Posts Tagged Lovie Smith

FIVE REASONS THE BEARS ARE GARBAGE

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The Chicago Bears have lost 6 of their last seven games, with the lone victory coming against Cleveland at home.  That game shouldn’t even count, and not just because it was against the Browns.  The Bears played like trash in that one too.  Even though it’s hard to narrow it down, here’s a look at 5 reasons the Bears are sh*tty once again:

 

REASON 1: WEEKS 2 & 3 OF THE 2008 SEASON

In consecutive weeks last year, undisciplined and sloppy mistakes by only two individuals derailed the Bears’ entire season.

 

In Week 2 at Carolina, tight end Greg Olsen fumbled twice, losing both.  The first was at the Carolina 27, ending a drive that would have put the Bears up by two scores.  The second was at the Bears’ 26, setting up a TD that put the Panthers within striking distance, and eventually losing the game.

 

greg olsen fumbles.  online photo, no source available

 

The following week at home vs. Tampa Bay, Charles Tillman committed a heinous unsportsman-like conduct penalty after the Bears defense had held Tampa Bay to a punt on their 3rd possession of overtime.  Not only that, Tampa Bay was inside their own 10 yard line when Tillman decided to engage in fisticuffs.  Tampa Bay, given new life in the extra period, drove right down into FG range and booted the game-winner.

 

The above synopses don’t scratch the surface of how Chicago drastically outplayed their opponents yet still lost those games.  Had the Bears been disciplined enough to win these two, the rest of the season could have played out exactly as it did anyway, and Chicago would have won the division at 11-5 and gone to the playoffs.  The final-game meltdown in Houston would have mattered none, in fact Chicago could have rested starters without being challenged for the division crown, and there would have been no temptation to trade away Kyle Orton and the bevy of draft picks for Jay Cutler.  No seven red-zone picks that clearly have cost Chicago multiple games this season.  No dismal future with gaping holes that can’t be filled because of 2 consecutive drafts without a first-day selection.

 

kyle.  online photo, no source available

 

No one will call me neutral when it comes to my disdain of Jay Cutler, nor for my fondness for Orton, but even I understand that Bears management felt the need to jump at a QB of Cutler’s caliber when they had the chance.  If for no other reason than to keep him off of the Minnesota Vikings, who right now would look pretty set for the next decade with Cutler and Adrian Peterson at the helm.  But Cutler’s regression, combined with the hefty mortgage for his services, makes the trade second-guess-able, and it will be until Cutler bears fruit.

 

REASON 2: THE 2003 NFL DRAFT

 

I know what you’re saying – that’s a bit of a stretch, isn’t it?  Really, just how much impact does a draft six years ago have on this season’s debacle?  The answer is: a lot.

 

Chicago went a dismal 4-12 in 2002, earning them the No. 4 overall pick in the 2003 draft.  2002 included an 8-game losing streak that stretched from September 15th to November 24th, and Bear fans across the nation deserved an impact rookie player in return for the pathetic performance.

 

GM Jerry Angelo started things off right in retrospect.  That year, the favorite of NFL Draftniks at the #4 slot was Kentucky defensive tackle DeWayne Robertson, who Angelo wasn’t high on at such a pricey draft position.  He would command big money, and seeing as Robertson is currently without an NFL home only 6 seasons later, Angelo was correct in not picking or paying him.  He found a sucker to trade with in the New York Jets (a favor the Jets would repay Angelo for down the road, but I’ll get to that later), who sent Chicago their 2 first-round choices, the 14th and 22nd picks, for the right to draft Robertson at no. 4.

 

This was an excellent trade, and would be viewed as such if Angelo didn’t take Penn State DE Michael Haynes at 14 and Florida QB Rex Grossman at 22.  We all certainly remember the rollercoaster Grossman took Chicago on during his tenure there – in fact, a QB who took his team to a Super Bowl in only his 3rd season can’t really be viewed as a bust.  But Haynes was an inexcusable disaster.  Haynes was cut from the Bears after their ’06 Super Bowl loss, and never dressed in another NFL uniform.  He was signed to the practice squads of the Jets and Saints, but was cut from both before Week 2.

