

It didn’t start off their way as they went down 2-0 to the San Jose Sharks in the first period. They looked flat and slow to start which made life very easy for San Jose.

It looked like another game that the Hawks were going to be dominated in but this time it was against the Sharks who are significantly worse than the Vegas Golden Knights and Colorado Avalanche. They might be looking at a top-five draft pick in 2023 as well.

Luckily, the Hawks were able to find their skating legs later in the game to give themselves a chance to win. In the second period, Jonathan Toews scored his second of the season which got them on the board for the first time since the first game of the year.

The Chicago Blackhawks started to play well at one point in Saturday’s game.

Following that, they scored back-to-back shorthanded goals. Both of them came off the stick of Sam Lafferty who was set up both times by Jason Dickinson. The Blackhawks were then winning 3-2 which is the score they took into the third period.

Taylor Raddysh scored and Dickinson added one of his own (yes, it was assisted by Lafferty) to make it 5-2. The Hawks carried that score to the final whistle and won their first game of the season. It wasn’t as easy as the score might indicate but they did it.

This was also the first win in the head coaching career of Luke Richardson. Although they came into this game 0-2-0, there were some things to like and they brought a lot of it out against the Sharks.

It is nice to see the new coach finally get that first win. You didn’t want to see it become something that evades him for too long. This team isn’t going to win a lot but they certainly wanted to get their first out of the way as soon as they could.

Connor Bedard is on the mind of hockey fans in Chicago but winning this game won’t mean much in that race. This is a long season that will have many ups and downs.

Their first win is out of the way before they come back to Chicago. They have some time off now before their home opener next Friday against the Detroit Red Wings.

There is plenty of time to rest, learn, and be ready for this big match upcoming in front of the home crowd. Congrats to coach Richardson on his first win as an NHL head coach. We can only hope that it is the first of many with Chicago.

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Chicago Blackhawks finally have first win under Luke RichardsonVincent Pariseon October 16, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

As Bears hit a break in schedule, these are the biggest questions they face

The Bears are on a pseudo-bye week after losing to the Commanders on Thursday and have a chance to reassess before they resume Oct. 24 at the Patriots. After six games, here are the biggest questions they face:

What is Matt Eberflus’ grade through 6 games?C-. Even taking into account that this is the onset of a rebuild and he is working with limited personnel, it’s concerning that the run defense is so bad and that quarterback Justin Fields hasn’t advanced. This team isn’t a contender, but Eberflus can prove something by fixing the offensive line, doing some problem solving on defense and facilitating some strides by Fields.

Is Justin Fields getting better or worse?Fields has looked good at times, but that was true of him as a rookie as well. His game against the Vikings looked like progress, but the follow-up against the Commanders was a dud. And the deficiencies on the offensive line and at wide receiver are working against him through the process.

What is one change the Bears must make offensively?The offensive line can’t stay the same. Newcomer Alex Leatherwood was a first-round pick in 2021 and needs to play against the Patriots. Look for him at right guard. Lucas Patrick needs to get back to his intended position at center.

What is the biggest problem facing the Bears overall?Their run defense. It’s ruining everything they hoped to accomplish defensively. The goal of every defense is to create obvious passing situations, and that’s not happening often because teams are running so effectively against the Bears. If they tighten that up and force more third-and-longs, that allows their pass rush to get going and that’s the best formula for takeaways.

What has been the best surprise so far?The safeties. After years of pairing Eddie Jackson with league-minimum players, the Bears found him a perfect partner in rookie Jaquan Brisker. There were high expectations on Brisker because he was a second-round pick, but there’s rarely certainty that a rookie will play this well this soon. And Jackson, once thought to be likely headed out the door, is reasserting himself as part of the Bears’ future.

