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Cutler & The Moronic Toughness Issue

| January 24th, 2011

Toughness, when it comes to football players, is non-negotiable.  These are hundreds upon hundreds of men who earn their living, far less than the other “major” sports, running the chimney stacks they call bodies at full speed into the brick shit houses of others.  Our quarterback is now being criticized by a bunch of couch-dwellers, second-guessers and newspaper men for his lack of toughness.  For not coming back onto the field with what we now know was a torn MCL.  

Jay Cutler was sacked more than any other player in the NFL this season.  And it wasn’t close.  He played valiantly behind the worst offensive line in the sport and led his team to the NFC Championship Game.  My pressing concerns about Cutler are not his toughness.  My concerns are his accuracy and his continually poor decision making.  (Don’t watch video of Cutler’s first-half pick or Hanie’s final play pick.  Both guy had Matt Forte wide open for guaranteed first downs.)
But I’m sure we’ll hear Dick Butkus on Chicago radio over the next few days, waxing poetic about the good old days when football players continued playing even when they had broken arms and dislocated pelvises.  But for every Dick Butkus there’s an Earl Campbell, reduced to surgery-after-surgery to repair a back destroyed by the game.  For every Butkus there’s a another name on Mike Ditka’s Gridiron Greats list.  I’m not a believer in the pseudo-masculine ideology of football fans, clamoring for players to risk life and limb to win a game.  These are human beings whose football lives will be over before they turn forty.  What about the rest of their existence?  
If you actually believe Jay Cutler could have gone onto the field yesterday and played effectively and CHOSE not to, then your criticism is warranted.  But when the medical staff of a football team tells you that you’re not allowed to go on the field, you don’t go on the field.  Cutler was injured.  He knew he was injured.  The doctors knew he was injured.  NFL players can Tweet all they want about what Brett Favre would have done and they’re right.  He would have played.  And he would have thrown three interceptions in heavy traffic and blamed the injury in a press conference two years later.  
But once again fans will do what fans do and radio hosts will do what radio hosts do.  Waste their time and energy on intangible non-discussions like toughness and attitude and ignore the real issues on the football field.  The “real” Cutler discussion should be about his on-field play not his sideline antics.  His reluctance to put the football in Matt Forte’s hands whenever the opportunity is there.  His reluctance to throw the ball away to avoid taking sacks.  His insistence on throwing jump balls for Johnny Knox week-after-week even though almost every one of them gets intercepted.  The conversation should about football.  But it never is in Chicago.
Is Jay Cutler tough?  I don’t care.  Is Jay Cutler a winning quarterback?  We don’t know yet.  We do know that the improvement from year one to year two in Chicago was remarkable and a second year in the Mad Mike system should yield even greater rewards.  All that happened yesterday was what always happens in the postseason: a team’s primary weakness was exposed and Cutler’s body finally had enough.  He needs an offensive line.  He needs a big ticket receiver.  This is the most important offseason in a generation and everyone at Halas Hall should be working towards answering the truly important question.  
Is Jay Cutler capable of winning a Super Bowl?

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Five Reasons The Bears Are Finished Playing

| January 24th, 2011

It is a game I’ll spend a few weeks thinking about, not sure quite how to wrap-up a performance so surreal and often downright bizarre.  But there were several key factors leading up to the Bears loss yesterday.

Jay Cutler’s First-Half Inaccuracy.  Cutler missed an open Devin Hester on two throws early and both could have resulted in touchdowns.  Cutler’s decision not to throw an open screen to Matt Forte – the best offensive player in the entire game – and instead lob a soon-to-be intercepted ball to Johnny Knox was a killer.
Todd Collins Playing in the NFC title game.  Maybe I haven’t been paying attention but I couldn’t believe that Collins re-jumped Caleb Hanie on the depth chart.  Todd Collins stinks and this decision was inexcusably mindblowing.  Hanie played with a lot of heart and showed a lot of talent but I wonder how much better he would have played if he’d gotten four quarters of action against the Pack in Week 17.  
Penalties.  The field position battle, specifically in the second half, was won by the Packers due to an alarming amount of penalties called against (1) Julius Peppers and (2) the entirety of the Bears secondary.  It seems that every time the defense made a play to change things around, a yellow flag appeared on the field.


Brian Urlacher.  Urlacher played a beautiful game for the most part but you can’t let Aaron Rodgers tackle you!  You simply can’t!  Not in a game like that!  And you also can’t let a runner juke you on a screen pass in open field for a second-and-far-too-long conversion (and then look down like it’s the turf’s fault).  Urlacher was everywhere on the field yesterday but he had an opportunity to deliver a legendary performance and he simply did not.

Tim Masthay vs. Brad Maynard.  Masthay did everything right for the Packers, pinning Devin Hester to the sideline and now allowing a field-position flip at any time.  Maynard was early-season Maynard, weak-legged and unreliable.

