NFL Week 10 Failure: Eulogy Edition

NFL: Chicago Bears at Green Bay Packers

Robert Zeglinski, November 14th, 2014

I’m going to change it up here a little bit.

Instead of focusing on the fantastic successes of good football teams with great game plans and talent, I’m going to start a weekly small Eulogy series leading up to the playoffs giving eulogies to those dysfunctional teams with expectations that fell apart, and others that just aren’t in the January mix.

We begin with those hibernating Chicago Bears and there’s all the point in the world to go off on a complete novel tangent here (I really want to).

Here is your eulogy for the 2014 Chicago Bears season:

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Let’s start off by being that stat guy and throw some things in for reference;

Maybe the Bears aren’t that historical proud franchise as we hear so often. The “tradition” was established long before NFL relevancy.

Ever since good ol’ Brett Favre started his first game against these Bears, the Green Bay Packers are 34-13 in their last 47 games versus Chicago. Obviously that coincides with having two Hall of Fame caliber quarterbacks, but we’ll get back to this with more in a second.

In the last 21 years (this year included, I’m not getting ahead of myself). the Bears have made the playoffs 5 times. Just for frame of reference since they are the primary “rival”, Green Bay has only missed the playoffs 5 times in that same span (that number’s not changing this year).

In the last 51 years (since 1963, an NFL title not Super Bowl, for the Bears), the Bears have only had 14 playoff appearances, 27 losing seasons, and 1 Super Bowl with a team that should have had more (Ditka is idolized for what again?).

In the paraphrased thoughts of the always classy Paul Pierce in reference to his old basketball team the Celtics against the Knicks, “they have to actually beat us to be our rival”.

That’s the exact situation the Bears face and have had thrown into their face with Green Bay for a long time.

One thing is clear, the proud “tradition” of a franchise has not existed for a very long time. Expectations notwithstanding, things can always change, but the pattern is hard to break out of.

Those expectations are always mounted when an unknowledgeable fan base idealizes a team that while yes was fantastic, won a Super Bowl OVER 30 years ago (Not a typo). It’s as if both the fan base and the organization haven’t moved from the glory days seeing the results of the past.

And yes the team was great but only in that SINGLE season. The greatest teams of all time had dynasties. Yes call it blasphemy if you want, coming from one of the biggest Bears fans you can imagine, but the 1985 Bears were not that great (I’ve had time to stew on this too).

So it’s time we stop idolizing them any time a modern era Bears team starts playing well, and inevitably the comparisons begin.

(End 1985 tangent here)

This year in relation to that fact, the Bears were expected to be a playoff team. A team that could have (key word, could) won 10-12 games and was considered a preseason chic Super Bowl contender pick.

Who could blame anyone with those thoughts? (*smacks self repeatedly over and over)

After retaining an offense that was 2nd in the league in scoring with all 11 starters and the same “innovative” (HA) system of head coach Marc Trestman, the Bears were supposed to make the jump to consistent Saints level offense contender status.

A patchwork defense of 2013, added “big” (mistakes) free agents, Lamarr Houston, Ryan Mundy, and Jared Allen. So in theory, an offense that could build a lead, would then have a pass rushing good front on defense closing the game out.

All of the plans were set in motion for a good run. Win One for Virginia! (what a crock) was the mantra.

None of those plans have come to fruition as the Bears have set an time NFL record for futility by being the first team since the Rochester Jeffersons in 1923 to allow back to back 50 point games. 1923. 91 years.

Furthermore, in the last 11 games of the Marc Trestman era, the Bears have allowed 50 points 3 times. Before that, they had never done it in over 759 games! Regardless of the mediocrity, that further record points to a level of pride this franchise has at least always had.

I’m not so sure about that anymore with the 3 worst losses in franchise history coming in the modern era.

That’s not an understatement.

As the Bears flounder at 3-6 yet again into irrelevancy, it’s fair to wonder if this is the worst Bears team ever. Yes the worst ever.

I’ve talked with older fans who said the 70’s were unbearable and absolutely awful teams (looking at the stats of those years…..MAN I AGREE), however I can’t shake the feeling of this team.

The sentiment I’ve gotten is that those teams were awful talent wise but at least grinded and competed 60 minutes every Sunday. There weren’t any expectations for them to perform well and they were expected to be bad.