 

rex grossman humped.  online photo, no source available

 

Perhaps if Angelo would have spent one or both of those two 1st-rounders (or his original 4th overall pick) on any of the following Pro-Bowlers he passed on, the Bears may still be reaping the benefits of a terrible 2002 season-this is why that draft still matters now:

 

DT Kevin Williams (Vikes)
OT Jordan Gross (Panthers)
CB Terrance Newman (Cowboys)
DE/LB Terrell Suggs (Ravens)
CB Marcus Trufant (Seattle)
RB Willis McGahee (Bills)
RB Larry Johnson (Chefs)
FS Troy Polamalu (Steelers)
CB Nnamdi Asomugha (Raiders)
WR Anquan Boldin (Cards)
DE Osi Umenyora (Giants)
LB E.J. Henderson (Vikes – hasn’t made the Pro Bowl yet, but will)
TE Jason Whitten (Cowboys)
CB Asante Samuel (Patriots)

 

I’ll let that squad of superstars sink in a while.

 

Ready?  Okay.

 

REASON 3: CEDRIC BENSON

 

That’s right kids, the Bears are still reeling from the mess Benson left in his drunken-boat-captain wake.  Not only did the Bears not need him as they already had Thomas Jones on the roster, they took him at that same cursed No. 4 spot, which the Bears had earned after another dismal season, only 2 seasons after their last top-5-draft-pick-earning craptastic year.

 

Benson quickly got to work on his 36-day training camp contract holdout, after which he immediately split the locker room by pretty much acting like a total assh*le.  Actually, assh*le doesn’t really adequately describe Benson’s behavior, but I’ll let other Bears fans give you their colorful opinions of Cedric Benson if you’ve been swayed by his resurgence in Cincinnati, and you mistakenly believe that his release from Chicago was foolish.

 

cedric benson.  online photo, no source available

 

But, you might say, they got rid of himHow is he still affecting the teamBesides, the 2005 draft was quite possibly the worst draft in the history of the institution – there were nothing but busts in the entire thing – and on that point, you’ll get no argument from me.  Cedric Benson wasn’t even the biggest bust of that draft.  That honor would probably go to top pick Alex Smith, or perhaps the lovable and cuddly Adam ‘Pacman’ Jones.

 

Well, remember how I said earlier that the Jets would have their revenge for getting tricked into trading up for DeWayne Robertson?  Well, here’s why – the J-E-T-S Jets Jets Jets happily took Thomas Jones off of Chicago’s hands for a 2nd round pick.  Turned out to be a steal, as TJ was an All-Pro selection the following season, and this year ranks in the top 5 in every rushing category there is, along with leading the league in carries.

 

Thomas Jones.  online photo, no source available
Thomas Jones: Apparently too much beast for Chicago

 

But Jones was a locker room favorite in Chicago, and for that reason, he had to go.  Benson was taking up too much salary-cap space to be the source of controversy, so despite only producing marginal results at that point in his career (as well as taking himself out of the ’06 Super Bowl like a pussy), Benson won the job, and Jones had to be jettisoned.  On top of losing a great talent and the spiritual leader of the offense, the Bears used the 2nd-round selection they got for Jones on defensive end Dan Bazuin out of Central Michigan.

 

The natural response to that fact, which would be “Who the f*ck is Dan Bazuin?” is the exact reason that Benson is a reason the Bears are garbage now.

 

dan bazuin.  online photo, no source available
Here’s Dan Bazuin. Don’t recognize him? Me either.

 

Think I’m finished? I’m just getting warmed up.

 

REASON 4: REPLACING MIKE BROWN WITH JOSH BULLOCKS AND AL AFALAVA

 

I don’t mean to directly disparage Al Afalava.  For a guy who was drafted 190th overall out of Oregon State and was pushed into the starting lineup because no one else would even take the job, he’s done fairly well.  But the he had some enormous, if often-injured, shoes to fill.