What has been the biggest disappointment so far?The wide receivers. Even Darnell Mooney has been making mistakes. And beyond him, the Bears don’t have anyone who causes problems for an opposing defense. Ryan Poles hoped he’d find at least one game changer among the budget-friendly group he cobbled together, but unless N’Keal Harry is that guy, that dream didn’t come true.

What is your revised prediction of the Bears’ final record?5-12. The Bears won a game unexpectedly over the 49ers in the opener, then lost to a brutally bad opponent Thursday against the Commanders. Realistically, there is no sure win on this schedule, and there aren’t a lot of Texans-level opponents left anyway.

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Blackhawks rally past Sharks for first win of season

SAN JOSE, Calif. — New coach Luke Richardson held the game puck as a keepsake, the festive beats of “Mi Gente” blared in the locker room and the Blackhawks grinned beneath sweaty hair Saturday after claiming their first win of the season.

Five unanswered goals during the second and third periods gave the Hawks a 5-2 victory over the Sharks, ending their three-game opening road trip on a much-needed high note.

“After those last two games, we got better from the Colorado game to the Vegas game, and to get through that first period here and to come out on top was huge for this team,” Taylor Raddysh said. “It’s a really good feeling right now.”

With the win, the Hawks avoided the possibility of another drawn-out losing streak to start the season — it took them 10 games to get their first win last season — even before entering a week off before Friday’s home opener against the Red Wings.

After a pregame ceremony honoring former Hawks defenseman and (more recently) Sharks general manager Doug Wilson, a scrappy start for the Hawks faded a poor second 10 minutes and a 2-0 deficit. Richardson addressed it at the intermission.

“I didn’t say too much, but I just made them realize what went on in the period, that we were moving our legs and then we weren’t,” Richardson said. “The compete level had to rise up. And the veterans took that one step further. We came out and played great.”

Jonathan Toews continued his strong start to the season by cashing in a breakaway — the Hawks’ first even-strength goal of the season — before Sam Lafferty and newcomer Jason Dickinson teamed up to score shorthanded goals on consecutive Sharks power plays. The Hawks previously hadn’t scored multiple shorthanded goals in a game since February 2016, and the momentum-shifting plays gave the Hawks a lead they never relinquished.

Dickinson, in his Hawks debut, finished with three points, as did Lafferty. Raddysh and Tyler Johnson each added two points, and goalie Petr Mrazek saved 24 of 26 shots for his first win as a Hawk. The Hawks also recorded the majority of scoring chances (18-16) and expected goals at five-on-five, in sharp contrast to their previous two losses.

But Richardson’s first win as coach was the most notable first, although he characteristically downplayed it.

“I’m happy to share the puck with the whole team,” he said. “It’s not mine. They deserve it. They’re the ones that go out and sacrifice; we just try to put a plan in place for them. But definitely, it feels nice. Maybe [there will be] an extra glass of wine tonight for me.”

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Illini football has gone gonzo! How far will the Orange and Blue Express go?

The scoreboard said Illinois 26, Minnesota 14.

All the other numbers screamed cruel, unusual punishment.

Illini football has gone gonzo, people. Enjoy it while it lasts, which might be for the rest of this already-special season and beyond.

The Illini are 6-1 — that means bowl-bound — after outgaining the Gophers 472-180, out-possessing them 40:04 to 19:56, winning the turnover battle 3-0 and pumping belief into fans that the Orange and Blue Express is well on its way to Indianapolis, the site of the Big Ten championship game, in December.

”This game wasn’t won this week,” coach Bret Bielema said. ”It was won in January, the way we prepare our guys.”

Many questions about whom the real bully is in the Big Ten West have been answered during a three-game winning streak against Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota. Those teams were supposed to be the top West contenders because of their rugged styles, but the Illini are staging a hostile takeover led by a lights-out defense and supported by clutch quarterback Tommy DeVito and indefatigable running back Chase Brown, the leading rusher in the country.

On a Saturday to remember, Brown carried an unthinkable 41 times for 180 yards.

