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New Bears General Manager: Phil Emery

| January 28th, 2012

The Bears have reached an agreement to name Phil Emery their new GM. The choice, I believe, is a significant decision. Ted Phillips and the McCaskey family have made a decision to entrust their organization to a veteran leader with a terrific reputation in league circles. They had a few young guns to choose from (including DBB endorsed candidate Marc Ross) but they opted for a man who has been around the league a long time and who scouted for the Bears a few years back.

To read Dan Pompei’s column on Emery, complete with quotes from his current boss Scott Pioli, CLICK HERE. Here are a pair of quotes from the piece I particularly liked:

Here’s how former Tribune In the Wake of the News sports columnist Michael Holley described Emery in his book War Room:

“He worked at the Naval Academy for seven years, so he’s not a career military man, although he does sound like one: His voice is clear and commanding. … He’s got an iPad in front of him with his notes as well as reports from the scouts. His recall is impressive. … You get the feeling the iPad isn’t always necessary due to his ability to give historical playbacks from memory.”

And…

If the Bears hire Emery, he will have to be a good learner too. He doesn’t have much experience with the salary cap and contracts, pro personnel or sitting in an office.

“That was the knock on Thomas Dimitroff, Jerry Reese, Ted Thompson, Trent Baalke and a number of guys who have become successful general managers,” Pioli said. “He runs the scouting staff, and that is quite a responsibility.”

The last part is a key to the process. The Bears must make sure Cliff Stein remains in the fold moving forward. His expertise with the cap will be an asset to Emery’s renowned scouting skills.

CLICK HERE to read Phil Emery’s biography on the Kansas City Chiefs website.

My Two Pennies…

I don’t know a damn thing about Phil Emery and I think it’s difficult to judge members of a particular personnel department on the decisions of that department. I mean this in both a positive and negative way. Unless we are situated in the war room or general manager’s office of a respective organization on draft day and beyond we do not know who is responsible for what decision. Emery will now, for the first time, have his own front office. For the first time every decision made by an NFL franchise will bear his stamp. Let us hope his stamp will lead a few Super Bowl titles.

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Bears Face Most Important Off-Season in More Than a Generation

| January 24th, 2012

The Bears, beginning this week, will make the decisions to shape their football operations for the next decade. They do so from an uncommon position. Normally a team conducting the final round of GM interviews is coming off a dismal season; ready to rebuild without a corp of winning NFL players. The Bears are coming off a season that at 7-3 looked to have potential for a deep playoff run but suffered the slings and arrows of Caleb Hanie’s unprofessional understudy work. (If this were the olden days of theatre fans would have been permitted to hurl tomatoes or other vegetables at Hanie during his grotesque performance against the Kansas City Chiefs.) The Bears, right now, are a good team. So why is this the most important off-season in more than a generations?

  • 2012 is on the table. Look at what’s happened this postseason and it is more evident than ever that getting into the tournament gives you a legitimate chance to win the Super Bowl. The Bears were a broken thumb from having a shot at the big prize in 2011 and they could have an even better shot in ’12 with a few savvy moves. (Wide receiver, anyone?)
  • Success in 2012, especially postseason success, will also lead to another extension of Lovie Smith’s contract. One can criticize Lovie’s game management (clock, challenges, timeouts) but it is difficult to argue Lovie does not get quite a bit out of his roster. And for all the criticism of Lovie as game manager, it is hard to criticize his actual management skills. He has been unafraid to populate his coaching staff with other head coaches and subsequently the Bears have a top tier defensive coordinator, the best special teams coach in the world and an offensive coordinator finally in-tune with Lovie’s (and Chicago’s) preferred run-first approach. Tom Coughlin won the Super Bowl with the Giants in 2007. He didn’t win another playoff game until three weeks ago. The Giants and Steelers have proven stability is the model for prolonged success.
  • The defensive talent of the Chicago Bears may not be old but it is aging. And for the first time in what feels like a century the Bears have draft picks over the first couple rounds. With Urlacher, Briggs, Peppers and Tillman moving into the twilight of their professional careers the new GM is tasked with re-inserting youth into the defensive roster.
  • If Ted Phillips gets this GM hire wrong, it is not a reach to believe the McCaskey family might reassign their money-making CEO to a non-football role within the organization and move to overhaul the whole of football operations. Would they look to emulate the Jets and promote a man like cap superstar Cliff Stein? Would they look to emulate the Dolphins (Parcells) and Browns (Holmgren) and bring in a prominent football man to rebuild things? Failure by Phillips to hire the right man this week might lead to a new powers structure at Halas Hall.

