Monday, August 22, 2011

USC basketball: Trojans add Danilo Dragovic as a walk-on

USC Danilo Dragovic, the younger brother of former UCLA forward Nikola Dragovic, will be a walk-on guard for the USC men's basketball team this season, USC officials confirmed late Monday night.

The 6-foot-5 guard is an interesting story, as he didn't play last season at North Hollywood Harvard-Westlake after a judge upheld a CIF ruling that Dragovic had exhausted his varsity eligibility after playing junior varsity the season before following his move from Serbia.

Because of his situation, Dragovic, who also attended Santa Barbara San Marcos High while living with a guardian but did not play because of CIF transfer restrictions, is still raw and was under the radar as a recruit.

Still, he's a noted shooter and could help USC now that senior guard Jio Fontan is out for the season with an injury.

ALSO:

Several defensive positions are up for grabs at USC

Chris Dufresne's preseason college football rankings: No. 9 Oklahoma State

Return of Robert Woods energizes USC's offense

-- Baxter Holmes

UCLA football: QB Brett Hundley practices for the first time

Brett3
Freshman quarterback Brett Hundley, the guy who made UCLA football fans’ hearts go pity-pat when he chose the Bruins, went through team and individual drills for the first time on Monday.

Hundley, considered the centerpiece of the UCLA’s 2011 recruiting class, had been sidelined a month following knee surgery. There was a moment when being back sunk in.

“I got chewed out one time today and started laughing,” Hundley said. “It was like, ‘OK, I’m back.’ ”

Hundley was expected to make mistakes, having been on the sidelines. But the raw talent was obvious during 11-on-11 drills. He completed two of three passes in a brief stint with the first team.

“I was surprised to realize what I actually knew,” said Hundley, who was injured playing basketball in May and had surgery in July. “I learned from all those mental reps and from the opportunity to study a little more while I was out.”

Ethan Moreau passes physical, expected to join Kings on Tuesday

Ethan Moreau, left, goes after the puck.

Forward Ethan Moreau passed his physical Monday and is expected to officially sign with the Kings on Tuesday, a team spokesman said.

On Saturday, the 35-year-old who is expected to give the Kings veteran depth at the forward position verbally agreed to a one-year, $600,000 deal pending the results of that physical.

Moreau played only 37 games with Columbus last season, scoring one goal and tallying six points, after suffering a broken right hand and a rib injury.

The first-round pick of the Chicago Blackhawks in 1994 has played in 900 games in his career, with 146 goals and 283 points in stints with the Blackhawks, Edmonton and Columbus.   

-- Baxter Holmes

Photo: Ethan Moreau, left, goes after the puck. Credit: Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times

Which MLB team not in a playoff spot has best shot to get in? [Updated]

 The San Francisco Giants have the pitching staff, led by Tim Lincecum, and a favorable schedule to make the postseason again.
 
Writers from around Tribune Co. discuss which Major League Baseball team fighting for a playoff spot will make, or not make, the post season. Weigh in with a comment of your own.

[Updated at 1:41 p.m.:

Bill Shaikin, Los Angeles Times

I'm going with the Los Angeles Angels. They have six games left with the Texas Rangers, who lead the American League West. The Rangers have 21 games left with teams with winning records. The Angels have 13, six of those against the Rangers.

Over the next two weeks the Rangers play the Boston Red Sox, the Angels, the Tampa Bay Rays, the Red Sox again and the Rays again. At the same time the Angels play the Chicago White Sox, the Rangers, the Seattle Mariners, the Minnesota Twins and the Mariners again.

The Angels aren't going to out-hit anybody but they just called up mega-prospect Mike Trout to join Peter Bourjos and Torii Hunter in baseball's best outfield defense. Jared Weaver, Dan Haren and Ervin Santana can give up all the fly balls they like now -- and the Angels can win 2-1.

Harvey Failkov, Orlando Sun Sentinel

Unless MLB adds another wild card team, as the owners have been contemplating, seven of the eight playoff teams seem locked in. Tampa Bay has the hard luck to be trapped in its division with the Yankees and Red Sox, favorites to face the pitch-rich Phillies in the World Series.

Detroit, led by Justin "No Hit" Verlander and closer Jose Valerde, are pulling away from Cleveland.