Whatever the issue is with the 2014 Chicago Bears, no one knows. But SOME of the pieces are there as the Bears are no where near a complete team.

So if you’re a Bear fan (Am I talking to myself here? Not sure.),

Who do you blame?

Jay Cutler? I can buy that.

A man who came with a high price in draft picks in 2009, has never quite lived up to the expectations.

He came here to rival Aaron Rodgers and Rodgers and the Packers are 12-1 since Cutler as a starter since. He’s turnover prone. He shows poor mechanics after poor mechanics and still makes the same bad decisions.

After having some of the worst offensive lines ever assembled in his first few years here, where he basically improvised most of the Bears offense, the team rebuilt the offense around him, and gave him the talent. Yet, the mistakes and off rhythm play continue. A championship caliber quarterback does not need to throw 50 touchdowns. He however has to play within the game plan and not turn the ball over.

With 15 turnovers this season (Tied for the league lead) that’s something Jay Cutler simply isn’t capable of. I used to defend Cutler, but he’s not the answer, he just isn’t. And his attitude doesn’t matter if he plays well, but he doesn’t so take that for what you will. I await what offseason plans await him in the coming firestorm of this season for the Bears. (TRADE PLEASE!)

Further down the line, Marc Trestman?

Sure. He’s supposed to be the head coach. The leader of the team that keeps everything in order in the locker room and all of his players on the same page. The man who is supposed to instill some kind of winning personality, attitude, and significant game plan into his men.

Yeah about that, Trestman has lost his team. Whether it’s leniency to allow players to take days off (Lance Briggs) or not addressing locker room outbursts (Brandon Marshall), he just doesn’t have a handle of the psyche of his team as he’s let everything spiral out of control. As his team is shellshocked, he continues to insinuate his team is practicing very well, so is he in denial of what’s happening?

You practice how you play is the old saying in sports, and well with the Bears…..you know…..

If we refer to further stats, the offensive “guru” Trestman has had the Bears slip to 20th in scoring, and 9th in offensive yards. The Bears offense has not been on the same page all year, and while yes Cutler is Cutler, it’s Trestman’s job to manage some kind of success to get all of this together as the league figures him out.

Lovie Smith and Mike Ditka were both 11-14 in their first 25 games as Bears head coaches just like Trestman, yet they never seemed to allow their teams to be this pathetic. They’re teams never quit on them and both guys also made the playoffs in their 2nd year.

Completely different circumstances for Trestman and barring a miraculous 7-0 run to end the season and playoff berth, the man has shown to be in over his head here. In my mind he has to be accountable, with his job, but hey, I guess that’s why I’m not the GM here.

AND speaking of one so called GM, Mr. Phil Emery. It will have been 4 years removed from the Jerry Angelo era at the end of December. The man has had time to craft this franchise into his image so to me there are no excuses of no playoff berths.

Yes, he’s certainly brought in the offensive talent. Alshon Jeffery, Brandon Marshall, Kyle Long, Matt Slauson, Jermon Bushrod are all fantastic acquisitions through free agency or the draft.

But that defense. The great defense of the Lovie Smith era is long gone as that defense wore thin with age and was never quite rebuilt the right way.

I mentioned the “band aids” earlier. Instead of outright building through the draft and obtaining impact players, GM’s of this franchise have made a habit to make panic moves and push all of their chips when it’s not needed?

What was the point of giving Jared Allen who looks OLD, 10 million per year or the overrated Lammar Houston 7.5 million?

Why resign Tim Jennings and Brandon Marshall to big extensions when both look like shells of their former elite selves? (I think the crappiness level of the team has brought at least these two’s performance down).

The Bears have brought in plenty more players than that too. In fact of the 53 man roster, 31 are outside acquisitions or free agents, by far the highest number in the NFL. Homegrown talent does not exist here.

Emery threw around money instead of patience and we have the results, a dysfunctional team that isn’t unified in time of crisis. In contrast, because I have to, the Packers have 5 free agents of the 53, the least amount in the NFL. Green Bay knows football continuity (UGH)

A model franchise, huh?

Model point being here, everyone is to blame.

Most of the organizational failure of the past half century points to bad drafting, bad readjustments to the modern era, and bad luck with “franchise” quarterbacks. When Jay Cutler is your best quarterback ever, that’s a problem. (Sad times).

