Chicago Sports

Former Bears OL relishes win over Green Bay Packers

A former Bears offensive lineman was pretty happy Sunday

The Chicago Bears are bad this season. That’s not a surprise, as many analysts predicted the Bears would struggle with their roster and dead cap space problems. However, their rival, the Green Bay Packers, are underperforming through the season’s first seven weeks. One former Bears offensive lineman, now with the Washington Commanders, was pleased with himself after their Week 7 win.

The Commanders held on to beat the Packers 23-21 in one of the NFL’s big surprises this weekend. The Packers have dropped three games in a row and now have a 3-4 record. After beating the Bears on Thursday night in Week 6, the Commanders have now won two in a row. They also have a 3-4 record.

Charles Leno Jr. had an excellent quote after the win

Following the win, former Bears offensive tackle Charles Leno Jr. gave his take on the win. He took a shot at the Bears’ expense and the Packers’.

“I’ve beat the Packers probably three times in my career now. I played in Chicago for seven years. That man number 12 [Aaron Rodgers] he can be a lot. Personally, it’s a win for me. Back-to-back, I beat the Packers and the Bears two weeks in a row; uh, I’m a happy man.”

Charles Leno Jr. with the best quote after the game because he rarely beat the Packers when he was with the Bears
“This is a win for me!”
😂😂 https://t.co/g5o5CJFOa9

Leno played for the Bears from the 2014 season through 2020. The Bears beat the Packers twice while Leno was there. Once in 2015 and then the second time in 2018. Leno should be happy after the past two weeks. He’s in a much better place in Washington this year than in Chicago. The Bears haven’t beaten the Packers since Leno left Chicago. The Bears have lost seven in a row to the Packers.

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Former Bears OL relishes win over Green Bay Packers

A former Bears offensive lineman was pretty happy Sunday

The Chicago Bears are bad this season. That’s not a surprise, as many analysts predicted the Bears would struggle with their roster and dead cap space problems. However, their rival, the Green Bay Packers, are underperforming through the season’s first seven weeks. One former Bears offensive lineman, now with the Washington Commanders, was pleased with himself after their Week 7 win.

The Commanders held on to beat the Packers 23-21 in one of the NFL’s big surprises this weekend. The Packers have dropped three games in a row and now have a 3-4 record. After beating the Bears on Thursday night in Week 6, the Commanders have now won two in a row. They also have a 3-4 record.

Charles Leno Jr. had an excellent quote after the win

Following the win, former Bears offensive tackle Charles Leno Jr. gave his take on the win. He took a shot at the Bears’ expense and the Packers’.

“I’ve beat the Packers probably three times in my career now. I played in Chicago for seven years. That man number 12 [Aaron Rodgers] he can be a lot. Personally, it’s a win for me. Back-to-back, I beat the Packers and the Bears two weeks in a row; uh, I’m a happy man.”

Charles Leno Jr. with the best quote after the game because he rarely beat the Packers when he was with the Bears
“This is a win for me!”
😂😂 https://t.co/g5o5CJFOa9

Leno played for the Bears from the 2014 season through 2020. The Bears beat the Packers twice while Leno was there. Once in 2015 and then the second time in 2018. Leno should be happy after the past two weeks. He’s in a much better place in Washington this year than in Chicago. The Bears haven’t beaten the Packers since Leno left Chicago. The Bears have lost seven in a row to the Packers.

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Bears missing golden opportunity in the wide-open NFC playoff race

The Chicago Bears’ record of 2-4 in the NFC North is more than a little frustrating given the overall weakness of the division and the NFC in general.

The 2022 Chicago Bears are blowing a massive opportunity at a potential playoff berth this season, highlighting just how frustrating the season has become.  The Bears’ 2-4 record belies the fact that they have lost three of their games by a touchdown or less.  Losses to the Giants (20-12) the Vikings (29-22) and the Commanders (12-7) represent peak frustration for Bears fans in the division and the playoff race in the NFC.

If the Chicago Bears could have found a way to eke out wins in those three games, they’d be sitting at 5-1 right now, would have a lead over the Vikings in the NFC North, and would hold the second seed overall in the NFC playoff race.  They would be ahead of both the Vikings and the Giants if they could have come up with two wins against those 6-1 teams (assuming a win tonight over the 3-3 Patriots).

Instead, the Chicago Bears are faltering at building up some confidence in their head coach and their QB.  While there is a myriad of reasons why the Bears are coming up short, they should be in a better position to win with a franchise quarterback under center who makes enough plays to carry his team to victory in close games.  

Instead, Justin Fields is putting together one of the worst passing seasons in the history of the league.  The knock on Fields coming out of college was his processing speed wasn’t at an elite level.  That lack of processing speed has shown time and time again in his short time with the Bears.  

