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OUR SKYLINE IS US

Posted by The BEAST on 2016/10/03
Posted in: Conversations. Tagged: Broad Street, City Hall, Market Street, Philadelphia, Philly, Rocky, Rosie the Riveter, skyline, skyscraper. 2 Comments

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PHILADELPHIA isn’t a glamorous city. It’s not glitzy or flashy, and it doesn’t overdo attempts to wow the eye. While this city does boast beautiful attractions, and has picturesque pockets here and there, that’s not really what Philly is all about. Philadelphia is all about backbone.

This is the place that gave birth to America. It was a Philadelphian (Stephen Girard, for whom both the street and college are named) who personally saved the U.S. government from financial collapse in 1812. That’s not a typo. I did say personally.

‘Rosie the Riveter’

Rosie the Riveter.jpg

lived all across this STILL great nation, yet few places personified her with as much power and eloquence, as the Naval Shipyard located at the southern end of Broad Street. Whether it was the men who gave their lives in the fight, or the women who built the ships to get the men to the fight; Philadelphia’s role in ending Hitler’s run was by no means a “bit part”. (Yo, Western Europe, you’re welcome!)

Philly is a backbone. This is what we do. In a world that seems hellbent on making things as complicated as it can make them, Philly is decidedly and unashamedly straightforward. We work in straight lines here. Even our skyline is a direct example of that way of thinking and being.

A skyline may seem like a funny thing to write about in relation to all the things I was just talking about, but I think it goes hand in glove. My friend Maureen gave me the necessary kick in the ass to make sure I wrote this, so it’s to her that you owe this article. You’ll see where I’m going with this, when you get to the end.

For now I’ll start at the beginning.

philly-skyline

That is an iconic shot from the movie ‘Rocky’ which came out in 1976. That means that shot was probably filmed in 1975. That hazy spire down the road from Rocky? That’s City Hall.

City Hall (Dilworth Plaza and the PNB sign are still there so this is before 11.16.2014)sm.JPG

City Hall was the tallest building in Philadelphia from about 1894 until 1987. It was the tallest building on Earth from 1894 to 1908. For decades there had been a sort of gentleman’s agreement among architects here, to neither build nor design, above the hat of William Penn’s statue perched atop City Hall. 

billy-penn

(Funny thing about that is, Penn was a Quaker and would be mortified that a statue to his honor even existed. If he were alive to see it, he’d demand it be torn down. Just sayin’…)

As you can see from the ‘Rocky’ picture, back in 1975 we didn’t have a skyline. We had a sky dot. You need at least two points to have a line, and we only had one point until 1987. Since 1987 however, there have been many skyscrapers built, crafting an actual, and respectable skyline.

skyline-2014-2015sm

This is the site of the 2017 NFL Draft.

Everything you see in Philly taller than City Hall, is under 30 years old. Once we stopped standing in our own way, with a self-imposed limit to our potential, we took off running and have never looked back. I’m proud to see that we haven’t joined in the “Who Can Build It Tallest” mania, that infects the minds of so many cities and countries around the world. When we build big, it’s on our own terms, and for our own reasons.

However what I find most telling is how we’re building. In most cities, the skyline has skyscrapers dotted around their downtown area. In Philly, almost every skyscraper we have, is located either on or within a block of, Market Street. Our skyline is built in a straight line more or less.

Like a backbone.

ben-frankin-parkway-from-the-art-museum-steps

TRADING UP FOR CARSON WENTZ

Posted by The BEAST on 2016/10/01
Posted in: Conversations, Draft, Front Office (F.O.), NFL, Players, Roster, trade. Tagged: Dak Prescott, Eagles, Howie Roseman, Jacoby Brissett, Jared Goff, Philadelphia. 1 Comment

wentz-v-pit-2-2016

REMEMBER back in May when I said that GM Howie Roseman got hosed in the trade with the Browns? That trade was made so we could move up from 8th to 2nd, and select QB Carson Wentz in the 2016 NFL Draft. We also gave up our third and a fourth-rounder in 2016, a first-rounder in 2017, and a second-rounder in 2018. Again, does everyone remember when I said that we overpaid?

Good.

Because we still overpaid, but now there’s more evidence to support the claim.

Wentz is 3-0, well respected, and seems to have a very solid grasp of the system he’s running out there. Clearly he will only get more comfortable, and more savvy as he gains experience. Also, Roseman’s fleecing of Minnesota took much of the edge off that Cleveland trade.

However, we still overpaid for Wentz.