There is no element of the Bears organization not at stake this offseason. The present and the future will converge as free agency opens in March and the new GM prepares for the draft in April. If Phillips hires the right man, the Bears could find themselves deep in next season’s tournament with a roster of young players ready to contribute in years to come. If Phillips hires the wrong man, the dominos may begin to fall with Lovie next January but the last domino will eventually be Phillips himself.

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Audibles From the Long Snapper: Tice Remains, GMs Down to Two

| January 23rd, 2012

MIKE TICE WILL REMAIN OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR

Mike Tice was denied the ability to interview for the head coaching position of the Oakland Raiders as that organization’s newly hired GM Reggie McKenzie has decided to move on to his second round of coach interviews. Here are a pair of tweets from ESPN Chicago’s Michael C. Wright:

Tice told me: “I was disappointed I wasn’t able to complete the interview process.”

More Tice: “But let me say this: I’m very excited about the opportunity and the new position I have with the Bears.”

I never considered Tice a serious contender for the Oakland HC position but I’m certainly glad the he and Lovie Smith can now re-focus their attention on bringing in a coach to install/coordinate the passing game. (This all bodes well for a group of young offensive linemen who’ll now continue to hear one voice in their meetings.)

JASON LICHT & PHIL EMERY ARE FINAL TWO CANDIDATES FOR GM

I don’t know which would do a better job as Bears GM and quite frankly neither does anyone else. Both have been around the NFL bend and both have earned the right to take an organization’s lead. What follows are the basic bios for both men.

Jason Licht: Wikipedia

He played linebacker for the University of Nebraska football team as a freshman in 1989 and offensive guard in 1991 before transferring to Nebraska Wesleyan University, where he played defensive tackle from 1992 to 1993. In 1995, Licht was hired by then-Miami Dolphins scout Tom Heckert as a scouting assistant before serving as the Dolphins’ offensive assistant/quality control coach in 1996. He then spent the 1997 season working for the college scouting agency National Football Scouting and the 1998 season in the Carolina Panthers‘ scouting department. From 1999 through 2000, Licht served as a college scout for the Patriots before being promoted to national scout for the 2001. He then was promoted to assistant director of player personnel in 2002, a position he held for one season before re-joining Heckert, then the Philadelphia Eagles‘ vice president of player personnel, in 2003 as the Eagles’ assistant director of player personnel.[1]

Upon Heckert’s promotion to general manager in 2006, Licht was elevated to vice president of player personnel, but was fired by the team in May 2008.[2] In June 2008, Licht was hired by the Arizona Cardinals as a personnel executive.[3] He left the Cardinals and returned to the Patriots as their director of pro personnel in February 2009.

Phil Emery: Kansas City Chiefs Website

A 31-year football veteran, Phil Emery enters his 14th NFL campaign and his third as the Chiefs Director of College Scouting. He previously served in the same capacity for Atlanta from 2004-08 before working as a regional scout for Atlanta leading up to the 2009 draft. Emery was an area scout for Chicago (’98-04).

The Garden City, Michigan native served as the Director of Strength and Conditioning Services and as an Associate Professor at the U.S. Naval Academy from ’91-98. He was responsible for the development, administration and supervision of all strength and conditioning activities for 4,000 Midshipmen. In ’96, his program helped the football team to its first winning season in 15 years.

Emery joined the Naval Academy after serving as the assistant strength and conditioning coach at Tennessee (’87-91). Prior to joining the Volunteers, he served as the defensive line and strength and conditioning coach at Saginaw Valley State (’85-87). He also coached the defensive line at Georgetown College (’84-85) after serving as the offensive line and strength and conditioning coach at Western New Mexico (’82-84). Emery began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Central Michigan (’81-82) after serving as a student assistant at Wayne State.

Education: Western New Mexico (M.A.T. ’83), Wayne State (B.S. ’81). Family: Wife – Beth; Child – April.

BEARS WILL NOT RETURN TO LONDON IN 2012

The only game on the NFL’s 2012 schedule to be announced thus far is the London game as New England will play at St. Louis on October 28. St. Louis has also signed a deal to play three consecutive home games in London starting next year, fueling speculation of their franchise being top of the list for an eventual move to the land of bad teeth and worse relations with the Irish.

