Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Former Bears Coach Who Mentored Ben Johnson Says He’s Perfect For Chicago

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Coaching for the Chicago Bears is not easy. If it were, the organization would’ve had more successful ones over the past 30 years. Instead, it’s been a lot of mediocre or bad with one instance of pretty good. One could make the case that the past decade has seen the absolute worst stretch of Bears coaches in franchise history. It started with Marc Trestman, followed by John Fox, Matt Nagy, and finally Matt Eberflus. Between the four of them, they managed a record of 75-116. That stretch includes one winning record and one division title. It feels like nothing short of divine intervention can pull this organization out of the quicksand. Enter Ben Johnson.

Most agree the Detroit Lions offensive coordinator is the hottest coaching candidate on the market. He’s had three straight years of unparalleled success, helping guide a previously futile organization to its best-sustained stretch of winning in decades. However, some worry if the 38-year-old is mentally equipped for the pressure cooker Chicago can be. One person who knows a lot about that is John Shoop. The longtime coach spent five seasons with the organization between 1999 and 2003, with the final three as offensive coordinator. He also mentored Johnson when they were together at North Carolina. Shoop expressed to Brad Biggs of the Chicago Tribune whether he thinks his protege can handle such a monumental task.

Put simply? No doubt about it.

“Just uncommonly bright,” said Shoop of Johnson, who graduated from North Carolina with degrees in mathematics and computer science. “Ben is very intelligent but also has the interpersonal skill to match that. He was the conduit between me and T.J. He gets the sophistication of football.

“Kind of like I have, I think Ben sees coaching as a noble profession. You are helping people become the best they can be. The other thing I will say about Ben, I think this is important, he’s seen fire and he’s seen rain in this business. And everything he’s gotten in this profession, he’s earned. He has worked his way up in this profession, and guys like that I really admire.”…

…“What I’ll say about that I will probably keep between Ben and I,” Shoop said. “But I’ll say this: It was some of the greatest years of my life. I absolutely loved it, and Chicago, when you’re coaching for the Bears, you experience every single emotion there is. And Ben is wired right and he has the foundation to really be able to handle that. He is grounded in something a little deeper than just wins and losses and I think he’s got the wherewithal to handle all that goes with that in a big city. It’s full throttle. He knows that.”

Ben Johnson already has the blueprint.

He watched Dan Campbell utilize it in Detroit for the past few years. He also saw another former Bears coach, Adam Gase, have some success doing the same in Miami. While his stint there didn’t go as planned, Gase became the first coach in eight years to lead the Dolphins to the playoffs. Elevating hard-luck franchises is something Johnson has been part of throughout his NFL experience. He would have a good education on what to do and what not to do if and when he did get the job.

Reports have persisted that Ben Johnson is intrigued with the Bears. He wanted the job this year, but Eberflus managed to survive. Now that the job is open again, the allure likely hasn’t diminished. Caleb Williams looks exactly like the gifted quarterback he was in college despite some rookie inconsistencies. Throw in lots of cap space and three picks in the first two rounds? The Bears are equipped for a rapid turnaround if the right coach steps in. If Johnson is the guy Shoop says he is, the decision should be easy.

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22 COMMENTS

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Vtdsypher
Vtdsypher
Dec 21, 2024 10:36 am

I’m at the point where it doesn’t matter who the bears get as next HC. He will come here and somehow forget how to coach like every other Bears coach

BearDownTX
Dec 21, 2024 10:28 am

I wouldn’t be unhappy with Vrabel as the head coach, but I would be much happier if Ben Johnson was the head coach. Caleb needs an offensive mind he can work with, develop with, and succeed with throughout his career. You don’t want a coach for a 4 or 5-year cycle; you want one for 15 – 20 years because that is the coach that obviously has had major success. Maybe Johnson isn’t that guy, but he is definitely the best thing going on the offensive side of the ball for consecutive years. It’s much easier to find a defensive… Read more »

ChicagoJohnnyVegas
ChicagoJohnnyVegas
Dec 21, 2024 9:44 am

Trestman, Fox, Nagy and Eberflus. What do they all have in common? They all happened under George McCaskey.

It feels like as long as the McCaskeys are calling the shots, it doesn’t matter who they hire, who they draft, who they trade for or who they pick up in free agency.

It’s all just rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

Slip Knotz
Slip Knotz
Dec 20, 2024 10:35 pm

Unlucky, it doesn’t matter how logical your argument is on Sports Mockery. You’ll still get downvoters from people who can’t be objective.

Unluckyirishman76
Unluckyirishman76
Dec 20, 2024 6:31 pm

@David….. Ok how about you list John Shoops accomplishments also? The funny thing about all of this is we i think can all agree that Dan Campbell is doing a great job in Detroit? But was he ever an OC??? Nope! So its possible that maybe knowing how to be a HC is the most important factor in all of this, not just being good calling plays. For every great DC who failed as HC there are just as many great OCs that failed also. You keep mentioning BB. Was he an OC? Did he develop Brady? Um….no.

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