Mike Ditka obviously comes from a different era of NFL football. Especially as it pertains to coaching. However, he also has a unique perspective when it comes to developing 1st round quarterbacks. After all, he did it twice during his run with the Chicago Bears. First with Jim McMahon (drafted 5th overall in 1982) and again with Jim Harbaugh (drafted 27th overall in 1987). Both went on to have success in the pros.
So it's only natural he'd be asked about the Bears' current situation regarding head coach Matt Nagy and his handling of Justin Fields. Jeff Kerr of CBS Sports caught up with him. Everybody knows the situation by now. Nagy plans to bring the 11th overall pick along slowly. He will enter the 2021 season as the #2 quarterback on the depth chart. Andy Dalton will be the starter. Fields will sit back, learn, and continue to prepare until the coaches feel he's ready.
Does Ditka agree? Not so much.
"Well, I don't know why you'd draft the quarterback if your plans aren't to play him. So if they feel they got a quarterback now that's capable of being a successful NFL quarterback, then I understand, let him run. If not, put him on the field and let him learn. "You learn by playing. You don't learn by watching."Ditka employed that same approach with McMahon back in 1982. Predictably, the rookie had his struggles. However, McMahon also learned quickly and was playing some good football by the end of the strike-shortened season. In 1983, he took a huge step forward. Everybody remembers what happened after that. Ditka is hearing what Nagy says. While he likes the Bears coach and trusts his handling of the quarterback position? He also thinks he'll ultimately end up going with Fields.
"I don't think Matt needs any advice at all. He knows how to handle Fields and he'll do a good job with him. I think he's gonna be thrown in there but that's OK, he'll learn. We did that with McMahon and that worked out OK."The funny part about this is Ditka's seen both sides of this argument. While it's true he threw McMahon into the fire right away, he also ended up sitting Harbaugh for not one, not two, but three years before giving him the starting job in 1990. It may explain why he believes starting Fields now is the best course of action. All that time to prepare didn't magically transform Harbaugh into a star. The quarterback went to the playoffs twice but had a 75.7 passer rating in his four years running the offense. Basically? If a quarterback has it, he'll learn one way or the other. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PhHEwxTlBAg&ab_channel=QuangShaco







