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Audibles From the Long Snapper: Trestman, Cutler, Harbaugh, Grey Cup Video

| January 21st, 2013

Trestman Met With Cutler Pre-Hire

Adam Schefter Tweeted the following Sunday morning:

Bears QB Jay Cutler played a small part in Chicago’s HC interview process, meeting with Marc Trestman before he ultimately was hired.

If you don’t follow DaBearsBlog’s Twitter account (you should!) you missed my responses to the Tweet. Here they are:

(1) Either you believe in your quarterback (Cutler) or you don’t. No team ever wins consistently w/ shaky relationship between coach/GM & QB. (2) Whether or not you believe Cutler can lead Bears to playoffs consistently (I do) you must like Bears now operating with unified vision. (3) Will Bears suffer defensively? Answer: yes. Rod Marinelli fleeing proves the impact Lovie had on defensive side of ball. Irreplaceable. (4) Phil Emery is operating under assumption he can restock defensive pantry soundly enough for minimal hit on that side of ball. We wait & see.

 “The Harbaugh Mentality” Reaches Super Bowl

I wrote about it a week ago and it has come to fruition: “The Harbaugh Mentality” has led both brothers to be coaching in the Super Bowl. Two bits from that piece:

When Alex Smith suffered a concussion in November, Jim Harbaugh watched Colin Kaepernick shred the Chicago Bears – at that time the best defense in the league – on a remarkable Monday night. When Kaepernick won his second start against the New Orleans Saints, Harbaugh made the decision that the human tattoo parlor from Nevada, not the Utah game manager, would be his starting quarterback moving forward. It was not that Harbaugh did not believe Alex Smith was capable of winning games. Of course he is. But just winning games is not enough for teams and coaches with title aspirations.

John Harbaugh and the Baltimore Ravens have title aspirations. And with three games to go in the regular they also had an offensive coordinator who’d lost the locker room, a majority of the fan base and his favorite bar stool at Bertha’s in Fells Point. Harbaugh’s Ravens were in the pole position for a division title but that wasn’t enough. Cam Cameron was fired Monday morning, December 10th.

Let’s hope Phil Emery’s decision to fire Lovie Smith pays the same dividends.

Journey to the Grey Cup?

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With Marinelli Out, Attention Turns Defensive

| January 18th, 2013

I don’t know the details surrounding Rod Marinelli leaving the Chicago Bears and, to the best of my knowledge, those details have not been reported elsewhere. Marinelli could certainly have remained the defensive coordinator and led one of the top ten units in the league next year. Did he not want to work for Marc Trestman? Did he resent Phil Emery for firing his boss and buddy Lovie Smith? Did the promotion of Joe DeCamillis to the utterly meaningless role of assistant head coach rub him the wrong way? Was the lure of being on Monte Kiffin’s final defensive staff in Dallas too strong? Any of these answers may be correct. Marinelli’s decision is not.

Now Halas Hall’s first true General Manager/Head Coach team – Phil Emery & Marc Trestman – must decide what coach will be charged with earning the trust of an installed veteran locker room while developing new talent on a consistent basis. It won’t be easy for a new coach to step in front of Tillman, Briggs, Urlacher, Peppers…etc. and demand the love and attention the former defensive coaches did. Perhaps no one can.

But the new defensive coordinator might be looked at as more of a caretaker position than anything else.

Marc Trestman has been hired to re-imagine the entirety of the offense: new protection schemes, new passing game, new attack. Trestman’s role is essentially to usher the Bears into the modern era of NFL football. The new defensive coordinator will have a diametrically different charge: don’t fuck up a good thing.

Will it be a promoted John Hoke? Mel Tucker? Raheem Morris? Mike Singletary? We will likely find out by the end of the day what Trestman and Emery decide. One thing we know based on the track record of these two men? The decision will be handled in a thorough, meticulous manner.

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Marc Trestman Introductory Press Conference

| January 17th, 2013

I will be at a funeral today so there will be very little updated information from me.

Marc Trestman will be introduced at the fourteenth head coach in the history of the Chicago Bears at 11 AM CT.

To watch the live video of the presser simply CLICK HERE.

To listen live there are multiple radio outlets available but the official Chicago sports radio program of DaBearsBlog is Waddle & Silvy on ESPN. To listen to their live audio simply CLICK HERE.

