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2010

Tale of the Tape: vs. Eagles, Week 11, 2010

by BearsFan on November 2, 2011

Mike Vick, meet your maker.

Fact: no player in the NFL has ever sacked Michael Vick as many times as Julius Peppers (7).  After years of playing in the same division – Vick with the Falcons and Peppers with the Panthers – they will meet for the second time in their new uniforms.  Just like last year, the match-up will be a featured game, and just like last year, both teams have the same record and win streak going into the game.  While the Eagles made themselves into a so-called “Dream Team” this offseason and the Bears were left to dream of a better team, I think it will be a close one this Sunday.  Follow me below the fold to look back at how the Bears decimated the Eagles by beating them at their own game and how we can do it again this time around.  Onwards!

The buzz before the game was all about the emergence of Mike Vick as a “pocket passer,” which is apparently the polite way of saying he finally got his accuracy numbers up to respectable NFL level.  On the other side of the field, the story was pretty much the opposite: after a mediocre start to the Mike Martz experience, Lovie threatened to sick Kreutz on sat down and talked to Mike Martz about needing to run the ball.  The results?  Three straight wins coming out of the bye.  In any case, the stakes were high for both of these playoff-bound teams.  Let’s break it down…

Defense

While many teams came after Mike Vick with the blitz, the Bears played him in their traditional style.  They were content, for the most part, to send only four men on the rush and fall back into a deep cover 2 shell to stop the big play potential of the Eagles offense.  At least through three quarters, this plan worked well on the front end of the D.  The Bears ended up with eight hits and four sacks on Vick, all of which came from the defensive front.  Better still, on the rare occasions they did blitz, it worked well: DJ Moore had a nice tackle for a loss on Lesean McCoy on a nickel blitz, Chris Harris blocked a pass on a red-zone blitz, and Brian Urlacher had an uncredited assist on a strip-sack of Vick.  The other key was, strangely enough, holding back the rush just a little bit.  This strategy was evident on a key play in the first quarter, when Israel Idonije came free, stutter stepped while Vick faked a hand-off, and the shut down the play for a measly gain when Vick ran the ball himself.  By having the defensive ends contain Vick to the inside, the Bears were able to keep him in check as a runner: he only gained 44 yards as a rusher on the day. All told, it was a superb game by the front four against the often-elusive Vick.

The Eagles’ run game wasn’t much of a factor in this game.  Their lead rusher on the day – McCoy – had only 53 yards on 10 carries, which gave him a nice average but little else.  The Bears, who always put a premium on stopping the run first, did just that.  While I’m guessing the game plan was focused more on Vick than on McCoy, the same strategies the Bears used against Vick also helped to stop the run.  By containing the edges of the pocket and forcing rushes by a RB or QB to go inside, Briggs and Urlacher were able to clean up most of what the D-line did not.

While the run defense was solid, things didn’t go quite as well against the pass.  Vick’s receivers and tight ends were able to find space in between the coverage zones, the biggest weak spot being the soft spots in the middle of the field between the linebackers and safeties.  While none of these 15-20 yard passes racked up huge yards after the catch, this is my single biggest concern going into this week’s game.  The Bears’ biggest defense against these kinds of plays – consistent pressure to force the ball out before deep routes can be completed – worked well, but if the Eagles’ offensive line can hold up against Peppers and company, it could be a long night.  The other defense against these kinds of plays – clogging up throwing lanes and getting hands on the ball in flight – also worked well.  This brings me to the…

Play of the Game

With time running down in the first half, the Bears were nursing a one-point lead that looked to quickly become a six-point deficit.  The Eagles had stormed down the field and had goal-to-go.  With the run going nowhere on first down, Vick dropped back to pass and made a clean throw despite the pocket collapsing at the edges.  Tommie Harris, however, was able to get just enough of a hand on the ball to turn the spiral into and end-over-end duck that flew right into the heart of the Bears’ secondary.  Chris Harris was able to secure the ball, and proceeded to run in out of the end zone.  38 yards and one devastating block by Brian Urlacher on Mike Vick later, the Bears had the ball with good field position and just enough time to make it 21-13 at the half. 

