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Man charged with murder in fatal December shooting in East Garfield ParkSun-Times Wireon September 12, 2021 at 2:46 pm

A man is accused of fatally shooting another man last December in East Garfield Park.

Rayvon Lofton, 19, is the second man charged with murder in the Dec. 22 slaying of 20-year-old Jim Courtney-Clarks, Chicago police said.

Courtney-Clarks was in the 700 block of North Ridgeway Avenue about 12:45 p.m. that day when he was shot in the chest, police said. He died at Stroger Hospital.

Lofton was arrested Sept. 9 in the Loop after allegedly being identified as one of the attackers, police said.

He was expected to appear in court Sunday.

Rayvon Lofton is charged with murder in a fatal shooting that occurred in December in East Garfield Park. Chicago Police Department

In June, another man also was charged in the case.

Jerryyon Stevens is accused of driving a stolen Honda to the scene of the shooting. There, according to prosecutors, two members of the Traveling Vice Lords got out of the Honda and opened fire at Courtney-Clarks and another man as they walked on the sidewalk.

Stevens, 21, was once featured in a Chicago Magazine profile when he was a teenager. He faces a count of first-degree murder for the apparent gang-related attack on Courtney-Clarks.

Investigators used surveillance camera footage and cellphone records to track Stevens and the two gunmen, according to Assistant Cook County State’s Attorney Kevin DeBoni.

Stevens’ face and distinctive clothing was recorded by a camera at a convenience store where Stevens met up with the gunmen before the shooting, DeBoni said at a court hearing in June.

Jerryon StevensChicago police

Stevens was also identified by a Chicago police officer who viewed the surveillance footage and recognized him, DeBoni said.

Stevens was the subject of a lengthy 2016 profile story in Chicago Magazine that detailed his dreams and the hardships he faced growing up on the West Side.

He was working at a family business and for a moving company to support his young daughter before his arrest, an assistant public defender said at that June hearing.

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Man charged with murder in fatal December shooting in East Garfield ParkSun-Times Wireon September 12, 2021 at 2:46 pm Read More »

With his job on the line, Bears coach Matt Nagy ‘calm as I’ve ever been’ heading into 2021 seasonJason Lieseron September 12, 2021 at 3:00 pm

Matt Nagy is 28-20 as head coach of the Bears and has gone 0-2 in the playoffs. | Nam Y. Huh/AP

Free of expectations and hardened by surviving his struggles to get one more season, Nagy has been at ease as he has worked toward the opener against the Rams.

Bringing back Matt Nagy to coach the Bears for another season required somewhat of an apology.

Even without a full crowd at Soldier Field to boo the team off the field every other week, chairman George McCaskey had a sense that this wasn’t going to go over well. Maybe he caught a whiff of the fury swirling around Nagy and general manager Ryan Pace on Twitter, or maybe it was simply logical to expect backlash after going 16-16 and getting pitiful offense from a supposed offensive guru.

“The decisions we’re announcing today may not be the easiest or most popular,” he acknowledged before taking a question.

Later, along with a smattering of dubious explanations and repeated use of the word collaboration, he said, “I don’t know, frankly, that a lot of people have confidence in this course of action. But sometimes you have to take the route that you think is best, even when it’s not the most popular decision.”

Nagy was logged on and listening to the Zoom call as reporters grilled McCaskey about the counterintuitive move to retain him as he waited for the heat coming his way. When his turn came, he described McCaskey allowing him to keep his job as an “opportunity,” reflecting that he grasped how close he’d come to getting fired.

It has been quite a plunge for the man who charmed Chicago with positivity and creativity on his way to going 12-4, winning the NFC North and claiming Coach of the Year honors in 2018. It was less than three years ago that the Bears celebrated the division title by toppling the archrival Packers at Soldier Field.

It feels like eternity.

The two seasons since have been disaster-laden in ways Nagy couldn’t have imagined.

He set the franchise low for fewest run plays with seven in a 2019 loss to the Saints, then said the next day he knew the Bears needed to run more and, “I’m not an idiot.” It’s never a good situation when you feel that needs to be said.

He followed that a year later with, “I don’t know,” when asked how his team had fallen off a cliff from winning the division to letting a home game against the Lions disintegrate in his hands as he called two pass plays late when all he needed to do was run out the clock. That was their sixth consecutive loss, a streak spanning nearly two months.

Additionally, Nagy has gone 1-5 against the Packers, scored the seventh-fewest points in the NFL over the last two seasons, been unable to make Mitch Trubisky or Nick Foles functional at quarterback and seen the offense dry up to the point that he had no choice but to give up play calling to offensive coordinator Bill Lazor, though he promptly reclaimed that role going into this season.

For those reasons and more, Nagy’s future with the Bears is absolutely on the line when this season opens Sunday at the Rams. There’s no way he survives if the string of embarrassments continues. McCaskey demanded “sufficient progress.” No one thinks Nagy has been handed a championship roster, but it’s enough talent for a smart coach to get to the playoffs.

Amid all that pressure and turmoil, the one thing Nagy keeps saying is that none of it rattles him. Improbably, he’s more comfortable now than in any other season. “As calm as I’ve ever been in my life,” as he put it. There’s freedom from expectations, strength from surviving and authentic confidence that he can finally fix the Bears’ offense.

“I got to the summer and you just start thinking about the time that it’s taken to get to where we’re at and how we’ve done certain things,” Nagy said. “We’ve had highs, we’ve had lows and we’ve been calloused mentally and physically.

“And as I started thinking about all of that, and about the people I have around me — the players, the coaches, the support staff — that’s when the calm started happening. And it’s nice to have that. It really is. It’s something that I’m going to continue to stick with.”

If it seems like he would’ve felt more at ease coming off the 2018 season, when the Bears believed they were climbing toward a championship, that’s not the case.

The players bought into the hype, and Nagy probably did, too. When he looks back at the ensuing training camp, when running back Tarik Cohen fired off the word “dynasty,” Nagy regrets that he didn’t do more to keep things level. The 2019 Bears opened with a thudding loss to the Packers and were sunk by midseason at 3-5.

