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Thread: Martz admits Bears needed more runs vs. Seattle

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    Banned dabears54's Avatar
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    Martz admits Bears needed more runs vs. Seattle

    Martz admits Bears needed more runs vs. Seattle

    By Brad Biggs

    Like he did two weeks ago after the disaster against the New York Giants, Mike Martz took out his sword after practice Wednesday afternoon and fell on it.

    The Bears' offensive coordinator admitted that he should have called more running plays in the second half of the Bears' 23-20 loss to the Seattle Seahawks.

    Quarterback Jay Cutler handed the ball off just five times in the second half of what was a close game and the one-dimensional offense was easier for the Seahawks to attack as they held the Bears to 0-for-12 on third-down conversions. Two of those five handoffs were to running backs in an unbalanced formation where the running back went to the weak side behind the tight end, who was lined up as the left tackle.

    Photo: Chester Taylor is tackled by Seattle's Marcus Trufant. (Jose M. Osorio / Tribune)

    Matt Forte was stopped for no gain by Red Bryant on the first offensive play for the Bears of the third quarter, and Cutler was sacked for a safety on the next play. As the Tribune detailed Tuesday, tight end Greg Olsen, the left tackle on the play, was giving up 68 pounds blocking defensive end Red Bryant on the play.

    Is it a gamble running behind Olsen in this situation?

    "I think (Olsen) is pretty good (blocking), don't you?" Martz said.

    It was pointed out that Olsen was sacrificing an awful lot of size on the play, which was stopped immediately by Bryant, who peeled off Olsen to bring Forte down with his right arm.

    "I think he has done a pretty good job," Martz said. "We've done that all year. Have you watched the tape? He's done a good job. I like him. I like him over there. He does a great job. Guy is outside of him. Heck, no, he has help with him, too. We like him as a blocker right now. I don't have any hesitation putting him out there.\

    "Should he block? He was on (Julius) Peppers all of camp, if you watched him. So, that is how he earns his paycheck too, as well as being a receiver. I don't consider that a gamble. That's what we do. Tight ends gotta do that stuff. We put all of our tight ends in that position."

    What the Bears didn't expect, according to Martz, was that Bryant, listed as the starting right end, would be there. In the fourth quarter when the same play (or a similar one) was run with tight end Brandon Manumaleuna at left tackle, he had to block right end Raheem Brock, who is only 274 pounds, 49 pounds lighter than Bryant.

    "Maybe a different guy that ends up over there, but then you better block him, you know?" Martz said. "The guy that we had over there when we saw them in unbalanced was a different guy. They changed it. So it was a bigger guy. We've still got to block him. That's just the way it goes. Did we put him over there thinking that is who he was going to get? No, we didn't. But that's what happened. So, you've got to block him."

    And, apparently they've got to hand the ball off more this week when they host the Washington Redskins at Soldier Field. But don't expect 42 carries like they had at Carolina until they're playing the Panthers again.

    "We weren't playing Carolina," Martz said. "It's a different team. Seattle is a completely different team and there are different challenges for us in the running game and we're trying to keep things a little bit simple for that group and probably should have run the ball more, particularly in the second half when they did change and I need to change there. You're reluctant again to do some of the things. We're just trying to be real simple at times and it's the wrong thing to do.

    "We need to do what we do and just go play. We were very close in that game in a lot of areas. There were a lot of positives, big plays, in some of the runs and passes and we've got to stay the course."

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    Banned dabears54's Avatar
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    Bears know they have to change play calls

    Martz acknowledges needs for more running plays and quick drops

    Atop the NFC North at 4-2, the Bears are a long way from pushing the panic button after a disjointed offensive performance.

    In fact, they're going as positive as you can imagine after handing the ball off only 12 times Sunday in a 23-20 loss to the Seahawks in which they made themselves one-dimensional.

    Offensive coordinator Mike Martz stepped forward Wednesday and said he needed to call more runs, particularly in the second half, when only five were called.

    Martz talked about the need to go to more three- and five-step drops so quarterback Jay Cutler can get the ball out quickly, and he shared his unabashed faith in an inexperienced offensive line that will not change for Sunday's game with the Redskins at Soldier Field.

    Martz admitted what they're doing might be a little fast for the young linemen, but he heaped praise on rookie right tackle J'Marcus Webb and second-year right guard Edwin Williams for their effort in the second half of the loss, and used the familiar refrain that the Bears need to do the little things better.

