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Audibles From the Long Snapper

| December 7th, 2011

BEARS SHOULD PAY FORTE NOW
What better way for the organization to show loyalty to a very talented running back than to sign him to an extension a few day after he suffers an injury that may cost him the regular season. Jerry Angelo actually has the opportunity to cease being the heel of the “Pay Forte” wrestling match and come out like a decent, compassionate man. We’ve all seen how little JA cares about PR but someone must be whispering this in his ear, right?

HOW LONG WILL CALEB’S LEASH BE?
I can’t imagine Denver will be able to score many points offensively so if Caleb Hanie continues to fail at every level, how long will Lovie Smith let that continue? I don’t care if the backup is Enderle or McCown, therd is no way Hanie sees the second half if the Bears aren’t moving the ball on defense that allowed Christian Ponder to throw for 400 yards last week.

DABEARSBLOG PICKS CONTEST UPDATE!
The playoff bracket with fully explained rules will ne published Friday with the Weekend Show. Tobijohn and NewBearInTown will have first round byes. The other competitors: FQD1911, SCDave, BigDaddy, BossBear90, Shady, Mike V in OR, Enderwiggin and Michael L.

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Healthy Defense Must Anchor Bears Through the Storm

| December 6th, 2011

Take a look at the injuries that have debilitated the Bears this season. They lost former first-round picks and projected offensive line starters Chris Williams ans Gabe Carimi for the season. They lost their apparently best receiver Earl Bennett for a long stretch after a shot to the ribs. They lost their star quarterback for the regular season on a tackle attempt. They lost their starting tailback, MVP candidate for the same duration after a missed Matt Spaeth block and a direct shot to the knee. At intervals this year they’ve been without Marion Barber, Roy Williams (I know, who cares?) and were forced to play WITH Frank Omiyale.

Notice anything? Every significant injury this team has faced has been on the offensive side of the ball.

Sure you could argue the Bears would prefer Major Wright stay on the field for one complete game and losing DJ Moore hurt. But Wright keeps showing up on game day, making plays, while Corey Graham has not missed a beat filling in for Moore. If you offered LoveRod their current injury report on defense heading into Denver on September 1 they would have been leaping over one another to sign the deal.

This week that healthy defense takes a trip back to the early days of organized football as they meet Tebus of Nazareth and the read-option Broncos circus. The Broncos defense has been brilliant of late and will make road life for Caleb Hanie and the flaccid Bears offense more than difficult. If Lovie Smith expects more than 14 points from his quarterback he expects too much. It is time for Lovie’s pride and joy defense to dominate this antiquated attack. It is time for the defense to live up to the reputations, the contracts, the star power. Because they are all there. Urlacher. Peppers. Briggs. Tillman. If they allow Tebow to move the ball consistently and light up the scoreboard, the Bears had no business being in the postseason to begin with.

The defense has no excuses. None. If they are truly as good as they want us to think they are, they’ll show us Sunday afternoon in Denver. The conversation to this point on Tebow has been about whether this offensive system can be consistently successful at the professional level. The Bears defense has an opportunity Sunday to answer that question resoundingly.

No.

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Bears Regular Season Now a Tale of Survival

| December 5th, 2011

I have read the phrase in the comments section below and across the pages of both major Chicago dailies from my hotel room in Lakeview this morning. “The playoffs look like a pipe dream,” folks want you to believe. The truth is this: the playoffs are not a pipe dream. They are not even close to a pipe dream. The Bears sit today as the conference’s top wild card after every single team competing for the postseason in the NFC lost yesterday. They have their destiny in their own hands.

But it is not the hands of destiny I am worried about. It is the right hand of Jay Cutler. Cutler, according to reports, will travel to Denver this week and meet with Dr. Viola to assess the recovery of his thumb. (David Haugh chronicled Cutler’s relationship with the Colorado doc wonderfully in the Trib on Sunday.) If Cutty can’t return to the lineup by the first week of the postseason, the postseason won’t be a pipe dream but a nightmare. Caleb Hanie, Josh McCown, Nathan Enderle or whoever else the Bears suit up at QB will have no chance to win on the road at Dallas, New York, New Orleans or San Francisco. No. Chance.

