3 Bears Most To Blame For Disastrous 2023-24 Season

In a year that saw improvement, the Bears still manage to get in their own way to make sure that was buried. Here's who to blame the most.
Nov 27, 2023; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Chicago Bears head coach Matt Eberflus reacts during the
Nov 27, 2023; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Chicago Bears head coach Matt Eberflus reacts during the / Jeffrey Becker-USA TODAY Sports
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The Chicago Bears' 2023-24 season started with a disappointing annihilation at the hands of their arch rival Green Bay Packers. The season ended with a disappointing annihilation at the hands of their arch rival Green Bay Packers.

In between those games we saw it all. The Bears more than doubled their win total, but gave up multiple fourth quarter leads in historic fashion. The defense showed glimpses of something special, but could not stay healthy. The offense could beat teams they were supposed to, but folded when the bright lights were on. All of this is true, but when the season is bookended with losses to the team up north, disastrous is the only word that can come to mind.

And disastrous has been the word for quite some time now. As another year comes to a close with the Bears not beating the Packers and not making the playoffs, it's hard to find light at the end of the tunnel - even while holding the top pick in the draft and plenty of cap space - because fans find it hard to trust anyone.

It takes a lot of boots on the ground, from players and coaches to executive staff, to put a football franchise together and to have it run well. However, sometimes a few bad eggs can derail the whole system. That's what the Bears feel like.

Here are three people who are to blame for another failure of a year in Chicago.

1. Head Coach Matt Eberflus is On the Hot Seat

Head Coach Matt Eberflus is probably shaking his head and wondering why others are coming after him right now. He took a three-win team last year and turned it into a seven-win team this year, finishing just about where everyone expected. There are a lot of other places that would take that as a promising stepping stone toward a bright future, but not here in Chicago.

Eberflus is responsible for a couple of historically (as in - never been done before) bad fourth quarter collapses this year that should have been wins and should have had the Bears in the playoffs. He handpicked a coordinator in Alan Williams to lead and build a defensive unit, but he ended up being dishonorably released for reasons we are still not sure of. And to top it all off, he is now 0-4 as a head coach against the rival Packers.

In total Bears fashion, they are keeping the details of Eberflus' contract under wraps, but it is rumored to be a four-year deal. That doesn't mean the Bears cannot cut ties and pay to break the deal, but it seems unlikely. If Eberflus is going to have to take responsibility for this year's failures, gather up all his tactics and fun phrases, and figure out how to get this team to the playoffs if he is to stick around.