“Everyone’s talking about the Super Bowl, this and that, and that’s the worst thing that could have happened,” Nagy said. “Where I wanted to improve is not [to] listen to those distractions. It means nothing. So we learned from that. That’s where I’ve been able to use these experiences to help me be calm.”

Inner peace is nice and all, but how about that offense?

Here’s the harsh truth about Nagy’s first three seasons: The Bears hired him to be an offensive mastermind and quarterback whisper, but he has been neither. The 2018 offense, when the Bears were ninth in scoring, was a bit of a mirage as Trubisky fattened up his stats against the lowly Buccaneers and the Khalil Mack-led defense carried the team.

Over the 2019 and ’20 seasons, the Bears were 26th in points, 29th in yardage, 26th in yards per carry and 23rd in passer rating–completely wasting one of the best defenses in the NFL. The Bears lost six games in which their defense allowed 24 points or fewer in 2019 and another four last season. It wouldn’t have taken much to turn 8-8 into 10-6 or better.

While the benchmarks for Nagy to keep his job aren’t necessarily quantifiable, they’re reasonably clear.

He better be right about quarterback Andy Dalton, and nothing will be more scrutinized than his handling of rookie Justin Fields. The running game has to exist. He can’t keep snatching defeat from the jaws of victory like he did in that meltdown against the Lions or the hashmark debacle on the last-second field goal try against the Chargers two years ago. He must prove he’s grown from having “failed in a lot of different ways” so far. And when 9-8 will probably be good enough to make the playoffs, he needs to get there.

“I’ve learned a lot, whether it’s on game day or throughout the week or running a meeting — sometimes it’s just how you speak to the players,” Nagy said. “Sometimes that changes, and that’s where I grow and where I learn. How can I get better so that these guys know that I’m doing everything I can on my part to improve, and it’s not just always the players’ fault?”

For all Nagy’s talk about his plan to hold Fields out for a season to prepare him to take over in 2022, he must earn the right to stick around for that. The Bears are betting everything on Fields rescuing them. They’re committed to him long term. They aren’t committed to Nagy past this season.

The biggest puzzle Nagy must solve is his offensive line, which rarely had cohesion as injuries disrupted the unit throughout the preseason and eventually saw presumptive starting left tackle Teven Jenkins undergo back surgery, but there have to be answers in there somewhere. It’s his job to find them. Sam Mustipher went from practice squad to starting center last season. It can be fixed.

“This is part of the game,” Nagy said. “This is just how we have to be built, meaning you’ve gotta prepare for times like this. You’ve got to be able to accept news when it comes certain ways.”

Beyond the o-line tumult, Nagy has everything he has wanted.

Dalton is the capable veteran he helped choose, and Fields is the ultra-talented game-changer he also helped choose. He can’t point to Trubisky’s struggles with mastering the playbook and reading defenses anymore.

Allen Robinson is a three-time 1,000-yard receiver, Darnell Mooney is ascending and Marquise Goodwin is a better third option than any Nagy has had in his Bears tenure.

Tight end Cole Kmet is poised for a big season, and Jimmy Graham can still box out for red-zone catches at 34 as well as anyone.

Running back David Montgomery is coming off a season of 1,508 yards of total offense, and Cohen’s return from a torn ACL gives Nagy his favorite weapon back.

“I really feel great about it,” Nagy said of the collection of skill players he helped craft. “What we have here and how we want to do things… At all positions, we feel really good with where we’re at — schematically, personnel-wise, across the board.”

Nagy felt a swell of confidence when he saw his offensive personnel take the field during offseason practices. He saw plenty of dynamic talent with which to work and not a single headache in the group. And while he might not have the same ferocious defense that helped him in 2018, it’s still very good. Nagy has what he needs. If he can’t make this team viable, it’s on him.

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With his job on the line, Bears coach Matt Nagy ‘calm as I’ve ever been’ heading into 2021 seasonJason Lieseron September 12, 2021 at 3:00 pm Read More »

Bears pick of Justin Fields has everyone thinking 2022, but what if he’s ready sooner?Jason Lieseron September 12, 2021 at 3:10 pm

At the end of another sweltering, exhausting morning of training camp, Cole Kmet is on the practice field behind Halas Hall, daydreaming of the future.

The Bears are Kmet’s team in more ways than one. If he hadn’t pushed his way to the top of college football as a tight end at Notre Dame and compelled the Bears to draft him, he still would have been elated to see them get dynamic Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields. Kmet grew up in Arlington Heights, and his father spent the 1993 season on the Bears’ practice squad as a defensive lineman. Even if Kmet had pursued one of his other interests and become a psychologist, he probably would have been screaming at the TV on draft night and rushing to pre-order a Fields jersey.

So in many ways, he’s having the same experience as the rest of the Chicago area. The Fields pick turned everyone’s attention to 2022 and beyond, but the Bears still hope they can squeak into the playoffs with Andy Dalton this season. They’re following two very different, yet concurrent, plans.

And so is Kmet. He’s working to synchronize himself with Dalton — his quarterback for the majority of practice — and make a big leap in his second NFL season. But he also can’t help envisioning what the Bears could be with Fields.

That’s why he’s still out here in his cleats when practice ended 15 minutes ago. The sun is blazing as it nears noon, and he’s sprinting through passing routes with Fields. Their success might be a year away, but he imagines this connection lasting a long time.

“That’s the hope,” Kmet said. “They drafted us with that in mind, so it’s good to get that equity in now — start building that. It will be good for both of us in the long run.”

Fields has been the talk of the town since Bears general manager Ryan Pace traded up to No. 11 to get him in April. Rarely have the Bears had a young quarterback with such proficiency throwing deep. Equally rare is the Bears quarterback who can outrun an entire defense. Suddenly they have both in Fields. Whether he takes over sometime this season or the Bears follow through with their original plan for him to step in at the start of 2022, it’s impossible to keep from looking ahead.

The wait will be agonizing.

Dalton is steady and experienced, but Fields is explosive. His high end is so much more than Dalton has ever been. So unless Dalton, in Year 11, rediscovers the modest success he had in 2015 and ’16 with the Bengals, the calls for Fields will be early and persistent.

