Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Big Deal........where was the offense?

Tug of war: Bears beat garbage Redskins behind 5 takeaways from dominant defense, 31-15

“You know, you get a turnover, you get pick, you get a sack,” linebacker Danny Trevathan said. “Kinda like Oprah.”


By Patrick Finley Sep 23, 2019, 10:21pm CDT


Bears outside linebacker Khalil Mack hits Redskins quarterback Case Keenum to cause a fumble during the first half Monday. AP Photos



LANDOVER, Md. — The Bears’ defense was back in the end zone and up to their old stunts.

With players standing in a circle, Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, who had just returned an interception 37 yards for a touchdown in the first quarter of Monday’s 31-15 win against the Redskins, stood across from fellow safety Eddie Jackson, and … was that a game of tug-of-war?

“We had been working on it all week, and I kinda went blank when it was time for us to do it,” Clinton-Dix said.

Outside linebacker Khalil Mack admitted that “my performance was terrible,” while cornerback Prince Amukamara applied that critique to the rest of the team.

“We weren’t organized, we weren’t ready,” Amukamara said. “We let America down.”

The rest of the game, though, they lived up to their reputation just fine. The Bears’ defense looked like unit that was the NFL’s best last season — only more so. Their five takeaways were the most for any Bears team since 2013 — and five times more than their season total through the first two games.

Clinton-Dix’s score marked the Bears’ seventh defensive touchdown since the start of last season, the most of any NFL team.

“Being a part of this team: we emphasize scoring,” said Clinton-Dix, who broke down the Bears’ huddle in the locker room after defeating his former team. “We don’t care about catching the ball — we care about scoring.”

And Mack cares about getting the ball. In the first half, the Bears’ star sacked Redskins quarterback Case Keenum twice, forcing two fumbles by swing at the ball.

The Bears recovered one of them. After Akiem Hicks fell on the ball, he sprinted toward the sideline before stopping to spike it, Refrigerator Perry-style.


Another Mack sack was wiped out by his own offside penalty — and a Mack sack-fumble was taken away by Amukamara’s illegal-hands-to-the-face penalty.

“He just loves showing out,” Amukamara said. “And I’m not complaining about it at all.”

How dominant was the Bears’ defense? It sacked Keenum three times and intercepted him twice more on his first 14 drop-backs. It hit him on seven of those plays and knocked him down five times.

The defensive showing gave the Bears something they’ve spent the entire season searching for: confidence on offense. After not throwing a touchdown all season, quarterback Mitch Trubisky threw for three in a six-minute, 11-second span.

Ahead 7-0 after Clinton-Dix’s touchdown, Trubisky and the Bears marched 67 yards on 11 plays, aided by three Redskins penalties. Trubisky converted two third downs — an 11-yard pass to Allen Robinson and a 15-yarder to Anthony Miller — before rolling left on second-and-goal from the 3. He could’ve walked it in but threw to an open Taylor Gabriel to go up 14-0.

Two plays later, Mack’s strip-sack of Keenum — and Hicks’ fumble recovery — gave Trubisky the ball at the Redskins’ 11. Three plays later, he threw a one-yard pass to Gabriel.

Two plays later, cornerback Kyle Fuller picked off Keenum, starting a Bears possession that ended with a 36-yard strike from Trubisky to Gabriel on third-and-16. Trubisky hit Gabriel at the front right pylon, but officials ruled the play an incomplete pass. Upon further review, Gabriel — who in the fourth quarter was ruled out with a concussion — was judged to have gotten both feet down before falling out of bounds.

The Bears led 28-3 at halftime before thee Redskins scored the only two touchdowns of the second half, missing a two-point conversion each time. Down 13 with about seven minutes to play, Keenum tried a quarterback sneak on fourth-and-1 at the Bears’ 16, but inside linebacker Danny Trevathan swiped the ball out of his arms. Jackson fell on it.

“You know, you get a turnover, you get pick, you get a sack,” Trevathan said. “Kinda like Oprah.”

They weren’t the queens of daytime. Five turnovers made the Bears the kings of prime time.

The Bears eventually added a 38-yard Eddy Pineiro field goal. The kicker missed an early try but made four extra points as he battled through a pinched nerve.

“The caliber of guys we have in this locker room is built for this,” Mack said. “It’s built for these moments. We want to go out and show the world every time we step out what Chicago Bears football is all about.”

3 comments:

  1. Yep,once again without a stellar defensive effort the Bears' offense looks merely pedestrian especially against a pedestrian team. Trubisky made no mistakes and that's what counts in the end. But the second coming of say a Brady,Rodgers,or Brees he ain't and surely will never be.

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  2. Anonymous9/24/2019

    how long do you think it will take opponents to realize that most of Trubisky's passes are 10 yards or shorter. Whats the season long over and under on #72 Leno's penalty count.

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    1. Anonymous9/26/2019

      It kinda reminds me of an old timer that joined my threesome golfing. He had a mismatched set of garage sale clubs and his drives were short, but straight. We all felt kinda sorry for him, but by the end of the round we were glad we didn't place any bets with him. He beat us badly.

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