Chicago Bears Fire GM Phil Emery, Coach Marc Trestman

Chicago Bears Fire GM Phil Emery, Coach Marc Trestman
Chicago Bears head coach Marc Trestman speaks during a news conference after an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2014, in Minneapolis. The Vikings won 13-9. AP Photo/Jim Mone
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LAKE FOREST, Ill.—The Chicago Bears fired general manager Phil Emery and coach Marc Trestman on Monday, making sweeping changes after missing the playoffs for the seventh time in eight years.

Trestman is out after going 13-19 in two seasons while Emery lasted just three years. The Bears went 5-11 in a mostly miserable season, never challenging for the NFC North lead after the first few weeks as quarterback Jay Cutler and the rest of the offense struggled mightily.

“I want to thank Virginia, George and the McCaskey family, Phil Emery and Ted Phillips for giving me the opportunity to be the head coach of the Chicago Bears,” Trestman said in a statement released by the team. “I also want to thank all the coaches and players who gave us everything we asked over the past two years. I have tremendous respect for this organization.”

This was certainly not what the Bears envisioned with a prolific offense returning intact and a rebuilt defense in tow. But little went right for Chicago this season.

There were distractions throughout the year, whether it was linebacker Lance Briggs being allowed to miss practice to open a restaurant in California the week of the opener or offensive coordinator Aaron Kromer admitting he was the NFL Network’s source behind a critical report of Cutler late in the season.

Trestman, who was hired to get the most out of Cutler, decided the team needed a spark even with the Bears out of contention, so he benched the highly paid quarterback in favor of Jimmy Clausen for the second-to-last game of the season against Detroit. Cutler wound up starting the final game after Clausen suffered a concussion against the Lions, adding another chapter to a season-long soap opera.

Trestman also surprised some by allowing star receiver Brandon Marshall to fly to New York on a weekly basis to record Showtime’s “Inside the NFL.” Marshall, who is open about his struggles with borderline personality disorder, had an off year and at one point gave a rambling news conference over past allegations of domestic abuse. He also challenged a Detroit fan on Twitter to a boxing match for charity, and reporters standing in the hallway overheard him screaming in the locker room after a loss to Miami at Soldier Field in October that raised all sorts of questions about where the team was headed.

The answers came right after that.

Chicago Bears head coach Marc Trestman looks on during the second half of an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2014, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)
Chicago Bears head coach Marc Trestman looks on during the second half of an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2014, in Minneapolis. AP Photo/Jim Mone
Andrew Seligman
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