Player of the Game

My lede already gave it away – I have to go with Julius Peppers for this one.  Simply put, he was in Vick’s face all day.  If he can continue to build on his already-impressive stats against Mike Vick, Peppers will be an awfully big spanner in the works of the Eagles offense.

This Week

The biggest question going into this week’s game is if the Bears’ defensive front can perform as well against the Eagles’ line as they did last year.  If they rack up pressures and sacks like they did last year, it could be another beat-down.  If, however, the Bears are forced to blitz or sit in coverage for too long, the tables might be turned.  The play of Chris Conte could also be key, as the Eagles’ speed on the outside will require him to make good reads and play tight coverage on those deep routes.  Lovie was content to start his safeties out a good 20 or more yards off the line last time, but they will have to come up and make some plays if the Bears are going to shore up the gaps in their zones and shut down the passing game.  The Bears were able to rack up enough points on the other side of the ball to make up for the D only generating one turnover, but with Cutler not having the benefit of going against two backup corners this time, the D will need to do better than that.  I am confident that we can hold the Eagles to 28 or fewer, but we shall see if that is enough to notch a win.

 

Offense

While Jay Cutler and company were the beneficiary of an injury-depleted Eagles defense, they had a great game by any standard.  While everyone expected the Eagles to be the team to put up big plays, it was the Bears who had five plays of thirty yards or more.  Better still, Jay was 14 for 21, with 247 yards, 4 touchdowns and no interceptions.  The Eagles’ overhaul of their defense makes talking at length about how we sliced them apart somewhat irrevelant, but I will give the quick summary.  Matt Forte was his usual beastly self, accumulating nearly 100 of his 139 all-purpose yards on two long runs.  Still, he was stopped far too many times for little to no gain, but such is life when you field an offensive line as lackluster as the Bears’.  The Eagles linebackers are their biggest weakness on defense, and if Forte can get a block and break through the front four of the Eagles’ D, he can once again get some highlight-reel runs against the Eagles this week.  Having a fullback who can actually block will only help, but if the offensive line allows too many Eagles in the backfield, we will see a lot more of those goose-egg runs come Sunday.

As I already mentioned, Cutler had a great game through the air.  He was sacked more times than any Bears fan would like to see, but when he had some time to settle in the pocket he played some of the best football of his Bears career.  Two of his touchdown passes were of the “Why did you just do that Jay, here comes the interc… touchdown!” variety, one a laser that split double coverage and found Earl Bennett, the other a pass that Greg Olsen quite literally stole out of the hands of the safety before he could get the interception.  Cringing aside, these are the types of throws Jay will have to make this week to outfox the much-improved Eagles secondary.  We also saw the big advantage we have against any secondary – pure speed – work to our advantage last time around.  In what is the only example of it that I can think of right now, Devin Hester put up huge yards on a perfectly-executed bubble screen, and was able to outrun everybody on a third quarter catch-and-run that would have been a touchdown except for a horse-collar tackle by the Eagles.  Knox also had his moments, showing good presence of mind in making catches in the middle of the field, and pure speed when he converted a three-yard pass into a twenty-yard touchdown.

With the amount of pressure he saw from the Eagles last time, Cutler will also need to draw on his improvisational skills.  He had some good rabbit-out-of-the-hat plays last time around, converting a key third-down on the Bears’ final scoring drive by miraculously flipping the ball out of a gaggle of Eagles defenders to find an open Matt Forte.  Cutler also was willing to tuck the ball and run when he had to, and while three of those runs went for little or no gain, he did gain another first down with an eleven-yard shuffle in the second half.  If Jay is able to keep plays alive using his feet, he can negate some of the effects of the Eagles’ pass-rush and continue to rack up big plays against the Eagles. 

Play and Player of the Game

Dual honors for dual touchdowns: Jay Cutler and Earl Bennett.  Bennett had his first two-touchdown game of his career, the first being a mind-boggling pass into double-coverage that Bennett was in exactly the right position for.  Words cannot describe how happy I am that he will be back for this week, and I can imagine that Cutler feels pretty much the same.  Cutler gets bonus points for getting an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty for telling a ref “What the f**k were you looking at?” when they missed an obvious defensive holding call on Forte in the fourth – a dumb move, I suppose, but it was good to see him fired up.

