Ryan Pace and Matt Nagy are officially back for the 2021 season

Both Ryan Pace and Matt Nagy know they are fortunate to be back with the Bears and plan to make the most of this opportunity.

On Wednesday morning, the Chicago Bears confirmed what many had been reporting since Tuesday night when they officially announced general manager Ryan Pace and head coach Matt Nagy would be returning for another season.

In a press conference with the Chicago media, chairman George McCaskey and president and CEO Ted Phillips announced the decision to retain Pace and Nagy, despite underperforming the last two seasons when they went 16-16 in the regular season.

“I was impressed with both of them,” McCaskey told the media. “The decisions we’re announcing today may not be the easiest, or the most popular. But we believe they’re the best decisions for the Bears.”

Phillips, who has been the team’s president since 1999, believes they have the right culture in place to be a winning franchise.

“When you sit back and look at what makes a successful organization, besides wins and losses, it’s the people,” Phillips said.

Both McCaskey and Phillips declined to confirm how many years remained on Pace and Nagy’s contracts, despite being pressed by the media.

Pace, who has been the team’s general manager since 2015 after coming over from the New Orleans Saints, has a record of 42-54 and just one season with a record over .500. The Bears made the postseason twice during his tenure, but lost in the wildcard round in each appearance, including this year when they fell to the Saints 21-9. His offseason moves have been defined by misses at the quarterback position, most notably when he drafted Mitchell Trubisky with the second overall pick in the NFL Draft in 2017.

Nagy, meanwhile, has a record of 28-20 since becoming the team’s head coach three years ago after coming over from the Kansas City Chiefs. He’s fallen off, however, after his first season when he went 12-4 season that resulted in a division title. Since then, his offense has become stagnant and he’s failed to develop Trubisky into a franchise quarterback.

Both Pace and Nagy know they are fortunate to be back and plan to make the most of this opportunity.

“Ownership has given us an opportunity, they’ve given us all the resources we can ask for and now it’s on us to prove them right,” Pace said.

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Twitter reacts to Ryan Pace, Matt Nagy press conference

Naturally, Twitter had plenty to say about Pace and Nagy’s press conference, including concerns about anything changing with this regime.

The Chicago Bears made it official that general manager Ryan Pace and head coach Matt Nagy will be returning to the team in 2021. The collaborative partners addressed the media in their annual end-of-year press conference, where they fielded an array of questions from the media.

As usual, there wasn’t much to be learned from their press conference instead of continued promises of turning things around, the importance of culture and the collaboration between Pace and Nagy.

Naturally, Twitter had plenty to say about Pace and Nagy’s press conference, including a lack of accountability, concerns about anything changing with this regime and the outlook of this franchise.

Bears will hold press conference with George McCaskey, Ted Phillips, Ryan Pace, Matt Nagy Wednesday morning

We’ll soon learn what the men in charge with turning this Bears franchise around have to say following a disappointing 8-9 season.

The Chicago Bears will hold an end-of-year press conference with Chairman George McCaskey, President and CEO Ted Phillips, general manager Ryan Pace and head coach Matt Nagy at 10 a.m. CT on Wednesday.

It’s expected that the Bears will officially announce that they’re retaining Pace and Nagy in 2021, which was reported on Monday night. The one question remains Phillips, who many speculated could be removed or, at the very least, moved from football operations.

We’ll soon learn what the men in charge with turning this franchise around have to say following a disappointing 8-8 season that ended with a wild-card playoff loss.

The press conference will be streamed live on ChicagoBears.com and on the Bears app.

Stay tuned to Bears Wire for continuing coverage.

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Twitter reacts to Matt Nagy and Ryan Pace’s likely return to Bears in 2021

Naturally, Twitter had plenty to say about the expectation that Nagy and Pace will be back in 2021. And most of it is far from encouraged.

The Chicago Bears have an offseason ahead of them with some important decisions to make. Following defensive coordinator Chuck Pagano’s retirement, it sounds like we have some clarity on the Bears’ front office.

