For a brief moment, it felt like the Chicago Bears were doing the exact same things that made them the laughingstock of the NFL. Matt Eberflus was allowed to have a morning press conference after the debacle in Detroit, making it seem as if the head coach was still safe despite every reason in the book to fire him. Mercifully, smarter heads prevailed. For the first time in franchise history, the Bears dismissed a head coach midseason. Eberflus is out, and offensive coordinator Thomas Brown is replacing him as interim, according to Tom Pelissero and Mike Garafolo of NFL Network.
Jay Glazer of FOX Sports added further details, stating the top brass (executives and ownership) were “infuriated” with how the Lions game ended. Eberflus’ handling of the post-game presser, in which he blamed rookie quarterback Caleb Williams, probably didn’t help. Team president Kevin Warren and GM Ryan Poles were said to have lingered in the locker room longer than usual after the game. Rumors have swirled that players were nearing a mutiny if something wasn’t done. At last, the organization did the right thing.
Appointing Brown to replace Matt Eberflus is an equal surprise.
Buzz had been growing for weeks that players in the locker room were drawn to the new offensive coordinator. He had an “aura” of self-confidence, discipline, and leadership you normally expect from head coaches. His rapid turnaround of Williams over the past three weeks since Shane Waldron was fired showed he had the ability to rally the troops. Still, some felt if Eberflus were fired it might not be the wisest decision to promote Brown again. Better to leave him in charge of the offense.
This move sends a clear signal that the Bears see him as potential head coaching material. Brown will now have five games to audition for the job while the organization likes starts researching alternatives once the season ends. The Bears haven’t promoted a head coach from within since Abe Gibron in 1972. So this would be rare history if that happens. Williams reportedly loves him, and other players are echoing the same. As for Matt Eberflus, his tenure will be remembered as one of the worst in franchise history, marked by conservative thinking, terrible situational awareness, and a reputation as a choker.
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I wonder if Warren told Ryan Poles that if Eberflus managed to lose out Warren could not guarantee Poles would be back?
Another question – did Warren and maybe, Poles let Eberflus go out and do the press conference so that George could see the outcry when people saw Eberflus was still there? It would a clever way to motivate George to sign off on firing him.
I’m not sure that Poles is that manipulating, but is Warren?
Genuine failure not hiring Ben Johnson last off-season. We’ll see if they repeat that mistake.
Time to bring in Belichick.
Good move to give Brown a HC audition with a few weeks left I’m concerned about that ‘25 top 10 draft though. Already spent it on OT Kelvin Banks.
As for Poles. His biggest failure was in coaching. Talent acquisition he follows a specific system of thought, but he has not had anyone who can, or will develop any of his players. If these five weeks with Thomas Brown doesn’t show development results (the win situation is absurd right now), reassess him. But if he isn’t smart enough to understand that ALL of his talent acquisitions hinged on the coaching they got, he SHOULD be fired. Incidentally, It should never take almost three years to find out that you aren’t on the right track. I usually know I’m NOT… Read more »