Saturday, September 21, 2024
HomeSportsBrad Biggs' 10 thoughts on Justin Fields, defense

Brad Biggs’ 10 thoughts on Justin Fields, defense

Published on

spot_img


10 thoughts after the Chicago Bears opened the preseason with a 23-17 victory over the Tennessee Titans at Soldier Field on Saturday.

They got two short throws from quarterback Justin Fields that went for long touchdowns and a total of eight sacks from seven different defenders.

Three plays. That is all it took for the Bears to accomplish something that hasn’t happened since at least the late 1990s.

The offense scored an opening-drive touchdown in the preseason opener. Yes, it seems a little narrow, but I spent time flipping through the gamebooks at this time last summer and the Bears hadn’t accomplished the feat since before 2000. That is at least 22 consecutive preseason openers without an opening drive possession (COVID-19 wiped out the 2020 preseason). Data for preseason games in 1999 and before wasn’t readily searchable.

Justin Fields completed a short pass to fullback Khari Blasingame on the first play from scrimmage for an 11-yard gain. Running back Khalil Herbert ran for 2 yards on the next snap and then we got an early glimpse at why a lot of folks say new wide receiver DJ Moore looks like a running back with the ball in his hands after he catches it. Fields hit him on the left side for a wide receiver screen and he was off to the races. Fellow receiver Darnell Mooney made a nice block on cornerback Tre Avery. Left tackle Braxton Jones got out on defensive back Armani Marsh and carefully blocked him from the side to avoid a penalty. From there, a Titans defense that was resting 10 of 11 starters (linebacker Jack Gibbons, an undrafted rookie from Minnesota in 2022, was the only projected starter to play) had no one there to impede Moore.

Easy catch and throw for a game-tying touchdown. This is noteworthy from the standpoint that opening-possession drives were one of the few things the Bears excelled at last season beyond running the ball. As Warren Sharp noted back in February, the Bears scored on 70.6% of opening drives last season, far and away the best percentage in the NFL. Think about that for a second. The Bears finished 23rd in scoring averaging 19.2 points per game but they were a well-oiled machine right after kickoff.

Obviously, credit belongs to offensive coordinator Luke Getsy and his staff for consistently crafting sharp scripts to open the game. I’m not sure that success rate is sustainable this season, but the Bears are better on offense and we got a glimpse, however brief, of that. The offensive starters were on the field for only seven snaps and produced 14 points.

Herbert carried on three consecutive plays to open the second possession and then Getsy called another screen, this one for running back Khalil Herbert. Cornerback Elijah Molden came screaming up the middle on a blitz as Herbert escaped the backfield to the left. That forced Fields to roll to his left. In a situation where last season maybe Fields pulls the ball down and runs, he gathered himself in time to shoot the ball out to Herbert. With center Cody Whitehair and right guard Ja’Tyre Carter out to block Avery and Marsh, Herbert was gone. There was a clear path down nearly the entire sideline for a 56-yard touchdown.

The Bears have said Herbert has improved in the passing game as a blocker and receiver, and the proof will be in how he’s deployed in games after getting a lot of work in third-down situations and the red zone in practice. In 13 games last season, he had only 12 targets with nine catches for 57 yards. One of the secondary goals for the offense this season has to involve the running backs more in the passing game, making this a positive early sign.

The key, of course, will be for Fields and the offense to take a big leap forward from 2022 after the opening drive, when Sharp noted how abysmal the offense was. With Moore in place, upgrades on the offensive line and at tight end and a deeper stable of running backs, it certainly seems possible.

There’s not too much you can take away from seven snaps by the starters. All three of Fields’ passes were completed behind the line of scrimmage against defenders competing for reserve spots in Tennessee. But Fields looked to throw in a situation where maybe he would have run last season and the Bears have more players on the roster who will account for explosive plays in 2023 than just the quarterback.

Chicago Bears quarterback Justin Fields throws in the first quarter of a preseason game against the Tennessee Titans at Soldier Field on Aug. 12, 2023.

