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Bears fire Lovie Smith: Next move looms large for Bears

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Now, the Packers are aiming for their second Super Bowl title in the past three seasons. The Chiefs are scouting for their No. 1 draft pick as the NFL’s lousiest team.

It’s tough to know what Emery will do because he never has been in this position.

High-profile coaching options such as Jon Gruden and Bill Cowher and Andy Reid sound nice in theory, but each comes with baggage and could seek more front-office influence than the Bears can provide. College coaches such as Oregon’s Chip Kelly or Penn State’s Bill O’Brien could draw interest for at least a few vacancies in the NFL, but success at the college level doesn’t always translate.

If I were Emery, I would pursue the league’s top offensive-minded assistants.

Have a chat with Denver Broncos offensive coordinator Mike McCoy about his success in the mile-high city. Ask San Francisco 49ers offensive coordinator Greg Roman about how he devised a scheme to pick apart the Bears’ defense in Week 11. Call up the Packers’ Tom Clements or the Falcons’ Dirk Koetter or the Seahawks’ Darrell Bevell to hear what they would have in mind for Jay Cutler and company.

Now more than ever, the NFL is geared toward offense and quarterbacks and scoring points. An opportunistic defense is great (see: Smith, 2004-12), but Super Bowl MVPs in six of the past nine seasons have been named Eli Manning (twice) or Aaron Rodgers or Drew Brees or Peyton Manning or Tom Brady.

Maybe Cutler can add his name to that list. Maybe he can’t.

It’s time to find out.

It’s time for Emery to deliver some happier New Years to Bears fans.

• Tom Musick covers the Bears for Shaw Media. Email him at tmusick@shawmedia.com, and follow the Bears Insider on Twitter @bears_insider.

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