Everybody knew what to expect from Matt Eberflus when the Chicago Bears hired him in 2022. They’d seen it enough times in the past. As a defensive-minded coach, he would inevitably want to run games through that mentality. This meant ball-control offense. In other words, avoid turnovers and run the football to control the clock so the defense could stay fresh. It was that way with Lovie Smith and again with John Fox. Throughout the first two years, Eberflus did little to change those assumptions.
A great way to determine the kind of person a head coach is is when their team has a lead. Most defensive-minded coaches prefer to run the football, milk the clock, and protect the lead. They don’t want to risk turnovers by having the quarterback throw the ball too often. Offensive coaches tend to think more aggressively and are interested in scoring points until it breaks the opponent’s spirits. Apparently, somebody has replaced Eberflus with an imposter. Based on recent charting data, the Bears have become one of the more pass-happy teams in the NFL when holding a lead.
Matt Eberflus has evolved without anybody noticing.
While he may still be a defensive guy at heart, he has opened his mind to the possibilities of being more aggressive. That means going for it on 4th and short if the situation is right. Pass up an extra point for a two-point conversion. Last but certainly not least, give the green light to your offensive coordinator to have the offense keep throwing even when you have a solid lead. Being in the upper right tier of that chart means the Bears are willing to throw the ball regardless of the situation.
This speaks to their confidence in Caleb Williams. The #1 overall pick has matured at remarkable speed over the past three weeks. He has seven touchdowns and only one interception while completing 74% of his passes. When your quarterback is looking that sharp, it becomes easier to be open to throwing it regardless of leading or trailing. It doesn’t hurt that the strength of the Bears’ offense is at wide receiver and tight end. Matt Eberflus deserves a ton of credit for leaning into that without letting his traditional mentality get in the way.
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@David RoosterRider wrote “way to smart”. Actually, it should be written, “way too smart” to be grammatically correct. That is grade school level as a mistake. David, why would you want to support such a simpleton? Oh, I see, you are his loyal grandson. Feel sorry for you. My grandfather, Samuel, read Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle to me as a boy. Big difference! And when I played football, I still ran over or dragged 3-4 tacklers.
@David And my David response was also pure sarcasm, RocketAss, I laughed my head off while writing it wondering who was dumb enough to think I meant it. So I guess both David and I are so very much smarter than you, it makes it even funnier.
Gee, willing to throw more now that Fields is gone and Williams is in there. You don’t say?
How about the head coach is just doing his job. The OC was hired to run the offense. Flus has stayed out of the way and let him do it. After the offensive players had a meeting with Waldron they seem to have gotten on the same page and started jelling into a unit, offensive line and all. Now if the offense hadn’t started producing, I imagine Flus would have stepped in.
Excellent comments Slip Knotz. Spot on. Most intelligent thing I’ve read on here in days.