While it would be too early to crown the Bears as a playoff favorite at this point in the season even if they were 5-1 heading into Foxborough. it’s rare that teams with a 5-1 record falter down the stretch and miss the playoffs.  The bottom line is this season and next season represent a clear chance for the Bears to establish themselves as a playoff contender.  The NFC is full of old QBs that are on the downside of their careers and may not be back in 2023.

Both Tom Brady Kirk Cousins and Aaron Rodgers are having uncharacteristically bad years and are clearly in the twilight of their careers. Jalen Hurts in Philadelphia is the only young QB of note that has stepped in and led the Eagles to an undefeated record to this point in the year.  But after Hurts, no one else represents the future of great QB play in the NFC.

Now more than ever it’s time for Justin Fields to seize this opportunity and put the Bears in a position of momentum heading into 2023.  While the 2022 season is not over, the narrative for the book of the 2022 season seems to have been written.  It’s up to Justin Fields to change that narrative, given the lack of elite teams in the NFC, and show that he and the Bears have a head start on becoming one of the best teams of the future.

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Chicago sees one of its deadliest weekends of the year: 12 people killed and another 43 wounded by gunfire

Chicago saw one of its deadliest weekends of the year, with 12 people killed and another 45 wounded by gunfire, including at least five children 15 and younger.

Nine of those killed were shot over just 12 hours Saturday night into early Sunday. Five people were shot during a drifting caravan in Brighton Park, three of them fatally. Among the children wounded across the city were a 12-year-old boy, a 13-year-old girl, a 14-year-old boy and two 15-year-old boys.

The last weekend that approached this level of gun violence was the middle of September when 9 people were killed and 54 others were wounded. Even the long holiday weekends of summer did have as high a death toll.

Ten people were killed over the Labor Day weekend, 10 too over the July Fourth weekend and nine killed over Memorial Day.

Bearing the brunt of this weekend’s violence was the Deering Police District on the South Side where three people were killed and two others seriously hurt after gunfire erupted during a large drag race in Brighton Park around 4 a.m. Sunday, according to Chicago police.

Around 100 cars had taken over an intersection when about 13 shots rang out at Archer and Kedzie avenues, police said. A man, 20, was shot in the chest and left thigh and went to Holy Cross Hospital, where he died, police said. Another man, also 20, was shot in the chest and upper body and went to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he died. A third person went to Holy Cross Hospital with gunshot wounds to his neck and chest and was pronounced dead. Another man, 21, was shot in the right thigh and was taken to Mount Sinai in critical condition. A 19-year-old man was shot in the abdomen and was taken to Mount Sinai in critical condition.

Four other people were shot in other attacks in the Deering District, where homicides are up 24% from a year ago and shootings are up 6%, according to police data.

Other fatal attacks

A man was found dead in Bronzeville around 4:15 a.m. Sunday. The man, 29, suffered a gunshot wound to the chest in the 4900 block of South King Drive, police said. He was pronounced dead at the scene, police said.Hours earlier, a man was shot and killed around 2 a.m. Sunday inside a home in the Scottsdale neighborhood on the Southwest Side. The man, 37, was attacked in the 4600 block of West 87th Street, police said. He was shot in the abdomen and was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was pronounced dead, police said.A 16-year-old boy was killed and a 13-year-old girl was wounded Saturday night in North Lawndale on the West Side. The boy was standing outside in the 1200 block of South Fairfield Avenue about 8:20 p.m. when two men got out of a dark sedan and opened gunfire, striking him once in the back, Chicago police said. He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he died. The girl was hit twice in the neck by stray bullets. She was taken to Stroger Hospital in good condition.Around the same time, a man in his 20s was found shot to death in Austin on the West Side. He suffered a gunshot wound to the head in the 500 block of North Leclaire Avenue, Chicago police said. Another man was found fatally shot about an hour later at an apartment complex parking lot in South Shore. The man, believed to be in his 40s, was found unresponsive with a gunshot wound to the head about 9:20 p.m. in the 7200 block of South Phillips Avenue, police said. About 10 minutes later, a 31-year-old man was killed during an argument at an Auburn Gresham home in the 8300 block of South Marshfield Avenue. The man was fighting with another man, also 31, who pulled out a handgun and shot him, police said. A suspect was arrested at the scene.Sunday night, a 50-year-old man was fatally shot inside an Irving Park apartment hallway on the Northwest Side. About 9:10 p.m., the man was in the apartment in the 4300 block of North Whipple Street when he heard a disturbance from an upstairs neighbor, police said. He stepped into the hallway and was shot in the face by a gunman. He was taken to Illinois Masonic Medical Center, where he died.