And people seem surprised. Suprised a quarterback with the strongest arm in the sport can make up for weaknesses on the offensive line and deficiencies at the receiver position. Surprised a reach draft pick from a nothing college has not mastered one of the league’s most unnecessarily complicated offensive systems in his second start. Six weeks ago I would have needed a shout to be heard when exclaiming just how good I believe Cutler to be. Now a whisper could be heard.

The Bears must survive. There is no other way to describe it. They must score points any way possible. They must continue holding opponents down defensively. Dave Toub needs to spend a few nights drawing ’em up on special teams. Mike Martz needs to do for Hanie what Todd Haley did for Tyler Palko – give him a few single read throws on the outside to move the chains. The Bears need to turn winning ugly into an artform because, from the look of things, winning pretty is not an option with number twelve behind center.

They are nowhere near the team they were three weeks ago and they will not be that team for at least another three weeks. Sunday the Bears blew an opportunity to put a game between themselves and the field for a postseason berth. Now the margin of error is nothing. If they can get their quarterback back they can play with anyone in the league, even with Matt Forte on the bench for a while. But the Bears must survive the next four games to ensure their quarterback has something to come back to.

It is about survival. By any means necessary.

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I Sat There So I Get To Complain About Everything

| December 4th, 2011

Okay. I have no idea why anyonewould try to seriously analyze this game. If Jay Cutler started, the Bears win by three touchdowns. But Jay Cutler did not start and somehow the Bears lost by a Hail Mary at the end of the first half.

1. Caleb Hanie is awful. Whatever you saw on television…he’s worse. We counted seven times during the game where Hanir held the ball and missed open receivers. Three of those resulted in sacks.

2. I know the Matt Forte injury will make people think the end is come but the Bears lacked nothing once we left the game.

3. Go to hell, Roy Williams.

4. If you want to fault the defense, go ahead. You’re wrong.

5. Julius Peppers is the best Bears defender of my lifetime.

6. Major Wright was playing a great game beford he got hurt. So, basically, stop expecting Major Wright to make it through a game.

7. Think about these two plays: the Barber screen and the Earl Bennett sideline route. How many points did the Bears leave out there?

8. I do not want to hear “Caleb is our quarterback.”

9. I don’t think it mattered but Robbie Gould missed another FG he should make.

10. First and goal from the seven. No points.

11. The offensive line was bad late but not until defenders could unload on obvious passes. Cutty makes plays with the same pressure.

12. Mike Martz seems like he’s already gone to a head coaching job which he won’t be offered.

13. Jay Cutler spent most of the game right in front of me. He was animated when Hanie missed throws. The telling thing? Earl Bennett was continually complaining to Cutty throughout the day.

14. Edwin Williams is not fast enough to the outside.

15. I don’t blame Lach for the Hail Mary. These guys are moronically taught to knock it down.

Ultimately here’s what I think. Nothing. I think it’s not worth our emotional energy to get upset by Caleb Hanie things. He’s bad. If Cutler does not return the only dream remaining is being thrashed in the first round. But can the Bears stay afloat til he returns? The Falcons helped. Currently the Lions are too.

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Kansas City Chiefs at Chicago Bears Game Thread

| December 4th, 2011

I chose one of my favorite locales in the city as the game thread photo. And I don’t care what you say about it. (By the way, I’ll be at Rossi’s tonight for the Detroit Lions v. New Orleans Saints game if you’re in Chicago and want to come by for a hello. I’ll be the one in a worn orange cap, drinking Old Style bottles, playing Warren Zevon tracks on the jukebox and screaming “Who Dat!”)

Other scoreboard watching to be done:

  • It’d be nice to see Houston’s terrific rush attack destroy Atlanta’s rush defense (one of the worst in the league). I just don’t know that the Texans will be able to hide Yates for four quarters.
  • It sucks, I know, but root for the Packers to put the Giants to sleep for two reasons: (1) it’ll knock another team out of the mix and (2) we need the Packers playing for something Week 17.
  • Root for Tony Romo to throw the game away and lose to Arizona.
  • I’m also going to start rooting against San Francisco every week. I want New Orleans to slide into the two slot, giving the Bears a trip to either San Fran or Dallas/NY for first round of playoffs (should they make it).

