1999 Chicago Bears season explained

Team:Chicago Bears
Year:1999
Record:6–10
Division Place:5th NFC Central
Coach:Dick Jauron
Stadium:Soldier Field
Playoffs:Did not qualify
Shortnavlink:Bears seasons

The 1999 season was the Chicago Bears' 80th in the National Football League (NFL). On January 24, Dick Jauron was named head coach.[1] The team improved on their 4–12 from 1998, finishing with a 6–10 under Jauron, who replaced Dave Wannstedt.

Quarterbacks Shane Matthews (1,645), Cade McNown (1,465) and Jim Miller (1,242) combined for 4,352 passing yards during the season, the most in franchise history.[2]

Offseason

Additions Subtractions
T Blake Brockermeyer (Panthers) QB Erik Kramer (Chargers)
DT Shane Burton (Dolphins) T Andy Heck (Redskins)
S Chris Hudson (Jaguars)
QB Shane Matthews (Panthers)

Organizational changes

Head coach Dave Wannstedt was fired after the 1998 season, forcing the Bears to hire their second head coach in ten years. The candidates included offensive coordinators Sherman Lewis of the Green Bay Packers and Joe Pendry of the Buffalo Bills, defensive coordinators Dave McGinnis (Arizona Cardinals), Dick Jauron (Jacksonville Jaguars) and Gunther Cunningham (Kansas City Chiefs), while DC Jim Haslett (Pittsburgh Steelers) was interviewed. Minnesota Vikings OC Brian Billick and New York Jets DC Bill Belichick were also allowed to be interviewed by the team. McGinnis was considered the favorite, and was interviewed last; he would be approached by Bears president Michael McCaskey for contractual terms, with McGinnis stating he "needed some time and he would think about it." However, the next day, McCaskey scheduled a press conference to announce McGinnis as the head coach, despite not having been officially hired. As a result, the conference was canceled, and Jauron would instead be hired, while McCaskey would be replaced by Ted Phillips.[3]

NFL draft

See main article: 1999 NFL draft. [4]

Undrafted free agents

1999 Undrafted Free Agents of note!Player!Position!College
Marlon ChambersTight endLouisiana Tech
Derrick SpillerTight endTexas A&M

Staff

[5]

Roster

[6]

Regular season

Schedule

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordAttendance
1September 12Kansas City ChiefsW 20–171–058,381
2September 19Seattle SeahawksL 13–141–166,944
3September 26at Oakland RaidersL 17–241–250,458
4October 3New Orleans SaintsW 14–102–266,944
5October 10at Minnesota VikingsW 24–223–264,107
6October 17L 16–203–366,944
7October 24at Tampa Bay BuccaneersL 3–63–465,283
8October 31at Washington RedskinsL 22–483–577,621
9November 7at Green Bay PackersW 14–134–559,867
10November 14Minnesota VikingsL 24–274–661,481
11November 21at San Diego ChargersW 23–205–656,055
12November 25at Detroit LionsL 17–215–777,905
13December 5Green Bay PackersL 19–355–866,944
14Bye
15December 19Detroit LionsW 28–106–850,256
16December 26at St. Louis RamsL 12–346–965,941
17January 2Tampa Bay BuccaneersL 6–206–1066,945

External links

Notes and References

  1. NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York,NY,, p. 108
  2. Web site: Mayer. Larry. What have been biggest Bears-Packers games?. Chicago Bears. December 26, 2013. December 27, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131228222040/http://www.chicagobears.com/news/chalk-talk/article-1/What-have-been-biggest-Bears-Packers-games/da89be49-42a5-4b3f-9a88-cb3d45e6a5a4. December 28, 2013. dead. mdy-all.
  3. Web site: Flashback #43: Dave McGinnis 'Hiring' (1999). WBBM-TV. March 12, 2014. September 12, 2014.
  4. Web site: 1999 Chicago Bears draftees . Pro-Football-Reference.com . November 24, 2014 .
  5. Book: Chicago Bears 1999 Media Guide . 3 . Club directory .
  6. Web site: 1999 Chicago Bears starters and roster . Pro-Football-Reference.com . November 24, 2014 .