Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Matt Eberflus Reportedly Tried To Weasel His Way Into Keeping Waldron

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Shane Waldron is out. It took nine games for the Chicago Bears to realize they made a huge mistake hiring him as their offensive coordinator. His bland personality, passive voice, and lack of common sense as a play-caller led to a realization that things couldn’t continue. Coming out of the bye week, the Bears have scored just 27 points in three games. Caleb Williams has been sacked 18 times and has not thrown a touchdown pass during that stretch. Something had to change. The decision fell to head coach Matt Eberflus.

For everybody outside the organization, dismissing Waldron was the easiest solution. However, it appears Eberflus wasn’t keen on that idea. In fact, it took until Tuesday for the announcement to come down because the head coach was actively pushing for a way to keep the embattled coordinator. Yes, really. Tom Pelissero of NFL Network appeared on The Rich Eisen Show, where he shared details of Eberflus’ proposed compromise. Let’s just say it was as weak as you’d expect.

“My understanding, as of last night, was that the plan was going to be: Waldron would stay. They’d potentially move him upstairs, change some things operationally, but that he was going to remain the offensive coordinator. But Shane Waldron got called in by Matt Eberflus around 7:30 Central this morning, and [was] told that they were indeed going to make a change. They had a staff meeting at eight, everybody found out that it was going to be Thomas Brown now taking over as offensive coordinator.”

Matt Eberflus trying to keep Waldron doesn’t feel like a football decision.

Remember that multiple players are said to have approached him and GM Ryan Poles asking for a coordinator change. They realized almost immediately that Waldron was utterly out of his depth. For Eberflus to still try to keep him in charge and propose a “solution” of moving him to the booth is incredibly ignorant. Waldron still would’ve called plays and been asked to lead the offensive locker room. Nothing would’ve been fixed. The truth is this effort by Eberflus feels less like a football decision and more like pure optics.

Let’s not forget the Bears head coach already fired one offensive coordinator earlier this year. That is in addition to most of the offensive staff. No fewer than eight assistants under Matt Eberflus have been fired or resigned since he took over in 2022. The fact he couldn’t pick a new offensive coordinator to last more than nine games reflects incredibly bad on him. Eberflus probably hoped his proposed solution could give Waldron one last chance to get things going.

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However, if that happened, it is almost certain he would’ve invited a full-on mutiny from the players. As a result, Waldron was fired.

13 COMMENTS

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Dr. Steven Sallie
Dr. Steven Sallie
Nov 13, 2024 1:16 pm

That’s the hardest I have laughed…since Sunday game time. Let’s just move on to standard operating procedures (SOPs) under artificial intelligence (AI), keeping our faces without eyes.

TGena
TGena
Nov 13, 2024 12:57 pm

In keeping with the animalistic theme of this thread (e.g., Bears, weasels, lions, hyenas, etc.) — if “Big Dog” Kevin Warren doesn’t “whale” on all these Halas Hall “rats” — he doesn’t have a “hare” on his “ass.”

[Yes — the Bears 2024 season has come to this level of absurdity.]

barry_mccockiner
Nov 13, 2024 11:48 am

@Sam What’s most likely to happen over the next couple of games is a spike in offensive production. This happens to a handful of teams every year: A new OC comes in with a fresh offensive motive, and it creates a degree of unpreparedness and confusion for the opposing defenses because there’s no tape available that hints at what that motive is. This is rarely a real fix, as production regresses back to the mean after there’s enough tape for opposing defenses to evaluate. (The same thing happens when teams replace their QB1 mid-season.) I, personally, would welcome the illusion… Read more »

Last edited 1 hour ago by barry_mccockiner
Bear_Down
Bear_Down
Nov 13, 2024 11:41 am

So the Bears fired another offensive coordinator that was in over his head and we still have a head coach under water and well in over his head. Makes sense! At least they’re consistent at sucking hiring coaches/assistant coaches. They definitely got the whole dysfunctional running an organization thing down. Why the hell does Chris Morgan still have a job? .

Dr. Steven Sallie
Dr. Steven Sallie
Nov 13, 2024 11:31 am

Because of the popular demand and support for the comment on authority, I encourage you to use your favorite, lay-person Wikipedia for the masses, to decern the critical differences among authority, power, force, influence, positive and negative incentives, and control to better understand the Bears decision-making processes when applied to routine, salient, and crisis decision contexts. Rod Serling, Mr. Spock, George, and Virginia would appreciate your fan effort.

Last edited 1 hour ago by Dr. Steven Sallie

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