World Series runner-up Rangers are ranked third in offense, too much firepower for the Angels.

The Brewers, flexing their "Braun," have left the Cardinals in their dust. No one will catch Atlanta for the wild card.

NL West-leading Arizona has scored six runs in five-straight losses. while the defending world champion Giants (35-25 at home) begin a 12-game home stand against sub-.500 teams. Unless Manager Kirk Gibson grabs a bat, the Giants, led by Tim Lincecum, will overtake the no-name Diamondbacks for the final spot.]

Phil Rodgers, Chicago Tribune

Seldom has a September in the wild-card era offered less excitement for baseball fans. We're in for an overdose of anticlimactic champagne celebrations beginning around Sept. 15 and the only drama lies in whether two of baseball's best pitching staffs -- the Giants and the Angels -- can sufficiently rise to the occasion to overcome teams with much better lineups (the Diamondbacks and Rangers). As much as I love the Angels' trio of Jared Weaver, Ervin Santana and Dan Haren, I don't think they can stop a team that is a threat to outslug the Red Sox or Yankees in a playoff series. But the Giants can -- and probably will -- reach the playoffs. They have the confidence of winning a down-to-the-last-day race against the Padres a year ago, and they have a favorable schedule. They are 28-17 against NL West teams, which other than the Astros (4) and Cubs (3) is all they play the rest of the way. You know the Phillies are rooting furiously for the Diamondbacks, but I think we're heading for a first-round rematch of the 2010 NLCS, Phillies vs. Giants.

Photo: The San Francisco Giants have the pitching staff, led by Tim Lincecum, and a favorable schedule to make the postseason again. Credit: Cary Edwards / US Presswire

Raiders roll the dice, take Terrelle Pryor in supplemental draft

Pryor-post The Oakland Raiders lived up to their longstanding reputation Monday, selecting Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor in the third round of the NFL’s supplemental draft.

The franchise, which is infatuated with speed and freakish athletic ability -- often in the absence of true football skills -- rolled the dice on a 6-foot-5, 232-pound player with raw potential and eye-popping measurables, including 4.4-second speed in the 40-yard dash.

Oakland used the 18th pick in the round for Pryor, forfeiting their third-round pick in the 2012 draft.

The Raiders are anything but overwhelming at quarterback, where Jason Campbell is the starter and heading into the last year of his contract. Also on the roster are Trent Edwards and Kyle Boller, both onetime starters in other cities.

It could be that the Raiders are more interested in Pryor as a receiver, where they are coping with a slew of recent injuries.

ALSO:

Six new NFL coaches face uphill battles

AEG shying away from Coliseum Commission

Stats can be hard to trust in football, baseball and basketball

-- Sam Farmer

Photo: Terrelle Pryor throws during a pro workout on Aug. 21, 2011. Credit:  Jered Wickerman / Getty Images

Which MLB team not in a playoff spot has best shot to get in?

 The San Francisco Giants have the pitching staff, led by Tim Lincecum, and a favorable schedule to make the postseason again.
 
Writers from around the Tribune Co. discuss which Major League Baseball team fighting for a playoff spot will make, or not make, the post season. Weigh in with a comment of your own.

Bill Shaikin, Los Angeles Times

I'm going with the Los Angeles Angels, they have six games left with the Texas Rangers, who lead the American League West. The Rangers have 21 games left with teams with winning records. The Angels have 13, six of those against the Rangers.

Over the next two weeks the Rangers play the Boston Red Sox, the Angels, the Tampa Bay Rays, the Red Sox again and the Rays again. At the same time the Angels play the Chicago White Sox, the Rangers, the Seattle Mariners, the Minnesota Twins and the Mariners again.

The Angels aren't going to out-hit anybody but they just called up mega-prospect Mike Trout to join Peter Bourjos and Torii Hunter in baseball's best outfield defense. Jared Weaver, Dan Haren and Ervin Santana can give up all the fly balls they like now--and the Angels can win 2-1.

 

Harvey Failkov, Orlando Sun Sentinel

Unless MLB adds another Wild Card team, as the owners have been contemplating, seven of the eight playoff teams see locked in. Tampa Bay has the hard luck to be trapped in the division with the Yankees and Red Sox. favorites to face the pitch-rich Phillies in the World Series.