I don’t expect much from press conferences such as these. I certainly don’t expect Trestman to reveal anything by way of philosophy/scheme moving forward. But it should be interesting to see how the man holds up his first attempt before the Chicago media firing squad. How he handles them moving forward will be key to his survival in the city.

We are also still awaiting word on who will run the Bears defense in 2013. Brad Biggs and Jason LaCanfora are both reporting that Rod Marinelli is leaning towards leaving Chicago to be a defensive line coach in Dallas. Does this make sense? Of course not. But Marinelli may be acting out of pure loyalty.

Enjoy. As always you can find the latest short shots from DaBearsBlog by following us (me) on Twitter by CLICKING HERE and adapting to the modern age.

RIP Lindsay Gray, my old friend, my partner on walks to school.

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Marc Trestman Named Head Coach of the Chicago Bears

| January 16th, 2013

Chicago Bears General Manager Phil Emery did not succumb to the league-wide consensus promoting Denver’s Mike McCoy as the “hot candidate” for a head coaching gig. He did not make the safe, David Haugh-approved (I know) decision to reward Bruce Arians’ ten-win season as interim head coach of the #Chuckstrong Colts by moving the 60 year-old lifetime football man into a larger office a few miles west. He did not, even after what felt like three dozen interviews, move in the direction of a young, hungry offensive coordinator like Mike Sullivan, Darrell Bevell or Rick Dennison.

Phil Emery hired Marc Trestman, the head coach of the CFL’s Montreal Alouettes.

As Rich Gannon and Steve Young have filled the airwaves in Chicago and beyond with verbal Valentines directed Trestman’s way, the man from above the border has transition in my mind from intriguing to essential. Here are a few quotes from Young pulled off the Twitter feed of ESPN Chicago’s Michael C. Wright:

Steve Young on Trestman: “He’s a phenomenal offensive mind. He is thoughtful. He’s not gonna scream at people. It’s time…If you have a willing participant, you could make some good music…Guys love him. Find some guys in Montreal that played for him and talk to him. Just a dynamic straight shooter.”

Here is Gannon from a report also on ESPN Chicago:

“He’s very innovative. He’s a terrific playcaller,” Gannon said. “He sees the game through the eyes of the quarterback. He played the position, he’s coached the position. He’s really an expert in that area. I think when you study Jay Cutler, here’s a guy that under Mike Martz was sacked more than any quarterback in the league; he got knocked around, and I don’t think he quite trusted the guys in front of him. That’s all got to get cleaned up, and you’ve got to bring in somebody who can work with the protections and clean up that part of it. Clean up his footwork, clean up the mechanics, and get him feeling good again back in the pocket. I think that’s what Marc does best.”

Those criticizing the Bears for “reaching” on a coach currently running an organization outside the country should be relieved if not persuaded by a Hall of Famer and MVP (under Trestman) endorsing the man’s credentials to lead a professional football team in the states.

I applaud this hire by Phil Emery for many reasons:

  1. It is the first significant movement by the Chicago Bears organization towards becoming a modern NFL franchise. This is an offense/passing league, a quarterback league and very few head coaching candidates have the quarterback coaching credentials of Trestman.
  2. Trestman has a short but important history with Jay Cutler. When they step into their first meeting room (in the next month or so) Trestman will not only be working with thirty year-old Cutty but also working with the memory of a strong-armed kid out of Vanderbilt.
  3. Yes it took place in Canada but Marc Trestman has led AN ENTIRE football team for five years and won two championships. Will that success translate immediately? Who knows. But it means Trestman has experience overseeing the entirety of a roster and managing a full coaching staff. If you discount that fact you fail to acknowledge one of the most difficult transitions from coordinator to head coach.
  4. It is NOT the safe choice. It is NOT the easy choice. And being that Phil Emery had Trestman at Halas Hall for much of Sunday and Monday without anyone – Dickerson, Zaidman, Jensen, Biggs – knowing means how he’s perceived in the local media is not near the top of his Things I’d Like to Achieve list.

Find me another candidate – anywhere in the football world – who fits the Bears bill to this extent.

Now the speculation ends and the analysis begins. How will Trestman fill out his offensive coaching staff? Will Rod Marinelli be retained to run the defense? What types of skill players will Emery bring in to fit the scheme Trestman wants to run? And most importantly, how will the quarterback and coach develop and grow together over the course of their first spring, summer and season together?