Other shootings

A 14-year-old boy was grazed in the face Saturday night while at a playground in the West Garfield Park neighborhood. He was wounded about 7 p.m. in the 4400 block of West Wilcox Street, police said. Hefferan Public School is located in the block and has a small playground. The boy was taken to Stroger Hospital in good condition.Saturday morning, a 15-year-old boy was wounded in a drive-by shooting in Englewood on the South Side. He was standing outside in the 5700 block of South Princeton Avenue when a car stopped near him and someone inside fired shots, police said. He suffered multiple gunshot wounds and was taken in critical condition to Comer Children’s Hospital.Another 15-year-old boy was shot about six hours earlier in Bronzeville. The teen was walking on a sidewalk in the 4000 block of South Langley Avenue about 1 a.m. when two men approached and opened fire, police said. He was struck in the right foot and taken to Comer Children’s Hospital, where he was listed in good condition.A 12-year-old boy was seriously wounded in a drive-by shooting Friday night in Lawndale on the West Side. He was standing on a sidewalk in the 900 block of South Albany Avenue about 8:35 p.m. when someone inside a gray car started shooting, police said. He was shot in the chest and transported in serious condition to Stroger Hospital.

At least 40 other people were shot between 5 p.m. Friday and 5 a.m. Monday in Chicago.

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Chicago Bears face monumental task in beating Patriots at home

Bill Belichick is on the verge of surpassing Chicago Bears George Halas for second all time on the NFL head coaching win total list.

Belichick is on top of that list because he is so good against first and second-year quarterbacks at home.  Since 2003 Belichick has compiled a 42-3 record against young QBs.  Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields is likely to struggle mightily against the Patriots defense.  Belichick is one of the most consistent defensive masterminds in the league’s history.

He sees weaknesses on tape and attacks them and Fields has yet to develop the confidence in what he’s seeing to make plays.  It’s getting to the point with Justin Fields that he needs to start taking more risks as Chicago Bears QB in order to put the Bears in a position to win games.  On the season Justin Fields has only four touchdowns to 5 interceptions.  To say that Justin Fields has been conservative is an understatement, or maybe he’s just not seeing what needs to be seen to make plays.

The “Not So Good” Part Kurt Warner Breaks Down Justin Fields and the Bears Offensive Woes – YouTube

There is little doubt that the Chicago Bears have to play conservatively because of the massive pass-blocking failure that exists up front, but that changes this week with Lucas Patrick moving to center and Zach Schofield taking over at left guard.  The hope is Sam Mustipher was the biggest problem with pass protection, but that’s doubtful given how awful Patrick has been as well as tackles Braxton Jones and Larry Borom.  Mustipher finally being benched hopefully leads to Patrick taking over the protection calls and that leads to better pass blocking for Justin Fields.

The Chicago Bears need to establish the run game early and then hope it opens up the play-action pass game.  This is where Fields needs to be more aggressive.  He needs to take advantage of his accuracy down the field and cut it loose regardless of what he thinks he’s seeing and try to throw his receivers open instead of waiting for them to come open.

Fields’ failures right now are a familiar failure to Bears fans.  Jay Cutler was also one who could never develop the rhythm necessary to throw his receivers open.  No matter which offense Cutler was in, he could never throw with timing.  Fields is also struggling with the same issue which if this is a habit he can’t overcome may prevent him from reaching his full potential.

 

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Blackhawks being careful in search for jersey advertisement patch sponsor

Nine NHL teams have advertisement patches on their jerseys — taking advantage of a new league policy this season — but the Blackhawks do not.

Considering the history and significance of their sweater, the Hawks are taking their time with their search for a jersey ad partner, business president Jaime Faulkner said last week.

“We want to find a partner with whom we share the same values [and] brand principles,” Faulkner said. “We’re having conversations with many organizations, but we want to be thoughtful and careful about who we put on this jersey. Thankfully, financially, we don’t need to rush into throwing a patch on there.”

The Canadiens and Maple Leafs are the two Original Six franchises that have added ad patches. The Leafs’ jersey has “Milk” beneath the right shoulder, representing the team’s new partnership with Dairy Farmers of Ontario. The Canadiens’ jersey features an RBC (Royal Bank of Canada) logo.

The Penguins, Capitals, Blues, Wild, Blue Jackets, Golden Knights and Coyotes also added patches.

Critics of the NHL’s new jersey-patch policy argue it could be a slippery slope, potentially opening the door for one ad to turn into multiple down the road. Some major European pro hockey leagues allow teams to sell seemingly endless jersey ads, which creates some distracting and hideous sweaters.

But a single ad patch doesn’t seem too noticeable, and the additional revenue could help the NHL start increasing its salary cap again sooner.

The Hawks are taking advantage of the NHL’s helmet ad policy that began in 2020-21, with Belle Tire’s logo adorning their domes for a third consecutive season.