This Week

In regards to Earl Bennett being back, I think his presence on the field will be key.  With their vastly improved secondary, the Eagles will probably play a lot more press coverage than they did last time around.  While the general complaint is that the Bears don’t have a physical receiver, Earl Bennett is the closest thing they have to one.  Last year, he showed just what I mean when he made a catch in tight coverage, shoved the trailing cornerback to the ground, broke another tackle, and continued on for a 32 yard catch-and-run.  The Bears will need that kind of play out of him if we are going to have a solid aerial attack.  Along with that, I expect that Mike Martz will take advantage of our lack of a true #1 receiver to wear down the Eagles secondary.  By mixing around his wide receivers, he can force Nnamdi Asomugha and company to run with the likes of Johnny Knox and Devin Hester on one down, and face up against the more physical Bennett and Roy Williams the next.  Martz would also be smart to use three-or-more receiver sets to allow Bennett and the rapidly developing Dane Sanzenbacher opportunities in the slot against weaker coverage.  Matt Forte lined up in the slot a few times last year as well, and we all know what happens when he is covered by a linebacker in coverage: easy yards for the Bears.

On that note, the key will be the play of #22.  If the Bears are able to establish the run, all the shutdown coverage the Eagles can put on our receivers won’t matter.  It will certainly help that Forte isn’t backed up by Chester Taylor, who was simply horrible – 6 runs for -3 yards horrible – against the Eagles last year.  Marion Barber should be back to 100% with the extra time off, and while I wouldn’t start him on my fantasy team this week*, he should at least be able to spell Forte more effectively than ol’ No-gain did last year. 

*I might actually have to start him since Payton Hillis did not prove immune to the Madden Curse, but that’s a different story altogether.

Special Teams

Desean Jackson is good, but last time I checked, he did not hold the record for most combined kick returns in NFL history.  This fact bore out in the game last year, as the Bears were able to break some big runs on kick returns and won the special teams battle overall.  While we gave up one nice return to Jackson – a 35 yard punt return – the big kick returns by both Hester and Danieal Manning both helped put points on the board by setting up short fields.  Short story even shorter, we will win the special teams battle nine times out of ten, and I would bet on this being one of the nine.

Honorary Award for Bad Coaching Performance

While Lovie Smith is the master of the pointless challenge and the prevent-you-from-winning defense, Andy Reid was not to be outdone in the department of bad coaching.  He wisely went for it on fourth and short at the edge of field goal range with his team down 13-31 in the fourth, but mere minutes later, he decided to take the field goal facing fourth and goal from the two.  To be honest, I stopped rewatching the game after that, as the game was over – the Eagles were simply not going to be able to get two touchdowns in one quarter after having gotten one in the first three. Not sure what he was thinking when his team hadn’t even seen the red zone in the third quarter and the Bears had been executing long drives good for points all day.  Yes, there was still 11:51 left in the game, and the field goal did make the game a two-score affair, but still, bad call. 

My Prediction

The record and my eyes agree that these are two evenly matched teams.  The real question is who wants it more, and I can only hope that the Bears want it more.  Not having home-field advantage this time around certainly won’t help our chances, and while I won’t be putting my money where my mouth is, I think the Bears can squeeze this one out if the D plays like they did last year and Cutler can make a little magic on offense.  Here’s hoping that I’m proven right on Sunday night, and see you back here next Wednesday when I try my best to go 2 for 2 in annoying Lions fans.

Windy City Gridiron

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Tale of the Tape: vs. Vikings, Week 10, 2010

by BearsFan on October 12, 2011

Hey guys, has anyone seen Adrian Peterson around?  Oh wait, that's what was stuck to my shoe.

