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Matt Nagy tests positive for COVID-19

cigaretteman

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May 29, 2001
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On the heels of the Chicago Bears’ biggest loss since 2014, the team’s COVID-19 outbreak has sidelined coach Matt Nagy.

Nagy announced Monday morning he tested positive for the virus after returning home from Tampa, Fla., where the Bears were shellacked 38-3 on Sunday at Raymond James Stadium by the defending Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

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Special teams coordinator Chris Tabor will run all team meetings as he did briefly in the spring and as the Bears had planned in the event anything happened to Nagy. That leaves offensive coordinator Bill Lazor and defensive coordinator Sean Desai to continue in their roles uninterrupted.

Four players are currently on the reserve/COVID-19 list: outside linebacker Robert Quinn, tight end Jimmy Graham, inside linebacker Caleb Johnson and offensive tackle Elijah Wilkinson. Running back Damien Williams and wide receivers coach Mike Furrey returned last week after being sidelined, meaning the Bears have had five players and two coaches dealing with COVID-19 in the last two weeks.

“It’s a reminder to all of us to be extremely cautious to understand where we’re at,” said Nagy, who indicated he feels pretty good. “We’ve seen it with other teams in the league and society in general. We’re going to have a good plan put in place.”

Is rookie QB Justin Fields progressing? Are any changes coming? Brad Biggs’ 10 thoughts on the 38-3 beating Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers put on the Chicago Bears. »

As a fully vaccinated individual, Nagy will be cleared to return to football activities when he has returned two negative tests 24 hours apart. How long that will take is unknown as the 3-4 Bears turn their focus to Sunday’s game against the San Francisco 49ers at Soldier Field. At this point, the Bears don’t have any other positive tests to report, but the four players on the list popped up between last Wednesday and Sunday morning.



Other NFL head coaches have been sidelined by COVID-19. Arizona Cardinals coach Kliff Kingsbury missed a game earlier this season, Tennessee Titans coach Mike Vrabel was sidelined in late August and Cleveland Browns coach Kevin Stefanski tested positive in January and missed the franchise’s first playoff game since 2002.










Nagy’s absence is a blow for the Bears as they search for answers to breathe some life into one of the league’s worst offenses — one that’s challenging the Terry Shea-coordinated 2004 offense in terms of ineptitude. The Bears rank 30th in scoring and 32nd in total yards, yards per play, passing yards, passing yards per play and third-down conversions.

The Bears opened as a four-point underdog at home against the 49ers, who enter the game on a four-game losing streak.

Nagy indicated after the Week 7 game that the Bears are as close as they’ve been at any point after developments in the last 24 to 48 hours. After revealing his positive COVID-19 test Monday, he expanded a little bit, saying that was the feeling he came away with after a team meeting at the hotel Saturday night.

“Big picture, I think sometimes as a coach you’ve got to have a feel and pulse as to where your guys are at,” he said. “Every now and then you’ve got to pull together and have a good talk with the guys where it’s open and it’s everybody. I just thought it was a good opportunity right there to speak from the heart a little bit from where I’m at as the head coach and where we’re at as a team. You can’t have those every week, but sometimes you’ve got to have some that are real conversations and mean a lot. That’s what we did.

 
Matt Nagy has no clue how to coach his rookie
quarterback from Ohio St. In fact, Nagy has no
idea how to run an NFL offense. He should have
been fired after last season.
 
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I appreciate that the common reaction is how long we can hope that he’s out for. I don’t see any reason he should rush back, and I would support him taking time away to be with his family
 
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Not a very good advertisement for their product. Like getting a self-driving car even when you keep seeing stories about them crashing & burning.
 
On the heels of the Chicago Bears’ biggest loss since 2014, the team’s COVID-19 outbreak has sidelined coach Matt Nagy.

Nagy announced Monday morning he tested positive for the virus after returning home from Tampa, Fla., where the Bears were shellacked 38-3 on Sunday at Raymond James Stadium by the defending Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

ADVERTISING


Special teams coordinator Chris Tabor will run all team meetings as he did briefly in the spring and as the Bears had planned in the event anything happened to Nagy. That leaves offensive coordinator Bill Lazor and defensive coordinator Sean Desai to continue in their roles uninterrupted.

Four players are currently on the reserve/COVID-19 list: outside linebacker Robert Quinn, tight end Jimmy Graham, inside linebacker Caleb Johnson and offensive tackle Elijah Wilkinson. Running back Damien Williams and wide receivers coach Mike Furrey returned last week after being sidelined, meaning the Bears have had five players and two coaches dealing with COVID-19 in the last two weeks.

“It’s a reminder to all of us to be extremely cautious to understand where we’re at,” said Nagy, who indicated he feels pretty good. “We’ve seen it with other teams in the league and society in general. We’re going to have a good plan put in place.”

Is rookie QB Justin Fields progressing? Are any changes coming? Brad Biggs’ 10 thoughts on the 38-3 beating Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers put on the Chicago Bears. »

As a fully vaccinated individual, Nagy will be cleared to return to football activities when he has returned two negative tests 24 hours apart. How long that will take is unknown as the 3-4 Bears turn their focus to Sunday’s game against the San Francisco 49ers at Soldier Field. At this point, the Bears don’t have any other positive tests to report, but the four players on the list popped up between last Wednesday and Sunday morning.



Other NFL head coaches have been sidelined by COVID-19. Arizona Cardinals coach Kliff Kingsbury missed a game earlier this season, Tennessee Titans coach Mike Vrabel was sidelined in late August and Cleveland Browns coach Kevin Stefanski tested positive in January and missed the franchise’s first playoff game since 2002.










Nagy’s absence is a blow for the Bears as they search for answers to breathe some life into one of the league’s worst offenses — one that’s challenging the Terry Shea-coordinated 2004 offense in terms of ineptitude. The Bears rank 30th in scoring and 32nd in total yards, yards per play, passing yards, passing yards per play and third-down conversions.

The Bears opened as a four-point underdog at home against the 49ers, who enter the game on a four-game losing streak.

Nagy indicated after the Week 7 game that the Bears are as close as they’ve been at any point after developments in the last 24 to 48 hours. After revealing his positive COVID-19 test Monday, he expanded a little bit, saying that was the feeling he came away with after a team meeting at the hotel Saturday night.

“Big picture, I think sometimes as a coach you’ve got to have a feel and pulse as to where your guys are at,” he said. “Every now and then you’ve got to pull together and have a good talk with the guys where it’s open and it’s everybody. I just thought it was a good opportunity right there to speak from the heart a little bit from where I’m at as the head coach and where we’re at as a team. You can’t have those every week, but sometimes you’ve got to have some that are real conversations and mean a lot. That’s what we did.


He left the state w/o getting any state-funded RegeneRon®️ ???
 
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