Diversity numbers

A diversity study released by the NHL last week found that 83.6% of employees across the NHL and its teams are white (compared to 4.2% Asian, 3.7% Black and 3.7% Hispanic/Latino) and that 61.9% identify as male.

Hawks CEO Danny Wirtz said the numbers for the Hawks’ employee base roughly align with those league averages.

“We’ve come a long way in the last two years, both in terms of the diversity component but also in terms of building a culture that’s inclusive, equitable and [just],” Wirtz said. “While our numbers are what they are . . . what I’m really proud of is, when you walk around the office here, you see representation in almost every department.

“By all means, we have to continue to explore bringing in diverse candidates. We need to find top talent, and top talent is not limited to white males. Top talent takes us across all dimensions of diversity, including other things like [people with experience] outside of sports.”

Mrazek on IR

The Hawks put Petr Mrazek (groin strain) on injured reserve Sunday retroactive to Friday, meaning he’ll be out until at least this Friday and miss at least two more games. Alex Stalock was competent against the Kraken, saving 30 of 34 shots, including a big glove save in the final two minutes to preserve the lead.

Faceoff dominance

The Hawks won 41 of 59 faceoffs, continuing their dominance in the circles.

They rank second in the league with a 58.2% draw winning percentage, trailing only Patrice Bergeron’s Bruins. Jonathan Toews has won 60.8% of his 74 faceoffs, but newcomer Max Domi has been even better, winning 65.4% of his 81 faceoffs.

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Legendary coaches: Patriots’ Belichick, Bears’ Halas have much more in common than 324 winson October 24, 2022 at 12:16 pm

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Andy Reid is on the other end of the telephone, sharing thoughts on Bill Belichick. His perspective is one few can provide.

“We probably downplay how you have to operate as a head coach in this league, especially us older ones. We don’t talk much about it,” he says.

“To be able to digest all that and be as productive as he is, and have the relationships he has with the players, is a phenomenal thing. We’re lucky to have him in this league, doing what he’s doing at this present time. You never take that for granted as guys get older.”

Reid, the 64-year-old Kansas City Chiefs coach, has carved out time to acknowledge the magnitude of what his close friend Belichick, 70, is on the cusp of accomplishing.

If Belichick’s New England Patriots beat the Chicago Bears on Monday night (8:15 p.m. ET, ESPN), Belichick will move past legendary Bears coach George Halas into sole possession of second place on the NFL’s all-time head-coaching wins list (regular season and postseason combined).

Entering Monday night, it’s Miami Dolphins legend Don Shula on top at 347, then Halas and Belichick at 324.

BELICHICK AND HALAS might be tied in victories, but they have commonalities beyond the win column.

Belichick’s ties to Halas came through his father, Steve, the longtime college football coach who knew some of the assistants on Halas’ staff in the 1950s and 1960s. Steve Belichick had also coached quarterback Bill Wade at Vanderbilt before Wade went on to play for Halas’ Bears, helping lead them to the 1963 NFL championship.

The Belichicks were based in Annapolis, Maryland, so when the Bears visited the Baltimore Colts, further connections were made.

“We would go to the locker room after the game. They were always very gracious and generous, let me hang around and stuff like that,” Belichick recalled. “I have a ton of respect for Coach Halas and the McCaskey family and what he did for professional football.”

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Halas’ eldest child, Virginia, married Edward McCaskey in 1943 and became principal owner of the Bears upon Halas’ death in 1983.

Reid, fifth all time in wins at 257, carries a lot of respect for Halas too.

“He was one of the forefathers. He helped set the pace for what we have today,” he said of Halas, the late player, coach, owner and Hall of Famer nicknamed “Papa Bear.”

“That’s the part I respect the most. He did it for so many years and had the energy to do it, still raising a family and doing all the things you need to do as a dad, coach, owner, general manager, president. And he played the game on top of that. I have the utmost respect for the things he did, and particularly the foundation he helped lay for all of us today.”

When Belichick shared his recollections of Halas following the Patriots’ 38-15 victory over the Browns last Sunday in Cleveland, given the location, he included former Browns and Bengals coach Paul Brown (15th in all-time wins).

“I probably shouldn’t make that list. They were my idols,” Belichick said.

“What [Halas] did for professional football, and Paul Brown and others like that who paved the way for us as coaches and paved the way for the National Football League to grow into what it is today, they laid a lot of the building blocks.”

Chicago Bears owner and coach George Halas is hoisted on the shoulders of players after beating Washington 73-0 to win the 1940 NFL Championship game. Chicago Tribune file photo/TNS via Getty Images

HALAS’ LEGACY WITH the Bears is still evident during each of their games. The left sleeve of the team’s uniform includes the initials “GSH” — for George Stanley Halas — a reflection of his status as founder of the franchise in 1920 when they were initially known as the Decatur Staleys.

