Saturday, October 5, 2024

Montez Sweat Admits Bears’ Scheme Is Way Better Than Washington’s

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Montez Sweat wasn’t happy when the news arrived that he’d been traded to the Chicago Bears. In fact, he was furious. He couldn’t believe the Washington Commanders could give him away like that, especially in the midst of the best season of his career. All he knew at the time was they’d shipped him to an organization that hadn’t done much winning in recent years. That was why he sent a clear message that he wasn’t playing a down for the Bears until he got his contract. The team obliged four days later.

Reluctantly, Sweat suited up. From that point on, his eyes were opened. Though the Bears weren’t quite a contender yet, they had pieces in place to become something more. That was especially true on the defensive side. Jaylon Johnson at cornerback. Tremaine Edmunds and T.J. Edwards at linebacker. Yet what really stood out to the eventual Pro Bowler was the system. Matt Eberflus utilized a scheme that allowed Sweat to play free. More importantly, it was based around all 11 guys playing as one. He told Dan Pompei of The Athletic that this defense is far better than what he left behind in Washington.

After becoming a Bear, Sweat tapped into his gifts in a way he had not previously.

In Washington, the scheme called for Sweat to read and think more while reacting to what teammates were doing. With the Bears, his only concern on most snaps is getting to the quarterback, and the coaches have tried to force opposing offenses to divert blocking attention away from him.

“It’s kind of based around me,” Sweat says. “In Washington, everyone was kind of like an alpha male and they are great players, but it was hard for guys to make sacrifices for all of us to be of one accord. In Chicago, we don’t have that problem. We all work together.”

Montez Sweat came from a somewhat toxic situation.

Jack Del Rio had been his defensive coordinator in Washington. His system was also 4-3 but based more around Cover-3 and quarters with an exotic blitz package. It was more about creating advantageous situations for certain players rather than instructing everybody on the field to pursue the ball. Eberflus understands that if everybody does their job from snap to snap, somebody will have a chance to make the play. By freeing Sweat from the necessity to read and react, he was allowed to use his power, length, and burst to attack up the field. Tackles had few answers for him once that happened.

It isn’t the first time the Bears have done something like this. Julius Peppers got the same treatment when he arrived in 2010. Across 48 games, he had 30.5 sacks, 46 QB hits, and 39 tackles for a loss. Based on Approximate Value, he had two of the three best seasons of his career in Chicago. That is what potentially awaits Montez Sweat, who is just as freakish as Peppers was. The best part is he’s still only 28 years old. Peppers was 30 when he arrived. The Bears have a larger window to take full advantage of his presence.

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mbearest
Jul 19, 2024 10:19 am

The cover 2 or most Zone defenses can’t survive without a pass rush and we’ve had So little for so many years. Eberflus had more to do with those collapses last year than any other aspect/player on this team. That said, I agree @timgjerde56, I think Eberflus will learn from that (at least I hope so). Lovie Constantly did the same thing and never really learned from it, at least while he was still here. You see it all over the league as far back as I can remember, defenses that stonewall the opposing offense for 3 1/2 quarters or… Read more »

timgjerde56
Jul 19, 2024 5:29 am

Sometimes I wonder if posters here think Flus lives in a vacuum or if he also watches tape with a focus on his own decisions of how to deploy the defense. I think his personal appearance and the way he seems to be handling CW indicates that he’s done some thinking and reevaluating. No doubt his decisions late in games were detrimental to the outcomes against Cleveland, Denver and Detroit. I’ve always hated Prevent as a strategy down to down late. One play here, one there to vary the look, sure. I think the players he has now and the… Read more »

jmscooby
Jul 19, 2024 3:47 am

Warren Sapp immediately put the opposing QB on a timer when the ball was snapped. When he came in overweight, the entire defense suffered. Tommie did that for about 2 years, and it made a difference. Billings is a very solid NT.

jmscooby
Jul 19, 2024 3:44 am

@bluridge You come off as a beaten down Bears fan. I’ve seen what the Tampa II can do when the Bucs had their SB run. Once they got a competent QB who could move the chains and scored a little, that D thrived with a lead. There’s a lot of focus on adding a DE but we are stacked better than last year at the position and TB did it with Simeon Rice and JAGs. It’s all about disruption at the snap from the 3T. EJax was a hole in the back end of our defense. Lynch used to bring… Read more »

bluridge
bluridge
Jul 18, 2024 4:06 pm

It all sounds good. Then 4th quarters happen. Flus the ultimate choke yourself in a prevent D.

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