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Weekend Show! ‘Sweetness’ Author Jeff Pearlman on How the Controversy Caused Him to “Lose Chicago”

| December 1st, 2011

Today on the Weekend Show I speak with author of the Walter Payton biography Sweetness, Jeff Pearlman. I encourage you to listen first to Jason Whitlock’s Real Talk interview with Pearlman by CLICKING HERE. I am covering some of the same ground as Whitty but that interview takes far longer to delve into Pearlman the man. If you have an opinion on this book, one way or the other, I encourage you to listen to this piece and allow the man to defend his work.

I do apologize for poor sound quality on both the show and Reverend themes. I shall rectify both issues by next week.

Lines This Week:

BILLS -1.5 Titans / DOLPHINS -3 Raiders / Ravens -6.5 BROWNS / Jets -3 REDSKINS / BUCS -3 Panthers/ 49ERS -13 Rams / Cowboys -6 CARDINALS / BEARS -8 Chiefs / STEELERS -7 Bengals / PATRIOTS -21 Colts / Chargers -2 JAGUARS / VIKINGS -1.5 Broncos / SAINTS -8 Lions / PACKERS -7.5 Giants / Falcons -2.5 TEXANS

The Brothers: Jon (23-12-1), Jeff (19-15-2), Chris (20-15-1)

The Commenter Perfect Weeks: tobijohn (4), New Bear in Town (3), Ufficio (3),  FQD1911 (2), SC Dave (2), BigDaddy (2), BossBear90 (2),  Michael L (2), Shady (2), MikeV in OR (2), greenbayman (1), Sacramento’s #1 Bears Fan (1), ben in norcal (1), CanadaBear (1), #76 Mongo Murph (1), TheFifth (1), DYLbears23 (1), EnderWiggin (1), IrishSweetness (1), Who is Willie Gault (1), SC Dave (1)

NOTE: Last chance, kids. You need to get to the second win to make the postseason, beginning next weekend. I will have the full playoff brackets ready by midweek.

SECOND NOTE on one of our sponsors. I purchased a photograph from Fisheye Vertigo and it’s brilliant. If you want to get a Chicago-related work for someone for the holidays I can’t think of anything cooler. Check them out by CLICKING HERE.

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Kansas City Chiefs at Chicago Bears Game Preview

| November 30th, 2011

Will Kyle Orton be returning to Chicago as a starting quarterback? I think so. Will Caleb Hanie be able to improve upon his performance of a week ago? He has to. Will the Bears right the ship at home? Absolutely.

WHY DO I LIKE THE CHICAGO BEARS THIS WEEK?

  • I always like the Chicago Bears.
  • The Kansas City Chiefs allow over 133 yards per game on the ground and the Bears are proving they can run the ball on just about anybody. The Bears, at home, should be able to control the game.
  • The question offensively for the Bears will be Caleb Hanie and I spent Tuesday discussing everything I have to say on that matter. The Bears can lose this game if Hanie turns the ball over multiple times, especially in Bears territory. Ball security wins the day.
  • I like Kyle Orton. He is a good quarterback who will be a sturdy backup for years to come. But the Todd Haley offense is complicated to learn and I can’t imagine Orton arriving at Soldier Field with anything more than an elementary understanding of it. Tyler Palko is going to start, per Todd Haley, but if he makes it through the game that’s a bad thing for the Bears defense.
  • The Chiefs do have talent at the receiver position, including Dwayne Bowe. I was planning to spend my offseason campaigning for the Bears to sign Bowe until he concluded his effort against the Steelers Sunday night with one of the most gutless plays in the history of the NFL. (To see video, CLICK HERE.) The Bears need to be physical and hit these guys on the outside. It’s very clear they don’t want any part of it.
  • The Chiefs have two road wins. They won at Indianapolis (and I’m confident half the SEC could do the same) and they won the ridiculous 28-0 game in Oakland as Kyle Boller and Carson Palmer threw a dozen interceptions. This Chiefs secondary is a bit larcenous and Hanie needs to be wary about sailing balls into coverage. Again, ball security wins the day.
  • The Chiefs have only 13 sacks on the season – lowest in the league – but Tamba Hali needs to be accounted for at all times. Recently it hasn’t been a major concern for the Bears. Let’s hope that continues.
  • And let’s not forget this is also Thomas Jones’ homecoming in Chicago. I have nothing to add to that fact. I just like Thomas Jones.
  • Only two of kicker Ryan Succop’s last nine kickoffs have gone for touchbacks and punter Dustin Colquitt is an average player. I think Dave Toub and the Bears return units will be angry this week. Not only were they frustrated by Parts Unknown (Lechler/Janikowski) but their early penalties put the offense and Hanie in some seemingly insurmountable holes.
  • Also looks like there’s a 50/50 chance of rain and snow showers throughout the afternoon. I’d like to see it. I’m tired of seeing football in sunshine.