The Bears have the young talent in place in pieces. Truth is, this team actually was a ways away from winning in 2014. Emery and Co. just tried to rush the process and raise expectations, and now you get this dumpster fire.

When you have no young impact players on the front seven (Fuller in the secondary is a great piece), you’re not going to be a good defense. You need a few more good drafts to be in position talent wise on all sides of the ball.

Again, that being said, it doesn’t excuse Emery’s lack of patience and recklessness, Trestman’s lack of confidence and leadership, and Cutler being Cutler.

If I was in charge, all 3 would not be involved with the Chicago Bears next season, and another big trio would have a chance to take the helm draft wise with the young pieces we already have. That would be the kind of radical change needed to jumpstart this franchise back into the pre-1963 level (GET A YOUNG QUARTERBACK).

However I get the feeling that won’t happen. Maybe 1 loses their job at the end of the season (Take your pick) but it’s likely Chicago’s hitched onto these 3 for at least next season, and at that point, if this poor embarrassment continues, I think only Cutler and Trestman lose their jobs. Emery will likely have his chance at another head coach, and I guess we’ll have to see if that’s a mistake or not. He’s been the best of the 3 (not saying much) a 2014 rushed offseason not withstanding.

Emery would get another chance that for the record I am opposed to, but not as much compared to the mediocrity of the other two.

For now though. For this 2014 humiliating playoff-less season, you will always be remembered but repressed deep into the back of the mind of every Bears fan for fear of humiliation.

Rest In Peace.

-Robert Zeglinski

Robert Zeglinski is an aspiring sportswriter who absolutely loves all the nitty gritty that comes with pro sports. He is currently attending Aurora University in Illinois. You can follow him on Twitter at @ZigZags82 or reach him through email (robertpoduski@gmail.com) for questions or feedback. 

 

 

 

 

NFL Week 7: Success/Failure

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Robert Zeglinski, October 22nd, 2014

As we inch closer to the midpoint of the season, the NFL seems to be in complete flux.

Some talented teams are having issues with identity (Seattle, Chicago). Some teams are making the most of their opportunities (Philadelphia, Dallas). A few teams have clearly separated themselves from the pack (San Diego, Denver, Indianapolis).

Nonetheless we’re beginning to get a good understanding of who should be in Super Bowl contention soon, but still, it’s too early. It’s why they play the games right?

Nine games left. Impossible to figure what other stories and teams will emerge.

Here’s Week 7 Success/Failure:

Success:

Denver Broncos

San Francisco 49ers v Denver Broncos

What Super Bowl hangover?

After a 13-3 season that culminated in a Super Bowl blowout at the hands of the Seahawks, it seems the 2014 Denver Broncos are actually better.

A 42-17 blowout this past Sunday over perennial NFC mainstay San Francisco shows as much.

The offense still has the familiar cast of the Demaryius and Julius Thomas, Wes Welker, in addition to speedster Emannuel Sanders.

The offense still has the statistical best quarterback of all time, Peyton Manning who just broke the touchdown pass record.

The offense still has one of the league’s best and technically proficient offensive lines stabilized by the return of left tackle Ryan Clady (who missed most of last season).

Denver leads the NFL in scoring at 31.5 points per game. Enough said.

It was never going to be problem to move the ball or score for the Broncos. This team had issues defensively and it seems they’ve addressed those problems quite well.

Free agent additions Demarcus Ware, Aqib Talib, and TJ Ward have panned out quite well as Denver is 2nd in the league in total defense, 2nd in the league in sacks, and 2nd in the league in rushing defense. It’s not as easy to push around and intimidate the Broncos anymore like Seattle exemplified this past February.

The Broncos made the necessary physical and athletic upgrades in breaking the bank this offseason, and in turn have built the most complete team in the NFL.

Denver actually has some stiff competition in the AFC with old rivals San Diego, New England, and Indianapolis lurking, but for now they have no reason to worry.

This team is actually better than a version that won 13 games a season ago.

That’s scary for the rest of the NFL.

Indianapolis Colts

Cincinnati Bengals v Indianapolis Colts

It’s not often you see such young up and coming teams perform so consistently well, but it’s time to take notice of what the Indianapolis Colts are doing right now.

They have a legitimate MVP candidate in young gun (can we even call him that anymore?) Andrew Luck, who is leading the league in passing and touchdown passes.

