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Bears play it safe with John Fox

| January 16th, 2015

When John Fox and the Denver Broncos decided to part ways on Monday, speculation immediately connected him to Chicago.  He’s been the presumed frontrunner for the job ever since, and the Bears made his hiring official today.

This is not the direction I would have gone if I were running the Bears this offseason, but I’m not, and that’s a good thing.  It’s a safe move intended to restore the Bears to respectability both on and off the field, but I don’t think it is one made with a serious goal of winning championships in the next few years (though you could argue that’s a good thing given where the franchise is at right now).

A familiar path

To me, Fox is Lovie Smith, which-as Bears fans should know-comes with both positives and negatives.  They’re both around .500 coaches* who will have the team be disciplined and competitive. They both have issues with in-game management, struggle with using the clock and time outs correctly, and make overly conservative decisions.  They both establish solid defenses and like to run the ball on offense.

(*They’re both around .500 coaches when they aren’t given an all-time great quarterback as a finished product to pad their record with.  In his 10 years before Peyton, Fox averaged 8.1 wins and 0.6 playoff wins per season.  In the 8 years of his prime before Fox, Peyton averaged 12.4 wins and 1.1 playoff wins per season.  In their 3 years together, they averaged 12.7 wins and 0.7 playoff wins per season.  Since Fox’s presence didn’t change Peyton’s outcomes at all from what he was, you’ll pardon me for not giving Fox credit or blame for those 3 seasons with Peyton).

The Bears made a move to go away from Lovie 2 years ago.  It was a risk, and it backfired spectacularly.  Now they’re going back to a Lovie-esque coach, and you can see the appeal.  Fox should help stabilize the franchise and prevent it from being the laughingstock it was in 2014 (on and off the field).  The Bears currently have a lot of big personalities in the locker room, and you can be sure that Fox will keep them in line much better than Trestman did.

Here’s what the next five years will likely look like for the Bears: they will beat most of the bad teams they face, lose to many of the good ones, and end up somewhere around .500 overall.  They will not win the NFC North unless something happens to Aaron Rodgers, but should get 1-2 wild card berths.  And you know what?  That’s not such a terrible outcome; you can definitely do worse.

Future Concerns

In 4-5 years, Fox will likely be ready to retire.  He is currently 59 (60 in February), and only one current NFL coach is older than 65.  The hope is that the Bears in 2020 will be in a similar place to where they were in 2012, with a good team (albeit hopefully younger than the 2012 version) looking for a great coach to take them over the top.

My fear with this is that Fox will try to pressure the Bears to make win-now decisions, bringing in older free agents that give them a better chance to be good now but hamper their ability to be great in the future by stunting the growth of young players and/or creating future cap problems (like are an annual event in New Orleans, where GM Ryan Pace comes from). Pace must maintain the control of football operations he says he has and avoid making moves that help the team’s present at the expense of the future.

Of course, the win-now approach Fox brings also starts to give us some clues on veterans whose futures in Chicago were thought to be up in the air.  With Fox hired, I think it is very likely that Jay Cutler and Brandon Marshall are both in Chicago for the next two years at least.  And that is not a bad thing, I just hope these moves don’t preclude the Bears from planning ahead and looking for their eventual replacements sooner rather than later.

Those veterans sticking around makes sense if Chicago’s plan is to be competitive now while building to be better in the future.  That is exactly what they should be doing, I only hope they don’t tilt that balance too far towards the now at the expense of the future.

Final thoughts

Personally, I wanted to see the Bears take a risk on a younger coach with more upside than Fox, and somebody who would be around longer than 5 years if they pan out, but I can see why Chicago thought otherwise.  In 2012, they were positioned to make a safe hire in Bruce Arians, but went for the home run with Trestman, and ended up striking out.  Now they don’t want to repeat that mistake, so they went with a solid double in John Fox instead of swinging for the fences and risking setting the franchise back even further.

You can do much worse in a head coach than John Fox, as Bears fans should know after watching Marc Trestman slowly destroy the franchise over the past two years.  But I think you can do better than him as well, and I wish the Bears would have made more of an effort to do just that instead of settling for a well known good-but-not-great coach.

