Wednesday, November 20, 2024

This Dan Quinn Comment Is Positively Damning For Matt Eberflus

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Everybody in the mainstream media will be talking about the Hail Mary play that pushed the Washington Commanders over the Chicago Bears on Sunday. It’s understandable. So many crazy things happened on the play, from the Bears only rushing three to Tyrique Stevenson being off in his own little world, ignoring the play before losing the guy he was supposed to cover in the end zone. However, several others can’t help but look to the previous play when the Commanders converted a 13-yard pass that got their 48-yard line with six seconds left. This put them close enough to throw the Hail Mary at all. Both head coaches, Dan Quinn and Matt Eberflus, were asked about it.

Eberflus shrugged it off. He stated that the only play he was focused on was the final one (i.e. the Hail Mary). There was little concern about the previous completion. Quinn had a far different perspective. He told Albert Breer of the MMQB that the pass to McLaurin was the critical play of the game. If it didn’t happen, Washington wouldn’t have been close enough even to try a Hail Mary in the first place. The difference in situational awareness between the two coaches is astounding.

And troublesome if you’re a Bears fan.

Dan Quinn reveals a gulf between Eberflus and true head coach status.

Top head coaches would’ve recognized right away how important a stop on the previous play would’ve been. It would’ve meant Washington would have to throw down the field and then do a bunch of laterals to try for a miracle touchdown. Instead, they got it to a spot where they could get it close enough to the end zone for a batted ball to create some magic. That is exactly what happened. The fact that Eberflus didn’t recognize or acknowledge this fact suggests his grasp on what being a head coach is continuing to elude him.

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Nobody can dispute that he is a terrific defensive coordinator. What he’s done with the Bears’ defense since taking over play-calling last season is admirable. Outside of that, what has he accomplished? Chicago is 3-17 on the road. They’re 1-13 against winning teams. They’ve now had five games where they held a lead with under three minutes left and lost. Eberflus is bad at challenges, bad at timeouts, and bad at finding any coherence on offense. Dan Quinn explained why the Bears may have the wrong guy in one sentence.

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Wes P
Wes P
Oct 29, 2024 9:22 am

The Bears didn’t look ready to compete Sunday after their bye week. It wasn’t just one play, it was a poor showing for the Bears period!

Slip Knotz
Slip Knotz
Oct 28, 2024 9:39 pm

Bears lost by 3 points. Offense scored 15. Doh!

Krisanthony
Krisanthony
Oct 28, 2024 9:01 pm

Let’s not forget that for whatever reason on this earth, he has TJ Edward’s stay near line of s rummage to spy on the RB. Yes, he said this!!!! 2 seconds left in game and he’s apparently worried that Daniels might dump it off to the RB. Rushing 3 instead of 4 allowed Daniels 11 seconds to set himself up for a throw. But Fluss has Edward’s take away the possible 10 yard pickup just in case!!!! It’s simply incompetence. That’s not hyperbole. Not a head coach.

Last edited 22 days ago by Krisanthony
David
Oct 28, 2024 6:08 pm

Honestly I would love to get a new HC and have Flus as only a DC. He’s not even the DC right now, that title belongs to Erik Washington. I think Flus would be great only focusing on Defense however that will never happen with the Bears. I can’t think of a single instance where a HC came back the following year as a coordinator only.

Dr. Steven Sallie
Dr. Steven Sallie
Oct 28, 2024 5:07 pm

How can a team be so offensively incompetent with three top WRs, a good enough TE, and an upcoming QB? No, really?

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