They started in his preseason debut. Throughout his 33 snaps against the Dolphins on Aug. 14, a quarterback-starved crowd of 43,235 at Soldier Field chanted, “Let’s go, Fields!” and, more pointedly,

“Q-B-1!” The latter was a response to the Bears tweeting a photo of Dalton in the offseason with “QB1” as the caption.

“You know, we all want the same thing,” coach Matt Nagy said that day, trying fruitlessly to convince the masses he’s not the enemy of fun. “We understand the buzz. We understand the excitement. That’s why we drafted him. But we want to make sure that we . . . understand the process.”

By the way, is “process” going to replace “collaborate” as the word that absolutely nauseates Bears fans?

Nagy’s model for handling Fields is the Chiefs’ approach to No. 10 pick Patrick Mahomes in 2017, when Nagy was their quarterbacks coach. But that doesn’t take into account how many quarterbacks have succeeded as rookies, or the fact that the Chiefs were in a much different position than the Bears are in now.

After the Bears couldn’t pry Russell Wilson from the Seahawks in the offseason, they went for the next best option in Fields. They think he’s that good. Tight end Jimmy Graham, who spent his entire career with Drew Brees, Wilson and Aaron Rodgers before stumbling into the Bears’ quarterback circus, said it unequivocally.

“I love the kid,” Graham said. “He sits beside me in the locker room and, man . . . he wants to be great. He puts in the work. The guy really can throw the ball. That’s been impressive to see his arm strength.

“I’ve got to get him matched up at some point with [Wilson] up there in Seattle — especially the ability to make plays while you’re running. It’s been impressive to see him so young, so focused. It definitely reminds me a lot of Russell Wilson.”

The Seahawks signed Matt Flynn to a three-year, $20.5 million deal in 2012, the same year they drafted Wilson in the third round. But Wilson was too good to keep on the bench, and the Seahawks named him their starter about two weeks before their opener. He threw 26 touchdown passes against 10 interceptions and finished with a 100 passer rating as the Seahawks went 11-5. Only the Patriots have won more games or been to more Super Bowls since Wilson got the job.

The Cowboys’ Dak Prescott had one of the best rookie seasons of all time in 2016, and the Chargers’ Justin Herbert set the rookie record with 31 touchdown passes last season. In more than a century of existence, the Bears have never had any quarterback throw 30.

Mahomes sat behind Alex Smith until a meaningless final game his rookie year, then stepped up with 50 touchdown passes in Year 2 to claim the MVP Award. Nagy admitted he can’t directly attribute that breakout to Mahomes taking a so-called “red-shirt year,” and it’s possible Mahomes would have set every rookie record if he’d played right away.

But the Chiefs didn’t necessarily need that. Smith gave them a career year in 2017. There wasn’t nearly the urgency that weighs on the Bears as they come off flops by Mitch Trubisky and Nick Foles and now turn to Dalton. Dalton is decisively better than either of his predecessors, but he assumed he was entering the clipboard phase of his career when he signed with the Cowboys to be Prescott’s backup last year.

The Bears’ offense, which scored the fourth-fewest points in 2019 and the 11th-fewest last season, needs a spark. Dalton can keep the team afloat, but that’s hardly aspirational. There’s potential with weapons such as Allen Robinson, Darnell Mooney, Tarik Cohen and David Montgomery — all 27 or under. Throw in someone with Fields’ limitless potential, and the offense gets a lot more dangerous.

Ohio State coach Ryan Day hugs quarterback Justin Fields after their win against Clemson in the Sugar Bowl.Gerald Herbert/AP

In his two seasons at Ohio State, Fields completed 68.4% of his passes, threw for 63 touchdowns against nine interceptions and averaged 244.2 yards per game. He also rushed for 867 yards and 15 touchdowns.

“The ceiling’s really, really high,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said. “I’m sure that’s what everybody in Chicago is fired up about. That’s what the Bears organization recognized.”

Dreaming big yet? Fields surely is. But to his credit, he has said all the right things and has accepted Nagy’s plan.

“I’m constantly growing every day,” he said in training camp. “A lot of people are anxious to see me play, but greatness doesn’t happen overnight. It’s a process. I’m just trying to take it day by day.”

Pressed again after his preseason debut about the strain between wanting to start and staying patient, he said, “When you look too far in the future, you start worrying about way too much stuff.”

That’s nice to say in the preseason, but it’ll get more difficult to wait his turn once the Bears hit the regular season. It’ll also get tougher for Nagy to manage the tension. The only way that goes away is if Dalton dominates, which seems unlikely as he approaches 34.

If Dalton performs in line with what he averaged the last five seasons — 19 touchdowns, 11 interceptions, 221.8 yards per game and an 86.5 passer rating — then Fields’ upside will loom large in everyone’s mind.

That includes Nagy’s. His initial thought of putting Fields through a one-season apprenticeship was never concrete. The only thing he fully committed to was going with Dalton against the Rams in the opener. If that goes poorly, everything is on the table. He benched Trubisky in Week 3 last season, after all. There’s little doubt Fields could be ready that soon.

And that’s the part of the equation that has nothing to do with Dalton. Fields isn’t a project. He was a Heisman finalist as a true sophomore. The only QB who outdid him was Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence, and Fields played through broken ribs to topple him with six touchdown passes.

His deep ball flies like an arrow, and he’s faster than some of the Bears’ wide receivers. No one seems to remember the last time the franchise had a quarterback like this — maybe because it never has. It’s immediately apparent how much more Fields can do than, for example, Trubisky, whom the Bears traded up to draft No. 2 overall four years ago.

A player like Fields doesn’t stay on the bench long; his talent forces the issue without him saying a word. As the anticipation accumulates, Nagy will be as eager as everyone else to see what he can do. And when Fields’ promise is finally too enticing to resist, a new chapter of Bears football finally will begin.

