[CBFF] Bears showing Rivera the door

Kenny Claxton kenny.claxton at gmail.com
Mon Feb 19 14:31:45 MST 2007


* Monday, February 19, 2007
* Chicago doesn't plan to retain D-coordinator Rivera
------------------------------
 By Len Pasquarelli
ESPN.com

 Chicago Bears defensive coordinator Ron Rivera, who has interviewed for
nine head coach positions in the NFL over the past two years but landed none
of them, is poised to become a man without a job. Negotiations between Bears
officials and Rivera's representatives, aimed at extending the coach's
contract, have produced no progress toward a new deal and have broken off.
Unless the discussions are suddenly revived, and a new contract is struck
before Tuesday, Rivera will become a free agent. Rivera's contract has
technically lapsed. But according to league rules the Bears had an
exclusivity period, for three Tuesdays following the Super Bowl, to
negotiate a new deal with him. During that three-week window, Rivera could
have been hired as a head coach by another franchise, but not as an
assistant. That window expires Tuesday, but sources said Bears officials
have no intention now of renewing Rivera's contract. It is believed that
Rivera, who played linebacker for the Bears for nine seasons before
embarking on a coaching career, earned $500,000 for the 2006 season. If that
is the case, it likely put him at about the middle of the NFL's salary range
for defensive coordinators. Given the popularity of Rivera during the NFL's
past two firing-and-hiring cycles, when he interviewed for nine vacancies,
his entry into the unemployment line would be fraught with irony. Still,
team officials indicated to ESPN.com during the week preceding Super Bowl
XLI that they would not overpay to retain Rivera. The feeling then was that
Chicago could survive Rivera's departure, since their defense is primarily
the design of head coach Lovie Smith. The Bears also felt they had a
replacement on staff already in assistant coach Bob Babich. The Bears'
linebackers coach, Babich is highly regarded and, assuming Rivera departs,
he will be elevated to the coordinator post. A Chicago official noted before
the Super Bowl that the Bears would be in worse shape if another club
pursued offensive coordinator Ron Turner, since there was no heir apparent
on the current staff. The Bears have been negotiating new contracts for
general manager Jerry Angelo and for Smith, but are not believed to be close
to a deal for the latter. Smith was believed to be the NFL's lowest paid
head coach in 2006, with a salary of $1.35 million, and has one season
remaining on his original contract with the club. Rivera, 45, played for the
Bears 1984-92, then became an assistant coach on the Chicago staff in 1997.
He moved to the Philadelphia Eagles in 1999, then rejoined the Bears, on
Smith's staff, in 2004. Of the seven head coach openings since the end of
the 2006 season, the only one for which Rivera did not interview was the
Oakland vacancy. *Len Pasquarelli is a senior writer for ESPN.com.*

On 2/19/07, Jerry Madsen <jerrywm at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> According to The Score, the Bears will NOT be offering Ron Rivera a
> new contract, and subsequently will be promoting their LB coach to
> D-Coordinator.  More to come...
>
> --
> http://bloggeddrain.typepad.com
>
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