Welcome to this week’s installment of Tale of the Tape. Since talking about our mastery of Brett Favre since Week 16, 2009 isn’t going to do much to tell us about how we can save ourselves from the NFC North basement, I wanted to focus on one man in particular: Adrian Peterson. As a rookie, he ran all over the Bears, but we’ve done progressively better since. In the game we played against the Vikings at home last year, we held Peterson to a mere 51 yards on 17 carries, a statistic that is even more impressive considering he gained 20 yards on his second run, 19 yards on the next 15 attempts, and was only able to get to 51 with a 10 yard run in garbage time. How did we do it? Follow me below the fold, where I will break down every single run and look at how we can continue to achieve success against Peterson’s one-man offense.

For your consideration, here is a breakdown of every run Peterson had in the game:

Run # Down/Distance Running Behind Gain/Loss Tackled By Notes
1 1/10 RT -2 Briggs Adams forced play
2 2/12 RG 20 Briggs Only big play – good blocking to outside
3 2/3 LG 4 Peppers Peppers slides past O-line for tackle in A gap
4 1/10 LE 3 Peppers Tillman slows 28 as he goes for edge
5 2/7 RG 0 Peppers & Toeania Urlacher blitz pushes play outside
6 3/7 RT 5 Adams C. Harris good run support
7 1/10 RG 1 Harrison backfield filled with Blue
8 1/10 RT 5 Adams Tinoisamoa misses TFL chance

9

2/5 RE 1 Toeania Vikings can’t block d-line
10 1/10 RT -1 Peppers Shiancoe can’t block Peppers – Toeania moves play to outside
11 1/10 RE 5 Tinoisamoa snuck away from DE pressure in backfield
12 2/5 LG 5 Tinoisamoa
13 2/10 LE -3 Adams Bears everywhere in backfield again
14 2/10 RG 0 Adams Briggs fills gap quickly to force inside
15 2/10 LT 0 Tinoisamoa Peppers and Melton fill in run gaps well to free 59
16 1/10 RE -2 Urlacher Urlacher shoots gap perfectly
17 1/10 RG 10 Moore Free yards against prevent coverage in garbage time

 

They were attacking from the right side of their line twice as much as they did from the left, but the production they got from either side was fairly equal – they might have felt they had an advantage going right, but it did not pan out on the field. I was surprised at the breakdown of who was tackling Peterson. I figured it would be our linebackers getting most of the tackles, and while Lance Briggs, Brian Urlacher, and Pisa Tinoisamoa did make their presence known, it was our defensive line that did a majority (9 of 17) of the run-stopping. The key to the defensive line’s success? Keeping Peterson in front of them. Having him as a run threat kept our defensive line from getting too far up the field – we had a whopping one sack by Henry Melton – but by slowing the rush down a bit and using linebackers to fill the gaps, we were able to pursue 28 from the sides and front of the play. The one time we let him get through the D-line without being touched or redirected, he was able to knock off a 20-yarder, so the loss of sack potential was more than worth the advantage in run containment.

The most common strategy in containing the run is the “eight in the box” you always here announcers going on about: dropping the strong safety down by the linebackers to provide extra stoutness in the middle. You might be somewhat surprised that the Bears brought eight into the box all of two times in the game with Peterson in the backfield, but consider what happened the first time the Bears did drop the safety down: Favre used play-action to hold Chris Harris just long enough to hit Percy Harvin in stride for a 53-yard touchdown play. The other time we loaded up the box, Favre again used play-action to draw us in and hit a screen pass to the outside to get around our numbers advantage in the middle. The Bears would occasionally toy with Favre by sneaking the safety up close to the linebackers and have him drop out before the snap, but motion by the linebackers was our biggest weapon of misdirection against their offense. On almost every play, either Urlacher or Briggs (or both) would move between the Lovie Smith classic “mug” look – having a linebacker or two lined up between the defensive tackles – and the even more classic Cover 2 formation. More often than not, and no matter where the linebackers were at the snap, at least one of them would looking for a gap to shoot and force the play away from their run blitz. This strategy was wildly successful: other than one play where Pisa wasn’t able to wrap up Peterson in the backfield, when our linebackers got penetration, they were able to stop the play either on their own or by redirecting him into the heart of the defensive line.