It was a short day of work for Justin Fields, but the coaching staff sent him and the offensive starters (minus wide receiver DJ Moore) back out for a second series after the quick touchdown on the opening drive. The QB said he didn’t lobby for more playing time as the second possession resulted in a score in only four plays.

“We had a set plan and a certain set of plays. Those first few plays, you can’t really draw it up much better than that,” Fields said. “I think we did what we needed to do today, and we’ll get back to practice Monday and continue to practice and continue to get better.”

You can gain a little insight into Fields’ maturation even in a small sample size, especially on the screen pass for a touchdown to Khalil Herbert. It didn’t go exactly as the Bears would have liked at the start.

“It was disrupted,” Fields said. “The guy (Elijah Molden) that was on Khalil’s side blitzed it. Then, the other ’backer (Jack Gibbons) saw him blocking, so he added on too. So that’s why it took a lot longer than normal. The screen usually doesn’t take that long. But of course, when you have a blitzer on his side, he has to bluff a little to run the screen.”

Those early parts of the operation are running more smoothly. Recall the second week of preseason in 2021 at Soldier Field, when the Buffalo Bills visited and Fields missed identifying the front and was rocked by linebacker Andre Smith for a vicious sack on a pressure that should have been easily picked up.

It’s not surprising the Bears made the decision to play Fields in the preseason opener. He’s young, he’s still newish in the offensive system and there are a lot of new faces surrounding him. Of the 28 teams that have played their Week 1 preseason game (two games will be played Sunday), 12 used their projected starting quarterback. Joe Burrow wasn’t available for the Cincinnati Bengals as he is recovering from a right calf muscle injury.

See also  Grieving her father’s death and battling lung cancer, Southern Miss’ coach pulled off a defining upset

The Titans were one of the teams to keep their starting quarterback — Ryan Tannehill — on the sideline. Tannehill last appeared in a preseason game in 2019. Tennessee started Malik Willis and rotated him with rookie Will Levis on each series.

Bears quarterback Justin Fields jogs off the field after a 23-17 win over the Titans in the preseason game opener at Soldier Field on Aug. 12, 2023.

Getting out there and taking a few snaps only reinforces what the Bears have been doing in practice. As coach Matt Eberflus said, they’ve really been emphasizing the screen game at Halas Hall.

“When you have guys that can take a 3-yard pass and go 50 yards, that just makes my job easier,” Fields said. “It’s always good to have playmakers like that on the team. Just competing with each other and competing with the defense every day is going to make us better.

“Anytime you have those playmakers where you can throw the ball 5 yards on a slant and he can take it 60, that makes my job easier, it makes the O-line’s job easier. After a period of time where you’re dipping and ducking those short passes, the defensive coordinator gets impatient and starts blitzing more, pressuring more, playing more man coverage, and that’s when those deep shots just naturally happen. I think it’s going to be a good thing for us this year.”

Bears linebacker Jalen Harris (59) sacks Titans quarterback Malik Willis (7) in the fourth quarter of a preseason game at Soldier Field on Aug. 12, 2023.

With the Titans near midfield midway through the fourth quarter and facing third-and-11, defensive end Jalen Harris got a good power rush upfield and the pocket for Malik Willis disintegrated, turning into a sack that Harris shared with defensive tackle Travis Bell.

Veteran defensive tackle Justin Jones was the first one celebrating on the sideline, pumping his fist into the air on a day when a maligned position group from 2022 dominated.

It was one of eight sacks the Bears totaled, a figure they haven’t reached in a regular-season game since Nov. 20, 2005, in a 13-3 victory over the Carolina Panthers at Soldier Field. Adewale Ogunleye had three and Alex Brown had two that day. Prior to that, you’ve got to go all the way back to 1991 for the last time a Bears defense had eight or more sacks.