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Bears pick of Justin Fields has everyone thinking 2022, but what if he’s ready sooner?Jason Lieseron September 12, 2021 at 3:10 pm Read More »

Four Downs: News and notes from Week 3 in high school footballMichael O’Brienon September 12, 2021 at 3:11 pm

Kaleb Brown had the game against Loyola circled on his calendar and he wasn’t afraid to mention it in the preseason.

“Loyola,” Brown said. “I want to beat them. I haven’t done that in high school, so I want to accomplish that.”

The Ohio State recruit won’t ever get a chance to do that. He’s still on the shelf after picking up a leg injury Week 1 against Mount Carmel.

Brown found himself wandering the Mustangs’ sideline on Saturday in Wilmette. He posed for some pictures and watched his teammates lose without him. St. Rita managed just 25 rushing yards in the game, about one medium-sized Brown run.

St. Rita’s major goal is a state championship and that is still possible. Brown said he’s hoping to be back for Week 6 against Nazareth or Week 7 against Marian Central.

Get to know the Storm

It’s probably safe to assume that most fans don’t know much about South Elgin football. This is only the 16th year the school has been around. The Storm has advanced to the playoffs six times, a very respectable start. But things are ramping up lately.

South Elgin was 9-2 in 2019-20 and undefeated in the spring season. Dragan Teonic’s squad is 3-0 so far this season, making it 24-4 so far in his four years in charge. The Storm has knocked off St. Viator (48-7), East Aurora (58-0) and Glenbard South (35-7) so far this season.

Running back Mason Montgomery had 12 carries for 204 yards on Friday against Glenbard South and sophomore quarterback Jake Sullivan had 24 carries for 126 yards. The Storm runs a triple option offense.

South Elgin’s remaining games are against Larkin, Glenbard East, Streamwood, Elgin, Bartlett and West Chicago. There’s a real chance the team could head into the playoffs as a fairly unknown unbeaten Class 8A team.

South suburban clashes

The Catholic League matchups will get most of the hype this week. Top-ranked Loyola is at No. 3 Brother Rice and No. 6 Mount Carmel is at No. 4 Marist. All four teams are unbeaten.

But there are two fun games in the south suburbs on Friday as well. No. 20 Lockport is at No. 16 Homewood-Flossmoor. The Vikings are a young team with a new head coach, but a road win for the Porters would definitely open some eyes.

The Joliet area will be hyped for Providence at Joliet Catholic. The Hilltoppers are undefeated and ranked fifth. They enter as heavy favorites. But this one could wind up close. The Celtics knocked off Fenwick in Week 3.

Batavia magic

It really looked like Wheaton North was going to win at Batavia on Friday night.

The Falcons led by 10 in the fourth quarter. Quarterback Mark Forcucci is a three-year starter, one of many experienced players for coach Joe Wardynski.

But there just seems to be some magic sprinkled on the Batavia football program the past several years, especially at home.

The Bulldogs found a way. Jalen Buckley ripped off a huge 83-yard touchdown run and everything changed. By the time overtime hit all the momentum was with the hosts, who pulled out a 23-20 win in overtime.

Keep an eye on Batavia linebacker Tyler Jansey, the younger brother of Michael Jansey. He was excellent throughout. Both games I saw this weekend featured underrated linebackers with impressive lineage. Loyola’s Josh Kreutz was a monster against St. Rita.

Neither player seems to be getting much attention in the recruiting world, but that is likely to change.

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Four Downs: News and notes from Week 3 in high school footballMichael O’Brienon September 12, 2021 at 3:11 pm Read More »

The Bears are worth billions. Can we expect some success?Rick Morrisseyon September 12, 2021 at 3:12 pm

Forbes says the Bears are worth $4.075 billion, which doesn’t mean that they are, just that we get to chide the McCaskeys for being extremely rich and not particularly successful at what has brought them the mountain of money: football.

It’s not as if ownership has gotten a lot of bang for its buck when it comes to victories, titles and Lombardi trophies. More like a faint tapping. That’s what back-to-back 8-8 seasons sounds like.

But here we are, expecting more because . . . because . . . because a new season is upon us, and that’s what you do in Chicago with the Bears. You hope against hope.

One thing is almost certain, short of an act of God: General manager Ryan Pace and coach Matt Nagy will be here the entire season. It’s being billed as their last chance to keep their jobs, the storyline based on what, I’m not sure. Nothing short of a playoff victory will be acceptable, we’ve been told — by whom with knowledge of such a thing, I don’t know. After previous disappointing seasons, team chairman George McCaskey hinted that improvements needed to be made, or else. But then, when improvements were nowhere to be found, neither was “or else.” People kept their jobs.

It’s why skepticism is the right approach when it comes to talk of ownership cleaning house if the Bears don’t have a good 2021. Given a choice between change and the status quo, McCaskey will wake up with the sun, put on one of his brown blazers, wonder if this is the day he’ll get a prize in his box of bran flakes and table all decision-making until the next morning. The cycle starts up again 24 hours later.

But let’s live in Pretend World for a moment, imagining a life where ownership is more demanding and asking what it would take for Pace and Nagy to keep their jobs after this season.

The Bears can’t be mediocre again. They can’t back their way into a wild-card berth, as they did last season. And, just to be clear, with the 17-game schedule being unveiled this year, 9-8 is the new definition of mediocre. A 9-8 record is not acceptable in a world where winning is everything. It’s not an improvement from 8-8. It’s another helping of bran flakes.

Assuming the Packers are going to be dominant again, something like a 10-7 record, a second-place finish in the NFC North and a playoff victory are the bare minimum for job retention.

The offense has to be significantly better. It doesn’t matter if Nagy or offensive coordinator Bill Lazor calls the plays in 2021. It only matters that the Bears’ offense ends up miles away from the dismal rankings of a season ago — 27th (out of 32 teams) in rushing attempts, 26th in total yards and 22nd in points.

But because we’re being demanding here, it sure would be nice to know for certain if the coach who was hired because of his expertise on the offensive side of the ball actually knows what he’s doing. Call in those plays, Matt!

No soul-crushing losing streaks. Well-coached teams with the amount of talent the Bears had on defense last season do not lose six games in a row. Last season’s losing streak said all kinds of things about Nagy and Pace, the man who hired him. Mostly, it said that Nagy didn’t know how to pull his team out of a deep, dark hole either with motivational skills or offensive game-planning.