Detroit, led by Justin "No Hit" Verlander and closer Jose Valerde, are pulling away from Cleveland.

World Series runner-up Rangers are ranked third in offense, too much fire-power for the Angels.

The Brewers, flexing their "Braun," have left the Cardinals in their dust. No one will catch Atlanta for the Wild Card.

NL West-leading Arizona has scored six runs in five-straight losses. while the defending world champion Giants begin a 12-game homestand (35-25) against sub-.500 teams. Unless Manager Kirk Gibson grabs a bat, the Giants, led by Tim Lincecum, will overtake the no-name Diamondbacks for the final spot.

Phil Rodgers, Chicago Tribune

Seldom has a September in the wild-card era offered less excitement for baseball fans. We're in for an overdose of anticlimatic champagne celebrations beginning around Sept. 15 and the only drama lies in whether two of baseball's best pitching staffs -- the Giants and the Angels -- can sufficiently rise to the occasion to overcome teams with much better lineups (the Diamondbacks and Rangers). As much as I love the Angels' trio of Jared Weaver, Ervin Santana and Dan Haren, I don't think they can stop a team that is a threat to outslug the Red Sox or Yankees in a playoff series. But the Giants can -- and probably will -- reach the playoffs. They have the confidence of winning a down-to-the-last-day race against the Padres a year ago, and they have a favorable schedule. They are 28-17 against NL West teams, which other than the Astros (4) and Cubs (3) is all they play the rest of the way. You know the Phillies are rooting furiously for the Diamondbacks, but I think we're heading for a first-round rematch of the 2010 NLCS, Phillies vs. Giants.

 

Photo: The San Francisco Giants have the pitching staff, led by Tim Lincecum, and a favorable schedule to make the postseason again. Credit: Cary Edwards / US Presswire

USC salutes Olympians in run-up to 2012 London Games

USC has begun a yearlong celebration of Trojan athletes who have participated in the Olympics with a salute themed “Cardinal and Gold Medal Heritage,” the school announced.

In the run-up to the 2012 London Games, USC will have displays and banners in Heritage Hall and introduce Olympians at sports events. Video vignettes to be displayed at stadiums and other events and programs also are planned.

Since 1904, 393 USC athletes representing 57 countries have competed in the Olympics, winning 122 gold medals, 76 silver and 60 bronze, the school said.

“We are extremely proud of our unparalleled Olympic heritage and, with the 2012 Olympic Games on the horizon, we felt it was important to salute and acknowledge that tradition,” USC Athletic Director Pat Haden said in a statement. “I know our fans will be as excited as I am to see our past and current Olympians and to relive the many successes that Trojan athletes have had in Olympic competition.”

-- Gary Klein

Raiders Take Pryor in Supplemental Draft

For as long as Al Davis has been the Oakland Raiders’ owner and all-powerful personnel executive, he has coveted speed in his players, sometimes to the exclusion of other skills, and occasionally in the absence of common sense. That is why as soon as the former Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor was reported to have run the 40-yard dash in under 4.4 seconds at a workout Saturday, it was assumed that the Raiders would make a bid to select Pryor — whose passes are not as accurate as his feet are fleet — in the N.F.L. supplemental draft. For a team that in 2009 reached for an extremely fast receiver, Darrius Heyward-Bey, who has struggled to catch the ball, Pryor seemed a logical consideration.

On Monday the Raiders lived up to their reputation, taking Pryor with the 18th selection in the third round of the supplemental draft, almost certainly higher than Pryor would have gone if he had been in the regular draft. Although the Raiders do not have a franchise quarterback on the roster — Jason Campbell is the current starter — the selection is still a risk for the Raiders.

Pryor will begin his N.F.L. career serving a five-game suspension imposed by the league because of transgressions he is alleged to have committed at Ohio State. Some N.F.L. observers, unimpressed by Pryor’s passing ability despite considerable arm strength, believe he will ultimately be forced to play a different position, perhaps tight end, where his size and speed would be better used. At the least, Pryor is expected to take at least a year, and probably longer, to develop as a quarterback, if he can do it. And in sacrificing their third-round pick, the Raiders now have no second-, third- or fourth-round picks in the 2012 draft.

