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The Meek Inherit the Championship

| February 7th, 2011

The trophy that bears their hero’s name is returning to Green Bay as the Packers have won Super Bowl XLV.  It was a bizarre football game that I’ve heard some people actually call great. Great?  A game where one team’s quarterback couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn and the other team’s receivers played like nervous high schoolers on a Friday night is a great game?  A game where the supposed veteran outfit played like first-timers, committing moronic personal fouls in big spots and fumbling on game-altering drives is great?

One thing is certain: Aaron Rodgers is a great quarterback.  An all-time great quarterback.  And while the Bears have had more success against him than most defenses in the NFL, it will now be Rodgers who stands between the Bears and their quest for a second Super Bowl.  Rodgers was a marksman last night, his receivers costing him some of the gaudiest numbers in the history of the league’s most celebrated game.  Maybe another 100 yards.  Maybe a couple more touchdowns.  And now he’s got the same number of Super Bowl titles as Peyton Manning.
Today begins the 2011 season.  Sure there will be some labor issues over the coming months that dominate the conversation but I don’t believe for a second that a single meaningful day of football will be missed.  Not with this much money at stake and not with this much of a sure thing.  The target is now re-directed to February 2012 in Indianapolis – the perfect venue for a midwestern club to win the whole thing.  Free agency, draft, summer, season.  The Packers have their fourth Super Bowl.  It is time for the Bears to cut the deficit in half.

Congrats to MikeBrownhadaPosse – winner of the Fantasy Playoffs.  His first column will debut in March as we give him an opportunity to preview free agency for the Bears.

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Super Bowl Sunday Mega Thread

| February 4th, 2011

I’ll be updating with thoughts using the Twitter widget.  Don’t be surprised if my updates start to seem a bit messy by the fourth quarter.


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Super Bowl Saturday Show!

| February 4th, 2011

You must listen to the voicemail midway through the show.  It is beyond funny.
____________________________________________________________________________
The Fantasy Playoffs Super Bowl Selections

BigT
Antwaan Randle El (as QB only), Rashard Mendenhall, Donald Driver

Shady
Ben Roethlisberger, James Starks, James Jones

IrishSweetness
Ben Roethlisberger, James Starks, Greg Jennings
MikeBrownhadaPosse
Ben Roethlisberger, James Starks, Greg Jennings
(I have sent tie-breaker questions to Irish and Posse.)

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Super Bowl XLV Game Preview

| February 3rd, 2011

Editor’s Note: T-shirt presentation will be next week.  We’ll present a few options by midweek.

I’ll wake up Sunday morning with about as little enthusiasm for a Super Bowl as I’ve ever had.  Losing on Championship Sunday relegates “the big game” to an excuse for drunken ribaldry – not than an excuse is required.  Maybe I’m biased but this game has very little juice.  The New York sports media has been overwhelmed with Madoff and the Mets.  The Chicago media is rightfully Bulls crazy.  ESPN has tried to create story lines over the last ten days but there has been far more coverage about the league and the upcoming CBA debate.  Nevertheless, I pick the game.

Pittsburgh Steelers
over
Green Bay Packers

Why do I Like the Pittsburgh Steelers this week?
  • I never like the Green Bay Packers.
  • With the Packers offensive line, they’ll have no hope of establishing any ground game against the Steelers.  This means they’ll need to invoke the Patriots-spread attack that has dominated Pitt for years.  I don’t like teams straying from what they do best in the Super Bowl and the spread is not what the Packers do best.
  • You can run the ball on the Packers and the Steelers will certainly find that out.  But when the Packers go all-out to pressure, I look for Rashard Mendenhall and Heath Miller to be major factors in the short passing game.  The Bears left multiple first downs on the field two weeks ago.  The Steelers take what’s there.
  • The Pack should get pressure on Ben Roethlisberger.  Multiple sacks. (Matthews, Raji)
  • The Steelers should get pressure on Aaron Rodgers.  Multiple sacks. (Harrison, Timmons)
  • If it comes down to which signal caller is the better big game player, I’m taking the Unwanted Sexual Advances in a Barroom Toilet.  Rodgers has a putrid record in close games and Large Benjamin has proven it on the sport’s biggest stage.
  • This is a big moment for Rodgers, however.  He’s struggled against Chicago and the Jets, the two best defenses he faces this season.  Now he’s facing the best defense in the league.  A poor effort might have some calling him a quarterback who stacks his numbers against inferior opponents.  And by “some” I mean “me”.
  • If this game comes down to the kickers, I like Mason Crosby.
  • Coin flip: Packers
  • MVP: Rashard Mendenhall
Pittsburgh Steelers 20, Green Bay Packers 17

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What the Bears Can Learn From Sunday

| January 31st, 2011

Editor’s Note: The final four remaining in the Fantasy Playoffs (Shady, BigT, IrishSweetness and MikeBrownhadaPosse) need to have their Super Bowl selections to me by Friday at 12:00 pm CST.  

