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The Sackman Cometh: Julius Peppers

| January 18th, 2011

Julius Peppers signed a six-year $91.5 million contract with the Bears in the spring – $42 million of that deal guaranteed.  Peppers signing in Chicago marked the arrival of the first certifiable sack man since perhaps Richard Dent to Lake Shore Drive and his presence improved the entirety of the defensive line, especially Israel Idonije on the other side.  I think it can be said, without argument, that Julius Peppers earned the $13 million plus he’ll receive for his performance over these first seventeen games of the 2010 campaign.

But this is game eighteen.  This is the Green Bay Packers in the NFC Championship Game at Soldier Field.  Some of the Chicago radio hosts, one with the last name Waddle, are looking to nickname this football game but that’s not how football games work.  Most classic football games are nicknamed by the conditions (see: Ice/Fog Bowls) or defined by plays within that game (see: Music City Miracle, The Catch). The action dictates the nickname.  Barring the miraculous within the game, the stage is set beforehand.  And this stage is set.  So forget about Peppers’ eight sacks, his nine passes defended, his two interceptions and his fifty-four tackles from the defensive end position.  Those statistics are the gaudy power numbers of a mid-lineup power hitter.  This is the postseason now and this is when stars must carry the day.
What I do want from Peppers Sunday?  A big hit.  The kind of big hit that alters the course of a football game by altering the mental state of the opposing quarterback.  Aaron Rodgers is playing the position better than any other man in the sport but all that can change with one hard journey to the finest turf in all the land (which is apparently worrying some folks who work in Wisconsin).  He wouldn’t be the only young, terrific quarterback of the NFC North who has seen his season come to an end at the hands of Orange Julius. 
Sunday is when fans are allowed to expect great things from their great players making great amounts of money.  Money that came from the fan’s wallet for the $9 MGD at the ballpark, the $24.95 ball cap at Sports Authority and the $80 Peppers throwback I see in front of me at Josie Wood’s on Sundays on the back of my buddy Hull.  Sunday is when great players make great plays.  Idonije, Toeaina, Harris, Melton, Wootton and Adams are good players.  Not great.  Peppers is.  And I expect him to play like it Sunday.  

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Da BigHotDog.Com Saturday Show!

| January 18th, 2011

big hot dog.jpg

Just click here: BigHotDog.com 

 

On this show: Dick Clark’s favorite song, “The Packer Dance” and all the usual stuff.  The Fantasy Playoff rosters available on the B-side.

Click here for the funniest Favre spoof I’ve seen on the internet.
Fantasy Playoffs Championship Round
There were some ballsy selections for this round, with several contestants leaving themselves with the possibility of no quarterback in the Super Bowl.  You’ll notice a certain running back will be a dominant factor in this week’s proceedings.  

Because of ChiTownHustler’s inability to get his selections in on time this week, he has been granted my default selections.  I decided not to eliminate him and risk bad karma.

Top Four advance to the Super Bowl.

BigT 
Ben Roethlisberger — Matt Forte — Greg Jennings

ChiTownHustler
Mark Sanchez — Chester Taylor — Greg Olsen

Cormonster
Ben Roethliesberger — Matt Forte — Mike Wallace

Doshi
Jay Cutler — Matt Forte — Heath Miller

enderwiggin
Jay Cutler — Matt Forte — Devin Hester

IrishSweetness
Aaron Rodgers — Rashard Mendenhall — Jordy Nelson

Jimmy Newport
Aaron Rodgers — Matt Forte — Mike Wallace

MikeBrownhadaPosse
Jay Cutler — Rashard Mendenhall — Santonio Holmes

Sdwat52
Ben Roethlisberger — Mewelde Moore — Hines Ward

Shady
Jay Cutler — Rashard Mendenhall — Santonio Holmes

Viva
Jay Cutler — Matt Forte — Heath Miller

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Audibles From the Long Snapper

