trents wrote:Man, the Bear's mismanagement of time at the end of the game on Thanksgiving was about the worst I have ever seen. When the clock expired, not only were the Bears looking at each other like "what happened?" but the Lions were doing the same. Everyone was looking at the clock like, "is time really expired"? I'm not sure whether that one was on Williams or the coaching staff but the Bears blew the opportunity to tie the game with a field goal.
trents wrote:Man, the Bear's mismanagement of time at the end of the game on Thanksgiving was about the worst I have ever seen. When the clock expired, not only were the Bears looking at each other like "what happened?" but the Lions were doing the same. Everyone was looking at the clock like, "is time really expired"? I'm not sure whether that one was on Williams or the coaching staff but the Bears blew the opportunity to tie the game with a field goal.
4XPIPS wrote:I think is just a case a rookie QB making a rookie mistake, and mis managing that two plays. On the prior play when the defensive ends way over pursued his rush, and the tackle didn't fly out to open the pocket up, Caleb should have stepped up into the pocket, but instead he kept back pedaling into that deep sack. They should have wasted their last TO, but instead they were trying to get lined up for a play and yes they burned out the clock.
This looked bad, but not nearly as bad as the Hawks vs 49ers when beastmode came in with Russ and Co near the goalline, and the offense just sat there and took a delay of game, and Pete Carroll looking all confused "like what happened" That was the epic poor clock management
River Dog wrote:
It wasn't that deep of a sack, -6 yards. But I agree, they wasted too much time getting organized after the sack. Knowing it was 3rd down and that they couldn't line up and spike it, they should have burned that last timeout then try to hit a quick 10–15-yard sideline pass before attempting a 61-62 yd FG. I'll bet their FG kicker was pissed.
That game could spell the end of Matt Eberfluss's NFL HC career. He's already on the hot seat.
River Dog wrote:It wasn't that deep of a sack, -6 yards. But I agree, they wasted too much time getting organized after the sack. Knowing it was 3rd down and that they couldn't line up and spike it, they should have burned that last timeout then try to hit a quick 10–15-yard sideline pass before attempting a 61-62 yd FG. I'll bet their FG kicker was pissed.
That game could spell the end of Matt Eberfluss's NFL HC career. He's already on the hot seat.
4XPIPS wrote:I think a 6 yard sack is pretty driving killing, and I personally think that is pretty deep behind the LOS. If had better pocket awareness he should have stepped up into the pocket, but again it's fast paced and he is a rookie.
Bears coaching staff is in shambles already. Shane Waldron spent all off season working with Caleb Williams, and there was a lot of hype that Shane was going to let it fly with Rome and Caleb, but he was displaced. As we have seen all along once a young QB has chances at OCs, this really messes with their development.
River Dog wrote:
Any negative play or penalty at that point is pretty devasting. I was just saying that it wasn't that big of a sack as far as sacks go. And in looking at the replay, there wasn't much of a pocket for him to step into. #98 DJ Reader did a great job of plugging up the middle. At that point, Williams didn't have much of a choice as he definitely didn't want to retreat and risk losing even more yardage.
The problem was in what happened next. The coaching staff should have realized that in the event of a sack and with all the receivers running downfield, that it was going to take some time to get organized. With no opportunity to spike the ball, they should have called the timeout. IMO this is mostly on the coaching staff, maybe 80/20.
4XPIPS wrote:I won't put this on Caleb, as he is a rookie. This clearly is 100% IMO on Eberflus, but instead of owning up to it in the post game he double downed and said that was the right decision. Maybe Eberflus wants to start his holidays early and get the boot sooner than later, because clearly he is on his way out if he clearly doesn't see that the clock management was an issue.
https://sports.yahoo.com/matt-eberflus- ... 57465.html
Stream Hawk wrote:And here it is https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/426 ... aight-loss
c_hawkbob wrote:They always say it wasn't just this screw-up. But Chicago just isn't a team that fires coaches mid season. I firmly believe that this incident is what got Eberflus fired now. And rightly so IMO.
c_hawkbob wrote:They always say it wasn't just this screw-up. But Chicago just isn't a team that fires coaches mid season. I firmly believe that this incident is what got Eberflus fired now. And rightly so IMO.
trents wrote:It certainly does appear to be at least the straw that broke the camel's back. If the Bears had tied the game with a field goal and pulled it out in OT, Eberflus would still have his job today. It's one thing to make a screw up like that by a coach who has a long history of winning, ala Pete Carol, but it's another to be new head coach with no history of winning and pull a boner like that one.
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