Editor’s Note II: Keep piling on the t-shirt ideas on the post below.  I’m going to look at the options on Thursday and will present the finalists with the Saturday Show this week.

I try not to overstate the lessons to be learned from the teams who reach the Super Bowl.  The Packers did not plan to need a shoestring tackle of DaSean Jackson to advance from the Wild Card round.  They didn’t game plan a B.J. Raji pick six against the Bears third-string quarterback when they gathered for training camp this summer.  Football is not baseball.  There are no best-of sevens.  Unlike most other sports, the bounce of the ball on a single play can determine the fate of an entire season.  But still these two clubs provide valuable examples of how to excel in the current NFL.

One Quarterback, One Scheme
Every play Aaron Rodgers has run in the league and Ben Roethlisberger has run since 2007 have been called by the same man – Mike McCarthy in Green Bay and Bruce Arians in Pittsburgh.  Jay Cutler has had three coordinators, and three distinctly different offensive styles, in the last three seasons.  You will not find a successful quarterback in NFL history who has endured without continuity of style from the play-calling department.
Draft Your Bread & Butter
The Pittsburgh Steelers first two picks of the past four drafts. 2010: center, defensive end.  2009: defensive tackle, guard.  2008: running back, wide receiver.  2007: linebacker, defensive end.  Do you think they’re a team that prides themselves on running the ball and stopping the run?  Outside of a misguided selection of Limas Sweed in 2008, the Steelers stick to their plan.  They find the players best suited to fit their identity.
The Green Bay Packers first and second picks over the past four drafts.  2010: offensive tackle, defensive tackle.  2009: defensive tackle, edge-rushing linebacker.  2008: wide receiver, quarterback.  2007: defensive tackle, running back.  Dom Capers becomes defensive coordinator in 2009, installs the 3-4, and they take two defensive tackles and an edge linebacker.  The other three selections protect the perimeter, throw the ball and catch the ball.  The core of the current Packers – passing game and pressure.  They may not always get it right on draft day but they have a plan.
The Chicago Bears first and second picks over the past four drafts.  2010: (no picks first two rounds) safety, defensive end.  2009: defensive tackle, wide receiver.  2008: offensive tackle, running back.  2007: tight end, defensive end.   (Side note, what Wal-Mart you think Dan Bazuin is managing these days?)  The Bears seem to employ the “best player available” technique but I’ve found that approach to be a cop out.  Jerry Angelo and the Bears need to start drafting exclusively for need and that means attacking the offensive line position with gusto this April.  This draft will be an interesting test of organizational direction.

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2010 Chicago Bears: Final Evaluation

| January 26th, 2011

Evaluating the 2010 Chicago Bears was a difficult proposition.  There seemed to be a success ultimatum as we believed we were looking at the end of tenures for both Lovie Smith and GM Jerry Angelo.  Make the playoffs or else.  Win a playoff game or else.  The season brought two new coordinators and one of the game’s elite edge rushers in what was believed to be a last-ditch effort to save the jobs of the current Halas Hall establishment.
Then something changed.  They stopped looking like a team at the end of the rope and started playing like a team at the start of successful run.  Young defensive linemen making big plays.  Young receivers making plays on the outside.  New corners establishing themselves opposite Charles Tillman.  The offensive linemen got better, a bit, as the year went on.  The old dogs were still there – Urlacher, Briggs, Peanut, Chris Harris, Jay, Forte, Skunk – but this was clearly not an aged group trying to win before the window closed.  
I don’t want to spend all offseason analyzing what transpired over the 2010 season.  So today I end the evaluation period.  Starting next week and after the Super Bowl, it’s all-systems-go on the 2011 campaign.  A year I truly believe can be and should be special.   
On the B-side we’ll look at every area of the Chicago Bears roster.