Overall I think this game is a simple one. If the Bears don’t turn the ball over they definitely win. If they turn it over once, they should win. If they turn it over twice, they might not win. If they turn it over three times, all bets are off.

Chicago Bears 17, Kansas City Chiefs 10

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Looking at the First Month as We Enter the Final Month

| November 29th, 2011

The Bears front office was destroyed for not being wheelers and dealers during the summer’s free agency free-for-all. But looking at the Sunday to Sunday contributors for this very good football team makes it evident there was a method to the perceived madness at Halas Hall. (I am leaving the draft choices out of this discussion as I like to give those guys a year or two to assimilate.)

  • The Annexation of Greg Olsen. Many criticized the move but elevating Kellen Davis and adding Matt Spaeth has led to a more powerful running game on the perimeter and little-to-no decrease in passing production.
  • The Annexation of Olin Kreutz. The Bears saw more than I did when they slid Roberto Garza to the center position. He’s been shaky in pass protection but strong in the run and overall been a far better center in 2011 than Kreutz was in 2010. This move also led to the signing Chris Spencer, adding toughness and guts to the right guard position. The leadership was replaced by the guy taking the snaps.
  • When Amobi Okoye started seeing action for the Bears during the second halves of preseason games it was apparent he could be a factor at the defensive tackle position. Now Okoye has surpassed Henry Melton as the Bears most consistent threat in the middle of the line.
  • Jerry Angelo grabbed Tyler Clutts the second he could and Clutts is a real life fullback. Fullbacks are about toughness. They’re about hitting defenders in the mouth and imposing your will at the point of impact. Clutts is a damn good player and a fitting Chicago Bears.
  • No Big Money Linebacker. We all thought the Bears would go out and make a move for one of the price tag linebackers on the market, i.e. Stephen Tulloch. They didn’t and they’ve been rewarded by Nick Roach improving week after week throughout the year.
  • The Dallas Trio. Marian Barber looks revitalized in Chicago since returning from injury, providing for Forte what Cedric Benson provided for Thomas Jones in 2006. Sam Hurd has made the loss of Rashied Davis, specifically on special teams, an afterthought. I’ll get to Roy Williams in a bit.
  • Adam Podlesh has not provided the leg strength I thought we’d see but he’s avoided the Brad Maynard deep zone shanks that had plagued our specials for the last few years. Podlesh provides consistency.
  • The safety position has been the source of this team’s most public turmoil but the signing of Brandon Meriweather, while at first looking like a mistake, is turning into a savvy move. It took Meriweather time to become acquainted with the system and relinquish his reckless style but Sunday he played his best game as a Bear and has given them depth at a position where they had none in August.
  • Dane Sanzenbacher looked like the second coming of Mike Haas throughout training camp: the white receiver fans love that ends up signing in the CFL. I didn’t quite understand Dane’s impact until Earl Bennett returned from injury. Cutty needed a receiver to cross the middle of the field, especially in the red zone, as Earl got his ribs back into shape. Dane fit the bill.