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A Wonderful Season, A Bizarre Ending

| January 23rd, 2011

If someone told you in August that Jay Cutler, Todd Collins and Caleb Hanie would each take snaps in the NFC Championship Game against the Green Bay Packers…what would you have said?  I don’t know what my exact words would have been but they would have rhymed with “buck cough”. 

We’ll have weeks to discuss the severity of Jay Cutler’s knee injury.  Weeks to analyze Mike Martz calling an end around to Earl Bennett on a game-deciding third down.  Weeks, nay months, to criticize Lovie and Mike for having Hanie behind Collins on the postseason depth chart.  None of it matters now.  The Bears are out of the 2010 season.  That’s the truth.
I was proud today of the way the defense played.  Proud of how Caleb Hanie played.  Proud of this team.  Maybe I’m a few yards further from understanding Cutler…maybe not.  But for now…in this moment…I’ll stick with proud.  
But if Jerry Angelo doens’t add a few offensive linemen this offseason, there’ll be hell to pay. 
Fantasy Playoff standings on the B-side…  

The Super Bowl Contestants
BigT
IrishSweetness
MikeBrownhadaPosse
Shady

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Bears & Packers: Final Notes

| January 22nd, 2011

NFL Says Soldier Field Sod in Good Shape

Read the article linked here.  Now if you believe the article you’ve just read, you are most likely one of the reported 60% of Americans who believe Noah’s Ark was an historical event.  I’m sincerely doubtful the Bears were working overtime to eradicate their most significant Soldier Field advantage.
Desmond Clark to Suit-Up Tomorrow
I understand that players like to use the Twitter but if I’m Lovie Smith I’m not pleased Desmond Clark personally leaked his playing status for tomorrow.  Even if Clark will have no role in the passing game aside from max protection schemes, giving players like Matthews and Woodson a day to study his tendencies as a blocker is simply not wise.  Every match-up, every moment, could be the decisive one tomorrow.
After Having Read All the Prognostications…
…I will say this: analysts are leading far too heavily on “the Packers are the better team.”  Are they?  Probably.  But it’s not the fault of the Bears that they earned a bye week and because of seeding landed the easier opponent in the Divisional Round.  The Packers had to beat the Eagles (barely) and the Falcons because they put themselves in that situation.  And now they are being predicted to go to the Super Bowl because of it.  Seems odd to me.
One More Radio Appearance Tonight
I’ll be on ESPN 1700 Des Moines (my home away from home) at 10:15 CST tonight with Trent Condon.  I really dig this show and am loving my appearance.  Click here to listen live.

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Bears/Pack: I Can’t Think About Anything Else

| January 22nd, 2011

  • I wonder how important this game will be in determining the off-season plan for Jerry Angelo and Bears management.  We know there will be tremendous focus on building the offensive line but if Aaron Rodgers shreds the Bears defense, I wonder how much attention will go their way.  If the defense stops Rodgers cold, you could make an argument for the same eleven starters next season.
  • Chris Harris has been on the Chicago Bears three of Lovie Smith’s seven seasons.  In those three seasons, the Bears are 35-13, three NFC North titles, 3-2 postseason record and an NFC championship.  In the other four seasons the Bears are 28-36 with zero postseason appearances.  Harris is listed as Questionable for tomorrow but says he will absolutely play.
  • It does not look like weather is going to be a major factor tomorrow, with little chance of precipitation and winds only gusting to around to about 9 mph.  
  • The more I think about the Bears passing game the more I think Earl Bennett is going to run some of those Rashied Davis routes from Week 17 and become Jay’s primary target to combat the aggressive Packers blitzes.
  • Mike Francesa brought it up a bunch on WFAN in New York this week and I think he’s right.  Jay Cutler has heard the media’s canonization of Aaron Rodgers this week and he’s going to attempt to make a statement.  Troy Aikman told Mike he thought the Bears would open ultra-conservative.  Joe Theismann believes Martz will allow him to take shots early.  Nobody knows anything but it’s what makes this game so interesting.
  • I’m not going to shill for a product so trust me on this.  The big hot dog from BigHotDog.com is one of the most remarkable things I’ve ever seen.  I’ll have photos up when we cook the thing.
  • I am not nervous about this game tomorrow.  I was nervous for the Seahawks game which was essentially a no-win for the Bears.  I am excited about this game.  I want it to happen.  I want it to be epic.  And I think it will be a great day for the Chicago Bears.

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Even More Audibles From the Long Snapper

| January 20th, 2011

I guess it’s that kind of week.  That kind of game.  For the first time since it’s initial debut, here comes the third Audibles in a single week.