 

I won’t even disparage Angelo for moving on from Mike Brown, a guy who will never pay for a meal in Chicago for the rest of his life.  Mike Brown was so good at his position that his annual injury would kill all momentum for the Bears defense.  He was too good to lose during the season, so the Bears had to lose him altogether, and not have to count on his presence to be the factor that it always was.

 

mike brown.  online photo, no source available

 

But he played an enormous role in the defensive success of Angelo’s tenure, and his position was far too crucial in Lovie Smith’s Tampa-2 scheme not to fill with a competent replacement.  The only free-agent the Bears tried to cover their asses with was Josh Bullocks, who has seen almost no time at all in the few games he’s actually been given a jersey and pads for.  They didn’t address the gaping hole via the draft until they took Afalava with the 16th pick of the 6th round, and if Angelo honestly thought he was drafting Afalava to start this year, then he needs to be fired on that basis alone.  Perhaps Afalava can grow into the starter that the Bears need him to be, but his rookie status as the quarterback of this defense is a huge factor in the Bears’ sh*tiness now.

 

REASON 5: MATT FORTE WAS NEVER REALLY VERY GOOD

 

I hate to say it, but Matt Forte’s reputation as a decent running back in the NFL has stood largely on one highlight, and that would be a highly-viewed 50-yard TD run on opening night in Indianapolis last season.  He outran Bob Sanders on the play, which was all the reason anyone needed to hype the kid as the next great Chicago tailback.

 

The truth is that Forte had all of three 100+ yard games in 2008, and didn’t break 4 yards per carry for the season.  Yep, I myself argued for his rookie of the year candidacy, given that he was responsible for more of his team’s total offensive production than any other player in the league.  But the fact that Chicago’s passing game largely revolved around an average tailback was an indictment of the Bears’ pass-catchers, not a complement to Forte.

 

matt forte.  online photo, no source available

 

Forte can be a good runner if given ideal conditions, and that means big holes in front of him and a passing game that is actually a threat.  Take one or both of those elements away and he becomes not only average, but spark-less.  He should be moved to H-Back, as he is still a good blocker and receiver, but shouldn’t be relied on to carry the Bears run game by himself.

 

That 50-yard TD on opening night was a signal to Bears fans that the days of watching the sleepy Cedric Benson plod around and fall down in the open field were over.  Benson was so bad that even a middling rookie looked like the next coming of Neal Anderson by comparison.  But Forte has turned out to be exactly what you would think when you watch his highlights from Tulane – the next Anthony Thomas.  Solid rookie year, and it’s all downhill from there.  Unfortunately for the Bears and their fans, the Bears will likely start him as their “featured back” as long as Lovie Smith is around.  Now would be the time to spend another high draft pick on a running back, like they did with Cedric Benson, but Angelo will likely be too in love with his own draft pick to challenge him, also like he did with Cedric Benson.

 

In conclusion, f*ck you, Jay Cutler. Here’s another really stupid looking picture of you, of which there are many.

 

jay cutler.  online photo, no source available

 

 

Email: nick.thomas@flyingpigskin.com

 

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NFL Week 11: The AFC North Implodes and the Bears are Awful

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While all four teams in the AFC North lost today, at least the Ravens can say they lost to a good team. Baltimore fell to Indianapolis, but Cincy lost to Oakland, Pittsburgh lost to Kansas City, and Cleveland lost to the lowly Detroit Lions.

 

The latter game was a barn-burner between two of the NFL’s worst teams, featuring 724 yards passing and 75 points of bottom-feeding offense. Matthew Stafford threw for 5 TD’s, including the game-winner with no time remaining, and perennial punchline Brady Quinn threw for four scores and over 300 yards. And that’s not all.

