Putting this one up early today, folks. To read my preview of tonight’s game against the Washington Redskins, CLICK HERE. (I’m using this video for the game thread just because I like it…)
Putting this one up early today, folks. To read my preview of tonight’s game against the Washington Redskins, CLICK HERE. (I’m using this video for the game thread just because I like it…)
The second preseason game feels more meaningful because the starters tend to see more time on the field. Don’t be fooled. It isn’t. There is still only one truly definable goal for every NFL franchise as they suit up this week: stay healthy. But there are certainly some things to take a look at (and subsequently overreact to) when it comes to these 2012 Chicago Bears.
Yeah I just wrote a lot. But honestly, outside the play of the two left tackles, I don’t care what happens on the field. As long as all the pertinent players walk off it.
The banality of training camp continues Let’s overreact to some more stuff!
URLACHER GETS SCOPED
Urlacher received a knee debridement yesterday morning – “the medical removal of dead, damaged, or infected tissue to improve the healing potential of the remaining healthy tissue.” Urlacher, Lovie Smith and the organization believe the middle linebacker is still on pace to appear in the season opener on September 9th.
The truth? Who cares about September 9th? Who cares about the following Thursday night trip to Green Bay either? If this knee isn’t ready for the impact of the NFL, the Bears would be better off dropping Urlacher to PUP and ensuring a healthy star come the seventh week of the season. We can’t be shortsighted. We can’t be impatient. As I wrote a few days ago, if the Bears expect to make a deep run into the 2012 postseason, they’ll need Urlacher in January not September.
WILLIAMS & WEBB WORTH WATCHING SATURDAY NIGHT
It is a meaningless game, of course, but not for one position on the Bears roster. Mike Tice has said Chris Williams will see time for the first team offensive line Saturday night against the Washington Redskins due to J’Marcus Webb’s subpar work in the opening preseason game. The first-team unit is expected to play the entirety of the first half.
Unless you want to overreact to Cutler or Forte’s first action of the year, these two are the only players on the roster worth truly watching Saturday night. If Williams significantly outperforms Webb – in a way visible to fans – the sounds from the Soldier Field faithful will become deafening. There has been personal vitriol lobbed at Webb. Fans seems to be angry at not only the player, but the man as well. If Williams keeps a clean sheet, he’ll win in the court of public opinion.
HEALTH UPDATE
Stephen Paea spent Monday in a walking boot but was getting around pretty well Tuesday, per reports across the sideline. Major Wright came out of the preseason opener with hamstring tightness but hasn’t missed a beat at practice since. Knock on wood but outside Urlacher the Bears have yet to face a significant injury this summer. Three weeks to go!
SIDE NOTE: I don’t know how much energy I have for these inane preseason posts but I’ll keep trucking along. I see what other blogs out there are doing and, let’s be honest, I’m not going to do that. I’ll start putting my heart & soul into this thing when the players do – Wednesday, September 5th.
Brian Urlacher vows to be ready for the start of the regular season and I believe him. What would I do if I didn’t believe him? Text him? Send a team of bandits/doctors to Bourbonnais in an attempt kidnap/examine him? I’m taking Brian Urlacher at his word because Brian Urlacher’s is the only word we have access to when it comes to his recovery from knee surgery.
Urlacher’s injury is no reason to panic. It’s not even a reason to worry…yet. Start worrying if #54 is ON the injury report and NOT ON the practice field come Wednesday, September 5th. Start panicking if Urlacher isn’t full strength by mid-season. (Let’s say Monday night November 19th in San Francisco for argument’s sake.) Do the Bears need Brian Urlacher to make a championship run in 2012? Absolutely. But that means having their star middle linebacker healthy and available in December and January, not August and September.
The man in question is thirty-four years old. He has played middle linebacker at an elite level for twelve seasons; playing sixteen games in ten of those twelve seasons. (Plus playoff appearances in 2001, 2005, 2006, 2010.) Dick Butkus played nine years. Jack Lambert’s body faded terribly in his eleventh year. Mike Singletary retired after his twelfth. After three straight seasons playing sixteen games, Ray Lewis was a liability in pass coverage and missed four games in his thirteenth year (2011). Sure there are physical freaks like the late Junior Seau, and maybe Urlacher will play seventeen or eighteen seasons. But convention wisdom and historical data lead us to believe otherwise.
The otherwise? Brian Urlacher is coming to the end of a borderline Hall of Fame career and the Bears need be prepared. It may not be this year or next year but it’s coming. And just as the Ravens began relying on younger, faster players like Suggs and Ngata to carry the bulk of their defensive load so must the Bears. The organization has already begun asking #54 to do less by excusing him from the practice field. Expect that to continue. Expect Urlacher to miss practices on most Wednesdays throughout the season. Expect Lovie Smith to lighten Urlacher’s early-season load in an attempt to preserve him for the pivotal end of the campaign. Expect Smith to compensate with scheme (when possible) for the step or two surely lost by a player undergoing a major knee surgery. Especially a player who relies upon speed as the centerpiece of his athletic ability.