”If there’s a better player in college football that has had a [bigger] effect on his own program,” Bielema said, ”I’d like to know who it is.”

And in an October beyond most fans’ wildest imaginations, the Illini have beaten the Badgers, Hawkeyes and Gophers for the first time in one season since 1983.

”All the work we put in in the spring and summer,” Brown said, ”this is just a representation of what we did and what we’re going to continue to do.”

So many recent Illinois teams have been brutal to watch, unable to protect their overmatched quarterbacks, unable to stop the run, unable to pull off any sort of representation of major-college football. But this team attacks defenses, pressures opposing passers relentlessly, creates waves of momentum that are almost shocking.

Is this what a good team looks like? It must be.

Is it going to last? There’s no reason it can’t or shouldn’t.

A bye week comes at a good time, a chance to breathe before a five-game finish that begins Oct. 29 at Nebraska. Illinois hasn’t been 7-1 in a mighty long time, either, you know. The last time was 2001, and where did that team end up? In the Sugar Bowl on New Year’s Day.

Three-dot dash

Manny Machado and Juan Soto

Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images

We journalists don’t root for teams because it’s unprofessional. Have I mentioned I’m pulling for the Padres to win the World Series? Jed Hoyer’s old team plowed $300 million into Manny Machado, traded with the Cubs for Yu Darvish, traded for Juan Soto and Josh Bell, traded for Josh Hader — it’s called going for it, people. Shoving all-in. Not leaning on ”market forces” or ”biblical losses” as an excuse to lose.

A mega-market, money-making machine such as the Cubs should be in everything-but-the-kitchen-sink mode pretty much at all times. They should be embarrassed right now, especially if the Padres pull this off. . . .

The Reds have announced a multiyear partnership with BetMGM that includes a sportsbook at Great American Ball Park. Just as long as baseball keeps Pete Rose out of the Hall of Fame, right? . . .

Raise your hand if you had the Phillies in the National League Championship Series.

Oh, stop, you did not. . . .

Free advice to Bulls coach Billy Donovan: Play rookie Dalen Terry more.

Don’t mention it, bub. . . .

My poll for the preseason AP Top 25 in college basketball has been submitted. I have Gonzaga in the top spot, followed by Houston, North Carolina, Kentucky and Baylor. Indiana, at No. 8, is my highest Big Ten team, with Illinois next at No. 19. . . .

Atlantic-10 basketball coaches and media picked newcomer Loyola fourth, behind Dayton, Saint Louis and Virginia Commonwealth. If they’re right, this could be where the Ramblers disappear from national relevance for a while. . . .

By the way, Bielema’s best coaching move at Illinois so far: not letting Brown get tackled in the spring. Spare the workhorse’s legs when you can.

This you gotta see

Bills at Chiefs (3:25 p.m. Sunday, Ch. 2, Paramount+): As Josh Allen and Patrick Mahomes trade superhero throws, ask yourselves how they would fare behind the Bears’ offensive line. Better yet, just enjoy the show.

”The Cave of Adullam” (4 p.m. Sunday, ESPN): This is the story of Jason Wilson and the dojo he runs for young Black boys in Detroit, which prioritizes emotional stability above all else.

Jimmy Butler

Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images

Bulls at Heat (6:30 p.m. Wednesday, NBCSCH): The season begins against the always-tough crew led by Jimmy Butler. Remember him? It turns out he’s still pretty good.

Only because you asked

From Gary, via email:

”Ohio State or Michigan? The Wolverines look like the team to beat from what I’ve seen.”

I don’t know what kind of TV you’re looking at. It’s the Buckeyes’ year in the Big Ten.

The bottom five

Nick Saban: Isn’t he supposed to know a thing or two about defense? Alabama scored 49 — not bad — but gave up 52 at Tennessee.

”Best game ever”: Come on, stop going overboard about Tennessee’s 52-49 victory on a long field goal at the final gun to snap a 15-game losing streak against a hated rival and tilt the college football world on its axis. OK, fine, it was pretty dang great.