 

lions win.  online photo, no source available

 

Matthew Stafford became the NFL’s youngest QB to throw for 5 TD’s in a game, surpassing Dan Marino and Joe Namath by a big margin. Conversely, Cleveland’s Brady Quinn came into Sunday’s game with only 3 career TD’s, which he matched in the first quarter. Over Cleveland’s last 15 games, they had only scored 5 offensive TD’s, and they scored 4 on Sunday, all through the air.

 

The display was punctuated by a dramatic finish for the ages – Detroit’s Stafford tossed up a prayer with no time remaining, and Cleveland giftwrapped a pass-interference penalty in the end zone, giving Detroit the ball at the Browns’ one with no time on the clock. Stafford was creamed on the play that set up the touchdown, injuring his shoulder, and to what extent is still unclear. But Cleveland called a timeout at the end of the play, giving Stafford enough time to gather himself for the final TD pass, which he completed to TE Brandon Pettigrew to ice the game. If you think that game was the only freak occurrence in the Brown’s division, you’d be wrong.

 

Flukes abounded in the Steelers-Chiefs game, where Ben Roethlisberger threw for the 3rd-highest yardage total of his career and three TD’s, but also threw two INT’s and was knocked out of the game in OT with a concussion. Ultimately it was Pittsburgh’s defense that gave up a huge pass play that sealed the game, and Kansas City broke a 10-game home losing streak against the World Champs, who gave up yet another special-teams return TD (the 8th straight game in which that has happened). The teams from Pennsylvania are hard to predict this season.

 

ryan succup.  online photo, no source available

 

Following suit, the Cincinnati Bengals lost to Oakland in a game that featured a combined 8 fumbles and 5 lost. Cedric Benson missed the game and was replaced by Bernard Scott, who filled in admirably to the tune of 119 yards on 20 carries. But Cincy’s Andre Caldwell handed the ball and the game to the Raiders when he fumbled a kickoff return inside his own 25 with 33 seconds left in the game. Sebastian Janikowski (first time I’ve typed his name, I have to say it was quite enjoyable) nailed the chip-shot to win the game for Oakland, who has proved to be a pitfall for over-confident teams from the other side of the US.

 

The New York Giants got up off the mat today against Atlanta in another overtime thriller, with Eli Manning turning in arguably his best game of the season (384 yards and three TD’s). New York’s strong start provided quite a landing pad for their freefall in the last month, and the Giants now are still in great position to take the middling, mediocre, mundane NFC East.

 

BEARS HOMER SECTION

 

I went into this game watching for a variety of sequences that would prove several theories I hold about exactly why the Bears have been terrible this season – among those would have been the ratio of press coverage to soft coverage by the Bears’ defense; how many times they ran Matt Forte up the middle out of the I formation, or how many times Don McNabb was able to connect on easy slant routes for more than 5 yards. But it’s way easier to just say that the Bears are terrible.

 

While the Bears played with good effort at times, it is disappointing to repeatedly see a good effort by one unit be completely wasted by the opposite unit. A turnover forced on defense is squandered by the offense. A rare scoring drive by the offense is never reciprocated by a defensive stand that helps build momentum.

 

bears suck.  online photo, no source available

 

On top of that, at would seem that the Chicago offensive game plan for Jay Cutler has been whittled down to two steps:

 

Step 1: Throw a terrible pass, whether it be into heavy coverage or badly overthrowing a wide-open receiver
Step 2: Beg for a flag from the ref

 

That’s it. Fortunately for the Bears, if they plan on employing this particular kind of passing attack for the next decade, they have the best possible QB in the league to do it. On Sunday night vs. the Eagles, Cutler proved especially adept at overthrowing wide-open receivers that should have had TD’s. Cutler was under no pressure on the remarkably overthrown passes, a sure sign that he is more concerned with not throwing picks than he is with making completions. And he’s already drawn tens of thousands of dollars in fines for jawing at referees, so it looks like the Bears are all set for the future!