| January 18th, 2011

‘Vanilla’ Approach a Definitive Advantage

Neil Hayes writes a very interesting column in the Sun-Times today, claiming the Bears gained a significant advantage by almost pulling a Week Seventeen upset over the Packers while instituting a vanilla scheme.  
His players gave every ounce of effort on the field. Smith even risked injuries to quarterback Jay Cutler and other prominent starters but left them in the game until the bitter end. What the Bears coach didn’t tell you, however, is that his staff didn’t game-plan for that game like they will prepare for the rubber match in the NFC Championship Game at Soldier Field on Sunday.  
While Hayes doesn’t have any direct quotes from organizational insiders or coaches, I think it was apparent to anyone who has watched this team that on that day, the game plan was very much vanilla.  (Unless you believe Rashied Davis is their number one weapon on the offensive side of the ball.)  I still maintain that the risk/reward of playing all the starters on the final Sunday was not worth it but if the Bears come out and play an inspired, dominant game this weekend and cite Week Seventeen as a reason, I may be willing to admit I was wrong.  Hell, if the Bears win Sunday I’ll admit I had a hand in the Madoff scandal.
Turf is the Essence of the Home Field Advantage in Chicago
Rick Morrissey, who seems to be coming around to this 2010 Bears season, writes eloquently and poetically about the grass at Soldier Field.  The Bears fans, the so-called 4th Phase, are usually as quick to boo the navy and orange as cheer them.  The weather may be fun but the Patriots and Jets offenses sure didn’t mind throwing the ball for huge chunks of yardage in it.  The turf is the equalizer, slowing down speed threats from beating the LoveRod Deuce deep and preventing big, physical receivers from making precise cuts on the slants routes that have killed this system for seven years.


The Aaron Rodgers Ignores Cancer Patient Thing

So if you don’t know the story, here it is.  Aaron Rodgers was walking through an airport and a woman suffering from cancer approached him for an autograph and he snubbed her.  Mike Florio picked up on the story at PFT and launched a pointed character attack on Rodgers’ until-now flawless image.  Subsequently the woman has expressed regret over Rodgers dealing with the criticism, claiming he’d signed autographs for her in the past.  You know what I think?  I think if this Lifetime drama starred Jay Cutler instead of Aaron Rodgers, it’d be front page news on ESPN and every one of those windbags on The Score would be using it as their rallying cry to root for the Packers this weekend.  This may not be a big deal but it proves that our sports media is quite selective as to which scandals they’d like to cover and which they chose to ignore.
Lovie Smith: Getting a Bit Tough?
When Smith was asked about the Packers injuries this season, he responded soundly with “All teams have injuries.”  The Packers have been flying the Injuries Flag for months and I’m tired of hearing it.  Lovie followed that up with some of his most candid comments in a long, long while:
“We don’t like each other. You don’t have to be in love with someone, or you can have some dislike, and not put it out in the media everyday. Believe me, there’s not a whole lot of love for us coming up north.”

I can’t lie.  I like it.  I like an honest, angry Lovie Smith.  And I hope it translates to the field on Sunday.

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Cutler and Rodgers are the Sunday Story

| January 17th, 2011

The labels that will be applied to the NFC Championship Game between the Bears and Packers at Soldier Field will be plentiful.  Epic.  Legendary.  Historic.  Colossal.  Prodigious.  Herculean. People, including me, will also pile out the match-ups that will determine the outcome.  Can the Bears block Clay Matthews and Charles Woodson on designed blitzes?  Can the Bears establish the run with Matt Forte on the outside?  How will the speed receivers of the Packers handle the turf?  Will Mike McCarthy punt to Devin Hester?  Was James Starks merely a flash in the pan against the Eagles’ mediocre run defense?