For Pryor, the Raiders are a good landing spot. Hue Jackson, the new Raiders coach, is a noted tutor of quarterbacks. There will be little pressure on Pryor to play immediately, and because of the dearth of quarterbacks on the roster, he will be given every opportunity to play his preferred position.

Sunderland lost to Newcastle but must not lose sight of a bigger picture


The thought of a manager being under pressure after just two games of a new season is, quite frankly, farcical. The thought of Steve Bruce being that manager after two years of steady improvement at Sunderland is, quite simply, ludicrous.


Then again, who would have thought the mighty Arsene Wenger would be starting a new campaign swatting away questions about his future at Arsenal while a slither of the club’s support begin to call for his removal.


Football is a ruthless, ridiculous business and football managers are normally its biggest and most frequent victims.


Bruce’s crime amounts to little more than a derby defeat to Newcastle, a one off game which can turn even the most level-headed into raging madmen; a game Sunderland were widely tipped to win given the two club’s contrasting fortunes over the summer months.


Newcastle’s recruitment strategy has been widely criticised and questioned, Sunderland’s was seen as bold and ambitious. Newcastle were thought to have got weaker because of the loss of key players and the relative unknown quantity of their replacements.


Sunderland, it was thought, were stronger because Bruce was allowed to reinvest in the team, not merely balance the books.


Thrashed 5-1 at St James’ Park last season and fortunate to escape with a draw in a game the Magpies dominated at the Stadium of Light, last weekend’s clash between the North-East’s ever warring neighbours was perceived by Sunderland’s supporters and players as an ideal opportunity to put the record straight.


Instead, Newcastle survived a difficult first half, scored from a Ryan Taylor set-piece in the second and made the short journey back to Tyneside with another derby win to celebrate. It was a crushing experience for those in red and white.


Bruce’s new look side looked worryingly familiar to the one which tended to run out of ideas towards the back end of last season and the knives, if not exactly out, are at least being reached for.


It is dangerous and short-sighted. So Sunderland lost to their bitter rivals on home soil. It was painful and embarrassing, but it is ultimately just one game in a very long season.


Under Bruce, Sunderland have progressed and improved. The calibre of player signed this summer would have been unthinkable when the former Manchester United skipper arrived just over two years ago.


This must not be forgotten, particularly when Sunderland started the season with a 1-1 draw against Liverpool at Anfield, who beat Arsenal at the Emirates at the same time as the Black Cats were losing to Newcastle.


The problem with derbies as intense and as hostile as the North East one is they mean everything at the time, but little in the grand scheme of things.


Sunderland’s record in these regional battles for supremacy is abysmal. One win in 14, one win at home in 30 odd years. Yet, they have finished above Newcastle three years running.


There is a section of the Sunderland supporters who will simply never accept Bruce because he was raised a Newcastle fan. They will always look to pounce on any failing.


Sadly, it is that bunch which will be heard loudest at the moment, metaphorically shouting on internet message boards, ranting on Twitter, bending the ear of radio pundits, whipping the media into a frenzy, turning a solitary defeat into a disaster. It’s the same at every club.


Had Newcastle lost to Sunderland, the mood would have turned ugly on Tyneside. A frustrating summer in the transfer market would have been replaced by anger and animosity at the thought of a troubled season ahead.


But they won and manager Alan Pardew has some breathing space as he looks to sign the two players, a left-back and a striker, everyone knows he needs before the close of the window. It was a great result for him, a terrible one for Bruce.


Sunderland must pick themselves up and dust themselves down. They responded to the 5-1 defeat last season by beating Chelsea at Stamford Bridge. A victory over Brighton in the Carling Cup on Tuesday night would be a start this time. Two early cup exits last season were arguably far more damaging and disappointing for Bruce and Sunderland’s board than those derby results.


Bruce has tried to do a lot this summer and has perhaps done a little too much in terms of the number brought in. With ten new players, the team needs time to gel, time the derby defeat has taken away to a certain extent.


The squad has more depth, but it seems to lack a goalscoring threat at the moment, while the lack of pace out wide is a concern.


Sunderland fans will be tetchy and emotional after the defeat to Newcastle, calm and a sense of collective purpose needs to be restored. The derby blow was a devastating one and it has undoubtedly wounded Bruce again, but it was not a mortal strike.


