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Draft Rounds Two & Three: Bears Pick 62, 93

| April 29th, 2011

I think most of us expect the Bears to look defensive tackle in the second round and possibly “steal” wideout in the third. You know my preference. Live and die blockers tonight.

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Available on the Second Day: Offensive Line

| April 29th, 2011

A few things to note about last year’s first round for the Chicago Bears.  (1) Team don’t trade in front of other teams for no reason.  The Chiefs believed the Bears wanted Jon Baldwin at wide receiver.  I think they might have been right.  (2) In that regard, the Bears were insanely lucky about the Jerry Angelo front office “glitch” that prohibited them making that selection.  Spend the cash, sign Sidney Rice.  (3) Angelo admitted that if Carimi were off the board, the Bears were selecting DT Stephen Paea out of California.  (4) The Bears got the guy they needed. 

With the knowledge of number three above, I assume Jerry and company will believe they’ve appeased the fans with the half-Jewish, all-awesome Gabe Carimi and will now draft what they want most: defensive line depth.  But I don’t care.  Here are the offensive line prospects who might be of interest today.  Will these guys be there?  Who the hell knows?  But when Chris Ponder goes 12th in an NFL Draft, all bets are off.

Note: You guys discussed Wisconsin’s John Moffitt yesterday in the comments and I discussed Florida State’s guard/center combo Rodney Hudson last week.  Both are likely to be available at the tail end of tonight’s second round.

THE GUARDS
(All Descriptions From CNNSI.com)

Orlando Franklin, Miami
Positives: “Big offensive lineman who’s shown flashes of
ability the past three years. Quickly sets up off the snap, keeps his
feet moving,
and makes terrific use of body positioning.
Stays square, controls defenders once engaged at the point of attack,
and anchors
in pass protection. Strong enough to ride
oncoming rushers from the play.”

Negatives: Does too
much leaning on opponents and rarely finishes blocks. Ineffective with
his hands and displays marginal strength.
Played left tackle yet does not possess the
footwork necessary to block the edge. Slow if asked to kick out or pull
and shows
no skill in motion.

Analysis: “Franklin
is a size prospect who has been productive on the college level but has
not been the consistent force many thought
possible. His technique is still rough around
the edges, but his size alone gives him good upside. He’s likely to be
over-drafted
and may take a while to develop.”

Marcus Cannon (great name), TCU
Positives: “Large, athletic blocker who easily controls
defenders once engaged the point of attack. Blocks with good lean, shows
the
ability to adjust, and stays square. Quickly
gets his hands into defenders, rides opponents from their angle of
attack, and
keeps his feet moving. Gets movement run
blocking and effectively blocks with his legs. Solid footwork sliding
out off the
edge. Large enough to engulf opponents. Moves
well on his feet.”

Negatives: “Must properly condition himself, as he’s too big. Played upwards of 375 pounds as a senior.”

Analysis: “At
the top of his game, Cannon is a blocking prospect who can be a
dominant force at several positions up front. He comes
with starting potential once he smoothes out the
rough edges of his game and commits himself to proper conditioning off
the
field.”

Ben Ijalana, Villanova

Positives: “Large, powerful college left tackle that
projects to the right side in the NFL. Big bodied lineman with the size
and strength
to swallow or engulf defenders at the point of
attack. Extends his hands, keeps his feet moving, and is patient in pass
protection.
Keeps his head on a swivel, shows good
awareness, and easily controls opponents at the point of attack. Blocks
with a wide
base, uses his entire frame, and is effective
when he bends his knees. Gets movement in run blocking and easily turns
defenders
from the action.”

Negatives: “Lacks
agility, struggles to adjust, and ineffective in motion. Lumbers about
the field and does not display top footwork
sliding out at left tackle. Exploited by speedy
rushers. Struggled in the pre-draft process recovering from sports
hernia
surgery.”

Analysis: “Ijalana
been productive throughout his college career and possesses enough size
and strength to be used at right tackle or
guard in the NFL. He improved his game as a
senior when he was more diligent with his mechanics, and he will be
productive
in the NFL if he does the little things well on a
consistent basis.”

