Chicago Bears training camp primer


Reuters | Washington DC | Updated: 22-07-2019 21:14 IST | Created: 22-07-2019 21:08 IST
Chicago Bears training camp primer
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New faces: S Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, CB Buster Skrine, WR Cordarrelle Patterson, RB Mike Davis, RB David Montgomery, WR Riley Ridley, G Ted Larsen They're gone: S Adrian Amos, CB Bryce Callahan, RB Jordan Howard, WR Josh Bellamy, G Eric Kush, TE Dion Sims, WR Kevin White, K Cody Parkey

2019 snapshot: Virtually any defense that reaches the heights Chicago's did in 2018 is bound to regress some, but the Bears might be in for a larger slide than most. It's not the team's fault that Vic Fangio is gone, but Chicago could have promoted Ed Donatell to D-coordinator to maintain Fangio's scheme. Instead, Donatell followed Fangio to Denver, and Chuck Pagano took over the Bears' D. Pagano has ample talent at his disposal, but his defenses in Indianapolis were disappointing. Chicago also lost talent in the secondary, with Clinton-Dix and Skrine replacing Amos and Callahan, respectively, albeit at friendlier prices. The Bears put most of their efforts into supplementing the offense, as Davis and Montgomery should be an upgrade to Howard in the backfield, and Patterson and Ridley complement a talented receiving corps. The O-line remains solid, with James Daniels moving to center (Cody Whitehair will bump out to guard) and RT Bobby Massie retained (four years, $32 million), giving quarterback Mitchell Trubisky no excuses.

Chicago's kicking situation remains concerning, as Parkey was released one year into a big contract, and no obvious replacement emerged in the months that followed. Of the series of offseason additions at kickers, several already have been released, and those who made it through the summer did so despite missing multiple kicks at OTAs and minicamp. Worth the investment?

--Trubisky started near 100-1 at some books in the MVP derby. Perhaps he's worthy of that billing, but investors drove him up to 25-1 and even higher before training camp began. Bottom Line: Without much cap space or a first- or second-round pick, the Bears didn't have much room to upgrade, but they could have done more to fight defensive regression.

 

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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