It has made the next few weeks tough for manager and players, but there is no sense in panic or attacking Bruce. He has damage to repair and the sooner the better, but a sense of perspective must be maintained even while their old enemy gloats, goads and grins.



2011 Chicago Bears Season Preview

Andy Benoit is previewing all 32 N.F.L. teams. He kicks off the N.F.C. North with an analysis of the Bears, who will be playing the Giants tonight in a preseason game.

By virtually all measurements, the Chicago Bears should be better in 2011. They enter the season with fresh playoff experience. Their leader, Lovie Smith, once on the hot seat, is now one of the five highest-paid coaches in the game after signing a contract extension that reportedly pays him in the neighborhood of $6 million annually through 2013. The offense is better acclimated to Mike Martz’s system and has three new key contributors in wide receiver Roy Williams, running back Marion Barber and the first-round rookie right tackle Gabe Carimi. And the defense is the same defense that ranked fourth in points allowed last season.

Yet, if you asked your gut, it’d probably say this team will not be better in 2011…right? When you lose the N.F.C. championship at home, being better the next year basically means reaching the Super Bowl. Is anyone outside the Windy City talking about the Bears and Super Bowl XLVI?

Last time the Bears went 11-5 and reached the playoffs, they did go all the way to the Super Bowl the following year. But that ’06 campaign was followed the next three years by seasons of 7-9, 9-7 and 7-9. That stretch of mediocrity is one source of the doubt some people are feeling about this squad.

Or maybe there’s doubt because Chicago’s quarterback, the neither likeable nor outgoing Jay Cutler, doesn’t fit the profile of a typical star. Even with scores of people embarrassing themselves by questioning the man’s toughness in the N.F.C. championship loss, Cutler isn’t acting as if he he has anything to prove in 2011. After all, having something to prove would require caring about what folks outside the locker room think. Cutler may play the season with a chip on his shoulder, but that chip has actually been there since Denver made him a first-round pick in 2006.

Maybe there’s doubt about this club because no one really believes its systems can work again. Mike Martz’s downfield passing offense on the sloppy Soldier Field track? Behind this terrible offensive line? No way. Lovie Smith’s traditional Tampa 2 defense? In this day of 3-4 blitzing and amoeba looks? Not a chance.

Or maybe the doubt pertains to the sheer magnificence of the rival Packers. Or to the league’s new kickoff rules, which put a serious dent in this team’s greatest strength. Or to  Bears’ fans being ticked off at General Manager Jerry Angelo for not partaking in the free-agent frenzy and for low-balling the now-departed veteran center Olin Kreutz. (Bears fans are off base here in their criticism of Angelo.)

Whatever the reason, the Chicago Bears aren’t being regarded as legitimate Super Bowl contenders in 2011. Is that Football America being prudent, or Football America unwisely overlooking this team again?

Offense

The Bears know they can’t afford to have Jay Cutler sacked 52 times again this season. But there might be little they can do about it. Mike Martz’s offense is built predominantly on downfield routes that develop slowly off seven-step drops. It’s also built on maximizing the number of receiving outlets. Instead of having running backs stay in and pass protect, they often run patterns out of the backfield. In this system, the only eligible receiver who stays in and blocks is usually the tight end, which is why the Bears felt comfortable trading the pass-catching oriented Greg Olsen to Carolina. (The 262-pound Kellen Davis will fill Olsen’s spot, with some help from lanky ex-Steeler Matt Spaeth.)

Whether you like it or not, this is the system. This is what you sign up for when you hire Martz to coordinate your offense. As you might imagine, Martz’s system puts considerable demands on the offensive line in pass protection. And, as it’s plain to see, the Bears don’t have the talent up front to consistently meet these demands. They’re hoping that rookie right tackle Gabe Carimi can ameliorate the issue. Perhaps he can, but his presence won’t make up for lumbering left tackle JaMarcus Webb’s cinderblock feet. It’s stunning that the Bears are having the ’10 seventh-round pick guard Cutler’s blind side. Frank Omiyale wasn’t great in this position last season, but he wasn’t the liability Webb will be.

