Bears will extend deal with Lovie

Doomsday101

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LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) -- As the NFL's lowest paid coach, Lovie Smith led the Chicago Bears to the Super Bowl. He's now in line for a contract extension.

Bears president Ted Phillips expects to work out the extension soon. Phillips said Wednesday he's had preliminary discussions with both Smith and general manager Jerry Angelo on new deals, but talks are on hold until after the Super Bowl on Feb. 4 in Miami. That way, there will be no distractions.

"Lovie Smith has indicated to me he wants to be head coach of the Bears for a long time. That's my goal. That's the organization's goal. I know everybody wants to make a big deal out of the fact that there is not a deal," Phillips said.

"It's not unlike a player negotiation in which sometimes it takes longer than you think."

Smith is in the third year of a four-year contract that pays him $1.35 million per season. The Atlanta Falcons just signed former Louisville coach Bobby Petrino to a five-year, $24 million deal.

"I'm not going to tell you what status we're at. I've known Lovie's agent for a long time and I have no doubt we'll get a deal done," Phillips said.

Phillips said he wasn't embarrassed that the coach of the one of the NFL's pioneer franchises, a man who has led the Bears to back-to-back division titles and to their first Super Bowl in 21 years, is the lowest paid in the league. Smith was voted NFL Coach of the Year in 2005.

"When we signed Lovie Smith, signed a four-year contract, it was a market value contract for coaches who had not been a head coach in the NFL. He received a fair deal and he'll receive a fair deal again," Phillips said.

"I guess you'd say it's my prerogative not to do a short-term fix last year. ... I never, including last year, ever thought -- and I've expressed these thoughts privately to Lovie and Jerry as well -- never felt that Lovie Smith wasn't a good head coach. I always believed he was. ... I needed to see another year. In '04, we didn't have a successful year. In '05 we did, but it ended on a sour note with the playoff loss to Carolina."

Angelo had his contract extended through 2008 on Dec. 29, 2003, the day Dick Jauron was fired as Bears coach.

"Ted and I are talking about my contract, too. All that in due time. (It) will resolve itself," Angelo said Wednesday.

"Hey, I've been very fortunate to be in football as long as I've been in this game and having people still want me around, I take that as a real blessing. If I can continue, great. But I'll let that take care of itself."

Angelo, initially hired on June 12, 2001, is credited with stocking the Bears with a mix of veterans and young players. Chicago returned 22 players who started at some point last season, and through the draft added key rookies such as defensive end Mark Anderson, who had 12 sacks, and Devin Hester, who set an NFL record with six kick returns for touchdowns.

Angelo said he realized the Bears were ready to compete for a championship when Chicago rallied from a 20-point second-half deficit and overcame six turnovers to nip Arizona 24-23 in a Monday night game on Oct. 16. The win gave the Bears a 6-0 record.

"Obviously that was our bad game," Angelo said. " National venue, and I'm just sitting there in that press box and everybody is there. I'm going, `You've got to be kidding me. Couldn't we do this Sunday at 12 o'clock. Do we have to do it Monday at 8?"

But the Bears' determined comeback was as memorable as the poor performance that game. At least for Angelo.

"If I had to pick one game that really exemplified this team, it was that one," Angelo said.

For Phillips, the trip to Miami will mark his second Super Bowl and it also reflects just how much things have changed since the Bears of Walter Payton, Jim McMahon and William "The Refrigerator" Perry rocked New England 46-10 in 1986.

Phillips, who joined the Bears in 1983, had responsibilities that were a lot less glamorous the last time Chicago was in the Super Bowl.

"I had been here two years, I was the controller, and at the Super Bowl I handled the rental cars. I'm not going to do that this year. I'm not doing it."

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...playoffs/2006/01/24/smith.bears.ap/index.html
 

DasTex

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CowboysZone LOYAL Fan
I'll believe it when Lovie's name is on that contract. A "fair deal" to them probably isn't the same deal Lovie has in mind.
 

dougonthebench

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numnuts23;1341116 said:
I'll believe it when Lovie's name is on that contract. A "fair deal" to them probably isn't the same deal Lovie has in mind.

or what he deserves!
 