P.J. Fleck: Minnesota’s coach really should’ve had to row a boat home after that miserable performance in Champaign.

Draymond Green: The Warriors just gave Jordan Poole and Andrew Wiggins so much money, he’s punching himself in the face.

Play-by-play announcers: Are they bound by law to feign disgust when a fan runs onto the field and interrupts the game? You know they secretly get a kick out of it, like everybody else.

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Blackhawks notebook: Another faceoff rule change causes confusion

SAN JOSE, Calif. — The NHL seemingly tweaks the minutiae of faceoff rules every season, hoping to help offenses and increase scoring by the slightest amounts.

This year, the league has supposedly banned players from dropping to one knee to win draws, Blackhawks coach Luke Richardson said Saturday. And new Hawks forward Colin Blackwell, perhaps aided by his Harvard degree, has kept his eyes peeled for potential violations.

“I don’t know how many times he was yelling at the referee last game because they were dropping to one knee,” Richardson said. “I quickly pointed out Max [Domi] did it once, too, so just be a little quieter.”

The Hawks did believe Golden Knights center William Karlsson was skirting the new rule frequently Thursday. But Richardson is nonetheless skeptical the change, whether enforced or not, will make a substantial difference.

“I don’t know how that is going to [increase scoring],” he said. “Because if you’re in the offensive zone, you’re going to do everything you can to try to win that draw.

“The one that they took out where the [Zenon] Konopka guy would just lock your stick down and use his free hand or glove on [the puck]….that made sense. This other one, I’m not really sure how much that makes sense. But that’s just the rules we’ve got to play.”

Oilers hire Keith

Three months after retiring as a player, Duncan Keith has landed his first front office gig. The longtime Hawks defenseman, who spent his final season with the Oilers in 2021-22, was hired by the Oilers on Friday as a player development consultant.

He’ll coach and advise Oilers prospects in juniors and the AHL, filling a role similar to former teammate Brian Campbell’s initial job in the Hawks’ front office.

News for Roos

Hawks defenseman Filip Roos has been admirably poised and composed in his first few NHL games, which have also been his first games ever in North America. Off the ice, however, the 23-year-old Swede has been a bit more wide-eyed.

“It’s a new country and everything like that, [but] I’m just trying to be focused on the game and on the practices,” Roos said Thursday. “It’s a new thing for me, but it’s getting better and better.”

His reaction to the Hawks’ trip to Las Vegas was hilarious.

“I said to the boys, when we were out walking, that it’s like a movie going out there,” he said with a grin. “It’s just unreal.”

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Hall of Fame center Mutombo has brain tumoron October 15, 2022 at 10:51 pm

Dikembe Mutombo is undergoing treatment for a brain tumor, the NBA announced Saturday on behalf of the Hall of Fame center and his family.

The NBA said in a statement that Mutombo — who ranks second in NBA history for career blocks — is beginning treatment in Atlanta and is in “great spirits.”

“Dikembe and his family ask for privacy during this time so they can focus on his care,” the league said. “They are grateful for your prayers and good wishes.”

Mutombo, 56, played 18 NBA seasons for the Denver Nuggets, Atlanta Hawks, Philadelphia 76ers, New Jersey Nets, New York Knicks and Houston Rockets before retiring after the 2008-09 season.

He was the league’s top defensive player four times, earned three All-NBA selections and played in eight All-Star Games over 18 seasons. Mutombo ranks 17th in rebounds (12,359) and finished with 3,289 career blocks, second to Hakeem Olajuwon (3,830). Mutombo followed most blocks with a playful wag of his right index finger, a gesture that became his enduring signature.

“We know he will approach this challenge with the same determination and grit that have made him a legend on and off the court,” Atlanta Hawks principal owner Tony Ressler said.