Quarterbacks

Forget the Jay Cutler “controversy”.  It’ll be nothing more than Steve Rosenbloom’s catch phrase whenever Jay struggles in the future.  Jay’s development in 2010 was terrific and should continue next year.  The Bears also established in the NFC title game that they have a more than serviceable backup in Caleb Hanie.  
Running Backs, Tight Ends
These are two positions where the Bears should literally spend none of their attention for the next nine months.
Wide Receivers
Johnny Knox and Devin Hester are terrific speed options on the outside and Earl Bennett has proven to be a reliable slot/possession man and a favorite target of Jay Cutler.  But the Bears can not enter another season without a proven threat at the position.  They need a player that can catch a slant route and take it to the house.  They need a player who can beat a corner for a jump ball in the end zone (the Packers have three).  They need a verifiable #1.   
Offensive Line
Three parts.  (1) Decide whether Olin Kreutz and Roberto Garza have more left in the tank.  (2) Evaluate the potential and find true positions for Chris Williams and J’Marcus Webb.  (3) Cut Frank Omiyale.  Seriously, I don’t have the patience.  Would anyone have any issue with the Bears taking seven offensive linemen in this year’s draft and hoping to strike gold with one or two?
Defensive Line
Not sure how to complain about these guys.  
Linebackers
Urlacher and Briggs are two of the best in the league but the Bears need to start developing young talent at this position for two reasons: (1) Urlacher/Briggs won’t be able to stay this healthy for an entire season very often and (2) Urlacher and Briggs aren’t going to be here forever.  Re-signing Pisa Tinoisamoa is not a must and I expect the Bears to look at this position relatively early in the draft.
Secondary
Assuming Chris Harris and Danieal Manning return, developing Major Wright becomes to the top priority at safety.  Peanut had an excellent season and Tim Jennings was perhaps the defense’s biggest surprise.  DJ Moore showed excellent ballhawk at the nickel corner spot.  Depth at corner is a need for every team, every offseason, and the Bears won’t be the only fanbase clamoring for their club to sign Namdi Asomugha.
Special Teams
The Bears need to re-sign Rashied Davis, Corey Graham to avoid the mistake they made several years ago when they let Brendon Ayanbadejo go.  They can’t afford to let Brad Maynard walk but they must bring competition to camp this summer. 

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Coaching Continuity a Must This Offseason

| January 26th, 2011

Editor’s Note: If this were a non-fiction book, the full title would be Coaching Continuity a Must This Offseason, or The Stupidity of Steve Rosenbloom.

I wake up this morning and check out the Tribune sports website and see that Steve Rosenbloom has decided Mike Martz needs to be fired as offensive coordinator of the Chicago Bears.  I just shook my head.  As most of you know, I was born and raised in New Jersey and have lived in New York City for the past decade.  The birthplace of sports radio.  The home of Mike Lupica, my sports literary hero.  I love Chicago, however.  The Bears, of course, but also Wrigley Field and Ozzie Guillen and the Jordan Bulls and Steppenwolf Theatre and deep dish and Old Style and the broad’s voice at O’Hare that sounds like my friend Steph.  It’s my second home.  The fact that Chicago sports fans, my favorite in the universe, have to deal with such consistently third-rate sports journalists from major news outlets is one of the most depressing things going.

If Mike Martz is responsible for Todd Collins playing two series in the NFC Championship Game, he should be slapped across the mouth and chastised publicly in Millennium Park.  (I contend, however, that decisions like these should always be on the head coach.)  But placing Collins in the #2 role does not overshadow the remarkable improvements the quarterback and offense made in 2010.  Martz discovered, after the bye week, the balance required to effectively run an offense in Chicago.  By season’s end he had begun taking full advantage of Matt Forte’s skill set.  He was a strong offensive line from something special.

Rosenbloom actually criticizes Martz for not running a typical Martz offense, as if he would have preferred to see the Bears struggle all season in the post-Coryell system as opposed to seeing an intelligent playcaller adapt to the abilities of his talent.  He criticizes the Bears for not running the ball enough late in the game Sunday when the opposition expected a run on every single damn play and had begun bottling up Forte on every carry.  The problem Sunday were not Martz’ play calls, with the exception of the scratch-your-head Earl Bennett end around.  The problems were the inability of the starting quarterback to find a wide open Devin Hester and the third-stringer to avoid B.J. Raji and hit Matt Forte instead of throwing a game-ending pick.  The calls were fine.  The execution was garbage. 
The best part of Rosenbloom’s piece?  He advocated the promotion of Mike Tice to playcaller.  Tice, you might know, oversaw the worst unit on the football team for the duration of the season.  Tice, you might not know, has never called a play in a football game in his life.    
The Bears must maintain every facet of this coaching staff for at least the duration of the 2011 season.  They can not force Jay Cutler into his fourth offensive system in four years.  They can not expect a young offensive line, young receiving corps to improve with playbook turnover every season.  Look no further than the two teams playing in next week’s Super Bowl to realize the importance of system continuity and organizational faith.  
The Bears were one game away from the Super Bowl with this coaching staff.  These coaches proved this season they can adapt.  They can change.  They deserve another chance to win two more games.

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Design Your Own DaBearsBlog T-Shirt

| January 25th, 2011

Note: Super Bowl coverage, with a complete lack of enthusiasm, will begin mid-week.  