This is not to under-value what Wentz has done, but really, look around. There are later selected rookies showing as much poise, awareness, and play-making ability as Wentz. They too will only grow more savvy and comfortable with experience.

jacoby-brisset

Jacoby Brissett

cody-kessler1

Cody Kessler

When I look at Wentz, or Dallas’s 4th round QB Dak Prescott, or New England’s 3rd round QB Jacoby Brissett, or Cleveland’s 3rd round QB Cody Kessler (who is the highest rated QB on his team), it’s clear that spending a high pick means less than having a coaching staff devoted to player development.

 

Here are two examples of what I mean. Did you see this year’s number one overall pick QB Jared Goff win that game last week? No. Of course not. Because he was drafted by a shitty Los Angeles coaching staff. He was expected to be great from Day One, and when he wasn’t, they found him a bench, a baseball cap, a clipboard and a dog house. There was no attempt to develop him first. They threw him out there, then threw him under the bus.

On the other hand, most of the other rookies I mentioned, were pressed into starting due to injury. None of them was supposed to be a starter. They were slated for developing, but circumstances shifted and they had to grow up in a hurry. So far, each of them has performed better than could be expected. Regardless of how high or low they were taken.

cody-kessler3

Look at his eyes…

cody-kessler2

See his eyes?

Looking around at what is actually happening in the NFL this year, looking at how these guys are actually playing, I see nothing that says the Eagles wouldn’t be just as good with any of these other rookie QB’s. Which only puts a larger spotlight on the incongruity of Wentz’s price tag.

Fans will say that as long as Wentz wins, it doesn’t matter what we gave up to get him. Sounds neat until you realize that next year we could have had two 1st rounders. It would have given us the option of infusing a big dose of young talent next year, or parlaying one of the picks into multiple future picks. That sort of thinking however, is specially reserved for those of us who remember that there’s a future, and not just a present.

Look, unless those other young QB’s start playing like shit, or unless Wentz continues to average 256 passing yards per game for the duration of his career, it still looks like we paid double retail price for the same product everyone else got on sale.

Wentz is 3-0, well respected, and seems to have a very solid grasp of the system he’s running out there.

But we still overpaid.

FOUR THINGS REVIEWED: STEELERS

Posted by The BEAST on 2016/09/26
Posted in: Coaching, Defense, Four Things, Offense, Players, Reviews, Uncategorized. Tagged: blowout, Darren Sproles, Eagles, Four Things, Josh Huff, NFC East, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Steelers. Leave a comment

eagles-v-steelers

 

YOUR Philadelphia Eagles and the home crowd didn’t merely win the game yesterday. We destroyed, dismantled and broke the will of what was supposed to be one of the NFL’s better teams. By the end of the third quarter you could see that all the Steelers wanted to do, was get on the bus and go home.

On the Steelers sideline, players and coaches were so shell-shocked that they weren’t even angry. Thousand yard stares dotted the sideline, as player after player sought out, and then curled into, his happy place until it was over. It was a thing of beauty.

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On our way to the 34 – 3 pummeling that was meted out, we took a team that came into the game averaging 135 rushing yards per game, and limited them to just 29. We hung 34 points on a team that had only allowed 32 in their first two games.

But what about the stuff that the final score doesn’t reveal? That’s the reason for these “Four Things” articles. To have an idea of what needs addressing BEFORE the game, so that we’re forced to honestly answer questions AFTER the game.

So, of the Four Things we were looking for in this last game, what exactly did we see?

1) Loosen up the Steelers front seven. I specifically said use passes to RB Darren Sproles and WR Josh Huff on routes to the outside (Outs, Flags, and Hitches) to get those OLB’s out of the box and into coverage. The Eagles did a less aggressive version of that, throwing Naked Screens and Flat routes to Sproles (6 catches) and Huff (4 catches). The two men came into yesterday’s game with a total of 5 catches. Yesterday they totaled 10. The box was unloaded and later there was room to run inside. DONE

2) Huddle. The idea here was that scoring and taking time off the clock would cause the Steelers to abandon their run game. They’d be forced out of their comfort zone, and put everything on their QB’s shoulders. The result was the Steelers attempted 10 runs all day long, as they fell further and further back. The game was put on the QB’s shoulders and we harassed him all day long. DONE

3) Intimidate the Steelers coaching staff. We got pressure early, but we never actually punked their coaching staff into a max-protect mindset. As a result they didn’t limit their QB’s options and had a numbers of opportunities. Good thing for Eagles fans that Steelers WR Mark Wheaton is apparently paid to drop passes. His 1 catch for 2 yards only looks worse next to his 3 drops. One of which was in the end zone. NOT DONE