Trestman has waited his entire career for the opportunity to be a head coach in the NFL. Waited since he was Jim Kelly’s quarterback coach under Howard Schnellenberger at the University of Miami in 1981. What he does with that opportunity will be the definitive question of his coaching career. The answers start now.

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Trestman & Bevell (& Arians) Identified as Finalists for Head Coaching Job

| January 14th, 2013

His name is Marc Trestman.

LDN20081004DC

Brief Description:

He is a teacher, a quiet leader, a cerebral offensive innovator…etc. He is not a field general and he won’t be the type to inspire men with a fire and brimstone approach. But he is well regarded in NFL circles and worked with Jay Cutler during pre-Combine preparation.

Resume:

1981–84 University of Miami (VC/QB)
1985–86 Minnesota Vikings (RB)
1987 Tampa Bay Buccaneers (QB)
1988/1989 Cleveland Browns (QB/OC)
1990–91 Minnesota Vikings (QB)
1995–96 San Francisco 49ers (OC & QB)
1997 Detroit Lions (QB)
1998-00 Arizona Cardinals (OC & QB)
2001-2003 Oakland Raiders (QB/OC)
2004 Miami Dolphins (QB/AHC)
2005–06 North Carolina State (OC)
2008–present Montreal Alouettes (HC)

His name is Darrell Bevell

Bevell

Brief Description:

Described by many as a head coach in waiting, Bevell thrived this year developing Russell Wilson and getting everything possible out of the Seahawks offense.

Resume:

Westmar University (1996) – Passing game coordinator/Quarterbacks coach
Iowa State University (1997) – Graduate assistant
University of Connecticut (1998–1999) – Wide receivers coach
Green Bay Packers (2000-2002) – Offensive assistant
Green Bay Packers (2003-2005) – Quarterbacks coach
Minnesota Vikings (2006–2010) – Offensive coordinator
Seattle Seahawks (2011–present) – Offensive coordinator

His name is Bruce Arians

arians

Brief Description:

He is one of the most well respected offensive minds in the NFL and everyone he’s ever coached think he’d make a great head coach. In 2012 Arians stepped in for the ailing Chuck Pagano and won 10 games as a head coach.

Resume:

1975–1977 Virginia Tech (GA)
1978–1980  Mississippi State (RB/WR)
1981–1982 Alabama (RB)
1983–1988  Temple head coach
1989–1992  Kansas City Chiefs (RB)
1993–1995 Mississippi State (OC)
1996  New Orleans Saints (TE)
1997 Alabama (OC)
1998–2000 Indianapolis Colts (QB)
2001–2003 Cleveland Browns (OC)
2004–2006 Pittsburgh Steelers (WR)
2007–2011 Pittsburgh Steelers (OC)
2012–present Indianapolis Colts (OC/interim HC)

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The Impact of injuries on the NFC North in 2013

| January 14th, 2013

“If only our guys had stayed healthy.”

This common lament from NFL fans at the end of a disappointing season reflects the harsh reality that injuries are an unavoidable part of football.  I don’t particularly like using injuries as an excuse, but there is no denying that the health (or lack thereof) of certain key players can have a dramatic impact on a team’s fortunes in a season.

With that in mind, I thought I’d take a look at the four teams in the NFC North to see how they were affected by injuries in 2013.  I had some difficulty here in trying to find one perfect metric for looking at injuries, and ended up settling on four different ways.  No one of them is perfect , but together they should give you a pretty good idea of how badly teams were impacted by injuries.  Before we get to the numbers, let’s take a minute to briefly explain each method.

Procedure

WARNING: if you don’t care about how I did what I did and just want to see the results, you should save yourself a lot of time and skip to the results section.

The first metric I examined was games missed due to injury.  This simply counts any time a player on the roster is ruled inactive for a week due to an injury.  This is useful for seeing how much injuries impacted the roster as a whole, but completely ignores the value of a player.  A superstar quarterback missing a game means a lot more to the team than a fringe roster player who only plays on special teams, but they both count the same here.

The second metric, therefore, is starts missed.  This looks only at games missed due to injury by players expected to be starters with a fully healthy team (so the standard eleven on offense and defense, plus a third wide receiver and cornerback).  This helps distinguish in player value a little bit, but still treats all starters equally when in fact that is not close to being accurate.