Make no mistake, the Bears once again underperformed at 8-8 despite a playoff appearance. And yet, it sounds like Bears brass have all the confidence in the world in the front office to turn things around.

There have been multiple reports around the league that the Bears will retain head coach Matt Nagy and general manager Ryan Pace in 2021, which is a surprise given the Bears lost six straight games just one month ago.

And yet, it sounds like Bears Chairman George McCaskey has seen enough to assure him that they can finally — finally –turn things around in 2021 just long enough to draft the wrong quarterback again and stumble to a 8-8 record to possibly save their jobs in 2022.

Sound familiar?

Naturally, Twitter had plenty to say about the expectation that Nagy and Pace will be back in 2021. And most of it, as you’d imagine, is not pleased.

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Matt Nagy feels like he still has support from Bears ownership

According to Bears HC Matt Nagy, he hasn’t had any conversations in relation to his job status with Bears ownership.

In case you were hoping that Sunday’s catastrophe at Soldier Field was a crazy nightmare, I regret to inform you it was very much reality. That much was confirmed by the chorus of chants for the firings of Chicago Bears head coach Matt Nagy, general manager Ryan Pace and president Ted Phillips less than a day after the Bears blew a 10-point fourth-quarter lead to the lowly Detroit Lions in a 34-30 loss.

Nagy usually meets with the media the following morning after a game, and many were wondering if Nagy would actually be in attendance considering things got pretty gnarly on Sunday.

But Nagy was there to meet with Chicago media on Monday morning, where he was barraged with — what else — questions about his job security.

According to Nagy, he hasn’t had any conversations in relation to his job status, saying, “we haven’t had those discussions.”

When asked if he felt like he still had management’s support right now, Nagy replied, “Yeah, I do.”

Now, that doesn’t mean a darn thing. We’ve seen coaches on the hot seat continuously deflect and assuage any concerns about their future. At this point, it feels like it’s only a matter of time before Bears Chairman George McCaskey cleans house with Nagy, Pace and possibly Phillips.

While many felt like it would’ve been justified firing Nagy on Monday — a six-game losing streak will do that — it’s worth noting the McCaskey’s have never fired anyone midseason. That’s something they typically do at the end of a season.

But how bad would things need to get for McCaskey to make an exception? A seven-game losing streak? Eight-games? Ten-games? Or maybe they’ve already accepted this season is a wash and are content to ride it out.

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Is it time for the Bears to clean house following brutal loss to Lions?

It feels like it’s a matter of “if” not “when” George McCaskey decides to clean house with Matt Nagy, Ryan Pace and Ted Phillips.

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If it wasn’t the national rout by the Green Bay Packers that sealed the fates of Chicago Bears head coach Matt Nagy and general manager Ryan Pace, it certainly was Sunday’s embarrassing 34-30 loss to the Detroit Lions, where Chicago blew a 10-point lead in the fourth quarter.

The Bears wasted their best offensive performance of the season, where the run game was the best it’s looked in two years with running backs David Montgomery and Cordarrelle Patterson leading the way with 131 total rushing yards and three touchdowns.

But, just as they’ve done so often in this now six-game losing streak, Chicago found a way to out-do itself. There was plenty of blame to go around, but a bulk of it should fall on the coaching staff — Nagy, offensive coordinator Bill Lazor, defensive coordinator Chuck Pagano and even special teams coordinator Chris Tabor.

The Bears had a 99.1% win probability in the final five minutes of the game, which was dashed in a horrible turn of events where all three phases let this football team down and allowed the Lions to battle back and repay an old debt with a 34-30 win.

This once vaunted Chicago defense allowed a depleted Detroit offense to move easily down the field on a 96-yard scoring drive. Then, the Bears special teams failed to put their All-Pro kick returner back for the kickoff. And we all know what happened on third-and-four when Mitchell Trubisky was in his throwing motion and the ball was knocked out of his hand, which the Lions recovered on Chicago’s seven-yard line and proceeded to score the go-ahead touchdown.