In games that counted last season, the Bears had only 20 sacks, the lowest figure in the NFL. They had seven sacks in preseason last summer, three of them by undersized defensive tackle Trevon Coley, who was cut in the moves to establish a 53-man roster at the end of the preseason. So, what we saw in the preseason — no pass rush — played out when the regular season opened.

“It’s a family in there, man,” Jones said of his reaction. “Everyone in (the defensive line room) is really tight. I feel like everyone wants to see everyone else win. When you have a room full of genuine guys, that’s going to take you a long way. All the celebrations you see on the sideline from the vets when the young guys get sacks, and the celebrations you see from the young guys when other young guys get sacks, that is genuine. You can’t fabricate that. That’s real family.”

Journeyman Terrell Lewis led the way with two sacks and had a forced fumble. Harris, an undrafted rookie free agent from Arizona, added 1 1/2 sacks, three quarterback hits and a forced fumble. Trevis Gipson had a hustle sack and rookies Zachh Pickens (one), Noah Sewell (one), Micah Baskerville (one) and Bell (one-half) pitched in.

Bears linebacker Terrell Lewis strips the ball loose from Titans quarterback Malik Willis the second quarter of a preseason game at Soldier Field on Aug. 12, 2023.

The Pickens play was great to see. The defensive tackle got upfield in a hurry and finished off a twist by bringing down Will Levis. Lewis has flashed from time to time going back to OTAs in the spring and he’s a potential depth piece now that he’s in a system that better fits his skill set after three seasons with the Rams.

No, this wasn’t pass-rush production from Yannick Ngakoue and DeMarcus Walker, the guys the Bears are paying to hunt opposing quarterbacks. Neither played, two of 14 players to sit out. (In comparison, the Bears had 23 players sit out the preseason opener in 2022). The heavy rush came against two inexperienced quarterbacks. Levis is a rookie and Malik Willis is in Year 2. Finally, the Titans’ reserve offensive line looked atrocious.

But this was a bright spot, no question about it.

“We don’t have everybody back yet,” Jones said. “But when we do, we’re going to be scary, especially with our new additions. Obviously, our most recent addition (Ngakoue), I think I am more excited about him than anyone else in the organization. I have always been a big fan. I am glad he’s here and I’m ready to get to work — all eight of us that we carry.”

Like the other positions on the team, the linemen have a points production chart in their meeting room. Sacks, pressures, hits, tackles for loss, deflected passes, you name it. Jones was grinning while rattling off the names of the young players who had stepped up.

“That’s what we expect as a room,” he said. “We always say if one of us gets a sack, we all get a sack.”

Chicago Bears defensive tackle Zacch Pickens celebrates after recovering a fumble against the Tennessee Titans in the second quarter of a preseason game at Soldier Field on Aug. 12, 2023.

The beauty of preseason for a team at the stage the Bears are in currently, still early in a rebuild after a teardown season, is the opportunity for young players. And, boy, are they young.

Forty-four of the players on the 90-man roster are rookies, considered in Year 1 or second-year players. The figure was 45 before a move Friday when the Bears claimed guard Logan Stenberg off waivers from the Detroit Lions, replacing undrafted rookie wide receiver Aron Cruickshank.

The distinction between rookies and first-year players is simple. Rookies signed an NFL contract for the first time this season. First-year players — and the Bears have seven — signed an NFL contract prior to this year but didn’t get enough regular-season games to earn an accrued season. Add those seven to 21 rookies and 16 second-year players and there is a ton of youth to sort through as general manager Ryan Poles and his staff begin considering options for the roster. The Bears had 13 rookies on their initial 53-man roster last season. They probably won’t go that high again, but you never know.

See also  Sam Burns nails impressive hole-in-one at St. Jude Championship

“Getting the young guys in there, the young guys that needed the reps,” coach Matt Eberflus said. “Our first three (NFL draft) picks were in there working and it was really good to see those guys, I thought they operated well.”

The fresh faces, especially the later-round picks and undrafted players, have to keep shining. They can’t flash and then disappear. It’s going to make the trip to Indianapolis this coming week for joint practices with the Colts significant. Those will be competitive sessions.

