This isn’t conventional. Today, I am not asking you for your favorite Chicagoland bar, or who should be the starting LT. Today, I am asking you something more existential.
I have long been a patient fan of the Chicago Bears. I have understood the value of patience, having had that patience pay off in two separate instances of Chicago sports fandom during the 2010s.
I recall watching the assemblage of Jonathan Toews, Patrick Kane, Duncan Keith, Brent Seabrook, Patrick Sharp, and the eventual acquisition of Marian Hossa, which led to three Stanley Cups.
I also remember the slow drip of prospects acquired by Theo Epstein – including Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant, Javier Baez, and Kyle Schwarber – supplemented by savvy veteran additions in Jon Lester, Ben Zobrist, and Dexter Fowler, leading to a 2016 World Series.
Patience has paid off before.
But my patience is beginning to wear thin with the Chicago Bears.
While I still believe there is room for patience moving forward – as the union of Ben Johnson and Caleb Williams is only likely to improve – I am ready to ask for more.
On paper, this Chicago Bears team should be as talented as any other in decades. Some numbers to back up that claim:
This team should be as talented as any other Bears team in the last decade, yet somehow, they looked exactly like every other Bears team in the last decade. Penalties, miscues, pressure on the quarterback, the quarterback doing too much, the defense getting gashed on the ground, excitement then letdown. It felt familiar.
So if not now, when? If not us, who?
It took both Joel Quenneville and Joe Maddon two seasons to win championships in their respective sports. But both made immediate impacts upon their arrival.
So while it would be absurd for us to expect the Bears...