New quarterback, same offense as the bear, return to the Matt Nagy 2019 form


No, you didn’t have a 2019 flashback on Sunday.

However, 2019 currently looks pretty good.

But the 2019 version of the Chicago Bears ’offense was not a good one and the offense led by Nick Falls we saw on Sunday that the Bears’ 19-11 defeat against the Indianapolis Colts in the Siavar area was also not very good.

“I didn’t execute well and we didn’t perform well enough,” Falls said after his first start with the Bears.

It wasn’t just the bears that got lost – that’s how he got lost. Facing the Bears all season in the Colts is the best defense and should be represented in the equation, but the coaching staff should be at Halas Hall on Monday, as the coaching staff reviews offenses that seemed to be the same as last year. Group.

And this time, no one can blame Mitch Trubisky.

New offensive line coach… 28 rushing yards.

Renewed tight end room… 5 catches, 39 yards.

New quarterback… 76.4 passer-by rating.

Even though the play caller was the same and when the Colts stopped the bear’s running game, the bear’s head coach Matt Nagy fell into a lot of habits that didn’t help his offense last year.

Taking the fourth quarter out of the equation – when the Bears lined up 20 times in the Shutton because they were in catch-up mode – here’s a break from what things look like:

.Std Quarter: 11 passes, 6 runs, 10 play from shotgun, 7 play under center. 2N.D. Quarter: 7 passes, 4 runs, 5 plays from shot shot tones, 6 plays under center. 3R.D. Quarter: 11 passes, 2 runs, 11 plays from shotgun, 2 under play center.

One of the big questions going into the game was how the offense would look different with Falls taking charge. It’s primarily a shotgun tug quarterback, but the Bears operated under more center with more play-action with Trubiski in the first 2.5 games of the 2020 season.

In the first half of Sunday, the bears were largely balanced in that regard, as they operated 15 times out of the Falls Shitgun and 13 times under the center. But the Bears had thrown the ball 18 times in the first half and scored just 10, a quarterback could check for a run if the defense indicated.

The problem was, the Bears achieved only 17 yards on the ground in the first half on 11 carriages – an average of 1.5 yards per vehicle.

Maybe he had no choice, but Nagy essentially dropped the run from that point. In the third quarter, and the game was still within the reach of 13-3, the Bears threw the ball 11 times and ran it only twice – for just one yard and two yards.

“Two rush, three rush, two rush, three rush, two rush – six long rush. You thought so, ”said Nagy. “And then all of a sudden you see and that’s the end of the third quarter and we’re trying to get a rhythm. It was difficult and that is a credit to him. “

This Colt deserves a lot of credit. They were stopping the run when they sat back in the cover-2 shell, preventing any deep danda shots. And since the run wasn’t too dangerous, the play-use function was useless. By my reckoning, the Bears used the play-used action seven times on the 42nd pass and only twice in the second. At times, it seemed that Nick Falls had been defending Lowe Smith since the 2000s, except that Colts star linebacker Darius Leonard was not on the field in the second half due to a groin injury.

Here are some realities: the Bears came out flat, the offensive line took a big step back, the Falls didn’t play well, and until Alan Robinson’s touchdown catch at the last minute no one felt they wanted to make any play. It’s hard to call plays when it’s on.

“We will go back and make sure we are putting our people in a big situation and then when we get a chance to be hanged, we will have to execute,” Nagy said.

But when the head coach goes back and reviews the tape on Sunday night, he will consider some of the tendencies that became apparent as soon as the game started. In the first quarter, the Bears had no idea what they were running, both run, pass and play both both under shotgun and center. But after halftime it changed dramatically. Starting with the Bears’ final drive in the second quarter and covering the third quarter, the Bears hit the ball four times from below the center, and threw the ball 12 times, all out of the shackles.

So when the falls are placed under the center on the critical 3R.D.-And -1 To start the fourth quarter, what do you think the Colts defense was thinking? Even with Cordarel Patterson at backfield instead of David Montgomery, he felt confident that a run was coming.

And by the way, why was Cordarel Patterson in the backfield instead of David Montgomery?

The run went nowhere as Patterson lost a yard. Pont.

Look, Sunday was bad. Coaches, quarterbacks, abusive linemen and receivers share the blame for what happened. And they were facing the league’s No. 1 defense, which certainly contributed.

But it’s still worrying that it looked like the 2019 Chicago Bears offense. And that needs to change in a hurry.

Especially since the Bears play Tom Brady in four days.

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