Following his playing career, Mutombo has worked extensively for charitable and humanitarian causes. He has served as an ambassador for the sport, particularly in the development of the Basketball Africa League, which completed its second season in May.

Mutombo was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2015. He had recently appeared at Hall of Fame enshrinement events in Springfield, Massachusetts, as well as a pair of preseason games in Saitama, Japan. Mutombo also appeared with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken at an event in the Congo, Mutombo’s native country, in August.

Blinken lauded Mutombo when they were together, telling him, “You’ve done so much to bring the world together.”

Mutombo speaks nine languages and founded the Dikembe Mutombo Foundation in 1997, concentrating on improving health, education and quality of life for the people in the Congo. His foundation led the building of a 170-bed hospital in Kinshasa, the capital city, and that facility has treated nearly a half-million people regardless of their ability to pay for care.

He also has served on the boards of many organizations, including Special Olympics International, the CDC Foundation and the National Board for the U.S. Fund for UNICEF.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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High school football: Loyola handles St. Patrick and looks ahead to showdown vs. Mount Carmel

Jake Stearney’s work was done earlySaturday afternoon. Coming out for halftime with Loyola up by 46 points, the Ramblers senior quarterbackwas wearing a baseball cap and carrying a tablet.

Two quarters’ worth of a runningclock later, Loyola had beaten St. Patrick 53-7 and Stearney and his teammates could finally discuss what everyone has been talking about: next week’s showdown in Wilmette between No. 1 Mount Carmel and No. 2 Loyola.

At stake: the CCL/ESCC Blue title, IHSA playoff seeding and plenty of bragging rights in the Chicago area and beyond.

“We haven’t overlooked any team we’ve played,” Stearney said. “But definitely this game was in the back of our minds for some time now. We’re going to have a great week of prep and just do our thing.”

In the postgamehuddle, Loyola coach John Holecek told his players they’d be underdogs for the first time all year.

“We’ll take it,” Stearney said. “Obviously in our minds we know we’re the best team in the state and the Midwest. Then again, getting that noise — they’re ranked No. 1, we’re ranked No. 2 — it doesn’t really matter at the end of the day.”

Asked if he was glad Mount Carmel week is finally here, Holecek said jokingly, “I’ll be glad when it’s over.

“Honestly, I don’t think it’s a stretch to say [Mount Carmel is] one of the best teams I’ve ever seen in high school. … They’re a machine and we knew that last year when they were all juniors.”

Both teams are 8-0 overall, 3-0 in the conference. Mount Carmel’s closest game was a 28-21 win at Brother Rice two weeks ago; Loyola’s narrowest win was 28-17 at Marist also two weeks ago.

The Ramblers came into the season expecting to be explosive on offense with plenty of experience and depth, and that’s proven to be the case. Loyola isaveraging 44 points a game. Coming into his abbreviated outing on Saturday, Holy Cross recruit Stearney was completing 73% of his passes for 1,477 yards and 25 touchdowns with three interceptions.

Will Nimesheim, who had a TD run and TD reception as Loyola opened a 22-0 first-quarter lead on Saturday is a proven back and sophomore Luke Foster was an effective second option.

But Drew McPherson, another sophomore, is out with an injury. “He’s a home-run threat every time he runs,” Holecek said. “Fastest guy on our team.”

The defense, which was the more unproven unit heading into the year, is giving up 14 points a game. Starting defensive tackle Joe Kelly is out for the season because of an injury, so Western Michigan-bound tight end Jack Parker is getting defensive snaps and making his presence felt.

The leader on that side of the ball is 6-6 lineman Brooks Bahr, a Michigan recruit who believes the defense is trending up.

“We started off strong, we’ve had our ups and downs throughout the season,” Bahr said. “Then again, we’re executing nicely and correcting the stuff we need to work on. It’s nice to see that all the guys are buying in, doing their thing.”

Now comes the big test.

