sjboyd0137 wrote:
...or maybe not
https://www.dailyherald.com/sports/2019 ... last-yearsQuote:
Interestingly, though, the facts suggest there are more similarities between this year and last than differences.
The Bears got to 3-1 a year ago by doing more to lose the opener to the Packers than what Green Bay did to beat them, and then putting together lackluster wins over Seattle and Arizona before exploding in what was the most dominant win of the season over the Bucs.
This year has been almost a carbon copy, with a similar loss to the Packers, ugly wins at Denver and Washington and then one of their best performances in years thrashing the Vikings.
Last season, the bye came in Week 4 and they came out of it with their worst performance of the year, losing at Miami with the defense giving up 31 points and 541 yards of offense to a bad Dolphins team.
A week later, just like the visit from the Saints Sunday, the NFL's best team (New England) came in and hung 38 points and another 381 yards on the defense.
I have no idea what's next, but last year's 3-3 and this year's are eerily similar.
Hub's not wrong
He isn't wrong. There is just a different feel about it, though, because last season there really wasn't a lot of hope going into the season like there was this year. I still cannot figure out really who to blame the 3-3 record on but I keep coming back to how terrible the offensive line is. But then again, a good offensive coordinator can scheme around a bad offensive line.
What I do know, though, is that it is up to NAGY to get the offense going because there is talent on the offense and good coaches need to get the ball in the hands of guys to have them make plays. This is Nagy's coaching test and he needs to step up and prove himself.