Still, Chicago had a chance to win the game, and they nearly scored the game-winning touchdown. But a failed third-down conversion by receiver Allen Robinson — which needs to be made — and getting stuffed at the line of scrimmage of fourth-and-one all but sealed the Bears’ troubled fate.

At this point, it doesn’t feel like it’s a matter of “if” but a matter of “when” George McCaskey will clean house with Nagy, Pace and possibly president Ted Phillips, who needs to be completely uninvolved in football operations, especially as the Bears will likely be conducting a new general manager and head coach search.

What say you, Bears fans? Should Chicago commence with the house cleaning immediately?

VOTE!

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Matt Forte, Kyle Long wonder what it’s going to take for the Bears to fire Matt Nagy

The Bears fired Lovie Smith following a 10-win season. Matt Nagy has his team on a six-game losing streak for the first time in 18 years.

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Just when you think things can’t get worse for the Chicago Bears this season, they continue to prove everyone wrong. If you thought last week’s 41-25 loss to the Green Bay Packers was bad, Chicago officially hit rock bottom with a 34-30 loss to the Detroit Lions, where the Bears blew a 10-point lead in the final two minutes.

Bears fans and alumni alike were outraged at Chicago’s sixth straight loss following a 5-1 start. At this point, it seems like it’s not a matter of “if” the Bears will clean house with head coach Matt Nagy and general manager Ryan Pace, it’s a matter of “when.”

Especially considering the Bears have now lost dix straight games for the first time since 2002 — over 18 years ago.

Among those that voiced their outrage on Twitter was former Bears running back Matt Forte, who has seen more than enough of this abysmal offense and thinks both Nagy and Pace should be fired. That, and he feels bad for fans and the product both of those guys have put on the field.

Forte has seen firsthand what has gotten a head coach axed, when Lovie Smith was fired when the Bears failed to make the playoffs with a 10-6 record in 2012. Which has left Forte, like many, wondering what it’s going to take for Nagy to get fired. Although, this Lions loss might’ve just been the final blow.

After all, Smith was fired following a 10-win season while Nagy hasn’t done much outside of 2018’s 12-win season.

Even former Bears right guard Kyle Long, who played under Nagy for two seasons, wondered what it’ll take for Nagy to ultimately get the boot midseason.

Nagy and Pace’s seats — along with president Ted Phillips — have gotten hotter with each passing week, but this loss likely was the final dagger in George McCaskey’s decision to part ways with them at season’s end.

Although, it would likely serve the Bears better to cut the cord now and get ahead of finding a new general manager and head coach heading into what looks to be a rebuilding offseason.

The McCaskey’s aren’t known for firing people midseason, but you wonder if this mess is enough to make an exception.

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George McCaskey: Bears optimistic about Allen Robinson’s contract situation

Bears chairman George McCaskey gave an encouraging update on WGN Radio on Friday regarding Allen Robinson’s contract situation.

It’s been a rollercoaster of a week for Bears fans.

Following a miraculous fourth-quarter comeback against the Lions — which featured 21 unanswered points in the final quarter — Allen Robinson’s frustrations with contract negotiations soon dominated headlines.

After Robinson scrubbed his social media accounts of all Bears references, his teammates took to Twitter to voice their belief that Robinson deserves to get his extension and there were even trade rumors swirling amid frustrating contract negotiations.

But Bears chairman George McCaskey gave an encouraging update on WGN Radio on Friday regarding Robinson’s contract situation.

“Ted (Phillips) gave me an update yesterday and we’re very optimistic,” McCaskey said.

Now, that’s certainly no guarantee that a deal will be happening anytime soon, or even at all. But it sounds like the Bears are doing everything they can to make sure they sign their best offensive player to a long-term deal.

ESPN’s Dan Graziano shined a light on where contract negotiations were being stalled. The Bears were looking to pay Robinson around $15-16 million per year, which is in line with what the Rams paid receiver Cooper Kupp recently. Meanwhile, Robinson wants to be paid in the $18 million per year range, which is what guys like the Chiefs’ Tyreek Hill and Browns’ Odell Beckham Jr. have received.