It’s important to remember that even after additions of veterans like defensive end Yannick Ngakoue, 28, and tight end Marcedes Lewis, 39, this projects to be one of the youngest rosters in the league. That means learning curves, excitement and opportunities.

Bears wide receiver Velus Jones Jr. walks the sideline in the second quarter of a preseason game against the Titans at Soldier Field on Aug. 12, 2023.

It was a rough day for punt returner Velus Jones Jr., who lost a muffed punt when he was hit by Titans safety Mike Brown after attempting to field a Ryan Stonehouse punt on one bounce. It resulted in a turnover. Jones lost his job as a rookie last season after losing muffed punts in close losses to the Washington Commanders and New York Giants.

Jones fielded Stonehouse’s first punt on one bounce and returned it for 7 yards.

“It comes down to fundamentals, it comes down to technique,” coach Matt Eberflus said. “And we are going to work on that: Reading the flight of the ball, getting ourselves in position early, and then getting underneath the football and squeezing the ball down on the catch.

“Those were two short punts. Like I said, the nose was up so they come down pretty fast, so you’ve got two of the more difficult ones back-to-back. (Stonehouse) is a really good punter. He can really boom them, so we were setting back a little bit because he can really bomb them in that part of the field. (Jones) had to come up more than he usually would. He just has to use fundamental technique and read the ball before it gets too high, then get underneath it.”

Even with a short track record in the NFL, opposing special teams coordinators will have a book on Jones and a plan.

“Make him move to catch the ball,” a special teams coordinator for another team told me. “That’s what I would do every time. Have the punter get him on the move and put pressure on him.”

Jones has expressed more confidence this summer and special teams coordinator Richard Hightower has echoed that. He’s put in a lot of work and in the second week of July, Jones flew to Charlotte, N.C., to work out with punter Trenton Gill and five other punters for two days. It was just Jones and Carolina Panthers returner Raheem Blackshear there catching punts.

“He caught so many,” Gill said. “(All the punters) hit about 50 or 60 balls each day for two days. Velus caught every other one. He got a ton of work in. That was tough today. That wasn’t because he just dropped it.”

Regardless, the Bears have an ongoing issue and they know it. They want to have faith in Jones, a third-round pick, but they can’t keep watching him make a similar mistake. That is the thing coaches harp on. Mistakes happen. They get irritated when it’s the same mistake over and over.

Jones went the extra step with the trip to UNC-Charlotte for the gathering of punters.

“Just seeing different punts and getting a feel for it rep after rep after rep,” Jones said earlier in camp. “That’s been good. That helped out my confidence a lot. It’s different coming off the foot. With the Jugs machine you can get consistent spin. When it’s coming off the foot, it can do all types of crazy (stuff).”

It will be interesting to see what the Bears do in the coming week. Dante Pettis was just cleared to return from the non-football injury list. He’s a non-flashy option as a return man but ball security is paramount.

Chicago Bears cornerback Tyrique Stevenson tackles Tennessee Titans running back Tyjae Spears in the first quarter of a preseason game at Soldier Field on Aug. 12, 2023.

You can make a case that cornerback Tyrique Stevenson had the strongest game of any rookie on the roster, pacing the defense with seven solo tackles (one for a loss) and getting a pass breakup along the boundary.

Stevenson read a quick out to short out by wide receiver Colton Dowell and broke on it immediately. He arrived in time to get his hands on Will Levis’ throw at the sideline but couldn’t haul it in.

“I’m going to catch that one (next time),” Stevenson said. “Just gotta hit the Jugs every day. That’s all it is. I definitely saw it. It was a quick out. I gotta make sure I jump on the Jugs and get it back.”

Stevenson was the sure tackler he is expected to be at 6-foot, 214 pounds, and was aggressive. It’s a must for cornerbacks in the Tampa Two scheme to be strong in run support and he fit the profile back at the Senior Bowl in January. He looks to have an excellent shot at the starting job opposite Jaylon Johnson. The Bears feel good enough about Stevenson, I think, to keep Kyler Gordon strictly inside at nickel, which could help him as well.