Were there bad moves? Well, one.

  • Roy Williams. I was not one of those people who believed Mike Martz when he said Roy Williams was going to catch 80 balls and have a number one receiver-type season. And I understand there was minimal risk to signing Roy to a contract worth little more than a million dollars. But the Roy Williams signing was a mistake for two reasons: (1) it has stunted the growth of Johnny Knox at WR. Knox showed once against Sunday he is the most explosive receiver the Bears have. I have a feeling Cutty doesn’t love him but the Bears should have been targeting him from the first week of the season. (2) Plaxico Burress. I was a lone man on the island calling for the Bears to sign Plax as all you moralists rested safely atop your high horses. Give Jay Cutler and his naturally rising fastball a monster target like Plax and you’d see one of the most lethal combinations in the league. Plax is a touchdown machine for an offensively-challenged Jets team and saves Mark Sanchez on two or three passes a game. Either way I can’t imagine a scenario where Roy returns to Chicago next year.

It wasn’t the type of off-season that yields stars and the Bears have proven on the field they didn’t require a star infusion to be competitive at the highest level. But what Jerry Angelo, Tim Ruskell and the folks at Halas Hall did was build the kind of roster depth that can win championships. Maybe not this season. But soon.

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Hiding Caleb Hanie Not an Option For Bears Moving Forward in Playoff Push

| November 29th, 2011

We know what kind of defense the Bears are going to play and their next three opponents – Kansas City, Denver, Seattle – will have very little success moving the ball up and down the field. We know what kind of special teams the Bears have and there isn’t another team in the NFL (and perhaps history of the NFL) who can neutralize their return game the way Shane Lechler and Sebastian Janikowski did Sunday. We know what kind of rushing attack the Bears possess, showcased by their exceeding triple-digits when the Raiders did everything in their power to shut them down.

Is Jay Cutler going to return to the Bears this year? I certainly think so. But the Bears cannot expect his return before the end of the regular season. Most have predicted he will begin throwing again in the week leading up to the Christmas night showdown with Green Bay and Jay Glazer reported Sunday morning Cutty is expected by some inside Halas Hall to return to the field in Minneapolis the following week. I’ll take a more conservative approach and say the Bears won’t have #6 back at full strength until they travel in the wildcard round of the postseason to San Francisco, New Orleans, New Jersey or Dallas.

But they have to get there. And after watching them play four quarters against a playoff-caliber opponent Sunday, I don’t think they’ll be able to hide Caleb Hanie. Fixing his play won’t be easy.

Decrease Number of Timing Routes

I understand the need to get Hanie comfortable early in games but the type of slants the Bears were running Sunday require a rapport between quarterback and receivers it would be impossible for Hanie and the pass catchers to have. If the Bears determine Hanie needs a couple easy completions to find his footing, insert Hester for a bubble screen or two or design ways to get Kellen Davis in space.

The other fear I have with Hanie and the quick slant is his size. He looked small behind the Bears offensive line and those routes are too easy to knock down at the line of scrimmage.

Take Off!

Maybe I’m losing my mind but I thought Hanie’s play improved significantly once he started gaining yardage with his legs. Hanie is not just a mobile quarterback but he’s a legitimate threat running the football. Using his speed (instead of, say, throwback screens in the red zone) when the play breaks down, and perhaps even in the play-calling, might be the best tool for the Bears to avoid costly, field-position killing turnovers.

Take Shots!

Opposing defenses know Jay Cutler can throw the ball with every other quarterback in the league and they respect his arm on game day. No one respects the arm of Caleb Hanie because no one has enough tape on it. Seeing him hit Johnny Knox deep (and seeing his rapport with Knox in general) made it clear that Hanie has the ability to stretch secondaries and take pressure off not only the run game but also the short passing game.

Throw It Away

Just throw it away, Caleb. If it’s not there and you can’t run, throw it to Mike Tice. He’s the giant man on the sideline who looks like he should be a short order cook in a highway diner. There used to be a chorus of “throw it away” filling Josie Woods whenever Rex Grossman looked a bit confused. Don’t make us pull the old scripts from the file cabinet.