4) Work the body. Once we ‘d spread the Steelers out with passes to Sproles and Huff on the edges, in came rookie RB Wendell Smallwood to finish the game with 14 second half carries. Smallwood didn’t wow anybody, but his fresh legs were effective enough to close out the game. DONE

So that gives us a score of 3 out of 4, which goes to show that when you attack an opponent fundamentally, you don’t need to do a billion things to bring them down. Our next match-up is in two weeks vs the hapless Detroit Lions, on the other side of our Bye week.

cheer-like-whoa

WK3: STEELERS

Posted by The BEAST on 2016/09/25
Posted in: Coaching, Defense, Four Things, NFL, Offense, Reviews, Uncategorized. Tagged: Brandon Graham, Eagles, Fletcher Cox, Jim Schwartz, NFC East, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, review, Steelers. 1 Comment

w3-pit

EAGLES 34 – Steelers 3

PHILADELPHIA dominated Pittsburgh in a fashion that will be impossible to ignore around the NFL. By the end of the third quarter it was clear that the fight had gone completely out of the Steelers, and they were just waiting for the bus ride home.

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QB Carson Wentz (23/31 – 74.1% – 301 – 2 – 0) came out and effectively managed the game again. RB Darren Sproles (2 – (-1) – (-0.5) – 0 – 0 / 6 – 128 – 21.3 – 1) led all Eagles in receptions and receiving yards today. Rookie RB Wendell Smallwood (17 – 79 – 4.6 – 1 – 0) got made the most of his 14 second half carries as he paced both teams in rushing.

While the news stories will undoubtedly focus on Wentz, the real story here is our Defense. It was one thing to hold Cleveland and Chicago’s heads underwater, but Pittsburgh entered this game with the NFL’s second leading rusher. Today they were held to 29 yards on 10 carries. As a team. Ben Roethlisberger (24/44 – 54.5% – 257 – 0 – 1) was sacked 4 times, losing a fumble on one of those.

Defensive Coordinator Jim Schwartz once again called a masterful game, and got production from all levels. His Defensive Line however, was the heart and soul of this attack. DT Fletcher Cox (3 – 2 – 0 – 1) was a terror up front allowing DE Brandon Graham (1 – 1 – 0 – 0) to collect a sack in his third consecutive game, as well as a fumble recovery. DT Bennie Logan (1 – 1 – 0 – 0) also looked great out there, contributing not just on Defense, but also blocking Pittsburgh’s first field goal attempt on Special Teams.

Did you notice?

WR Josh Huff (4 – 20 – 5.0 – 0) had 4 catches today after only one in the first two games. Both he and Sproles worked the flat area in the first half, which opened up the run up the gut in the second half. I specifically mentioned this should be the Eagles strategy in my Four Things article. This isn’t the first time the Eagles suddenly shifted what they routinely do, to something I’d specifically suggested in one of my articles.

WK3: EAGLES/STEELERS

Posted by The BEAST on 2016/09/24
Posted in: Coaching, Defense, NFL, Offense, Players, Preview. Tagged: Doug Pederson, Eagles, Jordan Matthews, Nelson Agholor, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, prediction, Ryan Mathews, Steelers. Leave a comment

w3-pit

 

Pittsburgh Steelers

SUNDAY 4:25        Lincoln Financial Field       PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania

NEEDS TO STEP UP:

Packers Eagles Football

HC Doug Pederson: Since we’re winning and dominating time of possession, no one will want to question the play-calling over these last games. No one except me. RB Ryan Mathews is not getting enough work. As a result the Offensive Line isn’t getting into a rhythm, and it has us averaging 3.5 yards per carry as a team. Also, aside from TE Brent Celek‘s 1 catch for 11 yards, there are only two Eagles players who average 10 or more yards per catch, WR’s Jordan Matthews (14.2) and Nelson Agholor (12.4). Even Dorial Green-Beckham is only averaging 8.0 per catch. More aggressive play-calling will be needed to beat the Steelers.

WE MUST CONTAIN:

deangelo-williams-fumble

RB DeAngelo Williams: I hate saying this because he’s KILLING IT on both of my fantasy teams, but this is the guy we need to shutdown this week. He’s his teams leading scorer, rusher, and second leader in receptions. While Pittsburgh’s QB is capable of carrying a team to a win, it would be harder for him to do it alone than if he has help.

