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Thread: Bears, Cutler having major problems gaining yards on first down.

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    Certified Oline Zealot JustAnotherBearsFan99's Avatar
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Gift received at 04-16-2013, 02:27 PM from weneedmorelinemen
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    Bears, Cutler having major problems gaining yards on first down.

    This is KILLING us.

    LINK to article

    Bears, Cutler having major problems
    gaining yards on first down


    Michael Bush knew a problem existed, but he didn’t realize to what extent.

    He was stunned when informed of the offense’s league-worst 3.32-yard average on first-down plays.

    “You can’t start like that,” Bush said, shaking his head. “You put yourself in a hole, and you have to fight even harder. So it’s just something you can’t do.”

    The Bears’ offense was ranked fifth in the NFL after racking up 428 yards and 41 points in the season opener. In the two games since, the offense’s ranking has plummeted to 27th, and the unit has managed only 442 combined yards.

    One problem consistently cropped up: an inability to generate yardage on first down. The Bears’ average is five yards fewer than the league-leading Carolina Panthers and two full yards fewer than the NFL average.

    “We’re bad on first down,” offensive coordinator Mike Tice said. “We’re putting ourselves in second-and-long a lot. So our goal this week is to do a lot better job, be more efficient on first down.”

    Asked if first-down plays are a point of emphasis, quarterback Jay Cutler said, “Absolutely. Three-and-outs, first downs, putting ourselves in second-and-15, second-and-12, it’s hard to call a game. It really is. You’ve got to get positive yards on first and second down and give yourself a chance. When you’re fighting a second-and-eight-plus, third-and-eight-plus, it doesn’t really matter what you call. You’re fighting uphill.”

    Cutler, of course, is a big part of the problem.

    Among all NFL quarterbacks with at least 25 first-down passes, Cutler is ranked 31st with a passer rating of 52.2. He has completed only 16 of 34 passes (47.1 percent) for 209 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions. By contrast, Jacksonville Jaguars second-year quarterback Blaine Gabbert is 17-for-29 (58.6 percent) for 271 yards with four touchdowns, no interceptions and a league-best passer rating of 129.5 on first down.

    Worse yet, it has been a comedy of errors for the Bears:

    ◆ Five sacks, including 12-yard losses on the opening offensive play of two games.

    ◆ Two interceptions, including one returned for a touchdown.

    ◆ Six penalties, including four false starts by offensive linemen.

    ◆ Eleven runs for no gain or loss of yardage.

    But practicing first-down plays isn’t as physical or even practical as plays in the red zone. To that end, Tice said each unit will study how it can improve. For instance, the offensive line can focus on limiting the sacks and false starts. The running backs can focus on hitting the right gaps and picking up pass rushers. The receivers can focus on catching the ball, and the quarterback can focus on throwing it.

    Cutler certainly can do his part, but Tice and pass blockers can help, too. The three highest-rated quarterbacks on first down (Gabbert, Josh Freeman and Cam Newton) have been sacked six times combined, only once more than Cutler.

    “We have to do a better job — and I have to do a better job — this week against Dallas of making sure we protect the quarterback against a couple of elite pass rushers and a very elite front,” Tice said. “They lead the league in defense.”

    The goals seem modest enough. Tice is aiming for four yards on runs and six yards on throws.

    “We’re trying to get better each day,’’ Tice said. ‘‘We put that mantra out there a long time ago, ‘Work your trade and get better each day.’ Can you get better at everything in one week? No. But we can pick some things that we’re going to get better at this week.”

    Brian Urlacher
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    Certified Oline Zealot JustAnotherBearsFan99's Avatar
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Gift received at 04-16-2013, 02:27 PM from weneedmorelinemen
Message: Here you go, buddy.  Wear it with pride.GameballBears Head LogoGeorge Halas
    Here's more.

    LINK to the article

    Bears look to increase 1st-down production
    By Michael C. Wright

    LAKE FOREST, Ill. -- Chicago Bears offensive coordinator Mike Tice correctly answered "no" to his own question of whether the struggling offense could "get better at everything in one week."

    But in preparing to face the Dallas Cowboys' top-ranked defense, which features a fierce pass rush led by DeMarcus Ware, the Bears know they need to shore up their offense as much as possible -- one that seems to be tripping on its own feet heading into Monday night's showdown at Cowboys Stadium.

    "It's one of those games you've got to be ready," backup running back Michael Bush said. "If you're not ready, you're going to get your butt kicked."

    To avoid that scenario, Tice pointed out the importance of taking measured steps toward correcting specific deficiencies as opposed to attempting to apply a fix-all solution to the team's offensive woes. So while Tice said the Bears "have to do a better job this week of making sure we protect the quarterback against a couple of elite pass-rushers," the focus going into Monday night is on becoming more efficient on first down.

    "We have to be better on first down, first and foremost," Tice said. "We're putting ourselves in second-and-long a lot, and then you're fighting to get back to a manageable third down."

    The Bears displayed as much last week in their 23-6 win over the St. Louis Rams. Of the club's 10 first-down plays in the first quarter, just four gained positive yardage, two were penalties, three were incomplete passes and one gained no yardage.

    The club improved in the second quarter with positive gains and a touchdown on 5 of 9 first-down plays, but on the other four plays the Bears lost a total of nine yards (five because of a false-start penalty on Chilo Rachal).

    "You can't win in this league when you're in a lot of second-and-long, third-and-longs," receiver Brandon Marshall said. "We need to clean that up, but I really like what we're doing (in the game plan this week)."

