Post by JABF on Nov 21, 2016 7:15:36 GMT -6
The OL in particular is devastated right now. Only Whitehair and Leno are the last men standing. The "replacements" are extremely bad. "Worse than Massie" bad.
And that is truly butt-ugly bad.
And that is truly butt-ugly bad.
LINK
Bears offense shuts down as injuries pile up in loss to Giants
Sunday, Nov. 20, 2016.
Rich CampbellContact Reporter
Chicago Tribune
The Bears locker room late Sunday afternoon contained the familiar elements of their sad season.
Hushed tones, somber faces and a couple of walking boots symbolized a team that was beaten down and beaten up in a 22-16 loss to the Giants.
The Bears blew a 10-point first-half lead and lost four more starters to injury, a dispiriting combination that promises to test their resilience.
The bad news: The Bears' depleted offense failed to build on a 16-6 lead. The Giants held them to 101 yards in the second half after the Bears gained 214 in the first.
"You look at the first half and we're kind of walking the ball up and down the field," quarterback Jay Cutler said. "In the second half, it's a completely different story, and they didn't do that many things differently."
The Bears gained only five of their 93 rushing yards after halftime. The Giants loaded the box at times and were better clogging holes.
That strained a passing attack that entered the day short-handed and faced more attrition as the game progressed.
With Alshon Jeffery serving the start of his four-game suspension, tight end Zach Miller caught a 19-yard touchdown on the opening drive. But he broke his right foot in the second quarter. And in the third quarter, left guard Josh Sitton left with a right ankle injury.
Eventually the Giants put Cutler under constant duress behind a line that was missing three opening-day starters. He was sacked four times in the second half, and they pressured him into an interception in Giants territory that sealed the game with 1 minute, 11 seconds remaining.
"I was pissed," said left tackle Charles Leno, who was beaten by Olivier Vernon for a sack in the fourth quarter. "I want to go out there and perform better. I'm going against a good rusher, but that's no excuse. I look back and (Cutler's) getting hit again. It's just disappointing. We've got to keep him upright."
The Bears' scoreless second half left the defense with no margin for error. The Giants scored touchdowns on their first two drives of the half to take the lead for good.
The decisive score was a 15-yard pass from Eli Manning to rookie wideout Sterling Shepard, who beat cornerback Demontre Hurst on a slant-and-go.
"Took my eyes off of him as he was going in, and he popped it up on me," said Hurst, who was forced into action after starting cornerback Cre'Von LeBlanc suffered a concussion. "Eye discipline was bad for me on that play. I should have been on it the whole way and anticipated the route."
The good news: For most of the first half, the Bears were so efficient on offense that you wondered how it was the same group that turned the ball over five times and scored only 10 points against the Buccaneers seven days before.
Cutler was 11-for-14 passing for 126 yards and a touchdown before halftime, good for a passer rating of 128.0. Jordan Howard added 72 yards on 12 carries as the Bears used a similar approach to what kept them competitive for stretches in 2015 when injuries depleted the receiving corps.
The combination of short passes, Cutler's accuracy on downfield shots and successful run blocks irritated wind-chilled Giants fans.
"We were dominating the ball, running the ball well," Leno said. "He was making some good play-action throws. When the second half comes around, we've just got to be a team to finish. We've got to find that 'it' inside of us and get the job done."
Extra point: More like missed extra points. Winds of 17 mph and gusts up to 30 wreaked havoc on the kicking game. Giants kicker Robbie Gould, the former Bear, missed two extra points. And Bears kicker Connor Barth missed an extra point and hit the right upright on a 51-yard field-goal try.
"You've got to hit everything pretty much perfect," Barth said. "If you're off just a little bit, where most times you can get away with it — today you just had to be really, really on.
Up next: The Bears return to Soldier Field to host the Titans (5-5) at noon on Sunday. The Titans lost 24-17 to the Colts on Sunday. It was the first time in the last eight games that the Titans were held to fewer than 20 points.