He’s spoiled with receiving weapons, TY Hilton, Reggie Wayne, Coby Fleener, and Dwyane Allen along with an excellent 1-2 punch in the backfield featuring Ahmad Bradshaw and Trent Richardson.

Indy is second in the league in scoring and 1st in yardage (Must be Luck’s beard). This team is making the leap now. A 6-1 record that can no longer just be blamed on playing in one of the worst divisions in the NFL, the AFC South, shows just that.

They seem to have youthful energy and passion for the game that extends throughout the team. It’s a winning culture and they understand what they do well.

Even a previously much maligned defense is 8th in the league and has shown to be able to completely dominate opponents.

Look no further for an example of that then the 27-0 shutout of the Bengals this past Sunday in forcing EIGHT (Almost as crazy as not punting by an offense, especially to a talented team like Cincinatti) consecutive three-and-outs.

It will be a race to the finish for this Indy team for a top 2 seed in the AFC considering the elite competition of Denver, San Diego, Baltimore, and the Patriots, but you have to think this team is ready for anything.

The Colts are a legitimate Super Bowl contender again (As they were for years with Peyton)

They’ve finally (re) completely grown up.

Failure:

Chicago Bears

Ryan Tannehill, Brandon Marshall

You can say I’m wasting my time as the Bears have made their 3rd appearance of failure here this season, but at some point the talk and madness needs to end.

It’s not because I’m a biased Bears fan that this (so far) disappointing 3-4 team is constantly discussed. They are literally one of the most talented teams in the NFL. They should not be losing home games to underachieving less talented teams in the Dolphins.

I’ll take a page from the Brandon Marshall in the post game locker room for a second:

A skill group that features Brandon Marshall, Alshon Jeffery, Martellus Bennett, and Matt Forte should be better.

Unacceptable.

An offensive line that has had it’s struggles due to injuries and lack of cohesion compared to last season should be better.

Unacceptable.

A talented quarterback in Jay Cutler that’s won big games in the NFL, who no one will confuse for Aaron Rodgers or Tom Brady (they never should have in the first place) that still has bad overthrows and awful routine miscommunications with his receivers.

Unacceptable.

A coaching staff led by head coach Marc Trestman that has established no clear identity for the team offensively or defensively which is why you see this hot and cold play week to week.

Unacceptable.

I’ve aired these points out now several times. There’s no point in talking about the routine mistakes and lack of rhythm this team shows every other week. The game events don’t matter anymore until the team gets it together.

Contrary to popular belief, I don’t think this team has a leadership issue.

The media tries to paint it’s own picture of a locker room in shambles but I see too many stable lead by example solid veteran types like Brandon Marshall, Jared Allen, and Jay Cutler (he’s the QB that it seems still gets everyone in the right spot).

While Marc Trestman hasn’t established an excellent identity and framework of winning yet, it doesn’t mean he won’t. We are only half a season into his tenure. Do the Bears really want to be one of those fringe franchises like the Raiders who fire their coach midseason barely giving him a chance (or making the wrong hire in the first place) and never have any stability?

Time must be given to this staff to leave their own imprint on the NFL. Talent doesn’t always mesh together well, but considering the pieces that are there, it’s way too premature for an indictment on anyone.

Now for realism.

I don’t think it’s a stretch to say that this team will have to go 7-2 or 8-1 in it’s last 9 games. That’s the nature of competition for a playoff spot and contention in the NFL. While it’s nice to have 5 home games (0-3 this season, so what does this matter right now?) and 5 divisional games left, what reason have the Bears given us to trust them and take advantage?

They tease us with games like San Francisco and Atlanta, and then lay eggs against inferior teams in Miami, Carolina, and Buffalo.

That’s why it’s so frustrating to watch, because we see what this team can do when running on full cylinders or at least execute well. I actually don’t think for a second we’ve seen the best possible version of these 2014 Bears.

But.

Winning teams are consistent teams in football and right now the Bears are neither.

I still believe this team can get it together, finally mesh well, and put together one of those hot 4-5 game winning streaks, but that’s asking a lot right now.

I thought the Bears would be at or around .500 closing in on the bye week, just not like this. Not with any lack of identity from the league’s #2 scoring offense a season ago. The next 3 weeks will define their season. Two games on the road against the Patriots and Packers with a bye week squeezed in between are beyond tough and they will need to come out with at least one if not both games with a win.

