Usa new news

Bears are criminally failing Caleb Williams, who might need to sit

The boos at Soldier Field spoke of anger, frustration and perhaps some embarrassment over whatever circumstances had led Bears fans to pledge allegiance to this sad franchise.

The offense managed just 142 yards of total offense against the Patriots on Sunday, which totally offended those in attendance, those watching on TV and those who weren’t paying attention to the game but smelled a foul odor they suspected was coming from a locked car trunk. Caleb Williams was sacked nine times.

The boos were scattershot. They hit coach Matt Eberflus, offensive coordinator Shane Waldron, the offensive line and general manager Ryan Poles, the guy responsible for putting together that offensive line.

Everybody and everything was a target during a brutally bad 19-3 loss Sunday to not-very-good New England. The boos will get louder.

The only thing stopping Eberflus from getting fired now is the Bears’ age-old refusal to can a coach during a season. No, check that. Another possibility: the out-of-touch McCaskey family still likes the cut of Eberflus’ jib. It’s the kind of thing chairman George McCaskey would say. And believe.

After the game, Eberflus answered reporters’ questions very broadly and very blandly, but if anyone is going to walk the plank for the offense’s deficiencies, it’s going to be Waldron, who seems to be in danger of losing his play-calling duties. The Bears have gone 23 straight drives without a touchdown. They were one-of-14 on third down Sunday.

“We’ll look at everything,’’ said Eberflus, which is coach-speak for “We’ll need your headset now, Shane.’’

The Bears used the No. 1 overall pick on Williams this year, and they’re criminally failing him. He was sacked six times last week, which seemed like a lot until Sunday rolled around. He had no chance against the Patriots’ pass rush, and if this is to be his lot the rest of the season, the best move would be to sit him and let somebody else donate their body to science. The idea is to protect such a valued investment, and if the line can’t do it, management should.

At a minimum, Williams shouldn’t have been anywhere near the field late in Sunday’s game, not with his team down by 16 points. But there he was, in harm’s way. A fireable offense, if there ever was one.

The Bears were without their starting tackles because of injury. The poor play of their replacements and the rest of the offensive line falls directly on Poles, who had one job after making the decision to draft Williams out of USC — do whatever it takes to help the rookie succeed.

What happened Sunday had the feel of all the other failures of modern Bears history, surely leading to all those boos. This felt like Matt Nagy and Marc Trestman, with a side order of Ryan Pace and Phil Emery. This felt like every other inept offensive coordinator before Waldron. The Bears offense had no rhythm, no cohesion and no apparent reason for being.

Williams averaged 4 yards a pass attempt, a stunningly low number that evoked Craig Krenzel, Chad Hutchinson and Jonathan Quinn. If one thing in this world is true, it’s that the talented Williams is not those reject Bears quarterbacks. He had no time to throw Sunday. Sometimes he held onto the ball too long, but mostly he spent the afternoon holding on for dear life.

So booing. Lots of booing for a franchise with a bad habit of finding multiple ways of screwing things up.

Losers of three straight after starting the season 4-2, the Bears got pushed around by the Patriots, who came into the game with a 2-7 record. And, to think, this was supposed to be the easy opponent on a very difficult second-half schedule. Now come, in order, Green Bay (H), Minnesota (H), Detroit (A), San Francisco (A), Minnesota (A), Detroit (H), Seattle (H) and Green Bay (A).

Late Sunday afternoon, Eberflus talked about “looking inward.’’ He said the same thing after a terrible loss to the Cardinals last week, too. Offensively, I think he’s seeing a blocked intestine.

Long forgotten is the preseason excitement about the skill-position talent Poles had amassed. He’s not a hero anymore. He’s a bull’s-eye, one of several. The sacks are on Poles for building such a bad line, the pre-snap penalties are on Eberflus for having an undisciplined team and the joke’s on Bears fans for believing this nonsense again.

Latest on the Bears
The Patriots sacked him nine times in a brutal loss. Heads need to roll so his doesn’t.
The Bears’ 19-3 loss to the worst-in the-league Patriots on a somber Sunday was as disillusioning an afternoon as the franchise has had in years.
It’s time for Bears general manager Ryan Poles to listen to what the locker room and the on-field performance have been telling him all season.
Exit mobile version