Running back Marion Barber gained 49 yards on 13 carries Monday night against the Giants. | Julio Cortez~AP
Updated: August 24, 2011 2:15AM
Like just about everything else with the Bears in the aftermath of the 41-13 loss Monday night to the New York Giants at New Meadowlands Stadium, the running game is a work in progress.
The Bears rushed for 81 yards on 26 carries (3.1 yards per carry). Matt Forte, getting his first carries of the preseason, gained seven yards on four carries. Marion Barber gained 49 yards on 13 carries (3.8 yards per carry) but was stopped twice on goal-line plays — third-and-goal from the 2 and fourth-and-goal from the 1 — in the third quarter.
But Forte is confident that won’t be a problem for long. ‘‘It’ll come,’’ Forte said. ‘‘We started slowly last year, too. We’ve got a lot of work to do up front and a lot of stuff to figure out. We’re getting better as a team right now.’’
In 2010, Forte averaged 2.7 yards per carry in the first four regular-season games (50 carries, 134 yards) and five yards per carry in the last 12 (187 carries, 935 yards).
Pass-first offense
Quarterback Jay Cutler said the Bears were more concerned with developing the passing game than the running game against the Giants. The Bears had 21 passes and eight rushes with the first-team offense in the first half.
‘‘We didn’t really give Matt an opportunity,’’ said Cutler, who was 12-for-21 for 171 yards and an 83.6 passer rating. ‘‘I think we wanted to see how we could hold up passing. We know those guys can block really well. We wanted to give them a chance to pass-protect, get some seven steps, try to get a rhythm going. I think we made strides in that area.’’
Screen gems
It took a little improvisation by Forte, but the Bears ran an effective screen play against the Giants. Forte took a short pass from Cutler and cut across the field for most of a 42-yard gain. Kahlil Bell had gains of 27 and 19 yards on screen plays, albeit in the second half, against the Bills in the preseason opener.
Outside of Forte’s 89-yard touchdown in the season opener against the Lions, the Bears’ longest pass play to a running back last season was 30 yards. ‘‘It was just a reaction,’’ Forte said of the cross-field move. ‘‘Screen plays are designed to go certain places, but there’s no telling where it can go. We had a lot of good blocks by the receivers downfield and O-linemen.’’
I'm getting to that age where a lifetime warranty just doesn't mean as much to me anymore as an afternoon nap.
Honey Badger Don't Care. Honey Badger Don't Give a Shit.
If you take away the failed goaline carries then Barber had 48 on 11 carries or 4.4 ypc which I'd take from a backup RB anytime. Barber looks strong and I won't fault him for getting stopped at the goaline. First of all NY exactly what was coming and second JC Brignone was must have been playing OG got himself completely turned around, blew his block and ended up with his ass facing the goaline. As far as I know that's not an acceptable blocking technique on the goaline. It was pathetic.
If we're going into the season with Forte, Barber and Bell at RB I'm not worried at all about our running game. That's the part of their job our line seems to have down. Just get rid of Taylor and I'll be happy and if Unga can ever stick around long enough to get in the mix he can probably back up Barber if he can play ST.
I'm glad to see that we actually have screen passes in our game plans now that aren't thrown to WR's. Forte and Bell have both turned big gains on them these last two weeks. The move Forte made at mid field to really shake loose tells me his getting his game back. That was a really well played run and had RWill at least even gotten in the way of the guy who knocked him ob Forte would have had six.
I'm getting to that age where a lifetime warranty just doesn't mean as much to me anymore as an afternoon nap.
Honey Badger Don't Care. Honey Badger Don't Give a Shit.