If they can put something together there, then maybe it’s time to fully put your stock on that hot streak and this team, but for now all Bears fans can do is hope for the best.

A season that was supposed to feature a playoff berth as a nice building block for a team building to be in a Super Bowl in the next 2-3 seasons is in danger of falling off the rails. It’s up to this team to fix that, recover, and execute on it’s own.

The ever awaiting drama and story of this 2014 Chicago Bears season begins it’s next chapter.

Seattle Seahawks:

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While Denver is thriving post Super Bowl, the defending champions are stuck in the mud right now.

After a Week 7 28-26 loss to the Rams that featured a variety of mental mistakes by Seattle (and courage by Jeff Fisher), the Seahawks have now lost 2 consecutive games and sit at 3-3 in the very competitive NFC.

Their failures have completely opened up the conference to any number of teams and you can’t really point at any specific issues to nitpick for them right now. Well except:

In the bottom 3rd of the league in 3rd down defense and pass rush effectiveness.

The smash mouth effectiveness of the “Legion of Boom” is lacking the same amount of passion and effectiveness they had last season. They don’t have the same discernible advantages or incredible depth they had last year so the creaks are shining through.

Now to further complicate things there are perceived chemistry issues following the shocking trade of Percy Harvin and perhaps some unresolved problems that could threaten the defense of their title. Seattle is a mystery right now.

Everyone knew they didn’t have the most explosive pass offense (the Percy Harvin trade still baffles) or best offensive line, but no one thought the defense would struggle as mightily as they have last season. If Seattle can’t pound the ball with their rushing attack and if the defense, the  supposed strength of the team lacks depth and proper execution, what do they have?

It’s hard to win back to back championships in the NFL and Pete Carroll and his team are learning that right now. Seattle has a lot of work to do. If they don’t get anything done soon, it seems the Pacific Northwest might be quiet come January.

The 12th man wants no part of that.

-Robert Zeglinski

Robert Zeglinski is an aspiring sportswriter who absolutely loves all the nitty gritty that comes with pro sports. He is currently attending Aurora University in Illinois. You can follow him on Twitter at @ZigZags82 or reach him through email (robertpoduski@gmail.com) for questions or feedback. 

 

 

NFL Week 5: Success/Failure

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Robert Zeglinski, October 7th, 2014

We are 5 weeks into the season, and there are no undefeated teams left standing. That hasn’t happened since 2010.

Usually we get that one team that flirts with greatness around 9-10 wins, but of course parity has won out in the 2014 season.

I haven’t seen a week of parity like Week 5 in a long time and I don’t know what to make of it. We had a number of teams win in blowouts (Packers, Broncos, Chargers, Patriots). We had so many teams win with ridiculous comebacks in back and forth matchups (Panthers, Saints, Bills, Cowboys, Browns, Eagles).

Of course there’s also the mention of the horrible state of officiating but that’s a different story (I feel for you Percy Harvin, I really do).

The NFL has relaxed into a state of mediocrity in the sense that we don’t really definitively know who the best team is.

Seattle would be the easy answer, but then to see them struggle with a decrepit Redskins team gives you mind of what exactly is going on (The officials did have a hand in this matchup though).

It used to be we would have definitive blue bloods like New England or whatever team Peyton Manning was playing for as the set in top teams for a championship.

Now?

I don’t think it’s a stretch to say that with the state of the lackluster officiating, lack of practice and contact teams are allowed within a week, and diluted talent level between teams, that the NFL has become a league where you just the roll the dice. And that’s what precisely what a league struggling with it’s PR wants. Crazy comebacks and crazy games.

I’m just saying. These are things to keep an eye on as we keep rolling through the season.

Nonetheless, let’s get to Week 5: Success/Failure.

Success:

New England Patriots:

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Bill Belichick may not be the smartest general manager.

Trading away blue chip picks and veterans that can still clearly play at a high level will do that to you, but it can be never said the man doesn’t how to inspire and prepare a team.

After the national media completely buried the Pats through their struggles within the first month of the season (A blowout by the Chiefs in primetime only exacerbated this), people actually wondered if it was the end of an era (Mostly ESPN). It was really debated if the Patriots of all teams were still truly a cornerstone contender team in football.

I think you could still argue about the actual state of the team. They have offensive line issues and they lack talent on the outside on offense.

But boy did they respond in a big way on Sunday night against the supposed most talented team in football.

