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I wouldn't say I am bullish on Nagy as much as I am done with firing coaches for not being able to build a sustained winner with a shit tier quarterback.
I wouldn't say I am bullish on Nagy as much as I am done with firing coaches for not being able to build a sustained winner with a shit tier quarterback.
I look at it from my personal context.
When I have a new class and I am planning for them like it is going to be Dead Poet's Society and I get a bunch of finger painting vape heads, I have to pretty quickly throw the original plan in the garbage.
Nagy has struggled to throw his 202 in the garbage.
But there's only so much you can do with, or get out of, a finger painting vape head
do you ever stand on a desk in class, pound your chest, and use a british accent while reciting your mock drafts to your students?I look at it from my personal context.
When I have a new class and I am planning for them like it is going to be Dead Poet's Society and I get a bunch of finger painting vape heads, I have to pretty quickly throw the original plan in the garbage.
Nagy has struggled to throw his 202 in the garbage.
do you ever stand on a desk in class, pound your chest, and use a british accent while reciting your mock drafts to your students?
I wouldn't say I am bullish on Nagy as much as I am done with firing coaches for not being able to build a sustained winner with a shit tier quarterback.
I'm not sure I've ever seen a player deserve it more than Parkey.
Seems like Nagy is in denial regarding Mitch’s abilities. Almost like he can’t believe what a shit show he has as a quarterback. Not to exonerate Nagy as his play calling has been horrible, he doesn’t have any options, and he’s obviously not going to throw his QB under the bus.True
But expecting them to be more than they are is guaranteed failure. What we are seeing is guaranteed failure.
Parkey was consistently poor last year. At the end of the day, the fault lies with the Nagy and the front office for sticking with him. They chose not to replace him. It wasn't like it was a secret he was terrible.
Nagy rode a great defense and other than a 6 game streak where the bears scored, his other 20 games the offense has been quite bad.
Trubs isn't good but did Daniel do much better?
His system doesn't work in Chicago.
Has any offensive system ever worked in Chicago other than Trestman’s for half a year? BTW Trestman’s offense was working until they reinserted Jay Cutler. You get where I’m going? The reason why Nagy’s system & other systems have failed in Chicago because they have failed to identify a good QB. No systems will work in Chicago until they find a good QB.
The difference is, you can't develop, install, and effectively run a completely different scheme on the fly. You have basically 3 practices a week to impliment new plays, so it takes time.I look at it from my personal context.
When I have a new class and I am planning for them like it is going to be Dead Poet's Society and I get a bunch of finger painting vape heads, I have to pretty quickly throw the original plan in the garbage.
Nagy has struggled to throw his 202 in the garbage.
I am still on board the Nagy train. I think the mass exodus this soon is rather entertaining TBH.
Yep. Everyone all year knew that he would eventually cost them a big game down the stretch. They deserved it.Parkey was consistently poor last year. At the end of the day, the fault lies with the Nagy and the front office for sticking with him. They chose not to replace him. It wasn't like it was a secret he was terrible.
Canada is going into the toilet, after 22 tears, I mean years, I was done. Fucking mierda tripe country, they have laws against breathing the wrong way. And brown face could hang a hooker in parliament during session and those morons would still elect him. God, I hate Canada.Canada has laws against unnecessary mocks. CCS is Windy's outlet for subversion.
I know there are many reasons to dislike some of his recent coaching decisions, particularly regarding play-calling. As a coach he inherited Trubisky. It's his job to try to squeeze whatever talent possible out of that 1+ round pick. I think it's becoming clear (if it hasn't been clear already) that for one reason or another, Trubisky has not shown the growth that was anticipated by a 3rd year player (even Mark Helfrich came out and said so in so many words). Here's why I am still Bullish on Nagy:
He actually reminds me of a young Pete Carroll. Before going to Seattle and winning a Super Bowl, Pete Carroll was run out of New York (he was the head-coach of the Jets). Not just as a coach, but as a leader, Nagy has some very admirable qualities that generally people admire.
- He is not a bullshitter. He's honest with the media to the extent he can be
- He does not throw his players under the bus. When pressed on specific player mistakes, he manages to discuss where there's opportunity for improvement without tearing the player down.
- He's honest about where his play-calling could have been better.
- He's trying to keep a positive attitude at a time when it would be very easy to lose the team. I have no doubt that behind closed doors there is more open accountability.
That's not to say he's perfect obviously. I'd like to see him improve as a coach in the following areas (with some scouting notes thrown in).
- Let's just come clean and admit that the offense should have played more in pre-season. Clearly Trubisky, the-line, the entire offense needed the work.
- Please turn the play-calling over to Helfrich. You can still override at times and get your play-calling fix in.
- I'm sure it's clear to you (as well as Pace) that the offensive line is a liability (despite them generally getting better- again, maybe that pre-season play was needed).
- Clearly your red-zone schemes are not original enough to fool defenses.
- Finally, I am sad to say (as I was an original Trubisky believer) , it's (beyond) time to move on from Trubisky. I don't know that it's going to be feasible for this season, but next year there had better be a plan to replace him.
- We need another monster defensive end. Hicks is awesome. He's also reached 28, which for many players in the NFL is when the injuries start catching up.
- Probably not a bad idea to get more speed at receiver. I've said this since the pre-season, and still believe it's true (kinda sucks to see Marvin Hall going off in Detroit).
I know there are many reasons to dislike some of his recent coaching decisions, particularly regarding play-calling. As a coach he inherited Trubisky. It's his job to try to squeeze whatever talent possible out of that 1+ round pick. I think it's becoming clear (if it hasn't been clear already) that for one reason or another, Trubisky has not shown the growth that was anticipated by a 3rd year player (even Mark Helfrich came out and said so in so many words). Here's why I am still Bullish on Nagy:
He actually reminds me of a young Pete Carroll. Before going to Seattle and winning a Super Bowl, Pete Carroll was run out of New York (he was the head-coach of the Jets). Not just as a coach, but as a leader, Nagy has some very admirable qualities that generally people admire.
- He is not a bullshitter. He's honest with the media to the extent he can be
- He does not throw his players under the bus. When pressed on specific player mistakes, he manages to discuss where there's opportunity for improvement without tearing the player down.
- He's honest about where his play-calling could have been better.
- He's trying to keep a positive attitude at a time when it would be very easy to lose the team. I have no doubt that behind closed doors there is more open accountability.
That's not to say he's perfect obviously. I'd like to see him improve as a coach in the following areas (with some scouting notes thrown in).
- Let's just come clean and admit that the offense should have played more in pre-season. Clearly Trubisky, the-line, the entire offense needed the work.
- Please turn the play-calling over to Helfrich. You can still override at times and get your play-calling fix in.
- I'm sure it's clear to you (as well as Pace) that the offensive line is a liability (despite them generally getting better- again, maybe that pre-season play was needed).
- Clearly your red-zone schemes are not original enough to fool defenses.
- Finally, I am sad to say (as I was an original Trubisky believer) , it's (beyond) time to move on from Trubisky. I don't know that it's going to be feasible for this season, but next year there had better be a plan to replace him.
- We need another monster defensive end. Hicks is awesome. He's also reached 28, which for many players in the NFL is when the injuries start catching up.
- Probably not a bad idea to get more speed at receiver. I've said this since the pre-season, and still believe it's true (kinda sucks to see Marvin Hall going off in Detroit).