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The Bears First Round Pick: Gabe Carimi

| April 28th, 2011

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Analysis From Me

Positives: He is a four-year starter in a great linemen conference.  Mike Mayock described him a a nasty player in the model of John Runyan.  He can start at either guard position or right tackle for the Bears tomorrow, allowing them to move J’Marcus Webb to left tackle as was discussed much of last year.  Also, Carimi thought he was the best tackle in the draft.  Welcome to Chicago.  Prove it.

Negatives: Struggles with some speed rushers due to inconsistent footwork, but that was on the left side primarily.  His athleticism is sometimes questioned for that reason but I’ll take grit and toughness over athleticism on the line any day.

Overall: I don’t love the pick.  I adore it.  I never thought it could happen.

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Bears Front Office Will Be Tested This Week

| April 28th, 2011

For the first time since the advent of free agency, NFL franchises will draft prior to the acquisition of free agents.  This was the message of football-business expert Andrew Brandt on the Four Letters and this is a message that should resonate with NFL fans.  Why?  Because 32 teams are competing for a Super Bowl title and, of the true contenders, it may very well be the front office that handles the confusion of the next few days that ends up hoisting the Lombardi in Indianapolis next February.

The league will be open for business as of 7 AM (CT) tomorrow morning with player trades possibly as early as the beginning of the second round (depending on legal disputes).  If the 8th Circuit rejects the league’s proposal, free agency is likely to begin Monday morning.  NFL franchises do not generally excel at operating on the fly.  They are rigidly planed organizations.  Bill Parcells used to have his travel arrangements for the entire season finalized before the start of training camp and would be upset when those plans were altered by anything non-natural.  32 NFL franchises will be forced to change their agendas.  And change is basically overnight. 

Are Jerry Angelo and his new right-hand Tim Ruskell up to this task?  We are soon to find out.  The Bears have specific needs overall, desperately seeking offensive line help and a big target, playmaking wide receiver.  What were the Bears targeting in the free agency market?  How confident are they about convincing a Sidney Rice-type to join Jay Cutler in Chicago?  Can Jerry move back in the draft to acquire talent off another roster (available tomorrow) with a pair of second-round selections?  Who knows.

The Bears are a Super Bowl contender in 2012.  Will their front office adapt to the insanity of this week and put them in a better position to win their first title in 26 years?  We start answering those questions tonight.

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A Poem For Draft Day

| April 28th, 2011

When the evening finds us at pick twenty-nine
Select then a player for the offensive line

As pressure does mount, these choices seem hard
So find thee a tackle, a center, or guard

For Kreutz hath been the roots of this unit since Dick
But Olin’s now rollin’ to the retirement shtick.
7-3’s a mountain, either a mountain or hill
But a mountain’s no good with no position to fill

The young kid from Vandy hath not been so dandy
Moving around like a beagle in heat
Frank often stank though the pundits thought him handy
I saw him struggle to keep 6 on his feet

Roberto.
Does anybody ever write about Roberto?

So when the evening finds us at pick twenty-nine
Select then a player for the offensive line

Austin the Tarheel, that wideout from Pitt
May be great players, may be the shit
But one thing’s for certain, or I could be insaney
Without offensive linemen
Get used to Caleb Hanie

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NFL Draft Round One Thread: Bears Pick 29th

| April 27th, 2011

I’ll be doing a rolling Twitter commentary here for the duration of the first round, followed by an analysis of the selection (if Jerry doesn’t pull a Jerry and trade out of the round altogether).

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Pre-Draft Audibles From the Long Snapper

| April 26th, 2011

Here’s my draft week plan.  I’ll have threads up for each of the draft rounds and then I’ll go and find all the information I can on each of the players selected by the Chicago Bears.  (Saturday might be a bit trickier as I’ll be on the golf course.)  I’m hoping they are all offensive linemen.

MARTZ REJECTS CONTRACT EXTENSION

PFT reported a day or so ago that Mike Martz rejected a one-year contract extension that would have kept him as the offensive coordinator of the Bears throughout the term of Lovie Smith’s tenure.  Why did he reject it?  Because it included no pay raise.  (Dave Toub rejected a similar offer.)  These rejections are not substantial but they are telling.  PFT relegates the story to the Bears being “stingy” but that notion feels antiquated in the wake of their signing high-priced free agents like Julius Peppers and making Lovie Smith one of the richest head coaches in the league.  The truth is the Bears still do not have 100% faith in their head coach and see no reason to overpay the staff of a head man they will fire at the first sign of a dismal season.

