The Chicago Bears offense didn’t just spend the bye week resting and recharging. That isn’t how the NFL works. If you don’t use that extra time to clean up certain issues, it is a complete waste. Shane Waldron and the rest of his staff understood that. If this team wanted to make the playoffs, they needed to pinpoint the most pressing issues and strive to correct them. It didn’t take long for Waldron to identify what he and his players had to get fixed once everybody returned for practice.
Poor starts have plagued the offense all year. Chicago currently ranks 31st in the NFL in 1st quarter points, averaging 1.7 per game. Meanwhile, two of their biggest rivals, Minnesota and Green Bay, rank 1st and 3rd respectively. If the Bears want to make the playoffs, that can’t continue as the schedule gets tougher in November and December. A good place to start would be their opening drives. In six games, the Bears have punted on four of them. The other two were a field goal and a missed field goal. No touchdowns.
Shane Waldron is trying to correct a persistent issue.
This season isn’t isolated for the Bears offense when it comes to early points. They were 20th last season, too. Ironically, they were 11th in 2022, a year they were the league’s worst team. Still, one cannot understate the importance of scoring early. Of the ten teams who finished highest in 1st quarter points last season, seven made the playoffs and two others had winning records. Thanks to their excellent defense, Chicago has been winning despite this, but such slow starts make success much harder.
Shane Waldron knows this well. In 2022, the one year he made the playoffs as Seattle’s offensive coordinator, they ranked sixth in 1st quarter points. The Bears can be forgiven for these struggles. It’s a brand new system they’re trying to learn, and they also have a rookie quarterback. It takes time to learn how to execute right out of the gate. Thankfully, they’ve been granted a grace period of poor opponents over the past month. That time is running out, though, and they know it.
Subscribe to the BFR Youtube channel and ride shotgun with Dave and Ficky as they break down Bears football like nobody else.
When I lived in Oswego, our big rival was Morris. Every time we played them the first play Morris would run was a bomb. They scored on many of them. It put us on our heels right out of the gate. Maybe the Bears should try a big strike from the jump. It would definitely be a change from the first play handoff they seem to run every game. Send a message. Just a thought….
Lot of good game plans on here. This obviously has been my biggest issue with this bears offense. But I like the come out the gates and air it out would be nice. And honestly this commanders secondary would make for a great test subject. Would love to see Rome get his deep looks in this game.
Great points from @David, just below this post. Also, I think there’s a component of adjustment for the defense. During the first few drives, the opposing offense usually does all right, and then later in the game the Bears defense puts the clamps on for the most part. I suspect this is due to adjustments made to shut down whatever is working for the opposing offense, and if that offense has no answers, well, then the Bears will probably hold them to 21 points or less. Score 22, and the game is in the Bears’ win column.
One thing I would love to see is not going for simple run plays on 1st and 2nd down right out of the gate. It forces a 3rd and long on every opening drive almost this year. Get more creative on that first series. I know we are trying to establish the run early, but there’s more than 1 way to do that. I would start with a play action on the first play. Defenses are looking for the run on the first play. Put them on their heels from the jump. The running game can also be opened up… Read more »
This news just in; Waldron’s 2nd big emphasis was scoring more points.