GoBLUE_SemperFi

January 8th, 2018 at 12:29 PM ^

http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2018/01/08/bears-hire-matt-nagy-head-coach/

"Bears general manager Ryan Pace and team brass interviewed Nagy on Sunday, a day after the Chiefs were eliminated in a 22-21 loss to the Titans in the wild-card round. He’s the 16th head coach in franchise history and takes over one week after the Bears fired John Fox following his 14-34 record across a three-year tenure."

 

mgobaran

January 8th, 2018 at 3:01 PM ^

Jim Caldwell did not fail coaching the Lions. He led the team to the highest level of sustained success since like 1991 thru 1995. He has the highest winning percentage as a Lions coach since 1956, outside of an interim stint by Gary Moeller in 2000.

He stabalized an instable franchise, and is basically moving on so the current GM can pick his guy. 

GoBLUE_SemperFi

January 8th, 2018 at 3:28 PM ^

...this isn't saying much.  "He has the highest winning percentage as a Lions coach since 1956"

However, when you look at the talent on the Lions team, in comparison to several of the other playoff teams, you have to believe that not making the playoffs is a disappointment, at the very least. Losing to that Cincinnatti team was unforgivable, whether you want to call it failure or not and I'm glad they decided to go in a new direction.

CryingMagnus

January 8th, 2018 at 4:26 PM ^

Yep... one playoff win in 60 years.

Even the CLEVELAND BROWNS have more playoff success than the Lions!

Tampa has WON a superbowl in that time -- after going 0-14.

Cincy, has been to the Super Bowl twice in that time.  TWICE.

Just face it.  People need to take off the Honolulu blue glasses and face that the Lions are the worst run professional sports franchise in North America.  

mgobaran

January 9th, 2018 at 8:32 AM ^

They have been poorly ran for  decades, but if you don't see the difference between that and what Martha Ford/Bob Quinn/Jim Caldwell have done, then you are too set in your mindset to view the actual world. This franchise has a base, a structure now. Going 10 years without getting to .500 on the season is not going to happen anytime soon. 0-16 is far far away. Going 4-12  one season after going 10-6 isn't going to happen again. 

CryingMagnus

January 9th, 2018 at 9:39 AM ^

Like I said, take off the tinted glasses.

If you think the Lions don't have glaring holes at RB, LB, OL, and the secondary, you are completely delusional.

Those same holes have been there for years.  It's didn't happen overnight.

The Lions reached this year.  It was the first time in decades they swept the division on the road.  They usually drop a couple of those.  Slide those games from the win column to the loss column and what do you have???  7-9 Lions.  Tah dah!

In 2017, the Lions were losing late to the Browns.  They got creamed by Baltimore and NO and dropped several other games to playoff teams.  Meet you back here when the Lions regress to their 6-10 or 7-9 mean in 2018 so you can tell me more bullshit about Ford and Quinn.

mgobaran

January 9th, 2018 at 8:28 AM ^

I'm glad they are going in a new direction as well. I do not believe Caldwell is a top tier coach in this league, or that he could get us to the next level of competing for and winning meaningful things (divisions/playoff games).

But to write him off as a failure when he is the best coach we've had since Wayne Fontes, and maybe further back than that, seems silly and ungrateful. Just being stable, even if it is average, is a step in the right direction for this franchise. 

madmaxweb

January 8th, 2018 at 12:45 PM ^

Reid gave up play calling for the offense to Nagy during the last five games which saw the Chiefs go 4-1 and just looked better during that stretch then they did the couple weeks before the switch. It’s a risky hire for the Bears but one that could work out very well IMO.

Perkis-Size Me

January 8th, 2018 at 12:50 PM ^

Can someone please explain to me the allure of Matt Patricia? Is it just because he's a Belichek guy? 

I'd be deeply concerned about the quality of his defenses while he's been in NE, which have usually been anywhere from meh to awful. He's only got Super Bowl rings because of Tom Brady and what the other side of the ball has been able to accomplish. He's just been along for the ride.

I wouldn't want the guy just because he's coached under Belichek. 

Whole Milk

January 8th, 2018 at 1:38 PM ^

I am no fan of either the Lions or the Patriots, but the Pats D is consistently one of the most underrated units in the league. Everyone wants to make it out how bad they were this season, but after a rough start, they ended up 5th in scoring D. They have literally been a top 10 scoring defense every year since 2011, including the #1 overall defense last year. 

mgobaran

January 8th, 2018 at 1:46 PM ^

Bob Quinn knows him, which is probably what allures him. 

The Patriots Bio (not including this current season):
 

Since moving to coach the Patriots on defense in 2006, the team has finished in the top-10 in fewest points allowed in 10 of his 11 seasons with the defense. Patricia's 2016 defense finished as the No. 1 scoring defense in the NFL by allowing only 15.6 points per game. The six rushing touchdowns allowed by his defense were fewest in the league last season. Patricia has also helped the Patriots lead the NFL in turnover differential in 2012 (+25) and 2010 (+28) and finished first in the AFC in 2011 (+17). The plus-28 turnover differential in 2010 is tied with the 2011 San Francisco 49ers for the second highest single-season differential in the NFL since 1970.
It doesn't seem like a bad resume. Not a great either. Idk. Allure to me is that he has been with the Patriots for 14 years, is still young, and has coached in/won multiple Super Bowls. Ex-player. Seems intelligent.

Maize and Blue…

January 8th, 2018 at 12:53 PM ^

Nagy was OC in name only except for the last 5 weeks.  So hiring a guy who was actually a coordinator for five weeks is a better move then hiring Patricia who has been a D coordinator for six seasons and also worked as an assistant to Dante Scarnecchia who is a very good Oline coach for the Pats. Interesting take and I realize that Pats coordinators have not been successful moving on to HC gigs.

BroadneckBlue21

January 8th, 2018 at 2:51 PM ^

Do you know what John Harbaugh was before he was hired? How about Andy Reid? The # of games one has done x or y does not correlate to whether a person is a good hire. Fox took two teams to Super Bowls and stunk it up with Bears. I have nothing against Patricia, either. I wanted Bears to hire DeFilippo, but Nagy is almost as exciting. I think Patricia is a solid hire for Detroit.

shotvig

January 8th, 2018 at 2:06 PM ^

 seems like a bold claim.  We just saw Nagy's offense go totally stagnet once they lost Kelce.  Not to mention, against the titans, which has not been great this season.  It seems like after the success of the Rams and McVay, this may be the trend to go out and hire a young gun.  I personally like the Patricia hire and could give a shit about his "sloppy" apearance.

LSAClassOf2000

January 8th, 2018 at 2:04 PM ^

Interesting thought, although his schedule would absolutely blow from basically late July until the end of September - longer if the Angels made the postseason. I guess the Angels would have to schedule most of the teams from the Midwest during this time to allow him time to get to Chicago and back as easily as possible. 

GoBLUE_SemperFi

January 8th, 2018 at 12:49 PM ^

Keeps you firmly on the pulse of most of what is going on in the NFL.  KC's offensive production took a major nose dive, after they started 5-0, and they were on their way to missing the playoffs.  Reid turned the offensive play calling over to Nagy, their offensive production improving drastically and they won the final 4 games.