In all, he won six NFL championships and coached the Bears for 40 seasons, although they weren’t consecutive. He stepped away three times: 1930-32, 1942-45 (to serve in the military during World War II) and 1956-57.

Ed Stone was the Bears beat reporter at the Chicago’s American — the afternoon newspaper of the Chicago Tribune — and covered the start of the 1963 season that delivered Halas’ final title.

“He was a very tough coach. He was very meticulous in everything he did in his preparation for the team,” Stone, now 89, told ESPN.

“He was not an outspoken man. At his personal appearances, he was often reluctant to speak. Our newspaper had a Bears event every so often, and he would usually send an assistant coach instead of himself. But he could be very different personally than he was as a coach; I would say he was a much nicer, gentler person off the field than he was on it.”

Sounds similar to the coach currently stalking the sideline in New England who, like Halas, has won six championships as a head coach.

“He’s got a great personality, which people don’t see,” Reid said of Belichick, who is in his 48th consecutive season coaching in the NFL. “Good sense of humor. Very witty. I think everyone knows he’s very intelligent, but he’s well-rounded in that area, it’s not just football.

“He does a tremendous amount for people, whether it’s ex-players or helping out with the different people he knows, giving them things they need in their profession to be successful. He’s a giving person that way. I love the guy for what he is.”

HERE’S ANOTHER STRIKING similarity: As coach of the Bears, Halas was fiercely protective of any information that could compromise competitive advantage — from injuries to transactions.

“Whenever there was a cutdown of personnel earlier in the season, when rosters had to be reduced, he was very secretive about that,” Stone said. “When you would ask him questions about it, he’d say, ‘That’s private information and you shouldn’t be doing anything that would interfere with the operation of the team.’

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“He was very secretive about his practices, didn’t like anybody to know what they were planning.”

In his 23 seasons as Patriots coach, Belichick has often closely followed a Halas-type script. The Patriots are traditionally one of the last teams to announce the initial 53-man roster, not giving other clubs the information before it’s required. Ditto for the injury report and transactions such as elevating a practice-squad player to the game-day roster.

And as for Belichick’s news conferences, Halas would likely be proud, considering Stone’s recollections of what it was like covering the Bears.

“He was a very interesting guy with the press, in that he would be, in his mind, very cooperative. But the local writers understood they weren’t going to get much from him,” Stone said.

“When he would get out-of-town writers around him, I can remember them holding their pens above their pads of paper and not writing anything down because he wasn’t saying anything they could use. But he would occupy their time and entertain them for a period of time.”

“He does a tremendous amount for people,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid (right) said of Patriots coach Bill Belichick. “… giving them things they need in their profession to be successful. He’s a giving person that way. I love the guy for what he is.” Al Bello/Getty Images

ROSTER MANAGEMENT AND innovation proved to be a key to Belichick’s and Halas’ success, too.

Don Pierson started working at the Chicago Tribune in 1967, which was Halas’ final season as coach. Thus, his coverage of the Bears was mostly when Halas, who died in 1983, was focusing on his front-office and ownership duties. Through that experience and talking to Halas about his coaching career, Pierson sees a link between Halas and Belichick in terms of how their teams were run.

“Belichick is not the owner, he doesn’t have the title of general manager, but I’m sure pretty much what he says goes. Of course, Halas, that would be similar. Very autocratic,” he said, before sharing another connection in how they built their teams.

2 Related

“[Halas] was able to control his roster probably better than anyone else in the league at that time to find the players he wanted. He would trade away players to Pittsburgh — they’d be on loan — and a couple years later they’d be back. That sort of thing.

“The other thing that characterized his coaching is that he hired very good assistants and allowed them to coach. He hired the guy [Clark Shaughnessy] who practically invented the T formation with men in motion. So very innovative in that regard.”

Belichick’s innovation is well documented, with examples including a heavy emphasis on “situational football,” defensive spacing and positional versatility, among other things. As is his knack for building an annually competitive roster — usually with a strong middle class of players at midrange salaries — despite restrictions from a salary cap designed to create leaguewide parity.

Jerod Mayo played for Belichick from 2008 to 2014 and is in his fourth season serving as an assistant coach on his staff. Acknowledging that any coach needs good players to win games, Mayo highlighted why he believes Belichick is about to surpass Halas.

“One thing about Coach is his willingness to evolve,” he said. “His willingness to take advice from different people. It doesn’t matter where you are on the spectrum — young, old, Black, white. He takes all those things into consideration, and when you do that, you kind of minimize your blind spots. He has people around him who will tell him the truth.”

ON THE DAY he tied Halas on the all-time wins list, Belichick deflected credit to the players, from his days as a rising assistant coach with the New York Giants, beginning in 1979, to his first head-coaching job, with the Cleveland Browns (1991-95), to becoming the Patriots’ head coach in 2000. He also noted the work of assistant coaches on his staff.

