Matt Nagy, Nick Falls’ reaction to ESPN’s comment on Brian Grease’s broadcast


Coaches Matt Nagy and Nick Falls had to respond to a troubled comment relayed by ESPN’s Brian Grease during the broadcast, as if the Bears hadn’t been able to release the Bears after losing 24-10 on Monday.

As Falls and Crime stumble upon their season’s poor performance, Greece shared something from Falls during a production meeting on Sunday.

“We were talking to Nick Falls yesterday, [and] He said, ‘You know, sometimes a play call comes in and I know I don’t have time to play that play call. You know, I’m succeeding here. “The man calling the plays, Matt Nagy, doesn’t know how long it’s been back here,” Greece said in the fourth quarter. “So that’s something they have to work on.”

If Falls said that, it indicates a lack of faith in the offensive line and the connection between him and Nagy.

Nagy wasn’t sure what to make of that joke after the game.

“Nick and I have a very good relationship, and he didn’t say that,” Nagy said. “I’m sure he’ll explain what it means.”

Falls confirmed the conversation that Greece mentioned in the broadcast, but said it was misunderstood.

“It was definitely a misunderstanding with Brian and I.” “We do pre-game conversations just a day before the giveaway [the broadcast team] Information. That conversation – Coach Nagy and the conversation next to me.

“There may be times when we already pass by and say, ‘What do you think?’ And there are times when you don’t get the ball fast and nothing. But in those circumstances, Matt and I have a very good relationship on the sidelines. . ”

When pressed, Falls elaborated on what he intended to approach in a production meeting.

“When coach Nagy and I talk, we go through dramas and different situations and go through the defense,” he said. “I’ll be honest, like,‘ Hey, right now, get the ball out quickly. They’re bringing some pressure, ‘and what not. We are talking about the conditions of the game and coach Nagini and [my] Communication and our relationship.

“It simply came to our notice then [that sometimes I say], ‘Hey, maybe with the pressure they’re bringing now, we don’t have time for this kind of drop anymore.’ It’s easier said than done, ‘Hey, 1, 2, 3, ball out.’ That is where the misunderstanding resides.

“It’s really a conversation with Coach Nagy and I have it so we’re ready to roll when we go to the field. I think I have a very valuable relationship with him, to be able to talk like this and to understand in particular. ”