An offense that struggled to move the ball consistently against the dumpster fire that is the Oakland Raiders, absolutely picked apart the elite Bengals defense in all facets. A New England team that lacks in talent did whatever it wanted all night. Keep in mind this is the same Bengals defense that served to humble Matt Ryan and his supremely talented duo of receivers.

43-17 was the final here and it never even seemed that close according to the eye test.

Cincinnati did not come prepared to play against a Pats team that treated this primetime matchup as a playoff game.

I still have to think Cincinnati possibly cruises to a top 2 seed in the AFC but Sunday night just wasn’t going to be their night even with Andy Dalton playing relatively well in a big matchup (204 yards, 2 TD’s). 500 yards of offense and 3 forced turnovers by an angry New England team proves just that fact.

At this point the Patriots have essentially become the Spurs of the NFL (or vice versa, you know you’ve heard this analogy routinely about these teams). Once you count them out. Once you think the game has passed them by or that they’re too inexperienced or too old, they always come back firing. That’s a credit to their great players like Tom Brady (Or Tim Duncan and Tony Parker) and their coaches like Belichick (or Popovich, you get the point).

I don’t know how far New England can take this season. Again you have to think the talent deficiencies on offense will eventually catch up to them at the worst time. But there’s no reason to think they still don’t win the AFC East and at least 11-12 games. They’re always hanging around. Always

That’s the Patriot Way.

Cleveland Browns:

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In relief duty, Charlie Whitehurst, yes Charlie Whitehurst lit up the Browns to the tune of 194 yards and 2 TD’s.

The Titans were playing at home, where historically the modern era Browns have been awful on the road.

Tennessee was ahead in this game 28-3……AND Cleveland won! The biggest road comeback in NFL history made by all of teams, the Cleveland Browns.

Of course not a coincidence, it broke an 8 game losing streak for Cleveland.

Regardless of the level of competition in the hapless Titans, perhaps the Browns have found something here.

Head Coach Mike Pettine seems to have his players believing in the vision he wants implemented, and the players are responding in such to make the Browns a halfway decent team.

I mean just take a look at the schedule. Cleveland has not been blown out of the water in any of their games.  Close losses to North rivals, Pittsburgh and Baltimore, and close wins over the Saints and Titans. This would’ve been absolutely unheard of by the Browns just 2 years ago. Yet they’re hanging in there.

Look I have my doubts.

Brian Hoyer is a glorified game manager that sans Josh Gordon lacks weapons on the outside to throw to and play consistently well. (Actually I’m not sure if he’s glorified but he’s keeping Manziel out of the conversation, which is a good thing, right?)

And consider a middling defense ranked 15th that won’t cut it once the Browns really step out of the division considering that mentioned lack of talent on offense.

Can they win the AFC North or realistically challenge for a playoff spot? No.

Can they win 7-9 games in a weak AFC, playing hard, and building a nice core level of a football team for the future? Yes

At this point an 8 win season might as well be a playoff berth for Browns fans.

Failure:

Chicago Bears:

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I’ll try to keep this as short and sweet as possible (no promises) as there’s no point in rambling on and on.

As many pundits have noted, the Bears offensive starters make a combined salary of $57.74 million. The Bears defensive starters make a combined a salary of $32.17 million. You can say figuratively the Bears have about 60% of their cap space invested on the offensive side of the ball. They are built to score points and move the ball as a primary tool of winning.

This isn’t about expectations. This isn’t about judging units based off of talent level and what we thought they were capable of. The Bears defense hasn’t necessarily been up to snuff either.

But.

They’ve been highly competent in some moments and straight up awful in others. An average defense is what they are right now, a far cry from the historically awful defense of 2013, so still an improvement (21st up from 30th last year).

Those moments of competence? 2nd in the league in takeaways and 12 sacks in 5 games (5 from Willie Young). Moments to ponder? Games like against the Packers, where Green Bay does not punt (Only the 2nd time that has ever happened in NFL history).

I’m pleased with the progress of the defense considering the youth gaining experience like Kyle Fuller or Ego Ferguson, and we won’t really talk about the special teams (young guys, bad mistakes, Joe Dicamillis is on the hot seat, but not a primary core issue). It’s not the problem here.

The Bears are built to win games offensively. Yet, they are just 11th in the league yardage wise. They are 17th in the league in scoring.

