fleet wrote:dougthonus wrote:Jeffster81 wrote:And if the bolded happens, there is no justification in keeping Nagy AND Pace.
I think Pace absolutely needs to fire Nagy to have any hope of keeping his job. I place more blame on Pace than Nagy in some respects, but I can understand why he did what he did. Pace went all in on Trubisky being a great QB, if it worked, the Bears may have had a shot at the superbowl.
It didn't work, and when it was clear to most people it wouldn't work, he doubled down on it a few years rather than pivoting to a new plan. That's not necessarily awful, it was kind of like betting on post ACL Rose, you were pretty sure it would fail, but you didn't really have a better option other than starting a rebuild earlier.
Pace has the opposite team building approach I would have. My approach would be to always be trading down, always acquiring more assets. Pace has been aggressive about trading out of the draft to get better current players. I haven't really studied the NFL enough to know how well my approach would work historically though. I generally believe that the draft is closer to a "random walk" and that people overvalue their hunches too much.
The team cannot afford to let Pace sacrifice picks to trade up for random dudes anymore, let alone Trubisky. There are too many needs. Not that they ever could afford it. That has to stop.
Did NOT need to trade up to get Trubisky. To me that is more unforgivable than passing Mahomes and Watson.





