The third metric looks at starts missed by Pro Bowl performers, that is, players who have made a Pro Bowl since 2012 playing for their current team.  The idea here is to look at players who are high-impact starters expected to be the best players on the field.  The flaws are that the Pro Bowl voting system is far from perfect, and again, there is still a difference in value between a star quarterback like Aaron Rodgers and a nice fullback like John Kuhn, both of whom qualified as Pro Bowl players here.

Finally, I looked at money lost due to injuries, assuming each players gets 1/16th of his cap for the season.  So if a player has a cap hit of $16 million for the year and missed one game due to injury, the team just “lost” $1 million.  The general idea is that teams pay their better players more money, but there will always be guys who are overpaid or underpaid, sometimes dramatically (Chicago defensive end Julius Peppers, for example, had the second highest cap hit in the NFC North this year but did not play anywhere close to that level).  Players who particularly get overlooked here are young players playing well on relatively small rookie contracts (think of guys like safety Harrison Smith and tight end Kyle Rudolph in Minnesota).

So again, let me emphasize that no one approach is perfect here.  Different teams will appear to have larger injury issues than they actually did (or vice-versa) if you look only at one of the four metrics, but looking at all four should generally give us a solid idea of how teams fared relative to each other.

I should also mention that all salary cap numbers come from Spotrac and all injury information is from Pro Football Reference.

Results

Here are the totals for each team in the NFC North in the four injury areas.  For those who are curious, the raw data can be seen here.  I had bold and italicized fonts to indicate starters and Pro Bowl players, but it didn’t copy and paste from Excel to Google Docs, and I didn’t care enough to go back and add it in manually.  Sorry.

Discussion

In three of the four areas, the Green Bay Packers comes out as the NFC North team that suffered from injuries the most in 2013.  This is probably not very surprising to anybody who followed the division closely this year-their injury woes were well documented-and makes their division title all the more impressive.

What is interesting to me is that, despite having almost twice as many games lost due to injury as any other NFC North team, the Packers were not that far off from some of the others in starts, Pro Bowl Starts, and money lost.  This suggests that a good number of their injuries were to backups and special teams players, although they still certainly lost their fair share of top-shelf talent as well.

The Chicago Bears stand out as an interesting case here.  They lost the fewest games due to injury of any team in the NFC North, but were well ahead of everybody but Green Bay in money and starts lost.  They also suffered more Pro Bowl starts lost than the rest of the NFC North combined.   So it would appear the Bears stayed relatively healthy overall but just had some bad luck in terms of the specific players who went down with injuries.

Another thing I find interesting about Chicago is that the overwhelming majority of their injuries were to the defense.  Of the 86 games lost to injury, 80 were by the defense, and 61 of the 66 starts lost-including all 28 Pro Bowl starts-came on the defensive side of the ball.   Chicago’s offense stayed remarkably healthy this year, while their defense did not.

The Detroit Lions lost significantly more games overall than the Minnesota Vikings did, but the two teams were highly comparable in both starts and money lost due to injury.  Minnesota also lost significantly more Pro Bowl starts, although part of that could be due to the fact that Detroit has a shockingly low number of players on their team who have made the Pro Bowl; the only Lions currently on the roster who have played in the Pro Bowl for Detroit are wide receiver Calvin Johnson, defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh, and long snapper Don Muhlbach.

Conclusion

So there you have it.  Some specific numbers you can use when you want to argue with somebody about how much more your team was hurt by injuries than their team this year.  I just want to stress one more time that no one number here is perfect, as every method has specific flaws and players it will overvalue or undervalue.  And ultimately there is no numerical way to fully evaluate the impact of injuries on a team, as there is no way to objectively assign value to every player that misses time due to injury.

In the future, I would love to expand this study to the entire NFL in order to better give context to the NFC North teams, but that seems like too much work to be worth the effort, especially given that it gets harder to do the less well you know the teams, and I know the NFC North teams better than any others in the league.  However, if anybody is interested in seeing the entire NFL, I may be willing to reconsider, but they are going to have to help me compile the data.

Tagged: ,

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The Harbaugh Mentality: Emery Acknowledges Titles All That Matter

| January 14th, 2013

When Alex Smith suffered a concussion in November, Jim Harbaugh watched Colin Kaepernick shred the Chicago Bears – at that time the best defense in the league – on a remarkable Monday night. When Kaepernick won his second start against the New Orleans Saints, Harbaugh made the decision that the human tattoo parlor from Nevada, not the Utah game manager, would be his starting quarterback moving forward. It was not that Harbaugh did not believe Alex Smith was capable of winning games. Of course he is. But just winning games is not enough for teams and coaches with title aspirations.