Is that an elite offense? Is that an offense that can carry an average defense still rebuilding but at a competent pace?

They have all these weapons like Alshon Jeffery, Brandon Marshall, Martellus Bennett, and Matt Forte, yet they’ve scored 3 points total in the last two second halves they’ve played against an awful Packers defense and a Panthers team that was humiliated by Baltimore and Pittsburgh.

If you come to think of it, the offense hasn’t really put together any complete games this year.

Playing to their potential off the top of my head; the 2nd quarter against Buffalo, the 2nd half against San Francisco, the 3rd quarter against the Jets, the 1st half against Green Bay, and the first quarter against Carolina.

People want to blame Jay Cutler for that inconsistency (which is warranted sometimes considering the untimely turnovers), but this is on the offense as a whole. We’ve known for a long time Cutler isn’t Brady or Manning, but he can play well enough. It’s on everyone out of sync.

The offensive line has been decimated by injuries. There are dumb penalties at the worst times.

Guys drop passes (Jeffery).

Guys miss blocks (Bennett).

Guys check out (Marshall).

Guys make bad decisions (Cutler).

Coaches fail to make in game adjustments (Trestman).

You could consider all of these workable kinks considering that guys just aren’t really making plays, but if an offense with top 5 level talent is performing at bottom half league capacity, you have to wonder what the core issue is.

You don’t fail to score points with the talent the Bears have. You just don’t. And that’s more than just on the players.

I argued with someone on Twitter about how it’s ridiculous to expect the offense to score 30+ points every game. That the losses the Bears have suffered are team losses and how the offense can’t carry the team every game.

But what game have they carried the Bears this season?

The defense put in the offense in short fields in the Niners comeback and the defense put the offense in short fields in the Jets win.

The offense is the weaker unit that has put the defense in short fields and bad positions with it’s turnovers.

And you know what?

The Bears have yet to score 30 points this season (Funny, huh?)

Marc Trestman better round up the troops fast, because they can’t afford to keep giving games away. This is still a 10-11 win team talent wise considering the schedule that can quickly evolve into a 6-7 win season if things aren’t tightened up.

The Bears are 10-11 so far in the Trestman era so I have my doubts about the man’s leadership. He’s looking more like a over glorified offensive coordinator who plays things cute than a competent head coach right now.

Put your players in position to succeed like your paid to do, or the Bears will find someone else in due time. It’s that simple.

There’s still time to fix that, 11 games. But soon that will become 10 games, then 9 games, then 8 games, etc. etc.

Let him and the Bears prove me wrong.

New York Jets:

NFL: New York Jets at San Diego Chargers

Who really expected the Jets to be relevant this season?

I thought they would win 7-8 games considering the talented front seven they have, but that offense and Geno Smith left a lot to be desired as a playoff contender.

No this isn’t about the Jets being a middling team that was blown out by the likely best team in the league, in the Chargers.

This is about the horrible mismanagement of their quarterback situation as it seems no team in the league likes to play around with their quarterbacks like the Jets.

The Jets stunted their previous quarterback, Mark Sanchez, by bringing in Tim Tebow as a publicity stunt, as “necessary pressure”.

If you’ve seen Tebow throw a ball, you know it meant something else, but not in Sanchez’s mind. Where is he now?

Oh, not on the Jets roster (backup in Philly).

Seeing that, what made you think they would stay patient with Geno Smith?

What made you think they would put tangible weapons around him to help him develop and give him the coaching he needs?

Who’s the most notable receiver the Jets have had in recent years, Stephen Hill? Oh, he’s not on the roster anymore. Who could they have drafted? Oh, Alshon Jeffery.

Then of course it’s oh-so typical Jets that when your young quarterback is struggling because of the garbage you put around him, you bench him in favor of your high profile over the hill signing, Michael Vick (hasn’t been relevant in 4 years).

Stunted development and career backup here we come for Geno Smith, at no fault of his own.

It seriously seems like the Jets and Rex Ryan have no idea what they’re doing.

That’s J-E-T-S football, baby.

-Robert Zeglinski

Robert Zeglinski is an aspiring sportswriter who absolutely loves all the nitty gritty that comes with pro sports. He is currently attending Aurora University in Illinois. You can follow him on Twitter at @ZigZags82 or reach him through email (robertpoduski@gmail.com) for questions or feedback.