A complete house cleaning is underway at Halas Hall. Three football seasons have passed since Matt Nagy, and Ryan Pace won top honors for their efforts in leading the 2018 Chicago Bears to a 12-4 record and NFC North title, and the time has come for the franchise to find their replacements.
Despite this team’s issues, the head coach and general manager vacancies are highly sought-after. And with Super Bowl-winning Hall of Fame executive Bill Polian lending a helping hand, the Bears are in a position to make some impact hirings. Over the following days, weeks, or however long it takes, we’ll be diving into the top available candidates, including their history, what they offer schematically, how they fit culturally, where they can take this team, and more. Let’s do it.
Previous Head Coach Candidates: Doug Pederson, Nathaniel Hackett, Brian Daboll, Brian Flores, Matt Eberflus, Dan Quinn, Byron Leftwich, Leslie Frazier
Previous General Manager Candidates: Glenn Cook, Jeff Ireland, Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, Ran Carthon, Joe Schoen (Hired by NYG on 1/21), Eliot Wolf, Omar Khan, Morocco Brown
Name, Current Team, and Position
Todd Bowles, Tampa Bay Buccaneers De𝄹fens💎ive Coordinator (2019-present)
Relevant Experience
• New York Jets Head Coach (2015-1﷽8), Secondary Coa♍ch (2000)
• Arizona Cardinals Defensive ꦅCoordinator (2013-14)
•☂ Philadelphia Eagle🐻s Secondary Coach (2012), Interim Defensive Coordinator (2012)
• Miami Dolphins Assistant Head Coach/Secondary Coach💖 (2008-11), Interim Head Coach (2011)
• Dallas Cowboys Secondary Coach (2005-07)
• Cleveland Browns Secondary Coach (2001-04), Nickel Pack🔯age Coach (2001-03)
Bowles’ head-coaching tenure with the Jets didn’t go well. But we can say that about a bunch of Jets coaches over the years. Seriously, how much of that can we attribute to the Jets being the Jets? Re-uniting with Bruce Arians as the Bucs DC and building a defense that kept Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs from repeating last year put Bowles back on the coaching radar. Considering the Bears’ history hiring defensive coaches, that résumé with all that experience as a coordinator and working in the secondary might be attractive to folks at Halas Hall.
Existing Rumors and Bears Ties
Remember when the Bears were aiming to hire Bowles as Vic Fangio’s replacement? Fun times (until he chose the Bucs over the Bears). Or when in 2015? I doubt either party saw that one coming. But who doesn’t like it when someone shows genuine interest from the get-go?
More recently, the Bears put in a request to interview Bowles one day after creating the head coach vacanﷺcy. And on this past Saturday, .
BONUS: Did you know that, in another timeline, Bowles and Matt Nagy could’ve been coaching together — with the Jets or the Bears. It’s a bit of a trip, but the jog down memory lane is a fun journey.
Potential Fit
Hey, It Might Work…
That Bowles defense is a mothertrucker. It is a unit that finished 13th in yards, 9th in Football Outsiders’ DVOA metric, and fifth in points. No team had more than Tampa’s 219 quarterback pressures. In short, the Bowles brand of defense would play well in Chicago. Especially among fans who love blitzes (no one sent extra men more than the Bucs) and seeing opposing QBs getting hit (no team had more knockdowns than TB).
Team Bowles with an offense led by a quarterback who possesses Justin Fields’ potential, and it could be a special pairing.
OK, Maybe He’s Not The One…
Bowles’ time as a head coach with the Jets was a dud. But, again, I can’t help but wonder if that was the result of a first-time head coach lost in the wilderness of a messy organization. Sure, I realize the Bears aren’t much better. But Chicago’s football team is on a tier above and in better standing than its AFC counterparts in New York. With that being said, I don’t want to ding Bowles too much for his time in the Big Apple.
On the other hand, Bowles’ defense has some studs. And as is the case with Byron Leftwich, Bowles can’t bring them to Chicago. Plus, sending that much heat is a lot riskier when your offense can’t bail out defensive gaffes because it isn’t led by Tom Brady.
I don’t have a third hand. But if I did, I’d look at multiple blown coverages against Cooper Kupp and have a desire to have serious conversations about what happened here:
STAFFORD FINDS COOPER KUPP. UNBELIEVABLE.
(via )
— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport)
Matthew Stafford & Cooper Kupp (70-yd TD)
🔹 Air Distance: 50.3 yds
🔹 Target Separation: 5.8 yds
🔹 Completion Probability: 50.6%» Stafford: 3rd completion of 50+ yards & 5+ yards of separation this season 𒐪(out of 8 NFL-wide); 2nd vs Bucs | Powered by
— Next Gen Stats (@NextGenStats)
In The End …
Much like Leslie Frazier, Bowles is a coordinator with prior head-coaching experience who deserves a second chance at running his own show. But like Frazier, I’m unsure of Bowles’ fit. It has less to do with what went down in the Bucs playoff loss and more to do with questions about how he would do things differently than he did in New York. The right answers to some well-thought-out questions would help build Bowles’ case. But the wrong answers would have me looking elsewhere for a candidate. Nevertheless, Bowles is still a candidate worth meeting.