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John Fox’s Third Act

| January 16th, 2015

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The best I’ve ever been taught the three-act structure of playwriting was by a a wonderful writer and teacher named Pat Cook at the BMI Musical Theatre Writing Workshop. Cook, recalling the lessons of a teacher from his own past, described it thus:

Act One: get the main character up a tree.

Act Two: throw rocks at him.

Act Three: if he comes down safely, comedy. If he falls to his death, tragedy.

At the risk of harping on an issue many readers of this site could care less about, this structure is being more or less abandoned by the modern dramatic writer. The three-act play is being replaced by the 65-minute “meditation” on a relevant theme. (How hard it is to be gay, violence in schools, sex scandals in politics!) Plays with beginnings, middles and ends – once referred to as “well-made plays” – are now considered old-fashioned.

oneill

John Fox is not the hot coordinator of the moment, the NFL’s equivalent of a meditation on a relevant theme. What has Adam Gase actually done? How much does Dan Quinn actually provide the ridiculously-talented Seahawks defense? Shhh! Who cares? These are the names of the moment and they excite owners and fans in the same manner any shiny toy in the window excites a child: they’re new!

Fox is not new. He is a veteran head coach, an established structure, an old-fashioned play. The Chicago Bears are his third act.

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John Fox, Chicago Bears Head Coach

| January 16th, 2015

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John Fox is not a flawless head coach. But the Chicago Bears are coming off a 2014 debacle defined by locker room meltdowns, traitorous coach leaks, endless primetime blowouts and a lack of any and all competitive fight. The organization, more than savvy play-calling or altered scheme, was desperate for stability. Fox is thirty games over .500 as a head coach. He is well-respected across the NFL landscape. He will build a top tier, professional staff. (Including the most exciting candy in the pinata, Kyle Shanahan.)

Stability has arrived.

Perhaps most importantly, John Fox will lead the locker room. There will be no more questions of accountability or articles written about the head coach addressing his players from the back of the room. The Chicago Bears will blow their horns to the tempo of Fox’s baton. And whilst hiring him does not guarantee topping Aaron Rodgers in the NFC North, it does guarantee the Bears return to respectability.

So welcome, Coach Fox, to a proud franchise. Welcome to a fan base desperate for the kind of toughness that came to define your teams throughout tenures in Carolina and Denver. Welcome to a city that rewards its champions with a lifetime of applause – muted in winter through thick, wool mittens – and more endorsement money than your pockets can hold.  (Not to mention radios shows, restaurants…etc.)

Welcome. Now win.

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Spotlight on Coaching Candidates: John Fox

| January 12th, 2015

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Some reasons I believe John Fox should be the next head coach of the Chicago Bears.

  • He is truly a head coach, a stabilizing organizational CEO who will build a top tier, professional staff.
  • If Bears were looking to pair their young GM with a veteran coach, Fox is the ideal candidate.
  • Fox is thirty games over .500 as a head coach. He was two games over in Carolina where his best quarterback was Jake Delhomme. (With whom he went to a Super Bowl.)
  • John Fox is a good man with a ton of respect around the league and he will immediately return credibility to the Bears locker room. Credibility is something the Bears are desperate to achieve.

More to come…

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Spotlight on the Coaching Candidates: Todd Bowles

| January 12th, 2015

wrong-bill

TODD BOWLES

The Bill Parcells coaching tree has been the most profitable of the modern era, yielding six Super Bowl titles since 2000. The reason? Parcells teaches his coaches to coach the whole field, not just their specific positions or unit. He breeds men who can run the room a la Bill Belichick, Tom Coughlin and Sean Payton.

From a Sheil Kapadia piece for Philly Mag:

While Parcells was making a name for himself as the head coach of the New York Giants, he faced Bowles, a safety out of Temple, twice a year.

“I noticed that he was making their secondary calls and adjustments and and all those things as far back as those days,” Parcells said during an interview with Jon Marks and Brian Baldinger on 97.5 The Fanatic.

Later in the piece, Bowles discussed the impact Parcells has had on his coaching career:

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