Tall Midget wrote:
Nas wrote:
Brick wrote:
Nas wrote:
Brick wrote:
Nas wrote:
I've seen nothing that Nagy has done in the past 9 games that should get him fired. Especially considering that Fields was the quarterback he targeted.
The 3-6 record isn't exactly a strong piece of evidence.
Starting Fields was essentially saying that you didn't care about wins. You can't have it both ways. The Bears would have more wins if Dalton was the starter.
The only game Dalton may have won that we lost would have been Cleveland but that was because Dalton was injured. Dalton wasn't winning any of the other games.
You probably need to get your television fixed. We're all still judging Fields on a curve. His inability to read a defense or get the ball out quickly has limited the effectiveness of the offense even though they have a great run game. The Buccaneers game is literally the only game I am not confident the Bears would have had a shot in.
I agree that Nagy's quarterback decisions have cost the Bears victories this season, but not in the way you state. Nagy's insistence upon giving Dalton the starting job and accompanying refusal to let Fields vie for the starting position is/was both antithetical to the ethos of competitive athletics and detrimental to Fields' development. If Fields had been practicing with the offensive starters from the beginning of training camp, his development would be significantly more advanced than it is today and the Bears would likely have one or two more wins.
More problematically, your wistfulness over a lost Dalton era is especially bizarre given the game plan Nagy used in the Cleveland game. If Nagy called the same plays for Dalton that he did for Fields, Dalton would have wound up in the intensive care unit and injured reserve. Your predictions of Dalton-fueled Bears glory both overestimate Dalton's ability and Nagy's commonsense.
The kid recently learned how to call plays in a huddle. It's okay to acknowledge that he wasn't ready to start. It's okay to acknowledge that Nagy's "plan" was probably right. It's okay to acknowledge that Dalton wouldn't have had the same problems in Cleveland because he wasn't a green rookie.
I'm not sad about a Dalton era. The only thing that has mattered to me was the development of Fields. Not wanting him to be ruined because he was pushed out of the nest too soon. I understood like everyone else that winning games this season wasn't going to be a priority if he became the starter. Therefore I can't blame Nagy or Pace because of the Bears record.