Like you say G08, the article doesn't really say anything we haven't already on this board... but man seeing some of those stats written down is a pretty damning indictment of Loggains and Fox:
Overall, he’s averaged just 23 pass attempts per game, with head coach John Fox and offensive coordinator Dowell Loggains instead leaning heavily on their run game for a league-high 54 percent rate since Trubisky was named the starter.
Trubisky lined up in the shotgun on nearly 98 percent of his dropbacks in college. Since he took over as starter, the Bears have lined up with Trubisky under center on a league-high 63 percent of his snaps.
Since Week 5, the team has run the ball 83 times on first down compared with throwing just 35 times—making it much too easy for opposing defenses to stack the box and stuff the play.
And perhaps the most damning indictment of many in the article:
For Trubisky, this season has a similar feel to Jared Goff’s rookie year under Jeff Fisher
In a season where Fox and Loggains are presumably trying to keep their jobs, it doesn't make any sense to me for them to be so predictable running the ball, particularly on first down 70% of the time, and consistently leaving Trubisky in a situation where the offense is behind the chains as a result.
In a season where Fox and Loggains are presumably trying to keep their jobs, it doesn't make any sense to me for them to have Trubisky run plays under center more than any other quarterback in the league when he played almost exclusively from the shotgun in college, even more so when you consider that Howard averaged 7 yards a carry running out of the shotgun last year.
In a season where Fox and Loggains are presumably trying to keep their jobs, it doesn't make any sense to me for them to put themselves in a position where they're being compared to Jeff Fisher!
It's almost as if they have a mindset that having Trubisky play so much from under center is what needs to happen for him to adapt to an NFL offense going forward without worrying about the present despite the fact that it will almost certainly cost them their jobs and in Loggains case any hope he might have of ever being a co-ordinator again let alone a head coach.
It's the exact opposite to the approach other teams who are having success with their young QBs are taking. They're integrating concepts their QBs were comfortable with in college into their schemes whilst introducing them to NFL concepts, providing a balance between familiarity and progression and easing their transition into the professional game with a gentler learning curve. Loggains and Fox just seem to be wedded to a sky high learning curve, dumping everything on Trubisky whilst drilling into him that it's better to play it safe than risk a turnover.
Maybe if he survives it, this approach will pay dividends in the future, but the slower, smoother option certainly seems to me to be the safer choice not least because it must be better for a young QB's confidence.