If the Bears aren’t willing to pay Robinson what he feels he deserves, it’s believed he’d ask to seek a trade to a team that will.

We’ll see whether or not the Bears manage to get something done ahead of Sunday’s game against the Giants.

Despite insider report, NFL owners not waiting on Jerry Jones to speak out

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones is one of the NFL’s leaders, but he’s taken a sudden backseat in using his powerful voice to speak out for change.

With every passing hour of silence from the big office at The Star in Frisco, the message being relayed only grows louder. It’s been 17 days since the first protest in Minneapolis, and Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has yet to make any statement regarding the current social injustice movement in America.

The Cowboys organization released a video statement promising ongoing conversation, but the man who runs the highest-profile team in all of sports doesn’t appear in it. The league has announced monetary support– albeit a microdrop in their lake-sized financial bucket- to fight systemic racism. And while many players and coaches from around the league have participated in marches and rallies in cities across the country, team owners have been largely missing in action on the ground.

On Thursday, a media insider suggested that other NFL owners have maintained silence on the issue directly because of the example being set by Jones.

Read that again.

As incendiery a headline as that makes, it’s not entirely factual. The truth, however, may be even more damning for the man who runs America’s Team.

ESPN’s Dianna Russini appeared on the network’s show Get Up and recapped her findings after a Players Coalition meeting that took place on Wednesday. The meeting was held virtually, and, according to Russini, began with a request for all media members to exit so that the meeting could be “a safe space” for all to talk freely.

While the GMs, coaches, and players who were present- representing several major sports besides the NFL- talked about education and community outreach, what didn’t come up, per se, was owners’ roles in the current movement or their responsibility to speak out, Russini told host Mike Greenberg.

But one NFL head coach Russini debriefed after the meeting told her:

“Everything falls in line with Jerry Jones. All eyes are on him. He’s the most vocal owner in the league. And not only is he the most vocal leader, but there are numerous owners that listen to him. He mentors them. What Jerry does, they do. And until he makes that move, the dominoes can’t start falling.”

 

“It’s not pulling them like it is the rest of the country,” San Francisco 49ers cornerback Richard Sherman said of the league’s owners. Sherman went on to single out Jones for his silence in the wake of nationwide protests.

Even former Cowboys receiver Dez Bryant- who is lobbying for a return to the league and has targeted Dallas as a preferred destination- called out his ex-employer in a tweet for not lending his powerful voice to any protests.

Russini’s source similarly believes that what Jones does or doesn’t do is apparently the bellwether for the league’s other owners. But, as the facts bear out, rather than allowing themselves to simply be “dominoes” waiting for a nudge from Jones, a not-insignificant number of NFL owners have stepped out and spoken up on their own.

Tennessee Titans owner Amy Adams Strunk delivered an impassioned statement on Thursday, announcing, “Hearts, minds and institutions need to change throughout our country. Those who face racism need to be heard, and more importantly, understood by those who haven’t listened before.”

Strunk shed light on some of the Titans’ ongoing efforts and concluded her statement by declaring: “I support our players using peaceful protests and their platforms to advance us as a nation. I would encourage those who haven’t thought about these issues before to understand the pain, anger and frustration of the black community. Black lives matter. We should all agree on that.”

As NFL journalist Paul Kuharsky notes, the Titans owner isn’t the first or the only league owner who isn’t waiting around for Jones. “We’d seen or heard statements from at least 10 NFL owners, 32 percent of them,” before Strunk released her statement, according to Kuharsky.

On May 30, San Francisco 49ers owner Jed York said in a tweet, “Before we are able to realize impactful change, we must first have the courage and compassion as human beings to come together and acknowledge the problem: black men, women, and children and other oppressed minorities continue to be systemically discriminated against.”

On May 31, Las Vegas Raiders owner Mark Davis told ESPN regarding his players, “If they have something to say, I’ll stand beside them. I won’t stand behind them; I’ll stand beside them. And if there’s something I don’t know, I’m happy to listen to them. We’ve got to find a solution.”

