Chicago Tribune

Revisionist history: Bears once passed over 9 of 12 quarterbacks in NFL playoffs

CHICAGO - It has become an obligatory annual question for George McCaskey, with the Bears chairman asked to detail his mother's emotions regarding the state of the Bears. Virginia McCaskey turns 97 on Sunday. And while George McCaskey didn't go so far this year as to paint his mom as "pissed off" with the team's struggles, he readily acknowledged that the citywide disappointment hit close to home.

With all the anticipation and hype that led up to the Bears' 100th season, the team's 8-8 fizzle-out was entirely unsatisfying.

"The hope was there. The Bears were back," George McCaskey said Tuesday morning. "And then to take a step back was especially disappointing. And she feels it, like all Bears fans do."

Ah, yes. That all-too-familiar feeling of deflation.

"Every year we talk about the goal being to win the Super Bowl," McCaskey said. "And in some years you feel you are better positioned to do that than others. We certainly thought that was the case in 2019. So the 8-8 record was especially disappointing in that light."

The playoffs will again go on without the Bears - for the 11th time in 13 seasons. And as if that sting weren't sharp enough, the emptiness surrounding the 2019 season will be amplified by another bit of "What might have been" lament.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune4 min read
Commentary: Was Sweden’s COVID-19 Approach Superior To That Of The US?
COVID-19 cases and deaths internationally have fallen to their lowest levels in four years. The data now permits a comparison between the controversial laissez faire strategy of Sweden and the more restrictive approach of the United States, which emp
Chicago Tribune6 min read
In Memoriam: As A ’90s Producer And Music Tastemaker, Steve Albini Was Brutally Honest — And Usually Right
CHICAGO — Steve Albini, who died on Tuesday in Chicago at 61, talked a lot. Like, a lot a lot. The first time I met him was about 30 years ago. I was a graduate student at Northwestern University and assigned to interview somebody, and I had just bou
Chicago Tribune6 min read
Tiny Pieces Of Plastic Pose One Of The Biggest Threats To Chicago River Wildlife And Water Quality
CHICAGO — Wendella engineer Miguel Chavez climbed down a ladder and over a small dock Wednesday to pull up a trap floating in the Chicago River near the Michigan Avenue Bridge. The size of a standard garbage can, the trap is designed to collect trash

Related Books & Audiobooks