It might seem like Matt Nagy only talks to his quarterback. But he also listens.
And when Mitch Truibsky said “the comfort level that we have with our two-minute offense is a strength of our offense right now,” — as he did after the Bears’ 19-14 victory over the Giants on Sunday, Nagy heard it loud and clear.
“Any time we have plays or something our players like, we always take that into consideration,” Nagy said Monday. “I think you need to.”
The challenge for Nagy is taking a fairly well-defined trait — Trubisky’s efficiency in up-tempo, no-huddle situations — and find a way to replicate the urgency of those situations earlier in the game.