Fair and Breezy
79°
DeKalb, IL
Fair and Breezy|Forecast »

ANALYSIS: Bears' skill players stand out

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

Receivers: A

Marshall (65 snaps) could have made a better effort to break up Cutler’s interception, but give Jaguars cornerback Derek Cox credit for reading the route and making the play. The early turnover did not subdue Marshall, who lined up across from Cox in the fourth quarter, beat the cornerback with a stop-and-go route, and hauled in an over-the-shoulder catch for a 24-yard touchdown. Alshon Jeffery (44 snaps) also caught a 10-yard touchdown pass in the fourth quarter on a play in which Marshall attracted double coverage from Cox and safety Chris Prosinski.

Tight ends: A

Bears offensive coordinator Mike Tice continued to use his tight ends as blockers first and receivers second, which is a strategy that he can afford thanks to having so much talent at the team’s skill positions. Kellen Davis (73 snaps) caught a pair of passes in front of Jaguars safety Dawan Landry in the first quarter, while Matt Spaeth (44 snaps) and Kyle Adams (14 snaps) accepted the anonymous dirty work that every good team requires. On both of the Bears’ offensive touchdowns, Spaeth picked up pass rushers to buy time for Cutler.

Offensive line: B

If not for Gabe Carimi’s foolish penalties near the goal line, this unit would have received its second straight “A” grade after a woeful start to the season. Carimi (75 snaps) carelessly committed back-to-back false starts that moved the Bears from the 3-yard line to the 13-yard line on third-and-goal with the score tied in the third quarter. On the bright side, the starting lineup of Webb, Chilo Rachal, Roberto Garza, Lance Louis and Carimi played 100 percent of the snaps on offense and allowed only one sack on 39 pass attempts.

Defensive line: B

After further review, the Bears’ defensive line makes opponents act like frustrated children. Case in point: Bears defensive end Corey Wootton (22 snaps) blew past Jaguars right tackle Cameron Bradfield and came around the edge to knock down Blaine Gabbert for a sack-fumble late in the second quarter. After Julius Peppers (39 snaps) fell on the ball, replays showed Bradfield raising both of his arms and punching them down at the air as if he were a toddler whose parents would not buy him a toy at the mall. Although Wootton shined, fellow linemen Israel Idonije (38 snaps), Henry Melton (38 snaps) and Shea McClellin (27 snaps) failed to register a sack or a tackle for a loss.


Reader Poll

Which Illinois issue matters most to you?

Pension reform
Same-sex marriage
Concealed carry/gun control
Medical marijuana
Other