We sold a lot of our various t-shirts, still available here, and would like to thank you fans for your support.  We do listen to your feedback and many of you have expressed your own ideas as to what the next DaBearsBlog t-shirt design should be.  So here’s what we’re thinking….

I want you each to present a t-shirt design idea and present it in the Comments section below.  Feel free to debate details and re-design/improve on each other’s ideas.  I’ll shuffle through make a list of three or four finalists and then you can all vote on what you’d like the shirt to be.  
As an added bonus, the back of the shirt will not only include…
DABEARSBLOG.COM
2011
ChicagoNow logo
…but also include your particular handle, i.e. GPLDAN.
The only stipulation is keep it to two colors to keep printing costs down.  This will be THE fan t-shirt.  We’ll sell it for the same price, the symbolic $19.85.  
So get to planning…

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2010 Bears Could Become 1984 Bears

| January 24th, 2011

Those of you yearning for the Bears to become a more consistent franchise, here’s a question: has any team in the NFC been consistently great over the last decade?  Consistently good, even?  The answer is simple.  No, unless you consider Andy Reid’s inevitable postseason failings each year good.  Peter King actually included an interesting tidbit in his MMQB column this week:

Winners of the championship in the 16-team NFC in the past 10 seasons:

2010 Green Bay

2009 New Orleans

2008 Arizona

2007 New York Giants

2006 Chicago

2005 Seattle

2004 Philadelphia

2003 Carolina

2002 Tampa Bay

2001 St. Louis

The NFC is wide open each year.  There for the taking.  And this season the Bears were a miraculous Caleb Hanie-as-Frank Reich drive away from having a shot to take their second conference title in five years.  They came up short to a Green Bay Packers team that would not have made the postseason if the Eagles don’t complete an improbable comeback against the Giants and the Bucs don’t blow a lead at home to the Lions.  That’s how tenuous success in the NFL can be.  This loss, though, may not be the worst thing that’s ever happened to the Bears organization.
The 1984 Chicago Bears were a slightly above-mediocre 10-6 and lost in a dismal NFC Championship performance to the eventual Super Bowl champion Joe Montana and the San Francisco 49ers.  They took a lashing in the media (shocker) but there was optimism in Chicago about developing defensive strength and continued excellence of Walter Payton at tailback.  Chicago knew they were good.  But could they become great?
The Bears are poised right now to be successful next season, especially with the CBA disputes on the horizon.  2011 will reward those teams with continuity both in the coaching staff and on the roster and the Bears will be bringing back every important performer currently on the roster.  Brian Urlacher and Julius Peppers are not young but they are also nowhere near finished as top-tier performers.  The remainder of the LoveRod defense showed against Aaron Rodgers once again that they are capable of being one of the top units in the sport. 
They also have two other major things going for them.  (1) The Jay Cutler Rallying Cry will be something we start discussing at the start of training camp.  The way this organization has publicly defended him will be their first bit of motivation for the 2011 campaign.  I will also be leading this brigade from the fan side.  (2) Their schedule, available here, looks to be easy.  I know it’s difficult to assess future opponents but the Bears got the two best teams in the AFC West (KC, SD) at home and have exceedingly winnable games against Carolina, Atlanta at home, Seattle at home, at Tampa…etc.  You don’t look at this schedule and say, “Wow, that’s going to be impossible to win”.  No Pittsburghs or Jets or Pats or Ravens.  Eagles and Saints on road are the only “penciled” losses.
Add that the weaknesses of the Bears are easily identified – rare in this current NFL world.  They need to fix the offensive line and add a big-target wide receiver.  Everything else – youth at linebacker, cover corner, punter, safety depth – would be nice but are not essential moves.  Offensive line and big-target receiver are the thing and the latter is not incredibly difficult with Santonio Holmes, Braylon Edwards, Vincent Jackson, Sidney Rice being available FA’s and Brandon Marshall reportedly available via trade.  Spend the money.  Get the weapon.
Offensive line is the issue moving forward.  The only issue.  If the Bears would like to commit to J’Marcus Webb at right tackle then they must find a way to put a capable player at left tackle.  Chris Williams can not continue starting and performing at his current level.  This unit is the team’s signature question mark and the Bears have nine months to get it fixed.  
The 1984 Bears seized an opportunity.  They seized upon the stains of defeat and the pains of disaster.  They returned to football and became the greatest single-season football team that’s ever snapped a chinstrap.  That’s a lot of pressure, I know, for this group of Chicago Bears but it must be the model by which they operate.  Last season brought the elite edge rusher, new defensive mentality and offensive system.  Now they need to make those adjustments that will elevate them from a good team to a great team.  Offensive line.  Wide receiver.  
The 2011 stage is set.  The play is written.  They simply need to cast a few essential roles.