Chris Harris/Major Wright – Bears Weakness to Watch
The Bears have put no starters on IR this season and are heading into the NFC Championship Game with only one player listed on the injury report: Chris Harris.  Harris, who Peter King named to his All-Pro team, said to reporters this week that it would take “a miraculous act of God” to keep him from suiting up.  If he struggles to stay on the field, the Bears will be relying on the oft-lost in coverage (but solid on contact) Major Wright to control one of the best passing games in the sport.  This puts an even greater emphasis on the pass rush and Orange Julius.  The more time Rodgers has to throw, the easier time he’ll have confusing and ultimately beating Wright.
The Tommie Harris Factor
If last week’s Divisional Round game were played in Week 12 or 13, I would have devoted an entire column to Tommie Harris’ performance – the way Dan Pompei eloquently did in the Tribune.  (Pompei is a good football writer and deserves credit for it.)  But I’ll say this about Harris: don’t tease us.  Don’t show up against the inferior opponent (Seattle), delivering a throwback-to-2005 performance and disappear against arguably the best team remaining in the tournament.  Harris has an opportunity Sunday to put away the last few years – slugging Deuce Lutui early in an important Cardinals game, countless benchings, mouthing off to press – and cement his legacy with the Chicago Bears and their fans.
Plays I Would Not Call Sunday
  • The quick slant route to the outside receiver – especially if that receiver is Knox or Hester.  It hasn’t worked all year and these corners will take it back for six.
  • The deep out (cover-2 splitter) where Cutler attempts to fit the ball above the corner and underneath the safety.  Don’t allow these corners the opportunity to win battles in space.
  • Anything that involves someone not called Jay Cutler throwing a pass.

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More Audibles From the Long Snapper

| January 19th, 2011

Lots of posts this week, kids, due to lots of traffic/interest in the site.  I keep it coming with a second dose of Audibles

Urlacher Wants Lovie Extended
Vaughn McClure reports that Brian Urlacher is now publicly lobbying for a contract extension for his head coach, Lovie Smith, and hopefully his opinion means nothing to the ownership of the Chicago Bears.  Brian Urlacher has been coached by two men: Dick Jauron and Lovie Smith.  Not surprising he believes Lovie is the man for the job.  There are very few worse times over the course of a season for this to be a topic of discussion.  Needless to say, the entire conversation is redundant currently.  If Lovie Smith beats the Green Bay Packers Sunday, he might be receiving a contract extension before kickoff of the Super Bowl in Dallas.
Martz Takes Blame for Week Seventeen  
Mad Mike is quoted in the Tribune, commenting on his work in the final week of the season: “Did not do a good job.”  Biting self-criticism.  There’s something very interesting about Mike Martz.  He’s got a Jekyll & Hyde personality.  He’s Jekyll when being interviewed by the press and Hyde when coaching football games.  This is the week for Martz to turn to the “C” chapter of the playbook.  Conservative.  Short passes, screens, runs.  Control the pace of play.  Take shots when they are there.
Packers Respect Hester a Great Deal
Mike McCarthy calls Devin Hester “the best player” on the Chicago Bears.  I don’t know if he’s right but he’s certainly the best returner in the history of the NFL.  The Pack’s ability in Week 17 to keep Hester contained and force the Bears to travel long fields was the reason the Bears struggled to score points.  The Bears are kind of a half-court offense.  If the Pack can repeat their success in the punt game, this time on the road, I’ll be impressed.  
“F” the Curse

sicutlersmall.jpg

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Packers at Bears NFC Championship Preview

| January 19th, 2011

I won’t sleep Saturday night and I might not sleep Friday night without the aid of my old friend Ethyl Alcohol.  If this were the Falcons on the opposing sideline, the Saints…who knows?  But it is the Green Bay Packers, the oldest rival of our beloved franchise, and I can’t stomach the notion of Aaron Rodgers holding the Halas Trophy at Soldier Field.