 

Jay Cutler is a cancer to a coaching staff. He got Mike Shannahan fired from Denver, and he’s about to get Lovie Smith fired too. He seems to be able to convince a front office that he isn’t the problem, and that the coaching staff and other personnel is. Shannahan won two Super Bowls in Denver before Cutler came along and got him canned. How long will Smith’s Super Bowl loss carry him with this front office (probably a while, actually, says Smith’s $10M buyout clause)?

 

Fact of the matter is that Jay Cutler, like the QB that took Chicago to the big game in 2006, can thrive if given ideal conditions. But to expect Cutler to lift a team out of mediocrity is expecting too much. If you know Cutler, you know that isn’t possible.

 

Likewise, Lovie Smith’s defense, predicated on not giving up the big play and creating turnovers/QB pressure, isn’t talented enough anymore to play the law of averages that says if they sit deep on routes and refuse to give up the home run, they’ll win. It just isn’t that simple. Teams have figured it out. It may require the patience to take what the Bears give you, but little study is required to realize that the Bears will give you a lot. Enough with this. The Bears suck ass, and that’s that.

 

contact email: nick.thomas@flyingpigskin.com

 

 

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GET THIS CLOWN OFF MY TEAM

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Tommie Harris has officially worn out his welcome. The Bears came into a game today against the Arizona Cardinals that was as important as any they’ll play this season. Chicago had pretty much beaten the teams they were supposed to beat, and lost the ones they should have lost. This one was going to be a great measuring stick, and the Bears needed all hands on deck, even the overpaid underachievers.

 

Tommie Harris.  online photo, no source available

 

So Harris decided to give Bears fans one more reason to scream for his release, as if they didn’t have enough already. On the first series of the game, Harris slugged a Cards o-lineman in the facemask, which of course does absolutely nothing except get you rightly thrown out of the game. The guy was laying flat on his back in a defenseless position when Tommie Harris proved himself to have no discipline, class, character, respect, or intelligence.

 

Ever since he was given a $40 Million extension after the 2007 season, Harris has defined the term “piece of sh*t”. The guy completely lost all the energy and integrity he once had surpluses of.

 

Not once since he got his payday has Tommie Harris had any discernible impact on even one game. If the Bears do decide to cut ties with this garbage tackle, he’ll probably then be motivated enough to be good elsewhere, which apparently is the en-vogue thing to do in the NFL these days.

 

But I personally wouldn’t care if he went to the Vikings and became a Hall-of-Famer. He’s sucking salary-cap space, and while before he was doing it by simply not performing, now he’s doing it while actually hurting the team.

 

And as if Lovie Smith needed more people piling on right now, he did himself no favors by keeping that same clueless expression on his face when Harris was rightly tossed from the field. Any Bears fan would have run through a wall for Smith if he would have ripped off his headset, ran onto the field, grabbed Harris by the facemask and ejected him before the refs did. But instead, I suppose he’ll wait until he watches the film tomorrow to have some kind of reaction.

 

The defense overall has given revolting performances in 2 of the last three games.  As such, Bears fans must revolt.  Blame lies with management.

 

The Bears finished last season ranked 30th in pass defense, and their answer to the problem was to release FS Mike Brown, who is Kansas City’s 2nd-leading tackler after starting every game this year; and replace him with free-agent safety Josh Bullocks, who has registered 1 tackle over the 4 games he’s dressed for.

 

The group has played so poorly that 6th-round rookie safety Al Afalava was starting as Brown’s replacement and was the team’s 6th leading tackler until he injured his shoulder Sunday.  Although Afalava has played admirably for a rookie, he’s certainly not good enough to mitigate the rest of the crap unit.  And just how did the team get in the position of needing a 6th-round rookie to start at free safety, regardless of how well he’s performed?  Even Jerry Angelo couldn’t say with a straight face that when he took Afalava as the 190th pick he was drafting him to start.

 

Jerry Angelo.  online photo, no source available
Keep smilin’, Jerry. That Super Bowl loss three years ago means you’re doing a heckuva job.