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The True Sadness of Joe Paterno's Passing

| January 23rd, 2012

Joe Paterno built one of the most prestigious and successful college football programs in the history of our country. He was a generous philanthropist, specifically in the State College area, and had a positive (almost fatherly) impact on the lives of every individual who spent a few years on the Penn State campus over the last fifty years. He preached – and there really is no better word for it – running a college football program “the right way”. As schools around the nation suffered sanctions and revocation of bowl eligibility for everything imaginable, Paterno continued to sport alarmingly high graduation rates for players and a relatively unscathed criminal record.

Then in 1998 Jerry Sandusky, famed defensive coordinator, admits to authorities he inappropriately showered with a young boy:

1998 — Penn State police and the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare investigate an incident in which the mother of an 11-year-old boy reported that Sandusky had showered with her son and may have had inappropriate conduct with him. In a June 1, 1998, interview with investigators from both agencies, Sandusky admits showering naked with the boy, admitting that it was wrong and promising not to do it again, according to the grand jury report. The district attorney advises investigators that no charges will be filed and the university police chief instructs that the case be closed, according to the testimony included in the grand jury report from the police detective who investigated the incident.

After subsequently being informed by Paterno that he’d not be the next Penn State head coach, Sandusky inexplicably retired from all of coaching. His parting gift? Full access to Penn State campus and facilities. We are meant to believe the timing of these two decisions are mere coincidence. We are meant to believe also that the nation’s most highly regarded defensive mind simply walked away from football in the prime of his coaching career. We are meant to believe Joe Paterno made his decisions on Sandusky’s future without knowledge of the failed investigation into his devious behavior.

What happened next in the life of Jerry Sandusky is one of the most deceitful, grotesque and vile chapters in human history. Sandusky utilized his Second Mile charity to prey upon disadvantaged boys, dangling Penn State as the carrot before the horse, taking sexual advantage in the basement of his home, in Paterno’s football facilities and in Bowl week hotel rooms.

Mike McQueary saw Sandusky pinning a boy in the shower in 2002. Sandusky was reported in the president’s box at Joe Paterno’s historic 409th victory. October. 2011.

Here is the true sadness of Joe Paterno’s passing: we’ll never know what he knew. We’ll never know what he said to Sandusky in 1999, leading to Sandusky’s shocking retirement. We’ll never know know how he orchestrated the post-McQueary coverup that swept this sordid tale under the Penn State rug for nearly a decade. For the rest of our lives most will be forced to debate the legacy of a man who put the reputation of the institution he loves ahead of the safety and security of the most vulnerable children in his community. Those who believe he knew little and acted as he thought best will be supported by his only public statements having supported that opinion. Those like me who believe he knew all that transpired within the walls of Penn State will never have the opportunity to hear Paterno asked the questions he needed to be asked.

It is a tragedy, his death, but not because he died. His death is a tragedy because he leaves so much unknown behind.

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Fantasy Super Bowl Contestants Set

| January 22nd, 2012

The offenses and the defenses this week canceled each other out and it all came down to special teams. Seven of us will advance to the Super Bowl. Because most of us will have opposing offenses and defenses, there will be a series of tiebreakers for the game in two weeks.

THE FINALISTS

Jeff “Blogfather” Hughes

SidLuckman42

SC Dave

JimWoww

TheFifth

BigT

TheVoid

I shall see everyone in the next twenty-four hours as I expect the Bears to make an announcement regarding their General Manager position in the coming day or so.

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Championship Game Previews & Fantasy Playoffs Continued

| January 19th, 2012

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS vs. Baltimore Ravens

The Baltimore Ravens have looked awful on the road this season and, to be honest, they didn’t look much better at home last week. If the Texans had Matt Schaub playing quarterback they probably win the game by a couple touchdowns. The Ravens defense still has names but outside of Ngata and Suggs up front, the rest of those names are looking hobbled by age (Ray Lewis) and injury (Ed Reed) and crappiness (Bernard Pollard). The Ravens don’t have a single player on their roster capable of covering either Aaron Hernandez or Rob Gronkowski. I think Brady keeps rolling and the defense allows some big yardage to Ray Rice but holds up in the red zone. Patriots 34, Ravens 16