All of it, and I really mean all of it, is secondary.  It is backstory.  This past weekend, in Chicago and Atlanta, Jay Cutler and Aaron Rodgers wrote the preamble for this coming Sunday’s NFC Declaration of War.  Cutler’s four touchdowns, two while doing his best Steve Young impression and taking bit hits on designed runs in the red zone, was the finest postseason performance ever by a Bears quarterback.  Mr. Rodgers was Mr. Perfect, completing 86% of his passes, and shredding the Falcons defense like they were fielding The Red Rooster and Tito Santana at corner.
They are the story, Cutler and Rodgers.  The story this weekend.  And the story on Sundays in the NFC North division for the next decade.  Yes, Cutler and Rodgers have squared off four times in their now native uniforms but they’ve yet to square off when both teams, both men, both quarterbacks had real stake in the contest.  Rodgers opened his career against the Bears with a victorious 37-3 mauling but his prolific offenses have never scored more than twenty-one points against Lovie’s defenses since.  Cutler is only 1-3 against Green Bay, winning only on September 27th, and struggling with a TD-INT ratio of 4-9.  But Sunday at Soldier Field he’ll be able to erase the entirety of his regular season resume, just as the New York Jets erased the humiliation of their Monday night 45-3 loss to Big Billy Bells and the Patriots. 
The Bears and the Packers are the two best defenses in the conference, with the Packers maybe slightly ahead due to the brilliant play of their corners – Woodson and Tramon Williams.  The early weather prediction has the temperature topping out around 20 degrees with 10 MPH winds streaming off the lake.  (It should be noted that the weather report last Monday mentioned no possibility of snow for the Seahawks game.)  Couple that with the fact that all four of the meetings between Rodgers’ Packers and Cutler’s Bears have been decided by seven points or less and it’s not far-fetched to imagine it might only take one play, one big throw in the conditions, to book a ticket to Dallas and Super Bowl XLV.  (Side note: If it were not for the Super Bowl, would anyone use Roman numerals for anything ever?)
They are the story, Cutler and Rodgers.  The way quarterbacks always seem to be the story when the games leave the lounge and step onto the stage of the main room.  One of these quarterbacks will hold the trophy named for Pope Chicago Bear I, George S. Halas, and find himself sixty minutes from holding the trophy named for King Packer, Vince Lombardi.  These franchises are the novels of the National Football League.  These quarterbacks are the current chapters.  One, Rodgers, seems right out of Steinbeck – humble and heroic, having emerged triumphant from the shadow of the country’s most famous jeans salesman/penis photographer.  The other, Cutler, seems almost out of a Tarantino picture – the prickly anti-hero with an assassin’s spirit and a vocalized disregard for authority.  
One of their careers elevates to the next step at the final whistle around 5:00 PM CST.  But only one.  I know quarterbacks can’t win football games alone and I’m not arguing either of these men will.  Not with these defenses.  Not in these conditions.  But it has been seventy years since these storied franchises have played a game with this type of heroic potential.  And one of these men will be labeled a hero at Soldier Field.   

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Fantasy Playoffs Standings – Updated!

| January 17th, 2011

A couple notes on this week’s action.  Basically, if you played Aaron Rodgers (32 points) or Jay Cutler (27 points), you advanced (with one exception, keep reading).   If you played Matt Ryan (-3 points), you had no shot.  There were very few other players this weekend who put up mega numbers.  Since the 12th place individual was The Big Cheesy and there’s no way a Packers fan is writing a word on this site ever, I decided only to advance the top eleven.
The Advancers to the Championship Round
ChiTownHustler (50)
Doshi (50)
Sdwat52 (50)
BigT (47)
Viva (44)
Shady (44)
Jimmy Newport (42)
IrishSweetness (42)
Cormonster (41)
enderwiggin (41 – without selecting a receiver)
MikeBrownhadaPosse (38)

The Cuts
The Big Cheesy (30)
SC Dave (24)
sjvl (24)
Perno (3)
Bears-4-Ever (15)
FQD1911 (3)
WrigleyFM (18)
Warrior Waddle (18)
Michael L (24)
Bears85Sweetness23 (12)
reprisal (6)
Jokey (27)
85bearz4ever (24)
The next round of selections are due to me in an email (jeff@dabearsblog.com) by Friday at noon EST (11 am CST).  We do this because strategy now becomes incredibly important.  I will confirm receipt of your picks and publish the list of picks in the same post with the Saturday Show.  Only the top four will advance to the Super Bowl.

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Thoughts on Division Round Dominance

| January 17th, 2011

It was as dominant as the Chicago Bears have been this season, only letting the Seahawks make the game look closer by mailing in the last five minutes or so.  I have a lot of thoughts.

  • Good for Jay Cutler.  After taking some of the most personally pointed abuse of his career by Dick Reilly, Cutler put the offense on his back and led the way he’s needed to lead: on the field. 
  • When is the last time a Bears QB scored two rushing TDs on designed runs?
  • Greg Olsen not only looked like the best tight end in the league but he blocked like one of the best tight ends in the league.
  • Every guy along the offensive line played well.  I don’t have game tape and I don’t need it to realize that Jay had hours to throw the ball at times.  
  • Another note on the o-line.  When Webb and Omiyale push the perimeter rushers up field and the middle of the line holds, it gives Jay the pass/run option and has led to the most productive plays for the Bears over the last 9 games.
  • Did Brad Maynard and Corey Graham spend all week to together?  Graham seemed to know exactly where each punt was going to land and was brilliant covering them.
  • Charles Tillman.  The best game played by a Bears cornerback in a generation.
  • Our defensive line has to be the deepest in the league and they are downright frightening when Tommie Harris plays like Tommie Harris.
  • If Chris Harris is significantly injured and Major Wright plays every down next week, it’s a reason to be concerned.
  • I felt pretty good watching Brian Urlacher shed an offensive lineman and tackle a back for a loss.
  • Devin Hester is a remarkable kick returner but he is still a puzzle to me (and I think Mike Martz) at wide receiver.
  • I like these games where Robbie Gould just kicks off and makes extra points.
There will be a lot of writing on this space this week as we prepare for the biggest game in the history of the sport’s oldest rivalry.  I’ll have the updates Fantasy Playoff standings in a few hours.