EAGLES STORY LINE:

This is a great game, coming at a great time. Winning it would be a huge boost for the locker room. Losing it however, just means more time to dissect what went wrong over the following week, which for us is the Bye. Unless we get blown out and embarrassed at home, there is no downside to how this week turns out. So enjoy the game Eagles fans.

BOTTOM LINE:

2-1 or 3-0 heading into the Bye. Since stopping what the Steelers do is right in our wheelhouse, I like our chances at home.

PREDICTION:

EAGLES 23 – Steelers 21

FOUR THINGS: EAGLES/STEELERS

Posted by The BEAST on 2016/09/23
Posted in: Coaching, Defense, Four Things, Offense, Players, Preview. Tagged: Eagles, Four Things, NFL, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Steelers. 1 Comment
ben rape

Hopefully we’ll see this once or twice on Sunday.

 

THE Eagles stride into Week Three with a 2-0 record, after beating two underwhelming teams. Beating this weeks opponent however, would get everyone’s attention. Pittsburgh is seen as one of the league’s upper echelon teams. If they lose to the Eagles, it will either mean that Pittsburgh isn’t as good as advertised, or that the Eagles can no longer be overlooked.

Let’s be clear on something. Using wins over “certain opponents” as validation, can be dangerous. It can cause a team to settle into a mindset of having done enough, even though they would have merely succeed over 1/16 of the season. A win here is one regular season win. It’s not a playoff game.

That being said, certain wins do hold more weight than others. As Lux said to Calico: “It ain’t how many fights you had, it’s who you fought”. Well a win over an opponent like this, can do wonders for the confidence in the locker room. It also can give players something to go back to when tough times come around again. Nothing says “We will get through this tough time” like having already been through tough times.

The Steelers however will not be looking to just give us this win. If we want it, we’re going to have to take it. We’re going to have to battle and subjugate the will of other men. We will need to defeat this opponent, not merely survive them. I for one, wouldn’t want it to go down any other way.

So let’s talk about the Four Things we need to look for, Week 3 versus the Steelers:

1) Loosen up the Steelers front seven. They’re stingy against the run, but they haven’t been challenged much vs the pass. This is an ideal week for players like RB Darren Sproles or WR Josh Huff to spread the front out by running “Out”, “Hitch”, and “Flag” routes vs their OLB’s. Establishing those routes will loosen the box, and it’ll be their 3 D-linemen and 2 ILB’s vs our 5 O-linemen in the run game.

2) Huddle. Eat up the clock. Pittsburgh relies on running the ball. For that approach you need time. If we eat a lot of time up on scoring drives, they have to rely on riskier ways of moving the ball, in order to even the score. They have to leave their comfort zone, which helps us create turnovers.

3) Intimidate the Steelers coaching staff. We’ve given significant injuries to starting QB’s in both games we’ve played. Don’t kid yourself, the Steelers are aware of this fact. We should offer them a choice of beating us, or having QB Ben Roethlisberger for the rest of the year. If we hit him HARD, early in the game (even taking a flag for a late hit during the first possession), it’ll scare their staff into a max-protect mindset. Get them thinking more about surviving than winning. Take them out of their comfort zone.

4) Work the body. Power running right up the gut. Get our Guards iso’d on their ILB’s. If we can get a gain of 5 yards on 1st down, stand on the gas. Go to a hurry-up, call another inside run, and do it again and again and again until you don’t get a 5 yard gain out of the play.

The idea here is to beat the Steelers in a fist fight. They’re kind of a finesse team now, but due to decades of a singular image, they’re still seen as a hard-nosed, defensive, run-oriented team. So let’s take that from them. Let’s beat their asses in a brawl, and strip them of their identity. All the while we will be sending this message to the other 30 teams in the NFL: Don’t be on our schedule.

yeah-bitch

FOUR THINGS REVIEWED: BEARS

Posted by The BEAST on 2016/09/22
Posted in: Four Things, NFL, Offense, Players, Reviews, Uncategorized. Tagged: Bears, Chicago, coaching staff, Destiny Vaeao, Eagles, Jay Cutler, Philadelphia. Leave a comment

 

MONDAY Night Football. Prime time, national audience, on the road, with a rookie QB under Center. The stage was set to watch our budding team fall on their faces. After which national sports pundits would talk about how nice our rookie was, but how much farther this team has to go. But this team had other plans in mind for how that game would turn out.

vaeao-sacks-cutler

DT Destiny Vaeao gets his first sack-fumble on Jay Cutler.