By the following day, he was done addressing the milestone. When a radio host congratulated him and asked what it meant to him, Belichick said, “This game isn’t about me, it’s about our team. Time to move off that subject. We’ve talked enough about it.”

Reid, in his 31st consecutive season as an NFL coach, understands that mindset.

Pick NFL player props every week. Rack up more wins than Mike for the season and you could win $20K! Make Your Picks

Asked how much he senses the achievement means to Belichick, he said, “I don’t know that, because he doesn’t talk about that. You start counting numbers, coaches don’t do that, especially ones that have been around long enough to have NFL scar tissue. You just take the next one and go for it.

“People talk, you hear those things. So he probably thinks about it, but probably not for very long, and gets on with trying to get the next win, which is extremely hard in this league.”

Stone surmises that’s precisely how Halas would have approached his record. Halas had a sizable edge by the time he retired in 1967, his 324 wins well ahead of Green Bay Packers legend Curly Lambeau’s 229. Halas’ record was broken by Shula in 1993, with Dolphins players carrying him off the field and Shula saying, “It was very emotional, and at the same time, I’m glad it’s over.”

The record wasn’t a hot topic between reporters and Halas.

“I never discussed it with him, and I don’t know if he was that concerned about it. My feeling is that he was probably just concerned about the next game they played,” Stone said of Halas.

“That [record] wasn’t part of his ego.”

For Belichick this week, that means he’s “on to Chicago.”

But those who walk in his coaching shoes and admire his place among the game’s coaching legends are happy to recognize what he’s on the cusp of accomplishing.

“It’s an amazing number,” Reid said. “It’s so well deserved, for the effort he puts in. He’s a relentless worker. I can see how it’s been done because he’s a heck of a football coach.”

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Legendary coaches: Patriots’ Belichick, Bears’ Halas have much more in common than 324 winson October 24, 2022 at 12:16 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears fans react to Packers losing to Washington

The Packers have lost three-straight games as Bears fans react to the latest loss

Green Bay Packers fans are learning a little bit how it feels to be a Chicago Bears fan. After another loss on Sunday, this time to the Washington Commanders, the packers fell to 3-4 on the year.

And it’s safe to say that the offense is struggling big time in Green Bay.

The Packers look completely out of sync and the frustrations are starting to mount for Aaron Rodgers and the offense. And things don’t get much easier either as they have a road game at Buffalo next week. But for Bears fans, it was a good Sunday.

Not only do the Bears play on Monday, putting away some disappointment for another day, they got to gloat and celebrate a Packers loss. They did exactly that:

#Bears fans watching Packers Twitter explode because their offense is playing poorly pic.twitter.com/FgqJBo6wB2

— Jacob Infante (@jacobinfante24) October 23, 2022

Pay attention to GB, Bears fans. They’re losing terrible games when they’re still trying to compete. We’re losing close games in the first year of a rebuild.

Back away from the ledge, it could be worse. You could be a Packers fan pic.twitter.com/BrF2qpWu4M

— Pete, and you will have time for my shenanigans (@Pete_Chi_Fan) October 23, 2022

Cant be greedy. My Fantasy Team This Week Sucked. But the Packers Lost so I’m good 😂

— The Irish Bears Show (@IrishBearsShow) October 23, 2022

When it’s 80 degrees outside, the Bears can’t hurt you today, and the Packers lose. pic.twitter.com/dRiX11E0vX

— Ross Read (@RossRead) October 23, 2022

It’s October 23rd and the #Blackhawks have the same amount of wins as the Packers pic.twitter.com/0t2Wegs9sa

— Mario Tirabassi (@Mario_Tirabassi) October 23, 2022

Yes. It’s finally true.
Green Bay sucks.

They’re a shitty football team.
Like, REALLY bad.
And it’s only going to get worse.

Welcome to the club #Packers fans.

— Silvy (@WaddleandSilvy) October 23, 2022

Packer fans talked all that shit when we lost to the commanders only for them to lose to the commanders

— EJ (@itsmine49) October 23, 2022

Hey Packer fan, I told you we are going to watch 2023 NFL Draft breakdowns and then you can leave. pic.twitter.com/WU25v3weQm

— Max Markham (@MaxMarkhamNFL) October 23, 2022

At least the #Bears went into 2022 knowing they were probably going to be bad.

The Packers on the other hand…

— Erik Lambert (@ErikLambert1) October 23, 2022

 

 

Look, the Bears aren’t a very good team. That’s fine. Everyone can admit that. But seeing Green Bay struggle like this is something we haven’t seen in a long time.

Are the days of Green Bay dominating the division slowly coming to an end? Are the tables finally turning on them?

Let’s hope so!