On June 1, New Orleans Saints owner Gayle Benson said in a statement, “Our goal will be to advocate for issues of change when and where we are able to in black and brown communities. Hopefully our work will be a model for others. They will have my full support.”

On June 1, Chicago Bears owner George H. McCaskey said, “We must do more than wring our hands and hope it doesn’t happen again… Through our voice, our actions and our resources, it is our obligation to lead.”

On June 1, Cleveland Browns owners Jimmy and Dee Haslam promised, “We must work together to elevate our efforts and our actions to ensure that we can be a positive and productive change agent off the field.”

On June 1, Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti vowed, “I have asked a group of former and current Ravens players to decide which organizations should receive proceeds from the $1 million donation we are making today.”

On June 2, Philadelphia Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie tweeted, in part, “At times, I have too many words. At times, I have no words. But silence is not an option.”

On June 2, Buffalo Bills owners Terry and Kim Pegula spoke out: “We stand with and will continue to work with those dedicated to eradicating racism and inequality. We stand with those peacefully protesting. We stand against those who are motivated by hatred and violence.”

On June 2, Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay quoted Martin Luther King Jr. via Twitter: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

On June 3, Houston Texans owner Cal McNair said in a posted tweet, “This has been a pervasive and mostly silent problem for the past 400-plus years… I believe that these injustices cannot continue.”

On June 3, Jacksonville Jaguars owner Shad Khan said in a released statement, “As a member of the NFL family, I recognize I have a unique opportunity to address inequity wherever it is present, expand opportunity for all who seek it, and seek justice for all who deserve it. I take that responsibility seriously.”

As of June 12, Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has yet to say a word.

His is the flagship team of the league, and the most valuable sports franchise on the planet. His fanbase reaches every corner of the globe. One from-the-heart statement from him into the nearest microphone would surely have ripple effects throughout the NFL, the sports world, the country, and beyond.

Russini’s head coach source was right. All eyes are, in fact, on Jones. And yes, what Jerry does, other owners invariably do as well.

Jones had the chance to be the undisputed leader within the NFL’s ownership by speaking out immediately. The Cowboys could have been the example and set the tone for other franchises to follow. Instead, more than a third of the other owners have beaten Jones to the punch. At this point in the story, Jones risks being barely more than a follower in the middle of the pack who did way too little, way too late.

The only thing worse is continuing to do nothing at all.

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Bears chairman George McCaskey releases statement on George Floyd’s death

Bears chairman George H. McCaskey released a statement Monday in response to George Floyd’s death and the protests happening in Chicago.

Chicago Bears chairman George H. McCaskey released a statement Monday in response to the tragic murder of George Floyd and the protests happening around the country, including in Chicago.

McCaskey noted that there was an internal discussion with players on Monday, which many have voiced their thoughts about on social media. The Bears were one of the first NFL teams to create a player-led social justice committee, which serves the city of Chicago. And McCaskey noted the importance of that social justice committee now more than ever.

For McCaskey and the Bears, the goal is to be “an active participant in change.”

Here’s McCaskey’s full statement:

A week ago another unarmed African-American man died at the hands of a white police officer. We are witnessing the anger and frustration play out in protests across the nation, including Chicago. We must do more than wring our hands and hope it doesn’t happen again. As an organization, we have addressed it internally by offering unconditional support to our family of staff, coaches and players, and today Ryan Pace and Coach Nagy spent the allotted two hours of team meeting time listening to and healing together with our players and the coaching staff. Through our voice, our actions and our resources, it is our obligation to lead. We will continue to work with our player-led social justice committee to provide funding and exposure to local organizations dedicated to empowering communities that have been oppressed for far too long. We’re proud to support organizations like BUILD Chicago, I Grow Chicago, My Block, My Hood, My City, and Youth Guidance, among others, who are doing great work in these communities and we encourage fans to partner with us in supporting them. Our commitment is to continue to be an active participant in change.

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