Oct 13, 2024; London, United Kingdom; Chicago Bears offensive coordinator Shane Waldron watches from the sidelines against the Jacksonville Jaguars in the second half during an NFL International Series game at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Reports: Jaguars add Shane Waldron to staff

The Jacksonville Jaguars are adding former Chicago Bears offensive coordinator Shane Waldron to their coaching staff, multiple media outlets reported Thursday.

Per ESPN, Waldron likely will serve as pass-game coordinator in Jacksonville.

The Jaguars hired Grant Udinski to be head coach Liam Coen’s offensive coordinator on Wednesday night.

Jacksonville moved on from its 2024 offensive coordinator, Press Taylor, after it finished 25th in total offense (306.2 yards per game) and 26th in scoring (18.2 points per game).

Waldron, 45, coached with the Los Angeles Rams from 2017-20, working with tight ends during his first season before serving as a passing game coordinator. He coached on the same staff as Coen from 2018-20.

Waldron spent 2021-23 as the offensive coordinator with the Seattle Seahawks before joining the Bears prior to the 2024 season.

–Field Level Media

Nov 10, 2024; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams (18) reacts against the New England Patriots during the first quarter at Soldier Field. Mandatory Credit: Mike Dinovo-Imagn Images

Bears fire OC, toss play-calling duties to Thomas Brown

Bears passing game coordinator Thomas Brown was handed the headset and playcalling duties as Chicago searches for answers and an end to a three-game losing streak.

As part of the shakeup, offensive coordinator Shane Waldron was fired on Tuesday. Waldron received a vote of confidence eight days ago after a lopsided 29-9 loss to the Arizona Cardinals, but head coach Matt Eberflus indicated he was resigned to change on Monday.

“After evaluating our entire operation, I decided that it is in the best interest of our team to move in a different direction with the leadership of our offense,” Eberflus said in a statement released by the team. “This decision was well-thought-out, one that was conducted deliberately and respectfully. I would like to thank Shane for his efforts and wish him the best moving forward.”

Eberflus selected Waldron as offensive coordinator from a pool that included former Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury. Eberflus was retained as head coach by general manager Ryan Poles in January following a 7-10 season.

The present situation isn’t entirely unfamiliar to Brown.

He is being bumped into the primary play-calling role for the second consecutive season. In 2023, the 38-year-old was promoted by the Carolina Panthers with embattled coach Frank Reich giving Brown the call sheet in an effort to spare his own job and pump life into their rookie No. 1 pick at quarterback, Bryce Young.

The Bears are in a bind with the Packers (6-3) up next as confidence and production bottom out on the heels of three consecutive losses and a three-game streak during which rookie No. 1 pick Caleb Williams has zero touchdown passes.

Eberflus said Monday that Williams was safe as the starting quarterback but pointed to imminent changes around the rookie.

Williams and the Bears were dominated by the New England Patriots (3-7) on Sunday. They carry a run of 23 consecutive possessions without a touchdown into Week 11 trying to keep pace with the rest of the NFC North. Eberflus is 0-4 against Green Bay in his first two seasons as Bears head coach and will see the Packers, Lions (8-1) and Vikings (7-2) twice in the final two months of the season.

The Bears have 27 total points during a three-game slide that began with rookie Jayden Daniels’ 52-yard, game-winning Hail Mary on Oct. 27.

Chicago produced three points against the Patriots, putting up fewer than 17 points for the fifth time this season. New England sacked Williams nine times one week after the Cardinals posted six sacks against Chicago.

Brown, a former NFL running back who broke into coaching under Sean McVay with the Rams, spent nine seasons on college football staffs including three years as Miami (Fla.) running backs coach and offensive coordinator.

–Field Level Media

Aug 21, 2020; Thousand Oaks, CA, USA; Los Angeles Rams pass game coordinator Shane Waldron gestures during training camp at Cal Lutheran University. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Report: Bears hiring ex-Seahawks OC Shane Waldron

The Bears are finalizing a deal with former Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Shane Waldron to fill the same role in Chicago, ESPN reported Monday.

Waldron was one of nine reported candidates interviewed by head coach Matt Eberflus and the Bears to replace Luke Getsy, who was fired on Jan. 10 after a 7-10 season.

Waldron, 44, spent the past three seasons calling the plays under former Seattle head coach Pete Carroll. The Seahawks (9-8) were 17th in the NFL in scoring offense and 21st in yards per game in 2023, compared to 18th and 20th for the Bears, respectively.

Waldron comes from Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay’s coaching tree. He coached the Rams’ tight ends in 2017 and was the team’s passing game coordinator from 2018-20.

He also has ties to former Patriots coach Bill Belichick, launching his NFL coaching career as an offensive quality control coach (2008) and tight ends coach (2009) for New England.

Waldron enters a fluid situation at quarterback in Chicago, where speculation about the future of Justin Fields future is rampant.

The Bears have the No. 1 pick in the 2024 draft, and general manager Ryan Poles said before the 2023 draft, when he swapped the No. 1 pick to the Carolina Panthers for two first-rounders and wide receiver DJ Moore, that this year’s first-round pick was important in the trade because it could be used on a franchise quarterback.

Should Fields return, he would be learning yet another offense, playing under his third offensive coordinator in four seasons.

–Field Level Media