The real key in stopping Peterson was the play of Julius Peppers and our defensive tackles. Peppers was keyed in to stop the run first and get upfield second, a fact you could see on the third Peterson run of the game: Peppers briefly engaged the left tackle, saw the run going inside, and slid down the line like a linebacker to make the stop. His lateral ability and speed allowed Lovie to play him like an outside linebacker in a 3-4 scheme: he would read the play and attack the formation accordingly, not just seal his edge by going upfield. The craziest match up on the field that game was when the Vikings tried to use Visanthe Shiancoe to run-block Julius Peppers out of the play. Peppers easily knocked him out of the way and made the tackle for a loss when Matt Toeaina forced Peterson to run straight into #90.
The lateral movement of the tackles was just as key as their ability to penetrate the backfield. By staying engaged to the middle of the line, Toeania and Anthony Adams were able to prevent the center and guards from pulling to block or generate enough push to open up holes in the center. They did get up field at times, but more often than not they simply waited for Peterson to get close, shed their blocker(s), and took him down.

You would think that the Bears would draw up some pretty elaborate schemes to stop the man known as Purple Jesus, but the best defense against him is fundamentally strong football by the front seven. While we haven’t seen a lot of that this season, you have to hope that the Bears have what it will take to save ourselves from last place in the division with our third NFC North loss. If we are able to contain Peterson as well as we have in recent games, we are still vulnerable to the well-aged arm of Donovan McNabb – review last season’s Redskins game for details – but I would take my chances against McNabb over Peterson any time. If Lovie is willing to forgo an aggressive pass-rush in favor of containing the run, Chicago will be able to contain (if not stop altogether) their single most potent offensive weapon. There’s not much to be optimistic about this season so far, but this Sunday will be the fifth anniversary of the most famous Bears victory in the Lovie Smith era, the “they were who they thought we were” Monday Night game against the Arizona Cardinals. Let’s hope the defense can come up just as big for this featured game as they did in that one.

Windy City Gridiron

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Tale of the Tape: vs. Lions, Week 1, 2010

October 5, 2011

I took a pass on looking back at last year’s match-ups against the Packers, but last season’s outings against the Lions are worth digging up the tape for. Not because they were great games for the Bears – or even good ones, for that matter – but because we knew just what type of season [...]

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Dallas Cowboys Wide Receiver Roy E. Williams 2010 Highlights (Chicago Bears)

August 17, 2011

cowboysportsblog.com Video Rating: 4 / 5

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The Chicago Bears 2010

July 16, 2011

The Chicago Bears 2010 A video I made with highlights from the Chicago Bears 2010 Season Please don’t hate you shouldn’t be watching it if you don’t like the Bears PS: this is my first video so if you have suggestions then feel free to ask Video Rating: 5 / 5

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NFL Philadelphia Eagles at Chicago Bears Week 12 2010

June 14, 2011

YES WE CAN Video Rating: 5 / 5

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NFL Chicago Bears Vs. Vikings Highlights MNF 2010

June 14, 2011

The Bears clobber the Vikings to clinch the NFC North Division title. Brett Favre was knocked out of the game, and Devin Hester galloped into the record books yet again by returning his 14th kick/punt return for a TD, an all-time record. Congratulations Chicago Bears 2010 NFC North Division Champions Video Rating: 4 / 5

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2010 Look Back – Bears Stop Cowboys in Dallas 27-20

June 13, 2011

Today it’s week two of our look back to the 2010 season, as the Bears topped the Cowboys 27-20 in a week two win in Dallas to get to 2-0 on the young season. Last year he receives blame, this year he’s receiving accolades. Did you see the Bears defensive pursuit? Make no doubt about [...]

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2010 Look Back – Bears Top Lions 19-14 in Wild Opener

June 8, 2011

Today we start our look back at the 2010 season, and it started with a game that made the headlines for a catch that wasn’t called a catch. The famous “Calvin Johnson” game as the Bears bested the Lions 19-14. Matt Forte=2008 Matt Forte. A win is a win? In a game that produced more [...]

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Best of the 2010 Chicago Bears

June 3, 2011

I had just as much fun putting this together as I did watching my favorite team this year. Fell short of the ultimate goal but it was still a great season. Anyways, hope you like. Bear down! Intro speech: Lou Holtz from Notre Dame. Guy talking in the huddle is Jay Cutler. Song is “Ready [...]

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