Inside is almost equally precarious. Left guard Chris Williams is a poor lateral mover whose feet get cemented in pass protection, particularly against bull-rushers. Right guard Roberto Garza is serviceable but lacks elite quickness. There’s a ray of hope with new center Chris Spencer, who’s 29 and a likely upgrade over the rapidly declining Olin Kreutz. Spencer has good size and adequate power; the question is, Can he win the job and stay healthy? (Garza began training camp as the starting center, with Lance Louis at right guard. But Garza has started just one game at center in his 11-year career and isn’t great operating out of position; expect Spencer to eventually get the nod here.)

To Martz’s credit, he’s lately shown a willingness to tweak his scheme with more running plays. This uncharacteristic play-calling balance is effective not because it keeps the defense honest or sets up play-action (these axioms are more myth than truth in today’s N.F.L.) but because it gives Chicago’s unathletic front five more opportunities to fire off the ball as run-blockers, and thus, be the aggressors. That’s important for the O-line’s rhythm; this group isn’t athletic enough to survive 60 minutes playing with the reactive approach that dropping back in pass protection requires.

Martz has a more powerful run game to rely on this season. Matt Forte, with his smooth but overly languid running motion, is still the starter. But new backup, ex-Cowboy Marion Barber, figures to contribute prominently. (So prominently that quick, space-oriented veteran Chester Taylor could be cut.) Barber has the one trait any runner needs when working behind Chicago’s offensive line: the tenacity to break tackles.

Though balanced (or close to balanced), Martz’s offense is still distinctly pass-heavy. And rightfully so. An arm as strong as Jay Cutler’s isn’t found often. Best to take advantage of it. Because of unyielding trust in his arm strength, interceptions will always be an issue with Cutler (just as they were always an issue with Brett Favre). Not wanting to compromise his style of play, the best way for Cutler to continue cutting down on turnovers is to sharpen his presnap diagnostic skills. He’s never been very good in this realm.

Fortunately, Martz does a terrific job of helping his quarterback in this department. He doesn’t give Cutler audibling powers (you think Martz would be crazy enough to let someone change his play call!?) but he employs a panoply of presnap movements and shifts, which often compel a defense to settle into a predictable coverage.

You need predictable coverages when Devin Hester is one of your starters. Though a sensational creator on special teams, Hester’s mediocre 0-60 acceleration in traffic and his still-primitive route running make him an ordinary wide receiver. It makes no sense to start Hester ahead of speedy Johnny Knox (who exploits zones well and is clearly a guy Cutler trusts).

The Bears’ No. 1 wideout is Roy Williams. Don’t laugh. The 29-year-old veteran has become a whipping boy because of his disappointing tenure in Dallas, but he was never a good fit for that system (he’s a big straight-line target with enormous feet that make changing direction difficult). We know Williams is a good fit in Martz’s system – he had 2,148 yards receiving when the two were together for 28 games in Detroit.

Another underachieving ex-Cowboy, Sam Hurd, rounds out the receiving corps, though he’ll probably be behind No. 4 receiver Earl Bennett, a steady but not explosive underneath possession target.

Defense

Lovie Smith is one of the ripest apples from the Tony Dungy tree. Consequently, the Bears are pretty much the only team left still running a full-time Tampa Two. The vanilla zone scheme is like a tube television or flip phone: a relic of an era just gone by but still a serviceable tool for those fully committed to preserving their status quo.

The Bears can only pull this off because their status quo has always been superior to everyone else’s. For most defenses, Tampa Two is now a form of prevent defensel; it’s a soft zone that’s naturally vulnerable to swing passes in the backfield, passes in the 15-20-yard range outside the numbers and anything down the seams. But most defenses don’t have two star linebackers or a deep rotation of initially explosive defensive linemen.

At this point, Chicago’s stud linebackers, Brian Urlacher and Lance Briggs, both of whom are on the wrong side of 30, are more super cogs than superstars. This is to say that their experience and judiciousness in this scheme masks most of their mild-but-relevant physical decline. Both can still run, which is vital. In fact, Urlacher is probably the only zone-playing middle linebacker in football whose first step after the snap does not have to be backwards as respect to the possibility of a pass; he’s fast enough to initially attack downhill and retreat into coverage if need be.