It wasn’t a performance for the ages, but it was a 29 – 14 victory. At no point did the team panic when something didn’t go our way. After spending the first half unable to get the ball in the end zone, all three second half scores were touchdowns. That says that someone somewhere on the coaching staff, is correctly recognizing the underlying problems, and then doing a great job of addressing them so far. Kudos to them.

The Defense was stingy on the ground giving up just 64 rushing yards, and driving the opposing QB out of the game with a hand injury. He was the second QB we knocked out of a game in two weeks.

But what about the stuff that the final score doesn’t reveal? That’s the reason for these “Four Things” articles. To have an idea of what needs addressing BEFORE the game, so that we’re forced to honestly answer questions AFTER the game.

So, of the Four Things we were looking for in this last game, what exactly did we see?

1) Hit Jay Cutler early and often. We did. He gave us 2 turnovers and we knocked him from the game. DONE.

2) DE need to keep contain. I was watching this one like a hawk and we did a solid job of it. As a result the Bears run game was bottled up and the game was put on Cutler’s narrow shoulders. DONE.

3) Get some Guard help for C Jason Kelce. While keeping an eye on this I noticed that starting LG Allen Barbre was losing some snaps to back-up Stefen Wisniewski. While I can’t say that I was bowled over by how the left interior played, I will say that QB Carson Wentz was able to stand in the pocket and step up when he needed to. DONE.

4) Play aggressive man coverage with WR Alshon Jeffery. We really didn’t do too much of that. Jeffrey saw a lot of off-coverage and what looked to me like tight zone coverage. The result was 5 catches for 96 yards with a long of 49. NOT DONE.

The result was a clear score of 3 of 4 goals this week. In sports it’s possible to got one of these things “mostly done” or “done for all intents and purposes”, if you write about sports, you have to be mindful of that fact. This week however, (and thankfully) there was no parsing of these things.

Next up we get a hard assignment in the form of a high scoring Steelers team. Can the Eagles hang in a fire-fight? Or will our Defense do to Pittsburgh’s offense, what China did to their regional economy?

yeah-bitch

WK2: BEARS

Posted by The BEAST on 2016/09/20
Posted in: Defense, NFL, Offense, Players, Reviews, Roster. Tagged: Bears, Brandon Graham, Chicago, Destiny Vaeao, Eagles, Nigel Bradham, Philadelphia, Ryan Mathews, Trey Burton. Leave a comment

 

w2-chi

EAGLES 29 – BEARS 14

THIS was not a pretty win. Like last week, the Eagles broke the game open in the 3rd quarter, but unlike last week, the Defense played the entire game. This week it was the Offense who had trouble finding the stadium, as 20 of our 29 points didn’t come until after the half. K Caleb Sturgis (3/3 – 2/3) battling a leg ailment, missed an extra point that would have had the final score at 30 instead of 29.

On Offense we took a three field goal, 9 – 7 half-time lead into the locker room. Apparently someone made some adjustment somewhere, because our last three scores were all touchdowns. Two on the ground by RB Ryan Mathews (9 – 32 – 3.5 – 2 – 0), and one by TE Trey Burton (5 – 49 – 9.8 – 1), who finally broke his touchdown cherry. QB Carson Wentz (21/34 – 61.7% – 190 – 1 – 0) was an effective game manager, who’s numbers may have looked a little better if not for WR Jordan Matthews (6 – 71 – 11.8 – 0) losing a sure touchdown off of his fingertips.

Defensively we held the Bears to 64 yards rushing, on 18 attempts, for 3.6 yards per tote. We also harassed QB Jay Cutler (12/17 – 70.5% – 157 – 0 – 1) sacking him three times, picking him off, and getting a fumble from him; on the way to injuring and knocking him out of the game. If you’re counting, that’s two straight QB’s we forced off the field in just two weeks. Can you FEEL that?

nigel-bradham-pick

Nigel Bradham kills a Bears drive

DE Brandon Graham got a sack in second straight game (4 – 1 – 0 – 0 ). OLB Nigel Bradham (1 – 0 – 1 – 0) killed a Bear’s drive with a leaping interception that he almost took back to the house. Also getting in on the turnovers was MLB Jordan Hicks (1 – 0 – 0 – 0) recovering a sack/fumble forced by rookie DT Destiny Vaeao (1 – 1 – 0 – 1), and CB Ron Brooks (5 – 0 – 0 – 0) recovering a fumble forced by DT Bennie Logan (1 – 0 – 0 – 1), whom I called out in this weeks Preview article. Between the forced fumble and the improved run play, I would say that Logan responded very well.