Players are the key, however. New, young players. Players like Henry Melton. Shea McClellin. Paea. Wootton. The kids in the secondary. Players not only situated to build the post-Urlacher foundation but also to relieve pressure from the aging superstar in the twilight of his career. (JT Thomas’ excellent preseason game aside, the Bears are devoid of young stars-to-be at LB.)
Urlacher must be the on-field transition from leading man to ensemble performer. If he does he could see his career extended several years. If he does not, it will not be his own fault. It will be the failure of the young talent assembled around him.
As starved football fans in football cities across American reach their incorrect conclusions based upon the incomplete data of the first preseason game, organizations carry on. Cuts start Monday and rosters/depth charts begin to take shape.
What will change this week in Bourbonnais? Who knows. But here is what I’ll be monitoring.
Left Tackle
Is there really anything else Bears fans care about? J’Marcus Webb struggled against non-elite pass rushers Thursday night and Mike Tice publicly flogged him by leaving him on the field until sometime early Friday morning. Now we wait to see if Tice decides to give Chris Williams an earnest chance to challenge for the position.
Personally I think it’s a must. Even if the coaching staff has every intention of allowing Webb to start the season at LT, he must feel his starting role is in question. He must feel he’s legitimately challenged. More playing time with scrubs can only send half the message. Competition sends the other half.
Shea McClellin
Will his performance Thursday night be enough to earn him work in the defensive line rotation? Will his performance against second and third-stringers be enough to supplant the thunderous Corey Wootton hype from last week? I know I’d be interested to see what McClellin can do lined up opposite Julius Peppers but that might not be possible for several weeks.
Injuries
Nothing else really matters. A fully-healthy roster for practice on Wednesday September 5th would mean the Bears had an entirely successful preseason.
No Cutler. No Forte. Brandon Marshall for twenty seconds. Peppers on the bench. Urlacher at whatever Lou Malnati’s location he’s been spending his nights. There was never going to be anything to learn from last night’s preseason opener. But I’ll take a few moments this morning and reflect.
Final note: Health is all that matters and last night, barring a change in course on Major Wright, the Bears came out healthy. That. Is. All. That. Matters. This is going to be a very good football team this year but only if their very good players are on the field.
Alex Brown signed a one-day contract with the Chicago Bears. On that one day, today, he’ll retire a Chicago Bear. He never seemed to make the money the other defensive end was making; no matter who lined up over there. He never won a Super Bowl title, although he came as close as any Bear not on the vaunted 1985 roster. He’s not going to be enshrined in Canton unless Canton decides to give me full control of enshrinement moving forward. Because I can say, without question, Alex Brown is one of my all-time favorite Bears.
Why? A million reasons.
AB belonged in a Bears uniform. Belonged in blue and orange. Belonged on the lake in Chicago. He was the quintessential blue collar defensive player in the quintessential blue collar football city (shut up, Pittsburgh). You know that phrase, “blue collar”? It’s the phrase commentators usually throw at any white guy that plays in the NFL. They do that because there’s an inherent racist assumption being made: black guys are born athletes, white guys have to work at it. It’s nonsense but that won’t stop you from hearing it out of the booths of CBS and Fox on Sunday afternoons.
Blue collar means work and AB worked – often harder than anyone else on the field. When the Bears needed a blocked kick, there was #96. When the Bears needed a sack, there was #96. And I would argue, I think without debate, no defensive end played the run better than #96 during Lovie’s tenure as Bears head coach. That run-stopping ability rarely showed up in the box score or on SportsCenter but it was the foundation on which the entire defensive system was built.
My favorite Alex Brown moment was against the Philadelphia Eagles in 2008. On a goal line stand to win the game, Brown came off the edge and wrangled Brian Westbrook to the ground. I remember thinking, in that moment, “Wow. That’s a great football player.” I can’t think of a higher compliment to pay Alex Brown. He was a great football player.
I have been looking for a video of the play and this is the best I can find:
Enjoy your night, Alex Brown. And I hope the Bears faithful at Soldier Field tonight can provide you a bit of the joy you provided us for eight years.
Note: That little fella to the far left of the image above is the one and only Mr. Caleb Hanie.
The first preseason game has less meaning than the first training camp practice. Substantially less, if that’s possible. There are two teams. Neither has game-planned for the other. Both have practiced for barely a week. And every starter worth their salt is terrified by one thing: turning the wrong way on the left knee and watching their season end before it has begun. (At least in the first training camp practice of the starters don’t spend 7/8 of the session chatting with sideline reporters.)
