It
was Alexander Pope who said “Hope springs eternal in the human
breast.”
I
would add the coverage of the Chicago Bears in the Chicago Tribune's sports section.
However
fine a newspaper it may be, the happy talk following two narrow
victories over cellar-dwelling opponents (one in the midst of an
eight-game losing streak and the other starting a third-string
quarterback making his NFL debut) smacks of public relations-speak
and not clear-eyed, objective journalism.
Judging
by the content, you would have thought the Bears had shut-out the
Baltimore Ravens and San Francisco 49ers—on the road. The reality
is the Bears squeaked by the New York Giants and Detroit Lions by a
cumulative margin of nine points.
Yes,
the Bears completed several forward passes, which was certainly
novel. And some even gained double-digit yardage, another novelty.
What's more, a number of possessions lasted more than three downs,
which qualifies as a veritable epiphany.
But
contrary to the Tribune's coverage, in the end it was the same
old Bears; struggling against what were (on paper) inferior
opponents.
And
to think all fans were worried about in September was finding a reliable field goal
kicker.
The
2019 Bears have many problems. Beyond playing a first-place schedule
and surrendering the ability to sneak up on people as they did last
year, problem number-one is their brittle offensive line, further
decimated by the loss of Kyle Long.
An
offensive line is the core of any team's offense. When they're stout
and impenetrable, they make a quarterback look like Brett Farve and a running back resemble Barry Sanders.
Quarterbacks have time to survey the field and decide on the best option for a pass. Running backs have wide open lanes enabling them to break off five, six yards at a crack. After three quarters of this, an opponent's defensive line shows signs of fatigue.
Quarterbacks have time to survey the field and decide on the best option for a pass. Running backs have wide open lanes enabling them to break off five, six yards at a crack. After three quarters of this, an opponent's defensive line shows signs of fatigue.
A
great offensive line provides options. Got a lead you want to protect
or an opposing offense you want to keep off the field? Go ahead. Run that ball. Need to
strike fast and reclaim the lead late? Done.
Sadly,
the Bears don't have either of these options. The proof is in the fact they're among the league
leaders in three-and-outs. They can't sustain their running game or their passing game.
However
talented the Bears defense is, they're on the field for more snaps
than three-quarters of their NFL colleagues. As a consequence, they tire and give up points. And
if there's a team in the NFL that can't afford to fall behind, its
the 2019 Chicago Bears.
Once again, the Bears can't run and they can't pass, largely because of their deficient O-line. Mitch Trubisky's development has been further retarded by this line, leading to a torrent of bitter and hostile criticism.
But
you'd never know it reading recent dispatches in the Tribune.
Nope. The Bears have rediscovered their mojo. They have their groove
back. Fire up Club Dub. All of this after beating the New York Giants
and Detroit Lions.
Whew. It's a little much.
The
Bears face the distracted Dallas Cowboys tonight, a team with serious
internal issues. They could conceivably get lucky and catch the
Cowboys by surprise, giving them a 7 – 6 record and sending the
Bears' public relations staff at the Tribune into overdrive.
But
with remaining games against the Green Bay Packers, Kansas City Chiefs and Minnesota Vikings (the
first and last on the road), things don't look so good. Not with a
tough schedule and a weak line and no obvious solutions on the
horizon.
Like
their 2007 counterparts, the 2019 Bears are the morning after a celebration. And there's no hiding the fact these Bears
don't look so good in the light of day.
It'll
be curious to see when the Tribune acknowledges it.
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