STEVE SMITH DOES NOT PLAN TO RETURN TO CAROLINA

A very detailed report has Steve Smith cleaning out his locker and luxury suite in Carolina, as he does not expect to return to the team this season.  If you don’t think Smith has more in the tank, you’re crazy.  His career has has been derailed by that cavalcade of crap quarterbacks they keep lining up under center down there.  If the Bears can get him for a mid-round pick, they should do that immediately.

MOCKING THE MOCK DRAFTS

Great piece in the Orlando Sentinel on the bullshit industry that has been spawned by the high profile of the NFL draft.  To read it, click here.

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Bears Should Leave Marvin Austin on the Board

| April 21st, 2011

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Taking a look around the Mock Draft Universe, it seems many football analysts believe the Chicago Bears (with fearless leadership from Jerry Angelo and Lovie Smith) will seriously consider taking North Carolina defensive tackle Marvin Austin with their first-round selection.  PFT breaks down the choice this way:
Austin’s college career left much to be desired (nine career sacks), but talent will keep him in round one. The nation’s former top defensive tackle recruit has rehabbed his stock with an exceptional offseason, dominating at the East-West Shrine and standing out at the Combine and Tar Heels’ Pro Day. 

Yes Austin was an underachiever during his time at North Carolina but that’s not why the Bears should leave him be.  Yes Austin was dismissed from UNC after inappropriate contact with an agent in 2010 but that’s not reason enough for the Bears to look elsewhere.  No the Bears should not even consider selecting Marvin Austin with the twenty-ninth overall pick in the draft because Marvin Austin’s defensive tackle skills would make him terrible at blocking for the quarterback.

The Bears have one glaring need heading into the 2011 season: blockers.  Sure they could use more depth on the defensive line but there current roster is more than capable of being a dominant unit.  They could also use a playmaking wide receiver but they’re not finding a #1 at the back end of the first round without a bit of luck.  The Bears need offensive linemen, plain and simple, and they need a bunch of ’em.
Michael C. Wright Tweeted Angelo’s press conference quote that the Bears are not targeting guards/centers, instead focusing on size.  Please tell me this is posturing to the media and not factual.  The Bears need a new center soon.  They could upgrade at both guard spots (and both tackle spots for that matter).  No position on the offensive line should be deemed safe and the best offensive lineman available at 29 – according to JA, Love-dawg and Rusky – should become a Bear Thursday night.
That is not Mavin Austin.  No matter how deep into his background the Bears look, they’re not going to find Jimbo Covert.

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A Closer Look at the 2011 Bears Schedule

| April 19th, 2011

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To look at the previous post, listing the schedule, click here.

Analyzing potential draft picks is the element of NFL writing I find most boring.  Coming in a close second is analyzing the schedule on the day of its release.  No one knows in April how good the Broncos or Chiefs will be in November.  No one knows if the Vikings will solve their quarterback issues or if the Green Bay Packers will stay healthy.  Three words pretty much sum up the coming season, when the discussion is happening in April: no one knows.

Here’s what we do know:
  • The Bears and Packers on Christmas night will be one of the most heavily watched football games of the year.  When Christmas falls on Sunday, the NFL flips its entire schedule to Saturday and gives two teams the national spotlight.  Bears/Pack are it.
  • I like to look at the schedule and target trouble areas.  The trouble three-game stretch for the Bears is the first three games of their season: home Falcons, at Saints, home Packers.  That is the only stretch that seems scary at this point.
  • So much for the Chicago weather having an impact.  The Bears have only one home game in December – against the Seattle Seahawks.
  • I don’t ever remember the NFL stacking all four Bears AFC opponents in consecutive weeks.  Since these games have no tiebreaker impact, I’d prefer they be earlier in the year as opposed to November-December.
  • Didn’t the NFL get the Bears memo stating we will only play the Saints in cold weather?
  • I was happy to see the Lions with a Monday night game.
  • I’m thrilled the Bears avoided the opening night contest with the Packers.  Home teams never lose that game.  That being said, go Saints!
  • Bears at Broncos.  December 11th.  Toughness Bowl.