SAN FRANCISCO 40ERS vs. New York Giants

The Giants offense has thrived on yards after the catch leading to basically a 70-yard touchdown catch every week. But there is no more sure tackling defense in football than the Niners. The Giants have thrived on their pass rush, not allowing quarterbacks to sit in the pocket and survey the field. But the Niners seem to run basically a one-read passing game and don’t allow Alex Smith to spend much time in the pocket. (Smith is also very quick to take off down the field when the pocket collapses.) The Niners have a great running game and the best special teams in the league this year. The Giants have magic on their side, especially at this time of the year, but I think the world is sleeping on how balanced and tough Jim Harbaugh’s group is. 49ers 20, Giants 17

Fantasy Playoffs Resume

  • Eleven of us remain. I survived based only on the tie. But my presence should haunt your dreams. Haunt them terribly.
  • We’ll put the Top Four, plus ties, into the Super Bowl. When the Super Bowl comes we’ll most likely have to institute a tiebreaker or two.
  • RULE OF NOTE: YOU MUST HAVE AN ELIGIBLE ENTRANT ON DEFENSE FOR THE SUPER BOWL. IF THE SUPER BOWL IS PLAYED AND YOU HAVE PREVIOUSLY USED BOTH OF THE DEFENSES YOU WILL BE INELIGIBLE FOR THE SUPER BOWL. (This is not the case for offense or special teams.)
  • My choices this week. Offense: San Francisco 49ers. Defense: New England Patriots. Special Teams: New York Giants.
  • The rest of the eligible participants:

SidLuckman42 

#76 Mongo Murph 

SC Dave 

Jimwoww 

TheFifth 

BigT 

Elcaney 

The Void 

Shannon Pankster 

Jokey  

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More Audibles From the Long Snapper: New Springsteen Track Edition

| January 19th, 2012

I tweeted about this already but I think Bruce Springsteen’s new track, We Take Care of Our Own, has Born in the USA potential. It is a masterfully timely piece of songwriting with a potent and dangerous message. It also has a faux-patriotic hook that will surely be misused by a few candidates over the next 11 months. Give it a listen. (And yes I’m from New Jersey and yes I know.)

BOB BOSTAD AS NEW OFFENSIVE LINE COACH?

The Bears won’t make any announcements on the hiring of Bob Bostad, Gabe Carimi’s former offensive line coach at Wisconsin, as their OL coach until the Mike Tice situation is settled in Oakland. But Mike Mulligan reported on his radio show this morning that Bostad is indeed heading to Chicago for what would be a massive promotion.

Bostad left Wisconsin for Pittsburgh a few weeks back with offensive Paul Chryst. The news was not taken lightly by the Big Ten power:

Bostad’s departure is a significant loss. The offensive line has been outstanding under his tutelage, especially the last two seasons.

The Badgers had two All-Americans last season in left tackle Gabe Carimi and left guard John Moffitt, and that duo joined Bill Nagy as rookie starters in the NFL this season. The Badgers’ line last season was considered to be one of the best in school history.

He is a young, talented coach. And if Tice stays he’ll be coaching under one of the best offensive line coaches in the NFL.

ADDENDUM: THIS STORY IS BEING REPORTED AS FALSE IN PITTSBURGH. READ HERE.

Pompei Does a Nice Job Breaking Down Marc Ross

Dan Pompei spends more time writing about Marc Ross in the Tribune than he’s spent on either of the previous two candidates. (Good on ya, Dan) I usually would just post a link for you but I’ll just throw the text on here.

Ross is a veteran of three NFL teams even though he’s only 38. At 27. he became the NFL’s youngest scouting director while working for the Eagles, who gave him his first full-time NFL job.

“He loved sports and knew his stuff,” said former Eagles player personnel man John Wooten, who gave Ross his first NFL job. “With the knowledge he had, you knew he was something special. He has shown that in Philadelphia, Buffalo and New York.”

Ross also worked for Tom Modrak with the Eagles, and Modrak later hired him to be his national scout for the Bills.

“He has a great feel for what needs to be done,” Modrak said. “He’s able to see what the job is all the time. He’s a really good talent evaluator.”

It’s almost cliche to say Ross is bright, but everyone says it anyway. He has a bachelor’s degree from Princeton in sociology and a master’s in sports administration from Massachusetts. At Princeton, he played wide receiver and still holds the school record for average yards per reception in a season with 20.2 in 1993.

