While Chicago Bears quarterback Mitchell Trubisky has taken a brunt of the blame for his poor performance this season, and rightfully so, there hasn’t been nearly as much blame placed on the guy hired to take him to an elite level in Matt Nagy.

Which is something that ESPN NFL analyst Dan Orlovsky has taken issue with.

Orlovsky had some choice words for Nagy when discussing the decline of Trubisky in his third season. Instead of playing to his strengths — including his mobility that made him a threat every game last season — Nagy is trying to force Trubisky to fit his offense instead of building his offense around Trubisky.

Orlovsky compared it to another mobile quarterback in Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson, who is thriving with offensive coordinator Greg Roman.

“I honestly think the Chicago Bears should be doing the same thing with Mitchell Trubisky,” Orlovsky said on ESPN’s Get Up on Tuesday. “If we’re going to praise the play-caller in Baltimore for utilizing Lamar the way that eh should, then Matt Nagy has to bear the brunt of the criticism when taking a player, and you’re ruining him.”

Orlovsky wants Nagy to utilize Trubisky’s strengths, which include his mobility. And the evidence is there in Trubisky’s performance last season, as well as Jackson’s this season.

“It makes no sense when you have evidence how to use a guy, and then you don’t use him that way. It makes me mad because we place the label ‘bust’ on a kid when the coach is not doing his number one job. It’s not fair to Mitchell Trubisky.”