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Brian Urlacher

#54 / Linebacker / Chicago Bears

6-4

258

May 25, 1978

New Mexico

Sacks Interceptions Tackles
G Sacks YdsL Int Yds IntTD Solo Ast Total
2008 - Brian Urlacher 16 0 0 2 11 0 79 14 93

So that's what it's like...

Snowdepressed_medium
Justin Snow has the same expression we all did last night

via d.yimg.com


It's been a while since I've felt like this after a Colts game.  Come to think of it, I would have felt this way had I watched one of our 5 preseason games, because that is what last night felt like.  Everyone was getting their bearings, trying things out, etc.  Unfortunately for the Colts, and us, the Bears did all of this in their Preseason games, and they knocked us around.  I guess this is the feeling almost every other team has felt sometime in the past 3 seasons.

I've read through most of the comments this morning from everyone, and I mostly agree with everything.  The one thing I haven't seen is a good explanation of why the Bears moved the ball very effectively on offense, even without major weapons, and I think the answer is a simple one:

They took what our defense gave them, and did not get impatient one time in the game.  They were very content to gain 4 yards on every play, and keep moving the chains.  Very few teams (read: coaches) have the discipline to not go for more than what the Tampa 2 gives you.  It will give you 4 yards a play, even when the defense is playing decent.  The Tampa 2 takes advantage when an offense starts to take risks down the field, or they need more than 8+ yards on one play.  The Bears, consistently, had 3rd and shorts, which is why they were 10-16 on 3rd downs.  Having 16 3rd down plays also shows how they kept taking 4 yards and moving on.

Other than the one big run by Forte, I don't think the defense played bad.  As BBS said below, taking that run out they only managed 3.4/carry.  Unfortunately, 3.4 x 3 > 10 yards, so they kept making first downs.  Plus they had some really good play-action calls and completions on 3rd downs as well.

As far as the offense goes, numerous things were going against us.  One, the Bears, and Urlacher confirmed after the game, wanted to stop the run on every play.  There were times they had 8 guys on the line of scrimmage, with 5 of them lined up over the middle of our line, which had a combined 12 starts (all by Johnson, at another position).  While I think we should have tried to run a little more, they never stopped daring Manning to throw the ball.  I liked the running of the slants, as they are quick passes that are great against a blitz.  But where were the variation plays off of them?  Why no slant-pump fake-go route, especially when there was no safety help?  The corners obviously knew they were blitzing, so they started to jump the slants.  Why not more screen passes, or draw plays?  I'm wondering if the inexperienced middle of the line played a part in that.

Every season, the biggest improvement comes from Game 1 to Game 2, especially with a lot of young guys.  It's still too early to start panicking about Peterson next week.  He still hasn't played a down yet this season.  I feel confident that the coaches know they've screwed up, and will right the ship.  I just wish they would have done this in the preseason, rather than on National TV, opening up a brand new stadium.

While this game was a kick in the nuts, it's still a better feeling than what they must be feeling in New England.  We all know how we'd feel if Manning was done for the year.  I really hope Brady can come back from this injury, as the entire NFL will suffer without him playing this season.  It really is the Bizarro NFL already, and we aren't even a week in.

0 comments | 1 recs | Digg!

Is the Bear's Defense still an Elite Unit?

It was only a mere 19 months ago that the Colts thumped the Bears in the Super Bowl, a year in which the Bears were clearly led by a top-flight defense.  They even won a few games, even when Rex Grossman tried his damnedest to lose it for the Bears.  Brian Urlacher was a feared MLB, and Tommie Harris was one of the best DT in the NFL. 

In 2006, the Bears finished 3rd in Points Allowed, and 5th in Yards/Game.  Obviously an elite defense, and that was without Harris and Mike Brown for the majority of the season.  Their Preseason Rankings, while mostly irrelevant, had them at 20th in Yards/Game and 10th in Points Allowed. These are middle of the road, but again, are mostly irrelevant, since there are lots of plays run by players who'll never see an NFL game that counts. 

In 2007, the Bears finished 16th in Points Allowed, and 28th in Yards Allowed.  Again, they had a few injuries (Brown, again, Vasher the big ones), but still no where close to being an elite unit.  They gave up 123 rush yards/game, which was 24th in the league.  As a point of reference, in the Preseason they finished 3rd in Yards Allowed, but 28th in Points Allowed.  That is a wide difference, but again, in the Preseason, take it with a grain of salt.

That brings us to the 2008 Preseason for the Bears.  They faced the Fearsome Foursome of QBs: Brodie Croyle, Charlie Frye, JT O'Sullivan, and Brady Quinn, and they finished 32nd in Yards Allowed, including 27th against the pass, and 31st against the run.  As a point of reference, the Colts finished 30th against the run, and they played backups and 3rd stringers for 3/4 of the Preseason.  The Bears finished 30th in Points Allowed.  These are not stats for an elite defense.

I watched a good portion of their game against the Browns, and in the first half, at a minimum Urlacher and Lance Briggs played, so it wasn't like they didn't play their starters.  And the Browns were running at will against them.  Quinn didn't need to throw the ball, as Jason Wright was shredding their defense on the ground.  Now the Browns have a very good O-Line, but their skill position starters did not play at all in the game.  And they put up 10 points in the 1st quarter against the Bears 1st Team Defense.

I was reading an article in the Chicago Sun-Times, and Brad Biggs is asking the same question I am:

The Bears would have you believe there's a switch somewhere that they'll get around to flipping this week. You know -- the one that turns on their defense now that the regular season has arrived.

He then mentions who their Week 1 opponent is, and what has happened since they last time they faced #18:

The last time the Bears took on Manning and the Colts in prime time, things didn't turn out so good, and it's fair to say the defense has been in a bit of a tailspin ever since.

On the Bears current depth chart, they have 8 starters on defense that played in the Super Bowl.  That isn't a big turnover at all, especially in today's NFL.  And they all played in the Preseason.  And they were the worst in the NFL. 

I think we are going to see a heavy dose of Joseph Addai, Dominic Rhodes, and Mike Hart on Sunday night.  Not only will we need to get Peyton into a rhythm, but we should be able to run all over the Bears defense.

Poll
Is the Bears Defense Still an Elite Unit?
Yes
23 votes
No
115 votes
The Preseason is meaningless, so let's wait and see
80 votes

218 votes | Poll has closed

10 comments | 0 recs


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