John Fox's seat with the Chicago Bears is not exactly cool.

The veteran head coach was hired by the organization in 2015 and has won just nine games in two seasons. The team regressed in his first season and won just six games before they took an even bigger step backward last season.

With Fox likely on the hot seat in 2017, Bleacher Report's Matt Miller offered up an interesting (to say the least) possible successor if Fox is ousted after the end of the year.

There was plenty of speculation that Stoops would be in line for a job with the Chicago Bears if John Fox is gone after this season. That wouldn't surprise me, but I'd also keep this name in mind: Jeff Fisher. Fisher played for the Bears and spent one season there as a coaching assistant in 1985. It's too soon to say Fox is done after only two seasons on the job, but if he's out, these are two names I expect to be linked to that job.

Fisher played with the Bears from 1981-1984 before an ankle injury in 1985 landed him on injured reserve. He worked as a defensive assistant while injury and eventually followed Buddy Ryan to Philadelphia as defensive backs coach between 1986 and 1987 before being promoted to defensive coordinator in 1988.

He made stops in Los Angeles with the Rams and San Francisco as an assistant before eventually taking over as the head coach of the then-Houston Oilers in 1995. He stayed with the team when they moved to Tennessee and helped lead the Titans to a Super Bowl appearance following the 1999 season.

After he was fired by the Titans in 2010 he rejoined the Rams as their head coach in 2012 before he was fired late last season.

In 22 seasons as a head coach (including a six-game stint as interim head coach in Houston in 1994), Fisher went 173-165-1. He went 142-120 with Houston/Tennessee and 31-45 with the Rams.

Outside of his magical run to the Super Bowl with the Titans, Fisher was unable to construct a perennial powerhouse team.

While Bears fans have an affinity for former players, bringing Fisher in as a head coach, if the organization moves on from Fox, would be a step backward in terms of progress. Chicago is becoming notably younger on both side of the football and it would make far more sense to bring in a coach who is either a.) young and on the rise or b.) an established, successful NFL head coach.

All of this is speculation at this point, but if Chicago does move on from Fox at the end of the year, there will be plenty better options on the market than Jeff Fisher.