ABQCOWBOY

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To me, this is all the same BS the Bears have always pitched. We'll see what the court of opinion doles out once the sheckles are anounced.
 

StanleySpadowski

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ABQCOWBOY;1341122 said:
To me, this is all the same BS the Bears have always pitched. We'll see what the court of opinion doles out once the sheckles are anounced.


Virginia McCaskey's facing the same problem as the Rooneys and a few other old guard families, they simply don't have the outside revenues to compete salary for salary with the new breed of billionaire owners who've purchased teams.

Yes, they're rich but their net worth is almost all tied up in the team. Some newer owners are beyond rich. Paul Allen could lose $100 million a year on the Seahawks and his team of accountants would be the only ones to care.
 

Da Hammer

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I would have loved Lovie here but its good to see that is finally gonna get the money that he deserves with the Bears. the guy has without a shadow of a dubt earned it!!!
 

Future

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Da Hammer;1341166 said:
I would have loved Lovie here but its good to see that is finally gonna get the money that he deserves with the Bears. the guy has without a shadow of a dubt earned it!!!

Agreed, he's one of the few guys that I would like to have who I will not be bitter about not getting
 

Wolfpack

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StanleySpadowski;1341158 said:
Virginia McCaskey's facing the same problem as the Rooneys and a few other old guard families, they simply don't have the outside revenues to compete salary for salary with the new breed of billionaire owners who've purchased teams.

Yes, they're rich but their net worth is almost all tied up in the team. Some newer owners are beyond rich. Paul Allen could lose $100 million a year on the Seahawks and his team of accountants would be the only ones to care.


Insightfull post. I don't think any of the NFL team are ever strapped for cash but the old school families tend to still view it as "their" money vs. a business expense which is a large difference.
 

LittleRed212

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Doomsday101;1341105 said:
Bears president Ted Phillips expects to work out the extension soon. Phillips said Wednesday he's had preliminary discussions with both Smith and general manager Jerry Angelo on new deals, but talks are on hold until after the Super Bowl on Feb. 4 in Miami. That way, there will be no distractions.

Too late. :lmao:

It's been talked about a lot, and everyone knows that he's going to be asked about it over and over again on the media days. All you gotta do is mention the Dallas Cowboys and the media will be all over it. We're just that good. :D
 

Big Dakota

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Hostile;1341114 said:
This had to happen. He's deserved it long before now.


I think his raise is right on time. He was 5-11 his first year but had 2 great years in 05 and 06, so he deserves what he's gonna get but it's not overdue. Cowher was one of the lowest paid guys for years.
 

Dave_in-NC

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Big Dakota;1341653 said:
I think his raise is right on time. He was 5-11 his first year but had 2 great years in 05 and 06, so he deserves what he's gonna get but it's not overdue. Cowher was one of the lowest paid guys for years.

All they did here is what I wish Jerry would do.

Prove your worth.
 

Biggems

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I hate when they compare salaries to what others make......

Some teams are more frugal or cheap than others.

Hell just think how bad it would be if every player wanted the contracts that the skins throw around.....the entire league would be in chaos. However, the players know Snyder just blows and gos when it comes to his cash....He doesn't seem to analyze what exactly he is doing.....He basically treats FA as if he is playing a game of Monopoly.

So what if the Falcons gave Petrino all that money....big deal....they also gave the Ron "The Coach Killer" Mexico like 160 million.....So this owner has a history of outrageous signings.....

So I wish the media would stop bringing up the Petrino contract. It isn't the norm.....it would not fit in the bell curve at all....it would be off on one of the ends of the curve.......just like the Michael Vick Contract.
 

jobberone

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Hostile;1341114 said:
This had to happen. He's deserved it long before now.

Well at least Chicago has sense if it's true. I'd read where he didn't have a contract for 2007. I guess that's not true.

It that's so then he will cost us a pick or two and I think that would frighten Jerry away.

There goes my favorite choice.
 
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