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Blackhawks’ penalty kill fuels another comeback win against Kraken

Luke Richardson talked a big game during training camp about the new way he’d run the Blackhawks’ penalty kill.

Five games into the season, the results have backed up Richardson’s words. The Hawks’ PK looks different than all 31 of its counterparts around the NHL, tenaciously forechecking complacent opposing power plays with two forwards as if not a man down at all, and the unique approach is working brilliantly.

Yet another shorthanded goal Sunday jumpstarted yet another multi-goal comeback en route to a 5-4 victory over the Kraken, the Hawks’ third win in a row.

“We’re never out of it,” forward Jujhar Khaira said. “But we’re relentless and we’re resilient. So we’re going to keep going.”

A sleepy start spotted the Kraken an early 2-0 lead as Hawks committed turnovers and lost puck battles left and right. But on a penalty kill late in the first period, Khaira forced a turnover in the neutral zone, found Colin Blackwell entering the zone and knocked in a rebound off Blackwell’s shot to give the Hawks life.

Tyler Johnson then potted two game-tying goals: First to level the game 2-2, then to tie it 4-4 with 7:03 left in the third period after a well-spotted and well-placed Jonathan Toews centering pass. Just 13 seconds later, Jason Dickinson buried what turned out to be the game-winner.

At 3-2-0, the Hawks are currently above .500 for the first time since March 6, 2021.

“Obviously, we’ve got to get to some better starts and hopefully play with some leads,” Johnson said. “But you’ve got to be happy with getting points and playing the way we are.”

Among all the Hawks’ surprising bright spots so far, however, the penalty kill stands clearly above the rest.

They’ve scored four shorthanded goals in three games, including Sam Lafferty’s pair against the Sharks and Connor Murphy’s long-distance wrist shot against the Red Wings. It’s the first time since February 2009 that they’ve scored shorthanded goals in three consecutive games, and the first time since March 1995 they’ve scored four shorthanded goals in a three-game span.

Even after Khaira’s goal Sunday, the Hawks effectively pestered the Kraken enough to kill off three more power plays, including a double-minor to Seth Jones during which the visitors struggled to enter their offensive zone and never produced a decent look.

The ‘PK’ forward duos of Lafferty-Dickinson and Khaira-Blackwell — all of whom are averaging at least 2:13 of shorthanded ice time per game — have been masterful on the forecheck, and the defensive pairs of Jack Johnson-Seth Jones and Murphy-Jarred Tinordi have been solid enough.

“You just find the right combinations where they can trust each other and work off each other,” Richardson said. “It’s very disruptive up-ice. The power plays do not like it. With our speed this year, why not take a chance, instead of just sitting back and letting the best players in the world come at you 100 miles an hour? Why not try to disrupt [them]…and maybe force bad passes, get them out of their routes?”

Since an admittedly awful debut against the Avalanche, during which they allowed four power-play goals, the Hawks have killed 14 of 15 opportunities and recorded a 19.4% shorthanded scoring-chance ratio, sixth-best in the NHL during that time span.

It’s a remarkable turnaround from last season when the Hawks ranked 24th with a 76.2% kill rate, 18th with a 12.2% shorthanded scoring-chance ratio and tallied only two shorthanded goals over 82 games.

“It’s just [about] reading off each other, trusting the three guys next to you and being able to know that if you’re going in [on the forecheck], there’s someone covering you,” Khaira said. “That’s the main thing.”

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Betting tips for Monday Night Football: Bears vs. Patriotson October 23, 2022 at 10:16 pm

Will Mac Jones be able to run wild for the New England Patriots in Week 7? Fred Kfoury III/Icon Sportswire

Week 7 of the NFL season wraps up Monday night with the New England Patriots (-7.5, 40) hosting the Chicago Bears at Gillette Stadium (ESPN, 8:15 ET).

After an exciting Sunday of action, we have one more opportunity to wager on professional football if we so choose. So which plays do our analysts like the most?

Betting analyst Joe Fortenbaugh, ESPN analyst Seth Walder, fantasy and sports betting analysts Andr? Snellings and Eric Moody, plus Football Outsiders’ Aaron Schatz provide their top plays.

Note: Lines from Caesars Sportsbook unless otherwise indicated.

Chicago Bears at New England Patriots (-7.5, 40)

Monday, 8:15 p.m. ET, Gillette Stadium

With Mac Jones returning for the Patriots, what are your thoughts on the spread and total for this game? Who are you taking?

Fortenbaugh: A one-dimensional offense (of which Chicago is one, thanks to a hideous passing attack) is a recipe for disaster against a Bill Belichick-coached team because he’s a master at making the opposition play left-handed. So you have to ask yourself, “Do I trust Justin Fields, who ranks 32nd in the NFL in QB rating at 72.7, to go out and win me this bet?” My answer to that question is a resounding, “No.” I hooked a handful of 6-point teasers into New England on Monday night and would also lay a half unit on the Patriots at -7.5, not to mention an under bet as well.

