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Campbell Settling for Second...............
Campbell making best of tough situation
May, 30, 2012 May 30
3:59
PM CT
By Michael C. Wright | ESPNChicago.com
David Banks/US PresswireJason Campbell lost his starting job to a broken collarbone, but he's looking to make the most of the situation with the Bears.
LAKE FOREST, Ill. -- Tumbling down the depth chart into a backup role, Chicago Bears reserve quarterback Jason Campbell recognizes the difficulty associated with humbling himself to accept the current situation.
It's all run through his mind: the fact he's started 70 games over the last six years, the broken collarbone suffered in 2011 in Oakland that may have led to the current situation, whether Peyton Manning's seemingly inconceivable availability in free agency affected his ability to find work as a starter.
In the end though, "it could be a good challenge," Campbell said Wednesday.
"Of course every guy wants to be a starter, especially you feel like you're not a starter in the league anymore because you broke your collarbone," said Campbell, a former first-round pick. "You're in a situation where Peyton Manning was a free agent, and you just never knew how that situation was going to turn out. A lot of teams were interested in him. Of course, if you take him out of the picture, things might have been different because you never know what the situation would have presented.
"But you've got a high-profile guy like him and every team is trying to jump at him. It kind of puts everything on the shelf and you can't just sit around and keep waiting and keep waiting and try to figure out what's going to happen and how this is going to happen and break it down. You have to go with what's best as that moment and just move forward."
Still, Campbell admits that wasn't easy and remains a challenge. Prior to suffering the broken collarbone, Campbell had thrown for 1,170 yards, six touchdowns and four interceptions in six games as the Raiders started off the season with a 3-2 record.
The promise that prompted the Redskins -- then still under coach Joe Gibbs -- to use a first-round pick to acquire Campbell finally appeared to be showing. Before joining the Raiders in 2011, Campbell had thrown for 74 touchdowns and 50 interceptions during an inconsistent career in Washington made even more difficult by working with multiple coaches learning different systems, not to mention inconsistency on the offensive line.
In Oakland, finally, things seemed to be clicking.
"You never know which road is going to lead you in your career," Campbell said. "It's tough to not be a starter, and I feel like I was in the prime of my career and going in the right direction, that I felt good about. Now I have to put a pause on that. It's a bit of a challenge, but at the same time, I (have to) adapt to it, accept it and keep moving forward."
Working with in a quarterback-friendly Bears offense featuring weapons such Brandon Marshall, Earl Bennett, Devin Hester and Matt Forte might ease the situation somewhat for Campbell. What the quarterback likes most about Chicago's offense is its versatility.
"It's an offense that we can do a lot of different things. It doesn't put us in one small category of things that we can do. It's an offense that you can spread it around if you want to. If you want to get in there and pound, pick up two or three yards, you can do that as well," Campbell said. "There's a lot of talent on this team. The sky's what you can do offensively."
As for Campbell, the same might still apply. He's currently signed to a one-year deal, and admits the new role puts the game in better perspective for him. Each repetition is even that more important as a backup, which forces Campbell to work to improve other facets of his game.
"Mentally, you have to learn as much as you can in the classroom because a lot of what you do is not going to be physical," Campbell said. "It's a little bit of a challenge to me because I have to approach everything differently. You just never know. It could be a good challenge because it forces you to focus on other parts of your game that you haven't had to do for a long time."
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.
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It's comforting to know that we've got a very capable backup now but we're all sitting here hoping we never have to use him. But as nice as it is don't get too used to it. I'd guess this is a one year stay for Campbell. He's too good not to interest some team as a starter.
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.
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Eh I don't see him starting again. The trend is to get a young guy in the draft and boom or bust w/them. I'm still not high on this move. If you have elite qb's, even in the midst of a SB run, you don't spend precious cap space on a backup. Name NY's backup qb, GB's, NE's?, NO's? This year the Bears got scurred and pressed the panick button and shouldn't have.
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Meh, maybe we spent a mil or so more on Campbell than some other vet but experienced QB's don't come cheap and we all saw what not having one can do to a successful season. You can get by with a young kid is he's very talented but for that to happen you need a good QB coach and until now we haven't had one.
And then when one does show real talent somebody else takes him away. Both NE and GB have lost very good backup QB's on the last few years and NO may lose Chase Daniels when he becomes a FA in another year. Campbell's an insurance policy. Maybe more expensive than some but if anything happens to Cutler Campbell can save Lovies job.
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.
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Originally Posted by
Riczaj01
Eh I don't see him starting again. The trend is to get a young guy in the draft and boom or bust w/them. I'm still not high on this move. If you have elite qb's, even in the midst of a SB run, you don't spend precious cap space on a backup. Name NY's backup qb, GB's, NE's?, NO's? This year the Bears got scurred and pressed the panick button and shouldn't have.
+1
He's been in the league long enough to see that he's not a guy who is going to take your team to the playoffs. I could see one of the crappier QB starved teams picking up Campbell to start though.
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Originally Posted by
Riczaj01
Eh I don't see him starting again. The trend is to get a young guy in the draft and boom or bust w/them. I'm still not high on this move. If you have elite qb's, even in the midst of a SB run, you don't spend precious cap space on a backup. Name NY's backup qb, GB's, NE's?, NO's? This year the Bears got scurred and pressed the panick button and shouldn't have.
Would you rather see the train wrecks we saw the past two years when we were forced to play without Cutler? I would rather have Campbell than Hanie or the other crap we had starting when Cutler couldn't go. Money well spent. If we had him last year, we make the playoffs.
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Originally Posted by
The Benjamin
Would you rather see the train wrecks we saw the past two years when we were forced to play without Cutler? I would rather have Campbell than Hanie or the other crap we had starting when Cutler couldn't go. Money well spent. If we had him last year, we make the playoffs.
I agree we needed an upgrade over Hanie. We couldn't even chance another season having a Hanie-like backup QB. Too much is at stake right now.
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He's a "tweener" ....better than your typical backup, but a "good but not great" starter. I could see a team taking a chance on him as a starter again. One scouting report describes him: "He is probably more of a game manager than a difference-maker." Most teams want more than a game manager for their starting QB.
Trestman - Kromer - Tucker - DeCamillis
I'm looking forward to seeing these guys coach. Hope they're good.
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Benj, I think you take your shot w/a Rookie QB, or you nab someone else off a PS from another team, or inexperienced backup that is in FA; I don't think you waste your money on a low end starter to be your backup. He's not taking this team to the SB anymore then Haine is, He'll just not ruin a shot at a playoff run.
btw I still think Haine(while not great) was given a bill of goods by a shitty OC who never wanted to be sattled w/him. Haine is a WC guy, forced to play in more of an Air Corelle O. Is he great? No, is he as bad as he looked under Martz, No. Martz decided on his way out of town he wasn't going to be the only one tarred and feathered so he sold Haine out.
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Originally Posted by
JustAnotherBearsFan99
He's a "tweener" ....better than your typical backup, but a "good but not great" starter. I could see a team taking a chance on him as a starter again. One scouting report describes him: "He is probably more of a game manager than a difference-maker." Most teams want more than a game manager for their starting QB.
He's in about the same category as Orton would be but he's bigger and more mobile than that. A guy with a TD to Pick ratio like his is certainly enough to attract the attention of some teams. He played on some God-awful Washington teams and still did fairly well. He looked a lot better in Oakland but after they traded for Palmer he become expendable. They couldn't afford to keep him as a backup.
He was also more available this year because he's coming off a bad injury. My guess is no one wanted to take the chance on him starting and we made him a good offer as a backup. I don't think he's ready to be a career backup just yet.
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.