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High school football: Andre Crews’ three TDs give Simeon a Battle of Vincennes win vs. Morgan Park

Simeon running back Andre Crews had a “mishap” before the Battle of Vincennes on Saturday and wound up without his customary No. 4 jersey.

He wore No. 38 against Morgan Park, so the Wolverines’ running game didn’t look quite the same numerically or production-wise in the first half.

But the Simeon defense stepped up and scored twice early. Then Crews came alive in the second half to lead the No. 5 Wolverines to a comfortable 42-22 win against the No. 24 Mustangs at Gately Stadium.

“At this point everyone realizes Crews is one heck of a running back so they load up to try and stop the run,” Simeon coach Dante Culbreath said. “Morgan Park came out with a great plan to try and stop it but we eventually got the offensive line rolling. They are probably the most important part of our team this year, the heavy guys up front.”

Crews had 20 carries for 179 yards with touchdown runs of three, 21 and 75 yards.

“We just had to make sure that the offensive line got to the second level,” Crews said. “When that happened there were holes for me to get through.”

Simeon’s defense made several crucial plays early to keep Morgan Park from finding any momentum. Junior defensive lineman Mikeshun Beeler was dominant for the second consecutive week. He recovered a fumble in the end zone for a touchdown to put the Wolverines up 7-0.

Then in the second quarter, Beeler blocked a punt to set up Crews’ three-yard TD run and make it 21-8. He also had a pair of sacks and multiple tackles for a loss.

“He is working his tail off and practices like he plays,” Culbreath said. “I have to take him out of practice sometimes because he only has one speed.”

Safety Andrew Beasley had a 45-yard fumble recovery touchdown in the second quarter for the Wolverines.

Morgan Park (7-1, 4-1 Red-South) is significantly younger than Simeon (8-0, 5-0) and entered as the underdog, despite both teams being undefeated.

The Mustangs pulled within 28-14 of Simeon on a 22-yard touchdown pass from sophomore Marcus Thaxton to Tysean Griffin midway through the second quarter.

Crews ripped off the 75-yard touchdown five minutes later to seal the win. He’s still waiting on his first college scholarship offer despite being one of the best players in the area.

“I’ve heard from Cincinnati, Michigan and Michigan State but no offers yet,” Crews said.

Simeon quarterback Keshaun Parker was 5 for 11 passing for 122 yards with a 50-yard touchdown pass to Cameron Ashley.

Cincinnati recruit Malik Elzy caught three passes for 68 yards and had an interception for the Wolverines.

Thaxton was 12 for 30 passing for 174 yards with three touchdowns and an interception for Morgan Park. Griffin had 22 carries for 87 yards and three catches for 48 yards and a touchdown.

Simeon clinched the Red-South conference title with the victory but has more than just city glory in mind.

“We know they have a good team and good players but we wanted it more,” Crews said. “We have a team of seniors that have been together all four years. We want that state championship and we are going to get it by any means.”

A suburban officiating crew was brought in to do the game, which is unusual. The game was originally scheduled to be played Friday night and broadcast on television but was moved to a Saturday afternoon slot last week.

“This was good for the city,” Culbreath said. “I love seeing everyone out. There are so many bad images of the city out there so to be able to come out and do this with both sides of Vincennes is great. Everyone was a class act.”

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Bears off to rough start under coach Matt Eberflus, but he can still change their course

Bears coach Matt Eberflus sounded like he was ready to rethink anything and everything after steering the team to one of its most disheartening losses in recent memory.

It’s hard to pinpoint exactly what was the worst part about losing 12-7 to the Commanders on Thursday.

Was it the meager point total? Getting inside the opponent’s 5-yard line and failing to score three times? Seeing across-the-board malfunctions on offense, ranging from poor protection to a head-scratching game plan?

Or the underlying embarrassment of such a pitiful performance coming at home against a really bad team?

There are countless other nominations, but the bottom line is that it looked like the low point of the Eberflus era. Hopefully for him, it was.