It is on Caleb Hanie to prevent a good team from missing the postseason. He’s the caretaker. But it is on Mike Martz and the Bears coaching staff to create an atmosphere in which he can succeed. I did not come away from Sunday believing Hanie is incapable of leading the Bears to victories. I came away from Sunday believing that Hanie’s success will be determined by game management: how the Bears coaching staff manages him and how he manages the football. If there Bears are going to make the postseason, they’ll need to be successful on both accounts.

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Thoughts on Caleb Hanie’s Rather Dismal Debut and a Bears Loss

| November 28th, 2011

  • It was very clear to me that Caleb Hanie never found solid footing the entire afternoon. He never looked comfortable in the pocket and looked less comfortable when he was intentionally rolled out. I thought he’d have been instructed to take off running once the play broke down around him but apparently he was instructed to lob balls into traffic. Overall a supremely poor debut for Hanie but he’ll be given the Chiefs at Solider Field next week to improve.
  • This game changed at the end of the first half and I blame Lovie Smith. Down 9-7, with a chip shot field goal there for the taking and a touchdown attainable, Lovie allowed Mike Martz to call a throwback screen with Hanie. Picked off. The Bears defense continued their valiant play and held the game at 12-7 but the Bears were unable to play catch-up the rest of the afternoon.
  • Lance Louis’ tackle on that play should go in the Plays of the Year reel.
  • Marian Barber ran the ball more consistently and with more authority than Matt Forte yesterday and I would have given him more snaps.
  • So Johnny Knox will be Caleb’s number one receiver, huh? Okay. But if you’re going to be the number one you need to catch the ball consistently.
  • I warned you all about Shane Lechler’s punting. He negates all punt returns because he’s one of the greatest punters in the history of the game.
  • Nice kicking, Robbie Gould.
  • Why I can’t get too upset with games like yesterday? There were half a dozen plays where Hanie simply bailed before he needed to. At times when Cutler would have stood strong and delivered a rocket down the field, Hanie started sprinting away from defenders. Life with a backup…
  • Hanie’s limitations might provide impetus to work Devin Hester back into the receiver rotation.
  • Very strange to see LoveRod leave Jennings on an island on the game-winning, third-and-long go route toss from Carson Palmer. Seemed that would be the ideal time to be in the zone.
  • Jennings also dropped two interceptions. He catches those balls, Bears win.
  • Overall the defense played exactly how you’d expect them to play on an afternoon where the QB looked as inept at Hanie did. They gave the Bears a chance to win the game.
  • Don’t let the special teams penalties get lost in the headlines. The return team buried the offense with holds on the first two returns.
  • Nick Roach continues his improvement. He might have been the best linebacker on the field for the Bears this week.
  • Corey Graham has picks in three straight games? Does any team in the league have more depth at nickel corner than the Chicago Bears?
  • Have we abandoned any designed outside runs?

Overall it is a loss to a good team on the road and hopefully Mr. Hanie will have worked through whatever led him to play the way he played. The Bears now embark on a winnable three-game stretch, starting with Kansas City at home, and Hanie cannot allow this offense to regress to the 2002-2005 era. He cannot make touchdowns rarer than foie gras hot dogs with a side of duck fat fries. It is incumbent upon Lovie, Martz and Hanie to spend the next six days making this thing work. If they don’t, there might not be a postseason for Cutler to return to.

_____________________

Extra note: Jeff Pearlman will discuss Sweetness on the Weekend Show! Friday. He’ll also be in the city this week. Check him out:

Nov. 28:  Jeff Pearlman will discuss and sign “Sweetness,” 7 p.m. at
Anderson’s Bookshop, 123 W. Jefferson Ave., Naperville.

Nov. 30: Jeff Pearlman will discuss his book, “Sweetness: The
Enigmatic Life of Walter Payton,” at 7:30 p.m. at KAM Isaiah Israel
Congregation, 1100 E. Hyde Park Boulevard. The event is free and open
to the public.