Courtney Cronin, ESPN Staff WriterNov 29, 2024, 12:34 PM ET
CloseCourtney Cronin joined ESPN in 2017, originally covering the Minnesota Vikings before switching to the Chicago Bears in 2022. Courtney is a frequent panelist on Around the Horn and host of Best Week Ever on ESPN Radio. She also co-hosts The Chicago Bears Podcast on ESPN 1000. She previously worked at the San Jose Mercury News as a multimedia sports journalist.
CHICAGO — The Bears fired coach Matt Eberflus on Friday, sources tell ESPN’s Adam Schefter, one day after a 23-20 loss to the Detroit Lions that ended with the Bears falling victim to clock mismanagement.
Eberflus held a news conference via Zoom Friday morning, and he said he was “confident” he would be coaching the Bears against the San Francisco 49ers on Dec. 8, but hours later, he was fired and sources told ESPN interim offensive coordinator Thomas Brown would take over on an interim basis.
Eberflus’ tenure ended amid a six-game losing streak that featured an array of last second-losses, including:
An 18-15 road loss to the Washington Commanders in Week 8 that culminated with a tipped 52-yard Hail Mary pass. In an embarrassing twist, Bears cornerback Tyrique Stevenson had his back to receivers running downfield as he faced and taunted fans on the final play before racing over into coverage.
A 20-19 loss to the Green Bay Packers in Week 11 that featured a blocked 46-yard field goal that would have lifted the Bears to victory. It was Cairo Santos’ league-leading third blocked field goal attempt of the season, and it came after the Bears decided not to run an extra play to try to make it a shorter attempt.
A 30-27 overtime loss to the Minnesota Vikings in Week 12 that negated a furious fourth-quarter rally.
Sunday’s loss, which ended with the Bears having the ball on the Lions’ 41 with 32 seconds left. Instead of calling his final timeout, Eberflus watched as rookie quarterback Caleb Williams threw a long pass out of the reach of Rome Odunze as time expired.
The losing streak coincided with dramatic improvement by Williams, who has thrown 232 passes without an interception, the longest streak for a rookie in NFL history. He’s thrown 5 touchdowns without a pick over the last two weeks, and the next coach will be charged with continuing the development of this year’s No. 1 overall draft choice.
Eberflus defended his clock management Sunday. Once Williams was sacked with 32 seconds remaining and the Bears trailing by three points, 26 seconds ticked off the clock before the Bears ran their final play.
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Realizing that Chicago would not have time to run another play after the ball was snapped with six seconds remaining, Williams changed the play and threw the deep ball toward Odunze.
Eberflus said he was trying to preserve the final timeout to set up a potential game-tying field goal after running a final play.
“I like what we did there,” Eberflus said. “Again, once it’s under seven [seconds], you’re going to call a timeout there — actually under 12 and then really you don’t have an option because it’s third (down) to fourth, you have to throw it into the end zone then.
“To me it’s — I think we handled it the right way, I do believe that you just rerack the play, get it in bounds and call timeout, and that’s why we held it and didn’t work out the way we wanted it to.”
Chicago has lost six one-score games in 2024, which brings Eberflus’ career record in one-score games to 5-19. That is the worst record by any coach with at least 20 such games in NFL history.
Eberflus compiled a 14-32 record in nearly three seasons after being hired on January 27, 2022, two days after general manager Ryan Poles was hired. Eberflus’ .304 win percentage in 46 games is the third-worst in franchise history, behind John Fox (.292) and Abe Gibron (.274). He is the first head coach in team history to be fired in-season.
At the beginning of the 2024 offseason, the Bears chose to retain Eberflus despite going 10-24 in his first two seasons. Poles, who made the decision, did so because of the coach’s “leadership” and “stability.”
“I really think that the head coach needs to be able to captain the ship when the seas are stormy or when the seas have storms, and really keep everything settled,” Poles said in January. “When you go through hard times and he can keep everyone together, to me, that’s like the critical piece.”
There were plenty of storms to endure, especially with the coaching staff. Eberflus fired offensive coordinator Shane Waldron ahead of Week 11 and replaced him with Thomas Brown. Waldron was the second offensive coordinator Eberflus fired in the same year after Luke Getsy and four offensive coaches were let go in January.
In two seasons, Eberflus fired eight coaches.
Eberflus, 54, was hired by the Bears after four seasons as the defensive coordinator of the Indianapolis Colts where his defenses finished in the top 10 in scoring three times, including being tied for ninth in 2021 at 21.5 points per game. He took over a team that went 6-11 in 2021 prior to his arrival. Chicago has missed the postseason in 12 of its past 14 seasons.
After taking over the Bears’ defensive playcalling duties two games into the 2023 season due to the abrupt resignation of former defensive coordinator Alan Williams, Eberflus’ unit became one of the best in the NFL during Chicago’s 7-10 finish last season. The Bears boasted the NFL’s No. 1 run defense and ranked 12th in total yards. Chicago finished tied for first with the San Francisco 49ers with 22 interceptions.
But since the start of Chicago’s losing streak in Week 8, the Bears defense has taken a significant step back. The unit ranks 30th in yards per rush allowed (5.1) and rushing yards allowed per game (158.2), ranks 31st in yards per game allowed (397.0), 30th in explosive plays allowed per game (8.3) and 26th in opponent Total QBR