- Brad Biggs at the Chicago Tribune answers your questions:
While the pass-rush problem seems like an issue that isn’t likely to be resolved with this team’s personnel, are there solutions to fixing the run defense in scheme and personnel? Getting Kyler Gordon back should help, but does Nahshon Wright need to be replaced if he continues to show zero interest in stopping the run? — @chicityforum1
I wrote at length earlier this week about the team’s struggles stopping the run. Fortunately it’s still a small sample size as the Bears have played only four games, but it has been an ominous start considering the explosive plays they are allowing on the ground. They are allowing 6.15 yards per carry. That’s last in the league and more than a half-yard behind the 31st-ranked Miami Dolphins.
“Hopefully (Gordon’s return) allows us to unlock a few things on defense,” Ben Johnson said. “He’s one of our bigger playmakers. I’ve got a lot of experience being on the opposing sideline from him and a ton of respect for how he can impact the game. There’s only a handful of nickels in this league that you really have to account for both as a coverage player but also a guy that likes to be nosy in the run game, and (he) could be part of the solution for us in terms of shoring up our run game as well.
“He’s got those natural football instincts that are really hard to coach and hard to teach. When you have enough players like that, that’s where you really take off in a hurry.”
Wright isn’t going to be great in run defense. I didn’t see a lack of interest in aiding the run defense last time out in Las Vegas. I saw him taking poor angles and failing to get outside leverage. He was coming down into the box. He just wasn’t executing.
As you probably know, cornerbacks are judged first by their ability to defend the pass, and if you’re swapping out those guys because of the problems you have stopping the run, there are probably bigger issues at hand.
Biggs has a point. But cornerbacks do play a role in stopping the run, and where stopping the run is a major issue, as it is with the Bears, Wright’s deficiencies in this area cannot be ignored. He has to be aggressive, stopping the run on the outside and helping to defend big plays.
Having said that, the outside run isn’t the only issue the Bears have. They’ve been porous all over the place up and down the defense.
Problems stopping the run are almost always due to poor fundamentals. Either guys aren’t doing their job filling the proper gaps or there is poor tackling, or they are having a hard time getting off of blocks. In the Bears’ case, it’s probably all three. In particular, the tackling is falling apart late in games in part because they’re just getting tired.
To an extent, I think all of these are correctable issues. I look forward to seeing if the Bears’ run defense improves coming off of the bye week after a prolonged period of self-scouting.
- Biggs goes on to address the Bears running game.
Do you think this is a week we finally start to see more Kyle Monangai in the offense? — @j_toast
Monangai’s playing time was pretty similar in the last two games: 17 snaps against the Cowboys and 19 against the Raiders. He had 28 in Week 2 in Detroit, but that bump was largely attributable to the lopsided score in the second half.
We’ll have to see after Monangai appeared on the initial injury report of the week Thursday. It was an estimate because the team was off Thursday, but he was listed as “did not participate” with a thigh injury.
When he’s healthy, I’m of the mindset that Monangai’s playing time will depend somewhat on game flow. By that, I mean if the coaching staff has a plan entering the game to use him on the fourth offensive series of the first half and the third series of the second half, how does the offense do in those scenarios? If it’s a sustained drive, there will be opportunities for more snaps and more touches.
He’ll get mixed in on occasion for D’Andre Swift in the middle of a drive. Ben Johnson has been pretty clear: He’s not piling the blame for an inconsistent rushing attack on Swift’s shoulders. Plus, Swift has been a consistent check-down target for Caleb Williams. He has 13 receptions and the ability to make a big play in the passing game.
Maybe we’ll see a few more touches for Monangai, but I don’t know that handing him the ball more would all of a sudden unlock the offense.
Rookie running backs tend to struggle as pass protectors in the NFL. It’s not that I’ve noticed that Monangai is particularly bad at it. But Swift is extremely good at it, and that’s going to be a major advantage to keeping Swift more of the time in Johnson’s mind.
I know that many Bears fans are going to choose the obvious and blame Swift for the poor running attack. But I tend to beleave Johnson when he says that Swift isn’t really the issue.
“It’s hard to evaluate any of our running backs right now when you turn on the tape and there’s some free runners in the hole where the play’s designed to go,” Johnson said. “I take it personally because I actually spend more time on the run game than I do on the passing game. Not only trying to create explosives in the running game but being sound and taking a lot of pride in our execution of the fundamentals.”
“You talk about a deuce block, deuce combination, all looking the same, a triple between the tight end and the tackle all looking the same,” Johnson said. “We’re not quite there yet. It’s been a race since training camp started. We get pads on, that’s when the full speed starts happening, and you get linebackers that are coming downhill and pulling you off your double teams. We’re just not reacting fast enough right now.”
As Johnson says, it appears to me that the Bears’ problems running the ball are those of execution. What he hasn’t said is that he’s running a fairly complicated offense that, unlike those the Bears fans have been exposed to in the recent past, is going to take a while for them to get comfortable with. This goes for both a running game and the passing game, and it’s probably responsible for some of the pre-snap penalties that they’re committing right now as well.
It appears to me that Bears fans are just going to have to be patient here. If the offense still looks like it does now halfway through next year, then I think they’ll be cause for concern. In the meantime, we just have to wait.
- Kevin Fishbain at The Athletic was also answering questions this week.
Which of our tackles would project well as guards in terms of physical statistics and skill set? Would love to find a long-term solution at right guard as I don’t think we have found even a medium-term solution in Jonah Jackson. — Nancy K.
After receiving a few questions about Jackson, I surmise that his PFF grade is low. He does have four penalties this season, which isn’t good, but I don’t think his play is anywhere near the “bench the $17 million player” territory. However, to the question about future options, if Kiran Amegadjie can get (and stay) healthy, I’d be curious what he can do at guard. That’s a big “if” based on how his career has gone, but the Bears started using him there late in the summer and liked what they saw. And then there’s rookie Luke Newman, who impressed in camp and the preseason and can play center. Those two stand out to me more than asking any of the current tackles to move inside.
This is a good question by Nancy, and I thought Fishbain’s response about “surmising that his PFF grade is low“ was a bit unfairly dismissive. Fans watch the games too, and we see what we see.
It hasn’t gotten a lot of attention, but I think that Jackson is definitely underperforming, and I would say that his job is probably in some danger. Like Fishbain, I think that there are possibly better options on the Bears roster as it stands right now.
I would guess that the Bears will give the offensive line a little bit more of a chance to gel in the running game as I urged fans to do above. But I wonder if that is going to solve Jackson’s problem, given that he couldn’t keep a starting job in Los Angeles. It will be interesting to see what happens here.
- I’m currently writing this at halftime of the Jets-Broncos game in London, so I may regret this later. But this all looks so familiar. It’s like PTSD with Justin Fields.
They started the pre-game off with all these really impressive statistics about Fields’ passer rating and the fact that he has no interceptions. And yet I watch and I see the Broncos doing everything against him that other teams did when they played the Bears and he was the quarterback. Try to keep him in the pocket. Cover everyone on the back end. Let him run if he can escape, knowing that you simply can’t win games that way.
He’s got this great passer rating against the blitz, but who cares? Who in the world would blitz this guy? All you have to do is let him drop back and hold the ball, and the drives end themselves.