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In Response to Rick Reilly

| January 13th, 2011

Rick Reilly is the Dave Barry of sportswriting and Dave Barry is to comedy what Antonio Cromartie is to not fathering nine children with eight different women.  In Reilly’s anti-Cutler column currently running on the ESPN home page, he levels charges against Cutler as severe as texting while ignoring John Lynch, watching TV while ignoring John Elway and not wanting to answer the questions of reporters at a press conference.  I say we string him up!

Here is Reilly’s final condemnation:

Reporter: When you were a kid, which quarterback did you look up to?

Cutler: Nobody.

Reporter: Nobody? You didn’t look up to anybody?

Cutler: No.

If he’s lying, it makes him a miscreant. If he’s telling the truth, it makes him a miscreant.

“Deep, deep down, I think he’s a really good guy,” Waddle says.

Maybe. But why do we have to look that deep?

Reilly’s hypothesis, of course, ignores the other obvious conclusion to be drawn from Cutler’s answer: he doesn’t like reporters.  You know reporters, right?  The ones who vilified him publicly and canonized Josh McDaniels in the aftermath of the Denver scandal?  (How’d that work out for Denver?)  The ones who have been quick to criticize every interception he’s thrown while ignoring his franchise record-setting productivity?  The ones who have written every week that Denver actually won the trade with the Bears by acquiring Kyle Orton, a player that has been benched for a quarterback who doesn’t possess the ability to throw the football accurately?

Rick Reilly has made his career writing about crippled ex-cops stealing home in the Bayonne Tavern Softball Tournament and blind guys winning gold medals at Binghamton Discus Championships.  He wants his athletes to be lovable because he, like a lot of sports journalists, crave a relationship with the athlete.  If they don’t let him in, don’t have a beer with him on the weekend, don’t talk about their personal lives, then he’s just a journalist.  A reporter covering others.  And if he wanted to remain a journalist, he would never have signed with ESPN.
Jay Cutler plays football Sunday.  And if he wins Sunday, he’ll be sixty minutes from the Super Bowl.  And being that I’ve never learned anything from a player interview and never cared about a player’s personal life, Mr. Cutler can stand in front of the microphone and flip the bird at the press for all I care.  I wanna buy a shitload of World Champion merchandise.  If he helps with that, I’m good.

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Seahawks at Bears Divisional Round Thread

| January 13th, 2011

A win and the Chicago Bears advance to the NFC Championship Game, at home, against the Green Bay Packers.  A win and the Chicago Bears are sixty minutes from the Super Bowl.  A win is all that is needed.


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Saturday Show & Fantasy Playoffs Round 2

| January 13th, 2011

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On this episode: Songs about Matt Hasselbeck and Favre’s meth-lab sister, Viva and I square off in the Picks Champions League, the Reverend rants against misplaced anger towards Jerry Angelo and I monologue about what would make 2010 a successful season.
All your pivotal Fantasy Playoffs information is on the B-side…

And now we enter the Divisional Round of the Fantasy Playoffs, with twenty-four bloggers still competing to winning the monthly off-season column.  The remaining competitors are:

Jokey — Wrigley FM — enderwiggin — Perno — Shady — Viva — Jimmy Newport  Bears-4-Ever — SC Dave — sjvl — ChiTownHustler — Doshi — FQD1911  WarriorWaddle — BigT — Sdwat52 — Michael L — Bears85Sweetness23  Cormonster — MikeBrownhadaPosse — IrishSweetness — reprisal  TheBigCheesy — 85bearz4ever

Things to know:
  1. You can not select any of the three players you selected for the Wild Card round.
  2. My goal is to eliminate half the field this week.  So tiebreakers will come into play.
  3. I will not be as quick with the updated standings as I was last week since I’ll be nowhere near a computer for most of the day Sunday.  (Hopefully I’ll start drinking heavily at 4:15 PM EST in a celebratory mode.)
  4. Starting next week, the picks will be submitted to me via e-mail, as the strategy becomes interesting.  I’ll explain this more as we celebrate the Seahawks win (knock on everything) and prepare for the NFC Championship Game.
Submit your picks below.  You have until 4:00 PM EST (3:00 PM CST) Saturday to get your names in.