Now this is a post I can agree with. I actually think Nagy can be an acceptable coach (in a Tony Dungy situation where he's the figurehead that lets his coordinators call the shots on gameday). And I think Pace could be an acceptable GM based on talent evaluation, if he starts valuing draft picks. But they are both problems, but they aren't the only problems. There's problems everywhere. I don't think they're disasterous problems, but obviously they will continue to be problems without serious changes in philosophies. Maybe they'll figure it out with their next franchises and a part from each other. The absolute best case outlook for each of them is that their collaboration line was even more BS than we realized. How does the GM decide to keep Graham at 7M to be used like he is by his head coach? Sure seems like they forgot to collaborate on that one. oh horsefeathers this. Nagy had say in the personal decisions, Pace definitely worked with him. He likely had to as ownership probably said to them both "figure it out or get lost". And Foles is an excellent example of Nagy wanting his guy and Pace going after him. They picked up Andy Dalton because they had no QB because the two collectively decided to blame Trubisky for his average play (which, BTW, would look better then what Dalton has shown) rather then looking at themselves. They suck. They communicate just fine, but they suck at what they need to excel at. Evaluating College talent (one of Pace's better qualities) is a lot different then sitting across the table for a coach who has a noose around his neck and saying "look, Matt, horsefeathers Foles. Figure it out with Trubisky" and that is something Pace HAD to do. Once he doesn't do that, they both end up chasing their horsefeathering tails decision after decision. jimmy Graham sticks around forever. Quinn was hurt, that's clear now, so Pace gets the benefit of that decision. But Dalton was something they BOTH had to do because they BOTH walked themselves into it. Imagine if they had picked up the 5th year on Mitch. Yea, he would be average - but better then Andy Dalton and his 5 yards per pass attempt. Had they done that, the best thing is they would have him on a contract year and still being able to draft Fields. They could have done that. Yea, it shouts "we aren't committed to Mitch" but you know what, why should any team be committed to a QB who isnt QB1 of the league and not on the wrong side of 30? Why not draft to that position repeatedly until you have that guy? Instead, we have [expletive] A and [expletive] B making moves and decisions to try and preserve their careers. Which is why they will lose their careers.