But those who know Ross say he isn’t one of those brainiacs who doesn’t deal well with those around him.

“He is smart about football and people,” Modrak said. “He has a feel for the room. He has the ability to pull things together. He draws from everybody around him because he’s very aware.”

That doesn’t mean Ross can’t be strong-minded. Modrak said Ross sticks to his convictions even if others disagree.

However, like former Bears general manager Jerry Angelo, Ross is considered a consensus builder.

“Here we do everything together,” Reese said. “Wherever Marc goes, he knows everybody’s voice is important. I think he’ll take that with him. We come to a consensus on guys. We don’t necessarily have one guy say this is our guy. If we can’t come to a consensus, we’ll pick somebody else.”

Ross does not have extensive administrative experience, but he has done some contracts and Reese gives him considerable autonomy.

“Reese has him run the draft, very similar to what Ernie Accorsi did with Reese,” said Wooten, who endorsed Ross in a phone conversation with Bears coach Lovie Smith. “He’s ready. He’s ready to run a team.”

Reese agrees.

“On draft day he does a tremendous job,” Reese said. “He has veteran scouts around him and young scouts around him and he manages those guys really well. He stays out all year long looking for players just like our scouts. He’s definitely qualified. Obviously I’m biased, but there’s no reason for him not to succeed. He’ll do a tremendous job wherever he goes.”

He’s the guy. It is simple as that. I would not have a terrible problem with Raye or Emery. But Ross just feels like the guy.

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Audibles From the Long Snapper: There's No Off-Season Edition

| January 18th, 2012

Mike Tice Will Interview With the Oakland Raiders Tuesday

Unless you’re a devout follower of the bullshit spewed by Steve Rosenbloom almost daily on the Tribune’s website, you understand that having your offensive coordinator interviewed for vacant head coaching positions is life in the NFL. And unless you’ve not checked a football-related website over the last two weeks you would know that Tice now joins a list of almost a dozen potential candidates for the position. Tice is a good football coach, well-respected throughout the league, and I firmly believe he is going to be a head coach again in the league. (I do not, however, believe he will be the next HC of the Raiders.) Tice staying in Chicago is the ideal scenario but if Tice leaves it is far from doomsday. It is not going to take a genius to hand the ball to Matt Forte twenty-five times a game next season.

Bears Interviewing Marc Ross For GM Position Today

He has been DaBearsBlog’s officially endorsed candidate for the GM position since before the candidate list was announced and Marc Ross is finally receiving his interview today. Ross is the candidate from the most stable organization and has had the most success on draft day at position the Bears target desperately: WR, DE, OL. I truly believe if Ted Phillips and the McCaskey family make this hire they will have stability in the front office for more than a decade.

Mark Potash: You’re Next

I made a mistake this morning I never make: I read a column in a major Chicago newspaper not written by Brad Biggs. That column is written by Mark Potash in the Sun-Times and can be read by clicking here. His premise is simple: Bears fans should not celebrate the loss of the Green Bay Packers because the Packers are better than the Bears. One of the reason the Packers are better than the Bears is because the Packers hire people quickly and the Bears do not. (I shit you not. This is one of the actual points of the column.)

We all know the Bears did not make the postseason but I refuse to join the chorus of revisionist historians who’ve casually chosen to forget the Bears were 7-3 and one of the best teams in football. And the same columnists who’ve discounted the Bears surprising appearance in the NFC Championship Game a year ago now want us to celebrate regular season success for Lions and Packers teams that were BLOWN OUT this January.

Newspapers are dying and it is not just because of the digital revolution. It is because they are no longer the destination for the country’s best writers and journalists. The Chicago sports columnist is a perfect example.

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Chicago Bears Extend Dave Toub's Contract

| January 17th, 2012

The Chicago Bears have signed special teams coordinator Dave Toub to a two-year extensions, making him one of the highest paid at his position across the NFL. Toub was under consideration by the Miami Dolphins for their head coaching vacancy.

This contract extension means many things. (1) If the Bears have a disastrous 2012, the organization could look within and consider Toub as a replacement both short and long-term replacement. (2) Even if the new GM moves on from Lovie at the end of 2012 the organization can prevent Toub from moving laterally (as an ST coordinator) to another organization. (3) Most importantly the Bears kept their finest coach.