Your ‘On the Verge’ 2010 Chicago Bears
over
The Green Bay Packers Football Club

Why Do I Like the Chicago Bears this Week?
  • I always like the Chicago Bears.
  • I think it’s time to recognize the Bears have a significant home field advantage not only because of the crowd, wind and weather but also because their turf minimizes the speed of outside threats and restricts receivers from making slant cuts under the coverage.
  • Aaron Rodgers, outside a 37-point output in his first start, has scored 17, 21, 21, 17 and 10 in the subsequent five games against Lovie Smith’s defenses.  This is the best Bears defense he’ll have faced (better than Week 17).
  • I don’t believe for a second James Starks is the real deal at running back and I think the Packers will need to move the ball continually through the air to generate long drives.  The Bears defense is not the Falcons defense.
  • Maybe I’m misguided, “drinking the Kool-Aid” as they say, but I believe in the corner combination of Charles Tillman and Tim Jennings.  They are being left in man-to-man situations far more than usual and truly excelling at times.
  • Julius Peppers.  The Green Bay offensive line was not great against Atlanta, relying on Rodgers’ escapability to the outside.  I expect a big day from Orange Julius.  And when they kick and punt back to us…
  • Devin Hester.  When I saw Eric Weems return a kickoff 102 yards for a touchdown last week against the Packers, I sensed a long week of debate for Mike McCarthy.  For some reason I think the focal point of our conversations Monday morning will be Hester.
  • I do believe Matt Forte/Chester Taylor can improve on their 18 rush, 102-yard performance from Week 17 and I think it will be a product of usage.  With 8:10 remaining in that game and Bears facing a second-and-nine, the Bears were sacked on back-to-back plays ending the drive.  When they got the ball back, they ran twice to set up a third-and-one (with 3:59 on the clock) and never rushed the ball again.  Lovie believes they learned a lot in Week 17.  I think this sequence was a primary teacher.  
  • The Packers showed everything they had in the blitz department in Week 17 and I think the Bears will be prepared to attack with the short passing/screen game.  
  • I think I redeveloped my confidence in our return coverage with the unit’s near-dominant handling of Leon Washington.
  • I really believe this game will be decided by one person: Jay Cutler.  While he outwardly dislikes the media and seems to shrug off his own failings, I believe embraces competition in the truest sense and I think he knows the ultimate middle finger to the world would be outplaying Aaron Rodgers Sunday.  I think he does.
Chicago Bears 27, Green Bay Packers 17

Editor’s Note:  Fantasy Playoffs selections are due by 11:00 AM CST Friday.  Only ChiTown Hustler, Shady and MikeBrownhadaPosse are still outstanding.

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Some Ramblings & Five Packers To Watch

| January 19th, 2011

  • Editor’s Note: I’m still waiting on Fantasy Playoffs selections from ChiTownHustler, BigT, Sdwat52, Shady, Cormonster, MikeBrownhadaPosse, IrishSweetness and enderwiggin. (Email to jeff@dabearsblog.com)
  • Editor’s Note 2: I’ll be re-joining my friend Trent Condon on ESPN Des Moines at 4:15 CST.  
The media’s attention this week, in-and-around Chicago, has been bizarre when it comes to this week’s showdown between the Bears and the Packers.  Mike & Mike on ESPN Radio spent most of their interview with Brian Urlacher discussing new media golden boy Aaron Rodgers, quickly becoming the heir apparent to Brett Favre in more ways than filling his vacated position.  Steve Rosenbloom is becoming obsessed with fan behavior at Soldier Field.  David Haugh is writing about the Packers franchise-saving efforts. (How dare he??  If he didn’t save them, we wouldn’t have to face them now!!!)  The Sun-Times, in a desperate effort to top Brett Favre’s meaningless weekend prognostication, printed 200 year-old Buddy Ryan’s – not surprisingly the Bears and the Jets.
The directive is clear: write about the Bears and the Packers.  Write anything about the Bears and Packers.  But not one moment of that Mike & Mike interview and not one word of the articles by Rosenbloom, Haugh and some guy called Jim Litke mentioned what’s important about Sunday’s colossal ballgame: football plays.  Remember those?  The passes and runs and punts and tackles and bullrushes and double moves and strip sacks that actually will determine which team ends up in Dallas in two weeks, playing for the Super Bowl?
So let’s get to football and the five Packers that frighten me heading into Sunday…


Andrew Quarless

I start with the tight end for almost every opponent and last week Jeremy Bates and the Seahawks were clearly going to use John Carlson as the principle weapon in their attack.  After his injury and a big drop over the middle by Cameron Morrah, they seemed to abandon that game plan for the most part.  Quarless is nowhere near the player Finley was but I wouldn’t be surprised to see him utilized early in the game, exploiting the gap in the deep center of the defense.  If the Packers establish a run game, it’ll force our linebacker up and Quarless could become lethal.


Tramon Williams
Jay Cutler has found a bit of luck with corners dropping surefire interceptions that could have altered the flow of the game.  Williams has been the best defensive player in the postseason thus far (3 picks, 2 games) and if Cutler puts the ball near his hands he can expect six points going in the other direction.
Clay Matthews/Charles Woodson
Simply put: they are the blitz.  The Bears offensive line/running backs must pick up their locations on the perimeter and Cutler must know to go hot when the rushers find their lanes undefended.
Aaron Rodgers
We all know how good a thrower of the football Rodgers is but the Bears know what they’re getting from him in that department.  When the Bears get shots on Rodgers, which they will, they must get him to the ground and not enable him to either (1) find open receivers downfield or (2) scramble for yardage/points.  This element, the inability to get Rodgers to the ground, was the definitive factors in the Packers win Saturday night.