Snellings: If Jones indeed back, I’ll go with the under. In three games before getting injured, Jones led the Patriots to just 15.7 points per game, and they combined with their opponents to go under this line in two of those three games. Similarly, Fields has led the Bears to an average of 15.5 points per game and they’ve combined with their opponents to go under this line in four out of six games. These are two teams that are better on defense than offense and have struggled to score.

Schatz: The Bears are just a very bad team, ranked 31st in DVOA right now and 30th in ESPN’s FPI. The Patriots have been playing very well over the last couple of weeks. Yes, they’re going back to Jones from Bailey Zappe, but the larger sample of Jones’ career (21 total games, as opposed to just the three games from earlier this year) suggests that Jones is the better quarterback. I have faith in Belichick building a Patriots defense that completely shuts down Fields and the entire Bears offense. Meanwhile, the Patriots will run all over a Bears defense that ranks 27th in run defense DVOA. Patriots, all the way.

Walder: FPI has very little faith in Chicago, who it ranks as the third-worst team in the NFL, ahead of only the Panthers and the Brett Rypien-led Broncos. Sacks are a serious problem for Fields. I contend they are mostly on him, but that’s really neither here nor there when forecasting this game. The Patriots defense is legit, ranking fifth in efficiency this season. Put it all together and the model thinks New England should be 9.9 point favorites. I’ll take the Patriots.

Rhamondre Stevenson has rushed for over 200 yards over the last two games. The Bears have one of the best pass defenses in the NFL, but are one of the worst against the run. What are your thoughts on Stevenson to finish with the most rushing yards this season (30-1), as well as his props for Monday night?

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Snellings: With Damien Harris having returned to full practice on Thursday, I’m expecting rushing production in the 60-70 yard range for Stevenson, and receiving production in the low-20s as opposed to the 266 total yards he produced over the last two weeks with Harris out. In other words, Stevenson could still be in for a solid game in a timeshare with Harris, especially through the air, and I could still see him as a likely candidate to score a touchdown.

Fortenbaugh: I do love Stevenson, but the return of Harris makes this a pass for me. He simply won’t record enough touches.

Schatz: I agree with Fortenbaugh here. Bill Belichick loves his RB committees too much for Stevenson to lead the league in yardage for the season. The question of how much Harris will play scares me off of going either over or under on Stevenson’s Monday night props.

The Bears have only thrown the ball 35% of the time, with 141 attempts on 402 plays — lowest in the league. However, Fields’ rushing yards prop has gone over in five of his last six away games. It’s at 43.5 for Monday night. What are your thoughts on Chicago’s player props? Would you take any of them for Monday night?

Fortenbaugh: I’d be looking to play unders, especially when it comes to Chicago’s rushing attack. I think Belichick is going to stack the box and dare Fields to beat New England with his arm, something the second-year quarterback has been unable to do throughout his brief time in the NFL.

Snellings: I’d take Fields over 43.5 rushing yards. He’s gone over that mark in each of the last four games, averaging 58.5 yards. I could see Belichick daring Fields to throw and trying to limit the run, but Fields is electric enough with his legs that I still like him to do some damage.

Schatz: I’ll take the over on Fields’ rushing yards because the Patriots historically have trouble with scrambling quarterbacks, in part because they play a lot of man coverage. I agree that the Patriots will look to stack the box and force Fields to throw, but he’ll get out of the pocket for a couple of big runs against this defense.

Walder: I’ll go over for the same reason. The Patriots have gone with man coverage at a 56% rate this season, which is fifth highest in the NFL. That generally leads to more scrambling opportunities for opposing quarterbacks. The Bears ought to be looking to get Fields to use his legs as much as possible.

What is your best bet for Monday night’s game?

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Fortenbaugh: I like the Bears to score under 15.5 total points (+100). This Chicago offense is in for a loooong night.

Walder: I’ll take Darnell Mooney for over 3.5 receptions (+100). I’m slightly nervous about this one because my model, which projects 4.3 receptions for Mooney on Monday, is having a hard time forecasting pass rates as low as what the Bears are putting up because they are such outliers. Still, Mooney is coming off of a 12-target, seven-reception game, which I think carries some signal. Plus, the Bears are going to be behind and will have to pass, even if they don’t want to. Mooney is the obvious target.

Moody: Mooney has gained more than 50 yards in three straight games. In that time frame, he has accumulated 22 targets. Even though the Bears are facing Bill Belichick and the Patriots, Mooney is Chicago’s best receiving playmaker. Against the Patriots cornerbacks, he is talented enough to win. There should be more than enough target volume for Mooney to go over 45.5 receiving yards.

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