Briggs eats up ground in space but is actually most effective in traffic. He’d make more sense at the less glamorous strongside linebacker position, but three Pro Bowls as a weakside ‘backer nullify any thoughts of a position change. Hence, the vastly underrated Nick Roach, who plays fast all-around, starts on the weak side. It’s a fervid linebacking unit, over all, though its customary depth is nonexistent this season; special teamer Brian Iwuh is the only experienced backup.

Something very astute that Urlacher and Briggs often do is crowd the A-gaps right before the ball is snapped. Almost always they retreat back into normal linebacking position immediately after the snap, but by simply lining up right over the ball and presenting the remote possibility of a blitz, they force the opposing center to account for them. This prevents the center from helping either guard, which prevents offensive lines from double-teaming Chicago’s defensive linemen without sacrificing a running back or tight end. This is a key for a defense predicated on generating pressure with a classic four-man rush.

Obviously, with Julius Peppers around, offenses are still going to sacrifice their backs or tight ends to help double-team the end. That’s the value of Peppers, and Bears defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli has created some great designs to take advantage of the attention he attracts (the best probably being a delay blitz from the secondary, which exploits running backs who have abandoned the backfield to go help on Peppers).

Israel Idonije matched Peppers’s sack total last season (eight) and employed his terrific movement skills on stunts and bull-rushes both inside and out. The versatile Idonije can line up as a defensive tackle in nickel, if need be, and make room for second-year pro Corey Wootton (barring recurring knee problems) or disappointing ex-Jet Vernon Gholston on the edge.

Second-round rookie Stephen Paea is expected to be a force both as a two-gap occupier at nose tackle and one-gap penetrator as a three-technique. He’ll probably start at some point, although hardworking and flexible Henry Melton and low-leveraged plugger Anthony Adams could get the first looks inside. Matt Toeaina moves well and has power to warrant significant snaps as well. And, just as a shot in the dark, the Bears brought in former Texans first-round bust Amobi Okoye, who isn’t better than anyone mentioned thus far but is still only 24. Lovie Smith is a big proponent of rotating fresh defensive linemen, so expect Chicago to dedicate as many roster spots to this area as possible.

For offenses facing a Tampa Two, aligning wide receivers in minus-split formations (i.e. close to the formation) almost always ensures a wide receiver being matched up on a safety.  In Tampa Two, the cornerbacks do not flip sides or even stray far from their outside posts. Because of this, it’s important that strong safety Chris Harris and new starting free safety Major Wright (who is about the 87th different player the Bears have tried at this position) be able to cover. They don’t have to be stars – they’re playing a simple zone, after all – but if they’re stiff, they’re sure to get exploited.

Harris’d movement is O.K. and he has great physicality – he should be fine. Wright, a third-round pick a year ago, is a tossup, which his why Jerry Angelo spent this year’s third-round pick on another free safety, Chris Conte.

Right cornerback Charles Tillman is a turnover-creating machine when comfortable (which is more often than not). Left cornerback Tim Jennings requires a little more safety help but clearly has the hip swivel that Zackary Bowman was lacking in this spot. D.J. Moore’s tendency to stare in the backfield probably led to Corey Graham getting the nickel job. The Bears aren’t all that comfortable with Graham either. If they were, they wouldn’t have had unsigned ex-Colt Kelvin Hayden in for a visit.

Special Teams

Robbie Gould is as fine a place-kicker as the league has to offer. His sterling accuracy numbers are often protected by Lovie Smith’s reluctance to attempt long field goals. New punter Adam Podlesh ranked fifth in the league in net average as a Jaguar last season. Devin Hester is the best punt returner in N.F.L. history. And, with Danieal Manning gone, he’ll now get even more kick returns…or would have before the league implemented new kickoff rules that this team abhors.

Bottom Line

Pro football is partly about deciphering patterns and probability. Years of patterns and probability suggest that the offensive line limitations will catch up to the Bears sooner than later. The defense is staunch, though an injury to Urlacher or Briggs could prove fatal.

Predicted Finish: 3rd N.F.C. North

Andy Benoit is the founder of NFLTouchdown.com and covers the N.F.L. for CBSsports.com. He can be reached at andy.benoit@NFLtouchdown.com.

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