And you saw Saturday night, against the Green Bay Packers, what that decision meant. San Francisco has one of the league’s top defenses and they STILL needed 32 points to beat the Packers. They did so with ease. They did so because Dom Capers had no answers for Kaepernick’s legs.

John Harbaugh and the Baltimore Ravens have title aspirations. And with three games to go in the regular they also had an offensive coordinator who’d lost the locker room, a majority of the fan base and his favorite bar stool at Bertha’s in Fells Point. Harbaugh’s Ravens were in the pole position for a division title but that wasn’t enough. Cam Cameron was fired Monday morning, December 10th.

Since that firing? The Ravens embarrassed the defending Super Bowl champion Giants in Baltimore and won two playoff games on the strength of their offense and off the hot hand of their oft-maligned quarterback, Joe Flacco. With Cameron calling the plays they were a lifeless entity warbling towards the postseason. With Jim Caldwell assuming those duties the Ravens are on the precipice of reaching the Super Bowl.

Lovie Smith won games. He won twenty more than he lost as head coach of the Chicago Bears. But on the day after the end of the 2012 regular season Phil Emery embraced The Harbaugh Mentality. Winning games is not enough. Winning championships is all that matter. And winning championship in the modern NFL requires a potent, powerful offense.

This was not a popular choice nationally.

LovieSportsNationpoll

Neither was the decision to bench Alex Smith off an injury. Neither was the decision to fire Cam Cameron with three games to go. The difficult decision are often not the popular ones. But the unpopular decisions are often met with the greatest results.

The essence of Emery’s decision to remove Lovie was on display this weekend in San Francisco and Denver. To be great an organization must be willing to abandon being consistently good enough.

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Guest Reverend's Rant & Four Weekend Gambling Ideas

| January 12th, 2013

Last weekend I took a shot with the Cincinnati Bengals and they let me down. All four games were covered by the favorites and all four games failed to hit the over. (Read: Vegas took a bath.) This weekend I present a bet for every game. One bet – prop or otherwise – to keep you excited about the prospect of making some money this weekend.

Ravens under 17.5 vs. Broncos

Joe Flacco and the Ravens offense flung the ball all over the field, at home, against a pretty terrible Colts defense and scored 24 in the win. Now they’ll travel to Denver, into the altitude, against the NFL’s best edge rushers down the stretch. The Ravens had no answer for Robert Mathis a week ago and they’ll have none for Miller and Dumervil this week.

Packers at Niners – First Score of Game – FG or Safety (+125)

Someone in Vegas has determined it is more likely for this contest to open its scoring with a touchdown than a field goal. I have to believe this has much to do with the fact that the kicking will be done by Mason Crosby or David Akers/Ryan Longwell. I’m not scared away. And if I can get the + from Vegas for an opening FG I am ALWAYS going to take it.

Seattle at Atlanta – Over 46 Points

Can Atlanta stop the run on early downs? Not particularly well. Can they rush the quarterback? Not particularly well. Does Seattle have an answer on their roster to contain Tony Gonzalez, a player who I believe will be possessed en route to what he believes is his finest chance for a title? No. There will be points in Atlanta and I think more than 50 of em. (I think it’s a 27-24 kinda game.)

New England -9 Houston

Here’s why I am going with the Pats and the points: I think New England is a terrific team and I think Houston – after starting 11-1 – stinks. Brady could throw for 450 Sunday afternoon.

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CFL Video: Why Trestman's Alouettes Record Means Nothing

| January 11th, 2013

I am confident in one thing after doing some exhaustive research regarding Marc Trestman and the CFL: none of his success in Montreal will translate to Chicago. This does not mean he won’t be a terrific NFL coach but these sports are not similar.

For instance, explain to me what happens here:

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Candidate Videos: Rick Dennison, Bruce Arians, Darrell Bevell

| January 10th, 2013

Here are some videos that might offer Bears fans a particular perspective into the personalities of men being considered by GM Phil Emery as the next head coach of the Chicago Bears.

Houston Texans offensive coordinator Rick Dennison:

Here are a pair of recent interviews with Colts interim head coach/offensive coordinator Bruce Arians:

Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell: