If you are going to scoreboard watch (and I am) here are your rooting interests:
1 PM GAMES
San Francisco over Detroit
Buffalo over New York Giants
4 PM GAMES
New England over Dallas
New Orleans over Tampa Bay
If you are going to scoreboard watch (and I am) here are your rooting interests:
1 PM GAMES
San Francisco over Detroit
Buffalo over New York Giants
4 PM GAMES
New England over Dallas
New Orleans over Tampa Bay
Lines This Week:
PACKERS -14.5 Rams / STEELERS -12 Jags / REDSKINS +1.5 Eagles / LIONS -4.5 49ers / FALCONS -4 Panthers / BENGALS -7 Colts / GIANTS -3.5 Bills / RAVENS -8 Texans / RAIDERS -5.5 Browns / PATRIOTS -7 Cowboys / BUCS +4 Saints / BEARS -3 Vikings / JETS -7 Dolphins
Pick three games against the spread and you can’t duplicate the selections of myself or my brothers.
CURRENTLY ON THE BOARD:
The Brothers: Jon (10-4-1), Jeff (9-5-1), Chris (9-5-1)
The Commenter Perfect Weeks: FQD1911 (2), New Bear in Town (2), BigDaddy (1), DYLbears23 (1), BossBear90 (1), Michael L (1), greenbayman (1), tobijohn (1), Sacramento’s #1 Bears Fan (1), ben in norcal (1), SC Dave (1)
The photo above is what happens to gear from Super Bowl losers.
Didn’t the Bears just play a game? I was kind of shocked to realize it was Wednesday night and I had to write a game preview already. Anyway the Bears play their second consecutive game in primetime, against another division rival, and this is the definition of a must win.
WHY DO I LIKE THE CHICAGO BEARS THIS WEEK?
Chicago Bears 27, Minnesota Vikings 13
As the Cubs steal headlines of both major dailies with their procurement of Theo Epstein’s services, the Bears slide to the second sports story until Sunday night’s contest with the Minnesota Vikings at Soldier Field. They are beginning a two-week stretch of must win football games against their current division rival to the west and their former division rival (Tampa) in the eastern most location of the NFL – London, England. (I will write extensively next week about how ridiculous I find this London game and how Roger Goodell’s manifest destiny concept for the NFL will be his ultimate undoing as commissioner.)
Where do the Bears go from here? They are five weeks into the 2011 campaign and have more far more questions than answers. Can they find professional, capable safety play out of the combination of Harris, Meriweather, Steltz and whomever else they pull off random practice squads? Can they find any consistency at the receiver position without making a big splash before the trade deadline – perhaps acquiring a former favorite target of Mr. Cutler residing in Miami, Florida? Can they survive another game without Gabe Carimi and with Frank Omiyale?
I don’t know the answer to any of these questions. That’s unfair. I know the answer to the third question. No. If the Bears had guts they would have released Frank Omiyale first thing Tuesday morning and sent him to the UFL, if that’s still around. I don’t believe J’Marcus Webb is going to become Anthony Munoz anytime soon but I’m willing to forgive him the mistakes of a young, raw talent attempting to adapt to one of the most difficult positions in football. Omiyale is a dreadful, dreadful football player and his time is beyond gone.
Needless to say the Bears need to get better. They need to improve. And they have plenty of time to do so. A lot of fans, many of you reading this column, would prefer to just type FIRE ANGELO NOW or LOVIE HAS TO GO or CLICHED NEGATIVE FOOTBALL FAN THING. And that’s understandable, given the way the season has started. But I will wait to light the torch and hunt the beast until the Bears are mathematically eliminated from postseason contention. Then and only then will my focus shift from 2011 to 2012. There is no fun for me in rooting for failure, rooting for change at the top, even if that’s what I know must take place for the organization to find sustained, long term success. I live to watch this club every Sunday and there will never be a Sunday I don’t root for them to shellack the opponent.
The next two weeks will determine whether the Bears play meaningful football games in the months of November and December. Winning both will put them at 4-3 heading into the bye, giving them a chance to get fully healthy for the backstretch. But just as important as winning both games would be seeing the Bears improve and gain confidence in the plaguing areas of the first five weeks. Beating Minnesota and Tampa won’t be rewarding if they continue to hand out free rushing yards like candy on Halloween and the Cover 2 continues looking like the Cover Who. Beating Minnesota and Tampa won’t matter if Jared Allen ends Jay Cutler’s season with a couple blindside hits.
So where do the Bears go from here? They go to Soldier Field Sunday night. They play the Minnesota Vikings. The Vikings will want to hand the ball to Adrian Peterson 30-plus times and right now Les Frazier believes that approach can beat the Bears. If it doesn’t, if the Bears win, they’re back to .500. Back to the land of the living. And if the Bears beat the Vikings we can assume they’ve solidified, to some extent, the rush defense.
There are no big fixes. 2011 is now a game-by-gamy proposition. And Sunday night is a very big game.
The NFL trade deadline rarely involves any significant player movement. It just doesn’t happen very often in the league. But there is a deal that can be made right now by the Chicago Bears that will make them better for the next five years. They Bears should deliver a third-round draft pick to the Miami Dolphins for Brandon Marshall.
Why?
This is not a fantasy scenario. This is an easy deal for the club to make and a deal that should be made. It would send a message to the fans, a message to the players and a message to quarterback. That message? We’re going to do everything possible to make our franchise quarterback successful.
I try not to be rash, especially in the immediate aftermath of football games. I invest so much emotionally into these ball games (as I know many of you do) it becomes difficult to remove the impulsive anger/disappointment when stepping back to analyze what took place on the field. So today I present a practical approach, both positive and negative, to looking at where the Bears stand after five weeks of the NFL season.
NEGATIVE
POSITIVE
People tell me it is too early in the season to scoreboard watch. I don’t agree. Right now if you’re a Chicago Bears fan, put the division title out of your mind. The Packers are a far superior football team and will remain so throughout 2011. The Lions are not a far superior football team and the Bears will get another crack at them at Soldier Field down the line. But the Bears are ALREADY three games back of the Lions. So put that at of your mind too, for now.
Go look around the rest of the conference. Dallas? Giants? Falcons? Bucs? Redskins? Eagles? Where is that second wildcard team coming from? The answer is it could be anywhere. Right now the Chicago Bears don’t look anything close to a title contender but winning the next couple weeks will send them into their bye 4-3 and put them in a terrific position to be a playoff team. I repeat: this is not a championship caliber team. But to believe this season is anywhere near over because of the 2-3 start is simply wrong.
OVERALL
The Bears have a home game against the Vikings and a London game against the Bucs. If they can win these two and begin correcting their fairly large-scale errors, they can make a run to the postseason. 9-7 is going to get in and getting in is what it’s all about. Meaningful games in December are what it’s all about. They need to win these two to secure them.
I am angry. I won’t listen to idiots telling me the season is over because 2-3 is one game out of the wild card. But I am angry. Our football team is better than it is being coached. Will that change? I don’t see it. But the Vikings come to town next week. It will be interesting.
It has been a long time since the Bears have been underdogs to the Detroit Lions. It’s been a long time since members of the media, the popular football media of PFT, have predicted the Lions to beat the Bears by 30 points. Is this a new era for the NFC North?
We shall see what these Lovie Smith Bears are all about tonight. We’ll learn about their toughness as they wrestle with not only a good football team but an intense atmosphere. We’ll know, I think somewhat definitively, what to expect from this group for the remainder of the campaign.
Bear down.
Enjoy a day of football without the nervousness of watching the Chicago Bears. Or, perhaps, enjoy your wife and kids enough to excuse your behavior tomorrow night.