After his preseason debut, Stevenson, a second-round pick from Miami, seemed like the experience had yet to sink in.

“Felt pretty great,” he said. “Still feels unreal. Still doesn’t feel real. That’s all I’ve really got.”

Wait a minute. It doesn’t feel real?

“Yeah,” he replied. “That was off instincts. Still trying to process everything. End of the day, I realize everyone told me it’s just a game of football. Went out there with the confidence. That was key. The game went fast. Had a couple mistakes I should clean up. Other than that, I felt comfortable.”

See also  Vikings' T.J. Hockenson, Jordan Addison knocked out of Lions game with injuries

Fellow rookie Terell Smith, the fifth-round selection from Minnesota, did not play. He’s been sidelined in practice recently with an undisclosed injury. It’s unfortunate because he’s also gotten quality reps with the starters on the other side of Johnson.

It’s looked like Stevenson’s job to win since the spring, and I’d say that remains the case. The benefit here is Smith has shown well in practice and could develop as quality depth, something the Bears have been lacking at the position for multiple seasons.

Chicago Bears guard Ja'Tyre Carter signs autographs at the team's Back Together training camp event for fans on July 29, 2023.

It will be interesting to see how the coaching staff breaks down the game for second-year guard Ja’Tyre Carter, who got more snaps than any other offensive player. Carter started in place of Nate Davis at right guard and with veteran interior lineman Lucas Patrick also injured, it was a big moment for Carter, a seventh-round pick from Southern a year ago.

The Bears have expressed confidence Davis, who has missed the majority of training camp practices, will be ready for the regular season. But his absence has given Carter a lot of time with the starters in practice. Davis missed eight games over the past two seasons as a member of the Titans and Patrick had multiple injuries that sidelined him for most of last year.

In other words, there is an opening if Carter can earn trust.

Carter played left tackle in college but the Bears moved him inside immediately and the hope is he can use his long arms — 33 5/8 inches — to excel. He spent the offseason working on skill and getting stronger to better handle the power a guard has to face in the NFL.

“Coming into my second year, I’ve got more insight into what I need to do,” Carter said last week. “I’ve got a purpose every time I come out to practice. At first, last year, I was just coming out here trying to learn things. The pieces were really moving. Now, I can slow it down and I can finally work on things I need to get better at.

“Trying to work on my pad level, staying square in my set and using my length more because I have long arms. I try to use my length more now. (Line coach Chris Morgan) has been working hard with me.

“It’s not easy to just say, ‘Use your long arms.’ Every day you show up, you have to work on it. Pre-practice, I am working at punching on the bags. After practice, I’m with Nate or Lucas or Teven (Jenkins), I’m just working on my set. Using my punch. Holding the line of scrimmage more.”

Davis is going to be the starter and Patrick has an edge for a job because he can play center. That creates a challenge for Carter because teams rarely keep a third backup interior player. But Carter should get a lot more playing time in the next two preseason games and if he can step up, the conversation could become interesting.

Bears offensive tackle Darnell Wright stretches with teammates before a preseason game against the Titans at Soldier Field on Aug. 12, 2023.

I thought there was a chance the Bears would give first-round pick Darnell Wright a little more run at right tackle, but he came out with the starters after the first two series — seven snaps. Wright, chosen No. 10 overall, has looked the part in practice and that has been encouraging.

“That was fun,” beamed Wright after the preseason opener. “I really didn’t have no clue what to expect. But it was fun. Had butterflies at the beginning. We did good. We weren’t in there for a long time but it was good. Even with those seven snaps, there will be some stuff to look at and get better on.”

Wright showed up for training camp in good shape — at 328 pounds — and the Bears are hopeful they’ve got a guy who can be a pillar on the line for seasons to come. When Nate Davis is back in the lineup, they are going to have a powerful right side to run behind.