Hey, did you notice:

How easy it was to hear players cursing at each other out there. You could hear them yelling things like “That’s fuckin’ HOLDING!”

WEEK 2: BEARS

Posted by The BEAST on 2016/09/16
Posted in: Coaching, Defense, Offense, Players, Preview, Uncategorized. Tagged: Bears, Chicago, Eagles, Fletcher Cox, Jay Cutler, Philadelphia, prediction. Leave a comment

w2-chi

CHICAGO BEARS

MONDAY 8:30        Soldier Field        Chicago, IL

NEEDS TO STEP UP:

card-bennie-logan

DT Bennie Logan. Last week against the Browns we got gashed by their run game at times. It’s common knowledge for Eagles fans that DT Fletcher Cox is our dominant pass rusher up the gut. That leaves Logan as the stabilizer and guy who helps keep the LB’s clean. That didn’t happen last week, it will be the death of us if it doesn’t happen this week.

WE MUST CONTAIN:

jeremy-langford

RB Jeremy Langford. You might find it funny that I didn’t say QB Jay Cutler. Last week Cutler was sacked 5 times and hit a total of 13 times. No QB in the NFL saw as much punishment. However, if the run game gets going and Cutler can start to set his feet, we could have a long day. So the key is to topple their Jenga pile by hampering their so-so RB, and placing the game squarely on the shoulders of their turnover prone QB.

EAGLES STORY LINE:

The Bears aren’t a great team, but unlike the carcass we picked apart last week, the Bears are at least seen as pro caliber. A road win over this team (regardless of how we win it), would close the door on any lingering doubts from last season. It would also signal that we were truly heading in a new direction. A loss here would be no great blow. In fact, it could be just the thing this team needs to put some fire in the players bellies.

BOTTOM LINE:

Last week was the beginning of our schedule, but this week is where the real season starts.

PREDICTION:

EAGLES 20 – Bears 17

FOUR THINGS: EAGLES/BEARS

Posted by The BEAST on 2016/09/16
Posted in: Coaching, Defense, NFL, Offense, Players, Preview, Uncategorized. Tagged: Bears, Chicago, Eagles, Four Things, Jason Kelce, Jay Cutler, Philadelphia. 1 Comment

team

LAST week we had our 5th preseason game, and the team took care of business. There were some apparent bugs to work out, but nothing we saw last week should takes weeks to fix. Then again, everything we saw is being judged against the backdrop of a team long known for it’s dysfunction.

This week’s opponent isn’t very good either, but they also aren’t lightly thought of. The Bears can be good at times. Their organization knows how to build a winning team. They have a couple of players that you wouldn’t mind having on this roster. Beating them would legitimize us as credibly being on our way.

Let me say right now though, if we lose a competitive fight this week, it’s nothing to get pissed over. The best way to learn how to take a punch, is to take a punch. Considering how soft this team has grown over the years, an early punch in the mouth could help shape the street brawler mentality that this team has lacked for some time now. (If you were a fan during Buddy Ryan, you know what I mean.)

So let’s talk about the Four Things we need to look for, Week 2 versus the Bears :

1) Hit Jay Cutler early and often. cutlerlossbills

We don’t need to sack him early, we just need to make him concerned for his well-being. He’s a turnover machine. Coming into this season, Cutler averaged 17.5 turnovers per year over the course of his career, and 18.5 per year since becoming a Bear. Better still, he doesn’t respond well at all to pressure.

2) DE’s need to keep contain. Last week the DE’s ignored the old adage of play the run first, as they instead focused on pass rushing, from the start of many downs. This led to them being too far upfield on the edges, leaving space inside for the Browns RB to find room to run. This week they need to play more disciplined ball.

3) Get some Guard help for C Jason Kelce. Bears NT Eddie Goldman is the sort of big (6’4, 320) bullrusher that has always given Kelce fits. If Kelce can’t hold his ground, then QB Carson Wentz won’t have a pocket to step up into.

4) Play aggressive man coverage with WR Alshon Jeffrey. Disrupting his timing and force him inside. He breaks tackles. A CB will find no tackling assist from the sideline. However, Jeffrey has a history of missing time. Forcing him inside, sets him up for big hits which would be very much on his mind as he tried to locate and secure balls.

Most of what we need to watch for this week, is on the defensive side of the ball. Barring Carson Wentz walking on water or turning it into wine this week, our Defense will need to play well for a whole game if we’re to win this one. This week they won’t get away with showing up late, like they did last week.

yeah-bitch

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