A more demanding owner would have canned Nagy and Pace for that terrible stretch, but McCaskey praised Nagy because players didn’t point fingers at each other when times were grimmest. The Bears’ higher-ups saw that as a victory, whereas most of us, naive as we are, considered a victory to be something where one team scores more points than the other on a football field.

Let’s go back to the real world, McCaskey World, where life is much more conducive to long-term employment. Here are some factors that could help Pace and Nagy keep their jobs after this season:

Lots of Bears players suffer significant injuries. You would be right in thinking that injuries are a part of a game as violent as football. But because the McCaskeys would prefer to be flogged rather than fire anybody, a raft of injuries would serve as a convenient excuse for another season of more of the same from Nagy and Pace. You can almost hear the midseason cries from here: They didn’t have all their bullets!

The Bears handle COVID-19 better than most teams. The franchise was very proud of how it responded to the pandemic last season. Like, insanely proud. As if that, and not beating the Packers, were the goal. So if this year’s team keeps the big, bad Delta variant at bay, there could be a lot of shoulder-patting going on. And a lot of job-retaining.

The team leads the league in quality mental reps. Bears coaches are always gushing about one quarterback or another’s ability to process information when he’s not taking on-field reps. This phenomenon could lead an NFL owner who didn’t know much about football to conclude that mental reps are more important than passer rating or interception percentage. Am I saying that the Bears could go 7-10 with brainy, unproductive quarterbacks and still retain Pace/Nagy? I believe that’s exactly what I’m saying.

For the record, ESPN’s computer geeks project that the Bears will go 7.4-9.5 this season, with a 25% chance of making the playoffs, a 13.4% chance of winning the division and a 0.5% chance of winning the Super Bowl. I’m very concerned that McCaskey saw those predictions when they came out and exclaimed, “Nice!” And that Pace and Nagy had knowing smiles on their faces.

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The Bears are worth billions. Can we expect some success?Rick Morrisseyon September 12, 2021 at 3:12 pm Read More »

Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 high school football rankings for Week 4Michael O’Brienon September 12, 2021 at 3:12 pm

Every week of the season is revealing a bit more of the complete picture. That’s the way the season is supposed to work and the schedule-makers are helping us out. Week 4 should provide a lot of answers. There are four games featuring Super 25 teams squaring off and some other excellent matchups including Providence at Joliet Catholic and undefeated Glenbrook South at Barrington.

Fenwick (2-1) drops out this week after losing to the Celtics. New Trier is out after losing to the Broncos.

Barrington pops back into the rankings, as does another preseason ranked team, Hinsdale Central. The Red Devils picked up a nice win against Lyons.

Week 4’s Super 25

With record and last week’s ranking

1. Loyola (3-0) 1

Friday at No. 3 Brother Rice

2. Maine South (3-0) 2

Friday at Palatine

3. Brother Rice (3-0) 4

Friday vs. No. 1 Loyola

4. Marist (3-0) 5

Friday vs. No. 6 Mount Carmel

5. Joliet Catholic (3-0) 6

Friday vs. Providence

6. Mount Carmel (3-0) 7

Friday at No. 4 Marist

7. Warren (2-1) 10

Friday at Lake Zurich

8. Naperville Central (2-1) 3

Friday at Waubonsie Valley

9. Glenbard West (3-0) 13

Saturday vs. Proviso West

10. Lincoln-Way East (2-1) 11

Friday at Andrew

11. Neuqua Valley (3-0) 14

Friday at Naperville North

12. Cary-Grove (3-0) 12

Friday at McHenry

13. Batavia (3-0) 15

Friday at Lake Park

14. Wheaton North (2-1) 9

Friday vs. No. 24 St. Charles North

15. St. Rita (1-0) 8

Friday vs. Benet

16. Hersey (3-0) 16

Friday vs. Glenbrook North

17. Bolingbrook (3-0) 19

Friday at Sandburg

18. Oswego East (3-0) 20

TBD

19. Homewood-Flossmoor (3-0) 22

Friday vs. No. 20 Lockport

20. Lockport (3-0) 23

Friday at No. 19 Homewood-Flossmoor

21. Lemont (3-0) 24

Friday at Hillcrest

22. Wheaton Warrenville South (2-1) 25

Friday at Geneva

23. Barrington (2-1) NR

Friday vs. Glenbrook South

24. St. Charles North (2-1) 18

Friday at No. 14 Wheaton North

25. Hinsdale Central (2-1) NR

Friday at Hinsdale South

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Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 high school football rankings for Week 4Michael O’Brienon September 12, 2021 at 3:12 pm Read More »

Bears defensive coordinator Sean Desai takes long path to current rolePatrick Finleyon September 12, 2021 at 3:25 pm

When Bears defensive coordinator Vic Fangio became the Broncos’ head coach in January 2019, he took two Bears assistants with him: defensive backs coach Ed Donatell, a three-time coordinator in an NFL career spanning almost 30 years, and little-known outside linebackers coach Brandon Staley, who would two years later become the Chargers’ head coach. To bring Sean Desai, who was under contract, Fangio had to ask the Bears for permission.

The team said no, even though Desai was merely a quality-control coach. “Vic didn’t take my calls for, like, three months after that,” head coach Matt Nagy said. “But it’s OK. I knew he’d get over it.”

Nagy thought Desai was smart and well-prepared. He gave him a small promotion — when Chuck Pagano replaced Fangio, Desai became the safeties coach — but couldn’t assure him of anything greater. “I was not letting Sean go,” Nagy said. “I knew that his goal was to be a coordinator. At that time, I couldn’t promise anything, but I could at least tell him and give him my word that, ‘If an opportunity does arise, you’re gonna have a chance at it.’

“It happened now. And here we are. And I’m more excited than anybody to see him out there this season, doing his thing.” Nagy hired Desai after interviewing nine coordinator candidates following Pagano’s retirement in January. It was a popular decision inside Halas Hall — defensive players root for Desai — but less understood outside the building. Either way, it’s a high-stakes bet on someone who has never called plays before. If the Bears fail this season, general manager Ryan Pace and Nagy could both be fired. But both of them believe in Desai.