The first five games weren’t quite spectacular, either, so it’s imperative that Eberflus and his staff — especially offensive coordinator Luke Getsy — use this break to consider every possible alternative that would prevent the rest of this season from being totally unwatchable.

The Bears got saddled with the latest possible bye, Week 14, but they have a rare 10 full days between their debacle against the Commanders and their Oct. 24 Monday night game at the Patriots.

Don’t underestimate the challenge of that game, by the way, just because the Patriots are 2-3. That will be the most complex, deceptive defense quarterback Justin Fields has ever faced.

Anyway, the key to making meaningful changes is being realistic about what’s wrong. Very little about this 2-4 start is worth clinging to, and the Bears are absolutely not “right there” on the cusp of being a good team, as Eberflus said after losing to the Commanders.

The Bears don’t have to be a good team this season. They’re in the first year of a major rebuild from the mess Ryan Pace and Matt Nagy left behind. But just because there are no serious expectations of the team doesn’t mean there aren’t expectations of Eberflus. Of course the Bears aren’t ready to compete for a Super Bowl, but Eberflus needs to show that they’re at least taking small steps in that direction.

If general manager Ryan Poles and chairman George McCaskey are looking for confirmation that they hired the right coach, they should watch closely during this break. Making adjustments is a huge part of the job, and based on the first six weeks, Eberflus needs to make a lot of them.

The offense should be his priority, and it’s a difficult problem to solve for someone who spent 30 years exclusively coaching defense before this season. Being able to figure that out is the difference between a coordinator and a head coach.

Under Getsy, with Eberflus’ supervision, the Bears are 29th in scoring at 15.5 points per game. The offense somehow has regressed from the score-17-points-and-pray-it’s-enough days under Nagy. It’s averaging just 5.3 yards per play.

They’re the sixth-worst team on third down, converting just 35.6%. Getsy said the goal is 48% because that would typically be tops in the NFL. There’s a mountain to climb from where the Bears sit to the league-leading Bills (55.7%) and Chiefs (52.5%).

Fields has the second-worst passer rating in the league at 72.7, half a point below his rookie season. The Bears are near the top of the NFL in rushing (170.8 yards per game and 5.2 per carry), but that’s not getting them very far when opponents know that’s the only thing they do well.

All the questions about Poles’ offseason moves and non-moves at wide receiver and on the offensive line have proven to be as problematic as everyone expected. Fields hasn’t made significant improvements, and the personnel around him is only making that tougher.

Eberflus and his staff have no choice but to make the best of it. He must be able to take players Poles gives him and add value through development. There aren’t many shining examples of that.

That’s true on defense, too. And it shouldn’t be. If nothing else, Eberflus should be masterful on that side of the ball. He should be able to take a less-than-ideal roster and scheme it into something viable.

At first it looked like he was pulling off that magic trick, but the collapse of the run defense has undone the Bears. They’re allowing 163 yards rushing per game, 29th in the league. The Commanders averaged 4.6 yards per carry, up from 3.9 over their first five games.

The pass rush isn’t getting sacks. Star linebacker Roquan Smith has been closer to good than great, and Eberflus was supposed to be launching him into a new stratosphere.

And then there’s the rookie class. No coach wants to rely on rookies, but Eberflus knew that would be a big piece of the job when he took it. Poles drafted cornerback Kyler Gordon and safety Jaquan Brisker in the second round expecting Eberflus to turn them into pillars of the future. Brisker has been great, but Gordon has a long way to go.

Wide receiver Velus Jones (third round) and left tackle Braxton Jones (fifth) are off to unconvincing starts. At least they found a top-10 punter in seventh-rounder Trenton Gill. They need him.

But it doesn’t have to stay this way. A rough start doesn’t mean Eberflus can’t turn it around. He has to be a problem solver, and this break gives him the opportunity to change course before it’s too late.

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