But are there things worth paying attention to? Sure. Since most of us are going to watch the game, we might as well pay attention.
We end with a blog open debate. If your eyes were not going to leave one Chicago Bear tomorrow night, whom would it be? Meaning: who are you most interested in watching against the Denver Broncos?
Apologies for what has been and will continue to be sporadic posting for the next few days. I am beginning my third week of jury service today but there is an end in sight.
BRIAN URLACHER RULED OUT OF PRESEASON OPENER
How many more years do you think Brian Urlacher plays at an elite level in the middle of the Bears defense? Three? Maybe two? In short #54 only has so much time left on the football field and none of that time should be wasted in Bourbonnais or in under-attended preseason stadiums. Every moment he spends on the sideline this summer, with his knee wrapped, may be another moment he can spend on the field come January.
When will I worry about Urlacher? If he’s not on the practice field Wednesday, September 5th.
THOMAS RETIRES, SANZENBACHER CLOSER TO FINAL 53
When I wrote an elaborate piece about Dane Sanzenbacher it was meant with a sufficient amount of mockery. “Why oh why, Jeff? Why must you waste our eye energy on a piece about a meaningless entity like Sanzenbacher,” wrote a fake comment I just made up. Then yesterday happened. Devin Thomas, seemingly out of the blue, walked away from the NFL. That squealing you heard from Bourbonnais was coming from Sanzenbacher’s training camp dorm. (Side note: Good for Thomas. Football is not a sport one should play against their own will.)
Here are the facts at WR. Marshall, Jeffery, Hester, Bennett and Weems are guarantees. If the Bears go with six WRs, the sixth will be The Great Dane. Lovie likes him. Cutler likes him. And contrary to many of the opinions on this site, I think the fans quite like him because fans tend to like white guy receivers. They’re easy to root for. Perennial football underdogs.
But even if Sanzenbacher makes the 53-man roster it will be a cosmetic decision. The sixth receiver never suits up on Sunday. Never. Unless the Bears suffer an injury to one of the top four receivers, Dane will have minimal impact and few touches of the football.
WILL REPLACEMENT REFEREES REALLY MATTER?
First, I don’t believe the NFL will utilize replacement referees this season. Like most strikes of this type a deal will be reached once the workforce faces the actual possibility of missing meaningful work and meaningful paychecks.
Second, I contend it wouldn’t matter much if we saw replacement referees in the NFL. Does anyone think the current crop of refs are that good? It seemed every game of 2011 was marred, one way or the other, by a poor or misguided call. Coaches, players and fans were constantly complaining about the officiating. Now we’re complaining those officials may not be around. Sounds like a Woody Allen joke.
What’s so hard about refereeing the NFL? It’s not like soccer, basketball or hockey. It does not require high levels of conditioning. And how many things are actually called on a weekly basis? Holding. Pass interference. Illegal shift. False start/offsides. You’re telling me, with six weeks of preparation, knowledgeable football men could not be put in a solid position to do the job effectively come September 5th? I agree with Pete Prisco of CBS Sports. I don’t think it would be as big a deal as people think.
It was to be the dramatic showdown of training camp.
In one corner was to stand J’Marcus Webb. 6’8″. 335 pounds. Drafted in the seventh round by the Bears,Webb has played a full season at both tackle positions. While he’s clearly been improving a technique to go along with his freakish physical stature, Webb was the single most maligned Chicago Bear of the 2011 season not called Caleb Hanie.
In the other corner would be Christopher Joseph “Chris” Williams. 6’6″. 315 pounds. Drafted fourteenth overall by Jerry Angelo to be the franchise left tackle for the Bears organization. Injury here. Injury there. Demoted inside to left guard in 2011, Williams looked like he was finally finding a home in the NFL. Injury again.
They were, these two very large men, destined to battle camp practice after camp practice for the starting left tackle position. They would battle for the right – nay the privilege – to protect the blindside of the first franchise quarterback in Chicago Bears history. It was my firm belief that this battle would reach its pinnacle under the primetime lights of the that giant air conditioner in the swamp – the Meadowlands – as Webb and Williams would come under the onslaught of the world championship trio of Tuck, Umenyiora and JPP. It would be glorious.
And then it ended. Just like that. It took half a week for Chris Williams to start working with the #2s behind right tackle Gabe Carimi, not Webb. It took half a week for Lovie Smith and almost all of the establishment media to acknowledge that it will be J’Marcus Webb lining up at left tackle for the Bears when they meet the Indianapolis Colts in a month or so. It took half a week for Lovie, Mike Tice & company to illustrate what a sham the whole battle was to begin with.
Is this final? Probably not. Like I said earlier in the week, if Robert Mathis torches Webb for three sacks on opening day I’d be shocked if pressure does force the offensive coaching staff to make a change at the position. without sIs it surprising? Yes and no.