“I’m so excited for him and proud of him,” Pace said. “And the path that he’s taken.”

***

The professor of the “Leading Organizational Change” course at the Lake Forest Graduate School of Management unveiled a slide of the first day of class that revealed his background. It read “Today’s Gameplan.”

What followed, though, had nothing to do with football. “I thought we were really going to hear something about the Bears,” said Diana Booth, who took the class in spring 2018. “It was something entirely different.”

In addition to being the youngest Bears defensive coordinator in the Super Bowl era and the first Indian-American coordinator in NFL history, Desai is a teacher. He got his doctorate in educational administration with an emphasis in higher education while coaching at Temple. He taught in the master’s and doctoral programs there.At Halas Hall, he’s known as “Doc.”

As an assistant with the Bears — he has worked under three head coaches, dating to 2013 — Desai has taught offseason business courses at Lake Forest, which shares a corporate park with the Bears. He didn’t teach this year but remains on the faculty. “You can tell that background is there sometimes, but it’s not a hindrance or anything like that,” outside linebackers coach Bill Shuey said. “I think he can relate to everybody.

”But there’s times — once in a while there’s a word that comes out, and I have to ask somebody, ‘What’d that mean?’ “He was kidding — kind of.

“He’s an efficient guy,” Shuey said. “He’s efficient in his teaching, and you can say that, even though he might be new at the coordinator role, he’s not new at the teaching role.”At Lake Forest, Booth said Desai arrived early and waited at the podium while students streamed in. Class started on time. He was impeccably organized.

“It’s just a personal leadership philosophy,” Desai said. “I think you’ve got to be organized. I think that reflects through your whole organization.”In my current role, I’m responsible for the defense and the staff and the players, and I’ve got to make sure I provide the roadmap for that. And they’ve got to feel that. And I think from a staff perspective and a player’s perspective, they know real quickly when you’re not organized. And so that’s a big pet peeve of mine.”

He was a perfectionist, Booth said.”He had very direct feedback — often with the terms ‘how’ and ‘why’ next to the points — to develop my critical-thinking skills,” she said. “To this day, those words are etched into my memory.”

Desai talks often about “why.” It’s not enough to force players to do something; you have to explain why it works in the context of the defense.”I want to have great teachers,” Nagy said. “And I think he’s an elite teacher. He knows how to connect.

“I get to see him in the classroom, when he’s in there explaining to every position the ‘why.’ How he teaches that and gets that point across, to what he does in walkthrough to having it come to fruition on the field . . . I think the guys see that and love that.” The more difficult question to answer is the “how.”

How will Desai, who has never called plays before, spark a defense that must dominate in order for the Bears to improve on back-to-back .500 seasons?How will he manufacture takeaways for a unit that led the NFL in 2018 but finished 22nd and 25th in the league, respectively, in the last two years?

How will he unlock pass rushers — Robert Quinn had two sacks after signing a $70 million contract last year — whose reputations outweighed their performance last year?How will he reinvigorate a defense with five starters in their 30s — including Akiem Hicks, Khalil Mack and a slowed-down Danny Trevathan — and prop open their window of success for at least one more year?

How will he do what Pagano couldn’t?

***

Mack used to call Fangio an “evil genius.” Trevathan has a different way to describe Desai.”He’s a wizard,” he said.

Fangio is the best in the world at disguising pass coverages while keeping the scheme simple. From the classroom to practices, the players already see so much of Fangio in Desai. “He’ll say something, and it will sound just like Vic,” Pace said. “I think that’s a really good thing.”

Bears defensive coordinator Sean Desai speaks while pointing to Khalil Mack during training campNuccio DiNuzzo/Getty Images

Desai doesn’t want to be known as simply a branch on the Fangio tree, though, listing influences from former Temple head coach Al Golden to Pagano. “Vic is a mentor,” he said. “We’re close. We talk. We text. We do all that stuff, as I would with a lot of other mentors I’ve had in the profession. . . .

“The philosophies we’re trying to build here as a defense, there’s roots of everybody I’ve worked with. Everybody’s voice is a little bit in there, and I think that’s the benefit of it. That’s why I’m my own person. And we’re going to try to do this thing the way these players want to do it and the way these coaches want to do it, and we’ll be unified in what that brand is going to be out there.” That brand?

“He’s going to force teams to beat us the long, hard way,” inside linebacker Roquan Smith said. Desai will be more creative than Pagano in masking pressure and coverage.

Expect Mack to line up in different spots on obvious passing downs to mitigate double-teams and — in true Fangio form — for coverages to stay blurry until the last minute.

“Just moving us around, making it hard for quarterbacks to read us,” safety Eddie Jackson said. “If I line up on the left side one game, I might line up on the right. . . . Just keeping them on their toes so they won’t just go in breaking down film.”

***

Desai introduced the “Takeaway Bucket” during training camp. It’s a laundry bin that defensive players dunk footballs into after interceptions or fumble recoveries. “He’s allowing guys to be themselves, have a little more swagger,” Quinn said.

Desai himself has brought “a little flavor,” Trevathan said, even if it’s scholastic. “Sean studies football to a whole other level, to which it makes me step up my studying time and study game and makes me look at film a lot more than I used to,” Trevathan said. “I know he’s going to be studying.”

That trust is exactly what Nagy was looking for when he promoted Desai. “That starts in the classroom, when you can teach and connect,” he said. “The more of those that you have, I really believe the better you’re gonna be.”

Desai, though, needs to navigate the bridge from teacher to play-caller — and fast. He’ll need to learn play-calling on the fly, even as the Bears’ aging defense knows it must dominate starting in Week 1 to have a chance at a playoff berth. The learning curve for “Doc” will be steep.

But every coordinator, Nagy said, has to start somewhere.” The greatest coaches in the history of the world in every sport have had their first time, and there was always an unknown,” Nagy said. “So for Sean, that’s going to be an unknown for him until we get through this year.