    Repairing the issues on first down isn't all the Bears need to do prior to facing the Cowboys, who have posted seven sacks (four from Ware), and are limiting opponents to 250 yards per game, including an average of 137 yards through the air.

    Quarterback Jay Cutler has thrown five interceptions and one TD in his past two games, completing just 48.3 percent of his passes for a total QBR of 16.6. According to ESPN Stats & Information, Cutler throws deeper than 10 yards down the field on every 2.66 attempts. Yet his performance on those throws hasn't justified the frequency of making them.

    Cutler throws deeper than 10 yards down the field 37.6 percent of time, yet he's completed just 40 percent of those throws, which ranks 31st in the league among 32 quarterbacks, according to ESPN Stats & Information. So smarter play-calling and better decision-making by Cutler could lead to improvements on offense for the Bears.

    It's not a process Cutler expects the club to complete overnight.

    "It's the first year in the offense," he said. "It's gonna take time. It's a whole season. You've got to build on each and every game and get better."

    Center Roberto Garza agreed, and acknowledged the Cowboys will "try to create a lot of situations where we're singled up (in one-on-one situations against pass-rushers)."

    In addition to giving up 11 sacks as a team, Chicago's offensive line has been responsible for six quarterback hits and 21 pressures. Tice discussed the possibility of max protecting on the majority of pass plays, saying "you think all those things through: What can beat this protection? You want to know the answers to that before the game starts. You want to know what can defeat this protection and then you want to have a counter for that. That's what we have to do a better job of. You have to have more than a couple of ways to take care of a player that might be having a rough night. At the same time, you can't take good care of that player every single play. There has to be a point in the game where players have to earn their money and block one-on-one.

    "At the same time, you have to have answers for a number of different players that might be in a difficult matchup and say, ‘If so-and-so is, where do we go to? If so-and-so is, where do we go to?' That's what I can do a better job as a coach of improving at."

    Coach Lovie Smith said the "entire team needs a boost right now and we need to improve in a lot of areas."

    But how much improvement is sufficient offensively, given the strides that need to be made? Even with the extra day of preparation that goes with playing in a matchup on "Monday Night Football," the Bears understand the difficulties of taking their first-year offensive system on the road against a top-flight defense.

    "You look around the league (and) it's so difficult to win on the road," Tice said. "We just have to be poised and handle the crowd noise and all of the above. We have a checklist of things we have to do better. Like I said, we've got to continue to work at getting better at something each day, and get better at something each game without taking any steps backward."

    Last edited by JustAnotherBearsFan99; 09-28-2012 at 07:48 PM.
    Brian Urlacher
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    Senior Member yttocs's Avatar
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    The Bears have a good Defs, good STs. What ever happen to the Offs just managing a game, aleast till it gets its legs? What a waste of the 2 other parts. Take baby steps with the O, do what is a high % play, and as you get the hang of the O, THEN add more to it. O has a good RB ( 2 ), I'm guessing atleast to , 3 good WR's, TE well thats up in the air right now. QB and OL ARE the most visible problem, what, add in gameplaning. That is where they need to focus. Give JC rollouts quickslants ,but RUN the ball.Then RUN some more. RB aren't the problem, so focus on them, then pass. Isn't the OL best thing, run blocking? So now I'm back to gameplaning. To ME, thats what need to be fixed first, then it's a toss brtween QB and OL. But with the RIGHT game plan and WR's catching , not dropping, the QB will fall in place. That will leave us fan to continue to scream about the OL. Just my take / rant on this post.
    The passion of a few, to rule the many, that's Washington D.C.. Where else was that said before, about whom?

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    Senior Member MPBears68's Avatar
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    Dear Mike Tice, this please ^^^^^^^

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    Button your face 4th and 26's Avatar
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    It helps to have Forte play.

  • BEAR DOWN! JustAnotherBearsFan99 say BEAR DOWN!
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    Senior Member jackiejokeman's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by 4th and 26 View Post
    It helps to have Forte play.
    That may help in some way ... I'm not buying it.

    Theres 52 other swingin dicks on the team.

    Let them be CHICAGO BEARS.

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    Certified Oline Zealot JustAnotherBearsFan99's Avatar
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Gift received at 04-16-2013, 02:27 PM from weneedmorelinemen
Message: Here you go, buddy.  Wear it with pride.GameballBears Head LogoGeorge Halas

    Negative yardage on 1st downs kill us too.

    One thing we CAN do that's not rocket science, is to not have negative yardage on first down. Taking a sack, or a stupid penalty, is a drive killer. I'm OK if we try to run the ball and get small yardage on first down, or a quick/short high-percentage pass that only gets a few yards.

    Positive yardage of ANY kind on 1st down helps, and negative yardage is breaking our back right now.
    Last edited by JustAnotherBearsFan99; 09-29-2012 at 09:57 AM.
    Brian Urlacher
    Thanks For The Memories


  • BEAR DOWN! yttocs say BEAR DOWN!
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    Member JPosh2012's Avatar
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    If anything instead of trying to force things they need to take what the Defense gives them even if it's a three yard slant pass or a quick screen. We also need to run the ball often with Forte and Bush use them as a package possibly depending on the situation.

  • BEAR DOWN! JustAnotherBearsFan99 say BEAR DOWN!
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    Member JJ-30's Avatar
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    Is it just me or are we trying too hard to get the passing game going in the first half. It seems like we pass more on first down if the first half and try running more on first down in the second half of the game. Why we are not trying to establish the run first I don't know. Even if we don't run the ball well on first down in the first half we at least keep the Defense on there toes. If we keep passing on first down it doesn't take much for a DC to call plays to hamper the passing game.

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