Final word: "I'm not going to just say, 'Oh, (expletive), the season is over.' No. We've still got next week. And the week after that. And the week after that. We've still got many games left, and we've just got to keep getting better with the guys we have." — Leno.
rcampbell@chicagotribune.com
Twitter @rich_Campbell
Bears offense shuts down as injuries pile up in loss to Giants
Sunday, Nov. 20, 2016.
Rich CampbellContact Reporter
Chicago Tribune
The Bears locker room late Sunday afternoon contained the familiar elements of their sad season.
Hushed tones, somber faces and a couple of walking boots symbolized a team that was beaten down and beaten up in a 22-16 loss to the Giants.
The Bears blew a 10-point first-half lead and lost four more starters to injury, a dispiriting combination that promises to test their resilience.
The bad news: The Bears' depleted offense failed to build on a 16-6 lead. The Giants held them to 101 yards in the second half after the Bears gained 214 in the first.
"You look at the first half and we're kind of walking the ball up and down the field," quarterback Jay Cutler said. "In the second half, it's a completely different story, and they didn't do that many things differently."
The Bears gained only five of their 93 rushing yards after halftime. The Giants loaded the box at times and were better clogging holes.
That strained a passing attack that entered the day short-handed and faced more attrition as the game progressed.
With Alshon Jeffery serving the start of his four-game suspension, tight end Zach Miller caught a 19-yard touchdown on the opening drive. But he broke his right foot in the second quarter. And in the third quarter, left guard Josh Sitton left with a right ankle injury.
Eventually the Giants put Cutler under constant duress behind a line that was missing three opening-day starters. He was sacked four times in the second half, and they pressured him into an interception in Giants territory that sealed the game with 1 minute, 11 seconds remaining.
"I was pissed," said left tackle Charles Leno, who was beaten by Olivier Vernon for a sack in the fourth quarter. "I want to go out there and perform better. I'm going against a good rusher, but that's no excuse. I look back and (Cutler's) getting hit again. It's just disappointing. We've got to keep him upright."
The Bears' scoreless second half left the defense with no margin for error. The Giants scored touchdowns on their first two drives of the half to take the lead for good.
The decisive score was a 15-yard pass from Eli Manning to rookie wideout Sterling Shepard, who beat cornerback Demontre Hurst on a slant-and-go.
"Took my eyes off of him as he was going in, and he popped it up on me," said Hurst, who was forced into action after starting cornerback Cre'Von LeBlanc suffered a concussion. "Eye discipline was bad for me on that play. I should have been on it the whole way and anticipated the route."
The good news: For most of the first half, the Bears were so efficient on offense that you wondered how it was the same group that turned the ball over five times and scored only 10 points against the Buccaneers seven days before.
Cutler was 11-for-14 passing for 126 yards and a touchdown before halftime, good for a passer rating of 128.0. Jordan Howard added 72 yards on 12 carries as the Bears used a similar approach to what kept them competitive for stretches in 2015 when injuries depleted the receiving corps.
The combination of short passes, Cutler's accuracy on downfield shots and successful run blocks irritated wind-chilled Giants fans.
"We were dominating the ball, running the ball well," Leno said. "He was making some good play-action throws. When the second half comes around, we've just got to be a team to finish. We've got to find that 'it' inside of us and get the job done."
Extra point: More like missed extra points. Winds of 17 mph and gusts up to 30 wreaked havoc on the kicking game. Giants kicker Robbie Gould, the former Bear, missed two extra points. And Bears kicker Connor Barth missed an extra point and hit the right upright on a 51-yard field-goal try.
"You've got to hit everything pretty much perfect," Barth said. "If you're off just a little bit, where most times you can get away with it — today you just had to be really, really on.
Up next: The Bears return to Soldier Field to host the Titans (5-5) at noon on Sunday. The Titans lost 24-17 to the Colts on Sunday. It was the first time in the last eight games that the Titans were held to fewer than 20 points.
Final word: "I'm not going to just say, 'Oh, (expletive), the season is over.' No. We've still got next week. And the week after that. And the week after that. We've still got many games left, and we've just got to keep getting better with the guys we have." — Leno.
rcampbell@chicagotribune.com
Twitter @rich_Campbell