“But that’s the fun part. That’s the challenge, the more you believe in somebody — and I believe in Sean.”

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Bears defensive coordinator Sean Desai takes long path to current rolePatrick Finleyon September 12, 2021 at 3:25 pm Read More »

Bears coach Matt Nagy knows this has to be his yearJason Lieseron September 12, 2021 at 3:35 pm

Bringing back Matt Nagy to coach the Bears for another season required somewhat of an apology.

Even without a full crowd at Soldier Field to boo the team off the field every other week, chairman George McCaskey had a sense that this wasn’t going to go over well. Maybe he caught a whiff of the fury swirling around Nagy and general manager Ryan Pace on Twitter, or maybe it was simply logical to expect backlash after going 16-16 in 2019-20 and getting pitiful offense from a supposed offensive guru.

“The decisions we’re announcing today may not be the easiest or most popular,” he acknowledged before taking a question.

Later, along with a smattering of dubious explanations and repeated use of the word collaboration, he said, “I don’t know, frankly, that a lot of people have confidence in this course of action. But sometimes you have to take the route that you think is best, even when it’s not the most popular decision.”

Nagy was logged on and listening to the Zoom call as reporters grilled McCaskey about the counterintuitive move to retain him as he waited for the heat coming his way. When his turn came, he described McCaskey allowing him to keep his job as an “opportunity,” reflecting that he grasped how close he’d come to getting fired.

It has been quite a plunge for the man who charmed Chicago with positivity and creativity on his way to going 12-4, winning the NFC North and claiming coach of the year honors in 2018. It was less than three years ago that the Bears celebrated the division title by toppling the archrival Packers at Soldier Field.

It feels like eternity.

The two seasons since have been disaster-laden in ways Nagy couldn’t have imagined.

He set the franchise low for fewest run plays with seven in a 2019 loss to the Saints, then said the next day he knew the Bears needed to run more and, “I’m not an idiot.” It’s never a good situation when you feel that needs to be said.

He followed that a year later with, “I don’t know,” when asked how his team had fallen off a cliff from winning the division to letting a home game against the Lions disintegrate in his hands as he called two pass plays late when all he needed to do was run out the clock. That was their sixth consecutive loss, a streak spanning nearly two months.

Additionally, Nagy has gone 1-5 against the Packers, has scored the seventh-fewest points in the NFL over the last two seasons, has been unable to make Mitch Trubisky or Nick Foles functional at quarterback and has seen the offense dry up to the point that he had no choice but to give up play-calling to offensive coordinator Bill Lazor, though he promptly reclaimed that role going into this season.

For those reasons and more, Nagy’s future with the Bears is absolutely on the line when this season opens Sunday at the Rams. There’s no way he survives if the string of embarrassments continues.

Bears coach Matt Nagy talks with quarterback Justin Fields during the second half of a preseason game against the Buffalo Bills.Kamil Krzaczynski/AP

McCaskey demanded “sufficient progress.” No one thinks Nagy has been handed a championship roster, but it’s enough talent for a smart coach to get to the playoffs.

Amid all that pressure and turmoil, the one thing Nagy keeps saying is that none of it rattles him. Improbably, he’s more comfortable now than in any other season. “As calm as I’ve ever been in my life,” as he put it. There’s freedom from expectations, strength from surviving and authentic confidence that he can finally fix the Bears’ offense.

“I got to the summer and you just start thinking about the time that it’s taken to get to where we’re at and how we’ve done certain things,” Nagy said. “We’ve had highs, we’ve had lows and we’ve been calloused mentally and physically.

“And as I started thinking about all of that, and about the people I have around me — the players, the coaches, the support staff — that’s when the calm started happening. And it’s nice to have that. It really is. It’s something that I’m going to continue to stick with.”

If it seems like he would’ve felt more at ease coming off the 2018 season, when the Bears believed they were climbing toward a championship, that’s not the case.

The players bought into the hype, and Nagy probably did, too. When he looks back at the ensuing training camp, when running back Tarik Cohen fired off the word “dynasty,” Nagy regrets that he didn’t do more to keep things level. The 2019 Bears opened with a thudding loss to the Packers and were sunk by midseason at 3-5.

“Everyone’s talking about the Super Bowl, this and that, and that’s the worst thing that could have happened,” Nagy said. “Where I wanted to improve is not [to] listen to those distractions. It means nothing. So we learned from that. That’s where I’ve been able to use these experiences to help me be calm.”

Inner peace is nice and all, but how about that offense?

Here’s the harsh truth about Nagy’s first three seasons: The Bears hired him to be an offensive mastermind and quarterback whisperer, but he has been neither. The 2018 offense, when the Bears were ninth in scoring, was a bit of a mirage as Trubisky fattened up his stats against the lowly Buccaneers and the Khalil Mack-led defense carried the team.

Over the 2019 and ’20 seasons, the Bears were 26th in points, 29th in yardage, 26th in yards per carry and 23rd in passer rating — completely wasting one of the best defenses in the NFL. The Bears lost six games in which their defense allowed 24 points or fewer in 2019 and another four last season. It wouldn’t have taken much to turn 8-8 into 10-6 or better.

While the benchmarks for Nagy to keep his job aren’t necessarily quantifiable, they’re reasonably clear.

He better be right about quarterback Andy Dalton, and nothing will be more scrutinized than his handling of rookie Justin Fields. The running game has to exist. He can’t keep snatching defeat from the jaws of victory like he did in that meltdown against the Lions or the hashmark debacle on the last-second field goal try against the Chargers two years ago. He must prove he has grown from having “failed in a lot of different ways” so far. And when 9-8 will probably be good enough to make the playoffs, he needs to get there.

“I’ve learned a lot, whether it’s on game day or throughout the week or running a meeting — sometimes it’s just how you speak to the players,” Nagy said. “Sometimes that changes, and that’s where I grow and where I learn. How can I get better so that these guys know that I’m doing everything I can on my part to improve, and it’s not just always the players’ fault?”

For all Nagy’s talk about his plan to hold Fields out for a season to prepare him to take over in 2022, he must earn the right to stick around for that. The Bears are betting everything on Fields rescuing them. They’re committed to him long term. They aren’t committed to Nagy past this season.