 

But perhaps the most egregious error the Chicago Bears front office has made was to believe that this defense was capable of playing at a level similar to three years ago. Has it played under unfavorable circumstances? Absolutely, with Brian Urlacher going down for the season in Week 1, and for all intensive purposes LB Pisa Tinoiasamoa as well. But after those two, health wasn’t a huge issue for the Bears defense. That is until today, when Chicago lost half their terrible secondary with shoulder injuries. Let’s see how bad they get torched when they’re down both Afalava and Peanut Tillman.

 

Chicago better hope that trading for DE Gaines Adams turns out to be a stroke of genius, because after next April’s draft, they will have gone two full years without a first-day draft pick. That’s at least four starting prospects that won’t be helping a defense that looks about as solid as Da Coach without Da Levitra.

 

Perhaps Mike Brown’s injuries were all Angelo needed to stop allocating salary to the position. But safeties aren’t running backs, you can’t just go through them like generic toilet paper (maybe Angelo should actually try that approach with his RBs). You need real talent at the position, and a lot of it.

 

I’ve been known to say that Angelo is at least capable of drafting defense, but I’m starting to dispute that notion too. Perhaps the Chicago defense wouldn’t look so anemic if a few of the following Angelo defensive draftees had panned out (I’ll even leave out players drafted after the 5th round):

 

Roosevelt Williams
Bobby Gray
Bryan Knight
Michael Haynes
(arguably Angelo’s biggest bust on either side of the ball – remember a 4th overall pick was traded for Haynes and Rex Grossman)
Tron LaFavor
Claude Harriott
Leon Joe
Chris Harris
(is and was good but Angelo traded him, probably for another waste of a pick)
Dusty Dvoracek (Angelo also traded a 3rd-rounder to Carolina for Ricky Manning Jr that year)
Michael Okwo
Dan Bazuin

 

It’s time for a change, I hope.

 

 

contact email: nick.thomas@flyingpigskin.com

 

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CUTLER vs. ORTON: CHICAGO GOT SWINDLED

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Sooo, Chicago’s Jay Cutler signed a 2-year contract extension today, loaded with $30 million in new money and $20 million guaranteed.  This seems like an appropriate time to analyze how Cutler stacks up with his trade-bait counterpart in Denver, Kyle Orton.

 

Full disclosure, I fully admit bias – I’ll give you my Bears tickets if you can find one person who says I was on board with the trade back in April.  I knew Cutler could play, and I also knew I’d hated him since college.  I knew there was a reason that a lot of other pros just didn’t like him.  It wasn’t just limited to San Diego where Cutler was strongly disliked.

 

Jay Cutler.  online photo, no source available

Jay Cutler: “I’m warning you, I’m pretty much a total pr*ck”

 

I could go on, but it’s pointless.  He’s the Bears’ QB and I’ve got to root for a guy I don’t like, it’s that simple.

 

Who I did like before the trade was Kyle Orton.  I liked rooting for him, even though his numbers weren’t top-shelf.  I thought that when Orton was given a set of options in a situation, chances were that he was going to make the right decision.

 

It’s how he turned the Bears’ doomed 2005 season into a playoff run his rookie year.  Lest ye Bears fans hath forgotten that year, starter Rex Grossman broke his ankle in the 2nd preseason game in St. Louis.  Grossman’s backup, Chad Hutchinson, played so terribly in the next two preseason games that he was cut prior to week one.  That left the Bears no choice but to turn to the 4th-round rookie from Purdue, Kyle Orton – who, after starting 2-3 (only a game worse than the Bears are today), he engineered an 8-game winning streak, before being thanklessly benched at halftime of a home game against Atlanta in December, a game he surely could have won if he’d made it past halftime.

 

Kyle Orton.  online photo, no sirce available

Kyle Orton, wondering why he got the boot twice in Chicago with a 21-12 record.

 

But Lovie Smith and GM Jerry Angelo saw an opportunity to showcase their QB with a big arm, who they’d saved a roster spot for all year instead of putting him on injured reserve.  Instead of rewarding Orton for saving their season and their asses, they shoved a clipboard in his hands and put in Rex, who played in more regular-season game and then got pounded in the playoffs by the Carolina Panthers.  It squandered the home-field advantage and the 11-5 record that the rookie built for him.