“I’ll have to watch the tape because you are looking at other things a lot of the time,” Matt Eberflus said of Wright. “I did see a couple of snaps where he looked good, so we’ll see it. Like I said, we’ll evaluate every player, go through it slowly because the players have the day off (Sunday) so we have a lot of time to make sure that we are going through it. Really it’s about the style.

“We want to make sure that the Chicago Bears are playing with the right effort, the right intensity, being smart about how they play, and playing smart with good fundamentals and technique, and that is all we are trying to do.

“We are trying to help each player, and we are going to give each player a couple of things to work on this coming week based on this tape so he can really hone in and focus on his skill.”

Eberflus puts teeth into that with extended individual periods in practice and that could be the case Monday before the team packs up and leaves for the joint practices in Indianapolis.

Bears wide receiver DJ Moore runs after a catch for a touchdown against the Titans during the first half of on Aug. 12, 2023.

The Bears wanted to find a partner for joint practices last summer but couldn’t get a match with the way the preseason schedule fell. They gave it a shot again this summer and connected with the Colts, who formerly employed Matt Eberflus as defensive coordinator. GM Ryan Poles has a close relationship with Indianapolis GM Chris Ballard too. They worked together in Kansas City.

Who knows what the Bears will find in Indianapolis?

The Bears practiced with the New England Patriots back in 2016 and saw a spunky and undersized cornerback Cre’Von LeBlanc making plays. They claimed him off waivers from the Patriots, launching a pretty successful career.

“I have been involved in a lot of these and I think it’s really cool because you get to cover and go against different skill sets,” Eberflus said. “We’ve been going against the same guys, DJ (Moore) has been lining up against Jaylon (Johnson) and he has been lining up against (Tyrique) Stevenson and all of those. Now we get to line up against (Michael) Pitman (Jr.) and those guys, so it’s pretty cool. There are some pretty good players over there and so it’s going to be an exciting week.”

Bears linebacker Barrington Wade, left, celebrates his defensive stop with cornerback Jaylon Jones during the second half against the Titans on Aug. 12, 2023.

Scouts from five NFL clubs were in attendance at the game: Green Bay Packers, Baltimore Ravens, Kansas City Chiefs, Los Angeles Chargers and Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The USFL was also represented.

10a. Big day on special teams for a couple of second-year players. Cornerback Jaylon Jones made three tackles. He’s down the depth chart on defense but if he can make himself indispensable on special teams, he will have a shot. Safety Elijah Hicks had two tackles and Richard Hightower’s units got a lot of work.

10b. Roster cuts are due at 3 p.m. Aug. 29. That is when teams must establish an initial 53-man roster. Practice squads, up to 16 players, can be formed the next day.

10c. There was a void in the press box for the first game of the season. Absent was Walt Hanza, the longtime head of the statistician booth. When I say longtime, Hanza had been doing his thing helping track accurate statistics well before I began covering the team in 2001. He passed away on Jan. 23, shortly after the end of the previous season. Hanza was always cheerful and made keen observations. He will be missed.





Source link

Latest articles

Metro Vancouver HandyDART strike ends following tentative agreement

The union representing striking HandyDART workers has announced the labour dispute is over. The...

Movistar+ Evolves Its Theatrical Feature Division

No company has a more powerful spread of productions at this year’s San...

My Saucony Running Shoes Are Also Great for Travel

As an avid trail runner, I frequently elevate my travels by exploring...

Voice Of Peppa Pig, Doctor Who And Thunderbirds

The man behind one of the world’s most familiar voices has died aged...

More like this

Metro Vancouver HandyDART strike ends following tentative agreement

The union representing striking HandyDART workers has announced the labour dispute is over. The...

Movistar+ Evolves Its Theatrical Feature Division

No company has a more powerful spread of productions at this year’s San...

My Saucony Running Shoes Are Also Great for Travel

As an avid trail runner, I frequently elevate my travels by exploring...