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Elliott Fry knew his first kick was from same distance Parkey missed

Elliott Fry's first Bears field goal — 43 yards — steeped in history

The Bears might like to have us believe that the symbolic 43-yard field goal through the North end-zone goal posts by Elliott Fry in the preseason-opening loss to the Panthers Thursday night was planned.

The truth of the matter: it was a simple twist of fate.

“You could sense it,” Matt Nagy said. “You could feel it, you could sense it, from all the fans, and I looked over and I said — after the completion down the middle, and then they spotted it, and I'm so used to seeing — like my math is really good right now, I can figure out real quick how far a field goal kick it from the spot of the ball, so I realized it was 43. Am I right? Yeah, then coach Rivera pops a timeout, too.”

Rivera admitted afterward he was doing his old organization a solid, adding one more layer of irony and eerie familiarity to the moment.

Heck, Fry wasn't even here in January, when Cody Parkey kicked his way out of town and Fry was deep in preparations with the now-defunct AAF's Orlando Apollos — but Fry was well aware of the bizarre circumstances.

“I did know it was 43 yards,” he said with a grin. “Obviously that number is ingrained in my memory.”

Obviously that play is ingrained in an entire city's memory, making the magnitude of the kick and the competition in which he and Eddy Pineiro are vying to exorcise the franchise's “double-doink” demons, difficult to categorize, however many times we try.

“That's just a thing you know is a possibility,” Fry said of getting iced before he nailed the kick, to the glee of Bears fans in attendance. “You don't really think about it too much. It really doesn't have that much of an effect on anything.

“You still have to make the kick. I'm not out there thinking about Cody's kick from last year. I'm not thinking about anything like that. I'm just going in focusing on making it.”

That he did, unlike Pineiro on his — and the Bears' — first preseason attempt in the kicking derby, a 48-yarder pushed wide left.

“It's not fun to miss,” Pineiro said. “You want to make every single kick, but I'm going to learn from it and bounce back next game and hit my kicks.”

But the Bears didn't go to such great lengths this offseason — bringing in eight kickers to rookie minicamp and manufacturing pressure in practice in unorthodox ways — to cut bait on Pineiro after one preseason miss (he hit his second attempt, a 23-yarder in the fourth quarter — and anoint Fry because he aced his first test.

Fry showed the lights weren't too bright, no matter how much it felt like a made-for-TV moment.

“I think we handled it well,” he said. “Every kick is the same, whether you're out there in practice, there's no difference feeling-wise. It's no different than the practice at Soldier Field last week or any other kick.

“You really learn to cope with everything. Every kick is kind of the same. I don't go out there thinking this is so much different because I'm in a game. You really have to be good at thinking every kick is the same.”

The distance — 43 yards — was the same but the dynamics have shifted completely. And Nagy obviously is a lot more pleased with this result.

“No, it wasn't planned, but I'm kinda glad he did it,” Nagy said.

• Arthur Arkush is the managing editor for Pro Football Weekly. For more on the NFL, visit profootballweekly.com and follow Arthur on Twitter

@arthurarkush or @PFWeekly.

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