 

Angelo and Smith decided that it was time to ditch Kyle again after the 2008 season, trading Orton, 2 first-round picks and a third rounder to Denver for the big-guns Cutler.  It’s what Chicago fans wanted.  There were no vigils for Kyle Orton; Chicago couldn’t wait to embrace it’s new melo-drama QB.

 

It just so happens that the Bears signed Cutler to this extension after 5 games, which is ironic, when you look at the last time that Chicago had a legit offense, even though I still hesitate to even use that word now. The last time would be the first 5 games of 2006, before that fateful night in Arizona.  Before the Monday Night Miracle performed by the Chicago defense in Week 6, the Grossman-led offense was unstoppable.  Grossman was never the same after that night (0 TD, 4 INT), and hasn’t matched that stretch since.  Here’s some numbers to crunch:

 

KYLE ORTON 2009

6-0 record, 100.1 passer rating, 244 yards a game and 9 TD’s with 1 INT.

 


JAY CUTLER 2009

3-2 record, 86.9 passer rating, 240 yards a game and 10 TD’s with 7 INT’s.

 


REX GROSSMAN 2006 (through first 5 games)

5-0 record, 102.6 passer rating, 248 yards a game and 10 TD’s with 3 INT’s.

 

Can you imagine if Grossman was signed to an extension after Week 5?  Me neither.  Thank the Good Lord.

 


 

My point is that as it stands right now, the Bears got grifted in the trade for Cutler.  While Denver uses Chicago’s surprisingly high 1st round draft pick next season and the Bears are left with huge holes on the offensive line and linebacking unit, Josh McDaniels will laugh as he solidifies his squad for years to come with multiple 1st-round selections.

 


To their credit, the Bears got to eat up much of the guaranteed value of the deal with the cap space they have available this season, so it is a mutually beneficial deal for both parties.  But the real motivation behind the signing was that Angelo wasn’t going to give up what he traded for Cutler and let him reach free agency, where he’d either have to overpay him or let him go after two years, which isn’t an option.

 


The fact that Cutler even complied scares me.  I’ve seen enough Bears play their asses off until they get their first big contract, then hit the brakes in just about every way imaginable.  I do believe in Cutler’s competitiveness, but can he find that fire after pocketing a $12 Million signing bonus?  Was he too easily swayed into getting his value now instead of waiting until after the season, when the true sociopathic narcissist would assume that they had been brilliant and worth more?

 


Denver got a cerebral team guy who doesn’t have Cutler’s cannon or mobility (or ego), but they’re undefeated and Chicago is two games back in their division.  I think the Bears can even with the Vikings before season’s end, but the Broncos don’t look to be slowing down after taking out New England two weeks ago and winning a tough division road game in the 4th quarter in San Diego.

 


 

Meanwhile, Chicago newspaper reporters are one more multiple-interception performance away from baiting Jay Cutler into a public meltdown so they can rip his play and his personality at the same time.  They lost a heartbreaker in Atlanta for the second year in a row and the natives are restless.  The running game is being crucified, and Cutler is next because the defense will ultimately get a pass for Urlacher going down Week 1.

 


If the Bears don’t win in Cincinnati this Sunday, Chicago will turn on Jay Cutler.  This is the town that forced Rex Grossman to the bench a mere two games after he started in the Super Bowl.  Don’t think Cutler and his facial expressions will last long, especially if Orton keeps outplaying him in Denver.

 


Lovie Smith, Jerry Angelo, and offensive coordinator Ron Turner all pretty much have their jobs wrapped up in Cutler’s success, and while I don’t want to see Lovie Smith be let go, he should be if Chicago misses the playoffs.  They all should be.  And then let some other regime come in and try changing Jay’s diapers.

 

contact email: nick.thomas@flyingpigskin.com

 

 

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