    "Mike's going to take the blame since that's kind of how Mike is," Cutler said. "As players we have to take more responsibility for this. We've been in the system long enough, we should have executed better."

    Even the Redskins' 32nd-ranked defense is licking its chops, to borrow the phrase Seahawks safety Lawyer Milloy used following Sunday's game. Washington is 31st vs. the pass and opposing quarterbacks have a 90.9 passer rating against them. The Redskins do have 13 sacks, tied for 11th.

    "With this team, you see a lot of sacks, interceptions," cornerback Carlos Rogers told reporters in Washington. "A lot of times, (Cutler) just throws right into coverage."

    Rogers isn't convinced about any growth on the line, either, saying, "We have some (blitzes) that we put in. I've seen a lot of nickel blitzes open up, a lot of linebacker blitzes, a lot of D-line rushing get to him. They've been leaving holes open everywhere."

    Coach Lovie Smith just about publicly mandated the Bears, who have passed 64 percent of the time when Cutler plays, will be more balanced. Offensive line coach Mike Tice believes running the ball will help the linemen gain some confidence. If nothing else, it should keep opposing defenses off balance a little more.

    "Flip a coin I guess," Cutler said. "They're either going to have to pass protect or run block. If we're going to get blitzed as much as we're getting blitzed, it's going to be hard for them to pick up guys on the move and find gaps and stuff like that. It's really difficult for an offensive line."

    On two of the five runs in the second half against the Seahawks, the Bears used an unbalanced line with the tight end at left tackle.

    Greg Olsen was that player for the first attempt that resulted in Seahawks defensive end Red Bryant, who outweighs Olsen by 68 pounds, easily dropping Matt Forte for no gain. Cutler was sacked for a safety on the next snap. Martz said the Bears expected a smaller end to be there and defended the call.

    "I think (Olsen) is pretty good (blocking), don't you?" Martz said. "… I like him over there. He does a great job. He has help with him too. We like him as a blocker right now. … He was on (Julius) Peppers all of camp if you watched him. So that is how he earns his paycheck too, as well as being a receiver.

    "I don't consider that a gamble. That's what we do. Tight ends have to do that. The guy over there when we saw them in unbalanced was a different guy. They changed it. It was a bigger guy. We still have to block him."

    No doubt, the focus will be on the blocking again come Sunday.

    bmbiggs@tribune.com


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    Senior Member purplejokr's Avatar
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    A tiger can't change its stripes. Luckily, Martz isn't a tiger but at the end of the day his offense is pass heavy and I would be very surprised to see Martz reverse his field after all these years of having his QB drop back and throw the ball.

    Heck, Andy Reid has been trying to run the ball more for years and he's NEVER succeeded either!

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    Senior Member Boochee Man's Avatar
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    He believes Olsen is a GOOD blocker. Now, we all officially know that this man is nuts!

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    Quote Originally Posted by Boochee Man View Post
    He believes Olsen is a GOOD blocker. Now, we all officially know that this man is nuts!
    +1

    Olsen might indeed be an outstanding blocker at his position but expecting him to handle an opponent's DE that outweighs him by that large a margin is just wrong.

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    Banned dabears54's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Boochee Man View Post
    He believes Olsen is a GOOD blocker. Now, we all officially know that this man is nuts!
    A coach defending a player, why would they ever do that?..much better to throw the players under the bus, because that in teh history of Sports sure works out well... We all know Olsen is not a top blocker, so does martz, and smart enough when get the " leading questions", to stay above fray and not throw the player under the bus for more bad headlines and the inevitable " bears in disarray, even coaches say players bad" stuff that would happen if he didn't defend the player.

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    doesn't matter why, doesn't change the fact that the coach is dead wrong, and will/should be called out for it.

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    Banned dabears54's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Riczaj01 View Post
    doesn't matter why, doesn't change the fact that the coach is dead wrong, and will/should be called out for it.
    So you think coaches should always answer honestly and throw the players under the bus when reporters do leading questions? and never defend the players?..

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    No he is saying to call the coach out for putting a player in a postion where the player without a doubt would fail. I give props to the player who is obvious out weighed and still trys to block him. But I am going to call the coach a moron for putting his players in situations like that and I will call it what it is bad coaching.
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