The biggest puzzle Nagy must solve is his offensive line, which rarely had cohesion as injuries disrupted the unit throughout the preseason and eventually saw presumptive starting left tackle Teven Jenkins undergo back surgery, but there have to be answers in there somewhere. It’s his job to find them. Sam Mustipher went from practice squad to starting center last season. It can be fixed.

“This is part of the game,” Nagy said. “This is just how we have to be built, meaning you’ve gotta prepare for times like this. You’ve got to be able to accept news when it comes certain ways.”

Beyond the O-line tumult, Nagy has everything he has wanted.

Dalton is the capable veteran he helped choose, and Fields is the ultra-talented game-changer he also helped choose. He can’t point to Trubisky’s struggles with mastering the playbook and reading defenses anymore.

Allen Robinson is a three-time 1,000-yard receiver, Darnell Mooney is ascending and Marquise Goodwin is a better third option than any Nagy has had in his Bears tenure.

Tight end Cole Kmet is poised for a big season, and Jimmy Graham can still box out for red-zone catches at 34.

Running back David Montgomery is coming off a season of 1,508 yards of total offense, and Cohen’s return from a torn ACL gives Nagy his favorite weapon back.

“I really feel great about it,” Nagy said of the collection of skill players he helped craft. “What we have here and how we want to do things . . . At all positions, we feel really good with where we’re at — schematically, personnel-wise, across the board.”

Nagy felt a swell of confidence when he saw his offensive personnel take the field during offseason practices. He saw plenty of dynamic talent with which to work and not a single headache in the group. And while he might not have the same ferocious defense that helped him in 2018, it’s still very good. Nagy has what he needs. If he can’t make this team viable, it’s on him.

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Bears coach Matt Nagy knows this has to be his yearJason Lieseron September 12, 2021 at 3:35 pm Read More »

Imagine Justin Fields living up to Bears’ expectationsRick Telanderon September 12, 2021 at 3:53 pm

Justin Fields might be the quarterback Bears fans have craved for decades.

He might be the single athlete who makes Chicagoans smile, say hi to strangers, feel the world is a warm and lovely place and not a sinkhole.

He might be the guy.

And, for the moment, let’s assume he is. Let’s assume Fields, all of 22 and never having played a down in a regular-season NFL game, is so talented that he makes the Chiefs’ wondrous Patrick Mahomes jealous.

Let’s assume he can throw darts like Aaron Rodgers, scramble like Michael Vick, read defenses like Tom Brady and lead like Johnny Unitas.

We’re talking Hall of Famer-to-be.

It all might be there in this 6-3, 228-pound package. Fields has been a star his entire football career, starting at Harrison High School in Kennesaw, Georgia, where he was Mr. Georgia Football in January 2018, with a guy named Trevor Lawrence just 20 miles away. Fields ran a 4.44-second 40-yard dash at Ohio State’s pro day, and that’s fast enough to circle a guy such as Brady or Rodgers a couple of times before they get started.

Then you look at passing skills, winning ability and leadership, and Fields seems to have it all.

He never lost a Big Ten game as a starter, and everybody around him praises his ”quiet leadership” and team-oriented focus. He’s not a loudmouth; he’s a listener and a doer.

”Just his demeanor, his poise,” Bears running back David Montgomery said. ”He doesn’t carry himself as a rookie.”

Veteran tight end Jimmy Graham is even more effusive, saying Fields ”definitely reminds me a lot of Russell Wilson.”

That’s quality praise, given that Wilson has led the Seahawks to the playoffs eight times and gone to seven Pro Bowls in his career. He holds the NFL record for the most regular-season victories in his first nine seasons (98) and, maybe most impressive, has started all 160 games — regular season and playoffs — since he joined the Seahawks.

Fields is a lot bigger than Wilson, but he runs like the smaller man, and the hope is always that Fields doesn’t get plastered while doing it. In short, the Bears need a savior who lasts.

Fields took an ominous shot against Clemson in the College Football Playoff semifinals last season that Bears coach Matt Nagy says he wouldn’t like him to take again. It’s a fact that an injured star quarterback is a doubly messed-up thing. Not only can’t he play, but his team often has no backup plan. (See the 1985 Super Bowl Bears and the ever-injured Jim McMahon for reference here.)

Fields has looked very good in his early apprenticeship under veteran teacher and starter-for-the-moment Andy Dalton. Yes, Fields looks like something very special. But it’s so early.

Of course, there’s a lingering concern about his college pedigree. We all know Ohio State is not exactly the Cradle of Quarterbacks. Or, rather, not the Cradle of Quarterbacks Who Tear Up the Pros.

Think of Rex Kern, Craig Krenzel, Art Schlichter, Dwayne Haskins, Cardale Jones, Braxton Miller, J.T. Barrett and Terrelle Pryor here.

Ohio State has had 85 players taken in the first round of the NFL Draft, more than any other school. And sometimes that makes it hard to assess how a Buckeyes kid will do with comparatively less talent around him and against much better foes.

NFL.com writes its prospect information after each NFL combine, and Fields was praised by the website for his ”good size and stout lower body to stave off sacks/tackles,” his ”toughness and willingness to do whatever it takes” and his willingness ”to take a big hit to deliver a pass.”

But his negatives included ”below-average feel for edge pressure,” ”stagnant eyes” and the need to ”improve eye manipulation as a pro.”

That technical stuff’s only as good as some general manager wants it to be. Remember, Bears GM Ryan Pace traded up to get alleged quarterback savior Mitch Trubisky with the second pick in the 2017 draft in part, we must assume, because reports said he was the real deal.

Think about it: Who doesn’t have stagnant eyes every now and then?

So let’s dream a bit. Let’s see the future with Fields being as bright as a sunrise over Indiana.

We’ve had lots of previous dark nights to pay for it.

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Imagine Justin Fields living up to Bears’ expectationsRick Telanderon September 12, 2021 at 3:53 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: NFL insider says Justin Fields could play vs. RamsRyan Heckmanon September 12, 2021 at 3:42 pm

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