The Rookies Part 2
Here is part 2 of the rookie quarterly report. As was the case with part
1
https://www.thebearsfanshop.com/Taylor-Gabriel-Jersey ,
I have posted a copy of the transcript as well. Enjoy!This is....The Bears Link
Film Study with Andrew Link.In this episode, which is the 2nd of 2 parts, I am
going to take a look at how the Bears rookies have performed through the first
quarter of the season. The first player we are going to talk about is what will
hopefully be the highest Bears draft pick for a while, inside linebacker Roquan
SmithA lot of people have wondered how well Smith is actually playing, due to
the fact that he isn¡¯t making a ton of ¡°splash¡± plays. While that is true, he
isn¡¯t making those types of plays...yet, he is making a tremendous impact on the
game. Smith reminds me a lot of Eddie Jackson from last year. He¡¯s been more
physical than I thought at times, but also getting overpowered at others, which
I expected. The speed and instincts are on full display but generally are a hair
late. The type of thing that comes with experience and becoming a professional.
I will touch on his struggles, really just physical limitations that we already
knew about, and the reasons why I believe Smith has a chance to supplant Luke
Kuechly as the new premier inside linebacker in the NFC.There aren¡¯t a lot of
examples of Smith playing poorly, and really, all but one are him just getting
physically overpowered. Which was something that I was worried about when he was
drafted. Rarely do you see Smith out of position, so his limitations right now
are things that he can change by getting stronger and using techniques.The Bears
are playing a cover-3 look on this play. But they show a cover-2 look at the
snap of the ball, but watch the safeties rotate. Adrian Amos drops into a
single-high look, while Eddie Jackson comes down into the intermediate zone. The
2 inside linebackers (Smith and Danny Trevathan), plus nickel corner Bryce
Callahan and Jackson, play quarters at the sticks, meaning each player gets a
quarter of the field. Let¡¯s start with the positives on this play. The Bears
force a check down to the running back David Johnson in the left flat. This play
should have forced a 3rd & 5 as the Bears have 3 players in position to make
the tackle. Roquan Smith comes from a LONG ways a way to get in position here.
This shows off his sideline-to-sideline speed, but he needs to play more
in-control of that speed. Instead of slowing down to contain Johnson from
cutting back inside, and forcing him into the waiting arms of Jackson and
Trevthan, he goes for the kill and ends up overrunning the play, which gets
Johnson and extra 10-12 yards and a first down.This is one of the more egregious
things that I see Smith do right now is overrun things. The game is still a
little quick for
him
Trey Burton Color
Rush Jersey , but that will work itself out as the season goes along.
Where Smith has really succeeded has been in coverage, which is one of the
reasons why people don¡¯t see the huge plays from him. Instead of making a ton of
plays, he simply prevents the other team from making them, which is just as
valuable. Against the run is where he struggles but it¡¯s also where we see his
instincts and athleticism shine the most. It is a joy to watch a linebacker
read, diagnose, scrape, and make a play against the run. If Smith can continue
to work in the film room and build a mental library, he will continue to grow
and succeed. This is a modern version of the toss sweep. Arizona show
misdirection (to freeze the linebackers) by putting Christian Kirk in a jet
sweep motion to left. The left tackle pulls around the outside, a combination of
tight end and wide receiver have to block Khalil Mack, and the center is
supposed to get out on the MIKE linebacker, Roquan Smith in this case.But when
you see an offensive lineman doing his best mummy impression, you know that the
defender won with play recognition and speed. Smith eventually undercuts the
pulling tackle and makes the play. Defense is all about the team though. Mack
almost blows this play up in the backfield, but he gets hooked a bit and can¡¯t
get off the blocks in time. But watch Kyle Fuller. He takes out the pulling
tackle, which causes a pileup that running back Chase Edmunds is forced to cut
inside of. Funnel the ball carrier to your inside help, that¡¯s good football.
Sticking with the instincts and athleticism theme, this is a prime example of
both, while also showing his coverage ability. Circling back to why Smith is
playing well by taking plays away instead of making plays. Ask yourself this:
How many tight ends or running backs have you seen kill the Bears this year?
Yeah, it really hasn¡¯t happened and 2 main reasons for that are Leonard Floyd
and Roquan Smith. The Bears again show a cover-2 look but back out of that into
a cover-1. Eddie Jackson rotates to the single-high safety look and Amos comes
down to play man coverage on the tight end. The inside linebackers are playing
the curl zones. Bradford¡¯s only option was to dump the ball off the running back
on this play. Smith breaks on this ball as soon as Bradford looks towards
Johnson. The closing speed is incredible. Smith closes the 5-yard gap by the
time the ball gets there and this play ends up going for a loss of 3 yards. This
is the type of play that will eventually go as a pick-6 as Smith digests more
film. One more play to illustrate just how good Smith is in coverage. These are
the plays that you can¡¯t see on the television broadcast, the angle simply isn¡¯t
there. There are dozens of these kinds of plays on Smith¡¯s film, he is just so
good in coverage. This isn¡¯t a huge shock to me as he showed this ability at
Georgia, but to see it immediately against NFL competition is pretty amazing.
The Bears are actually playing cover-2 this time, so this should look somewhat
familiar, except the Bears rotate Fuller to safety and Amos to the MIKE. How
cool is this coverage that Fangio runs here? He disguises the cover-2 inside of
the cover-2....mind. blown. What else might not look
familiar
Cody Parkey
Jersey , however, is how well Smith plays this coverage. Smith is playing
the WILL on this play, meaning that he has the Lance Briggs spot playing the
curl/seam. Crossing routes can often confuse players is a zone. But Smith passes
off Larry Fitzgerald and picks up David Johnson on a quick out and through the
scramble drill. This is an excellent play by a linebacker and another example of
why Smith is an integral part of this defense, even if he doesn¡¯t have big
numbers or splash plays. He is doing the dirty work very well, but the big plays
are coming, you can take that to the bank!As a bonus, I wanted to look at
undrafted rookie cornerback Kevin Toliver. I thought he was playing well while
watching live and the tape mostly backs that up. Sure, double moves have gotten
him a few times, but they do to all young corners. But he¡¯s physical against the
run and does very well in off-man coverage, which he¡¯s played exclusively so
far. I gotta say, Toliver reminds me a ton of Kyle Fuller. From the physicality
in the running game, to the penchant for playing off-man coverage, to they way
that they get into position is almost identical. At some point, the Bears are
going to need to shed some of the high-priced players on defense. If Toliver can
grow into the role opposite of Fuller and allow the Bears to part ways with
Prince Amukamara, that would be a huge help to the salary cap. Ryan Pace has
done an excellent job with undrafted free agents, and Toliver looks like the
next hit. Just watch how both Toliver and Fuller line up here. Don¡¯t they look
like twins? They even give up the same amount of cushion at the top of their
routes. Through a game and a half, Toliver has gotten his feet wet, but it looks
like Prince is ready to come back on the field. He is going to need a little
more time to become the player that many thought he could be coming out of LSU,
but for now, that seasoning will come in practice. I can¡¯t wait to see what
Toliver can turn into. He is exciting to watch and I would love to have another
corner like Fuller on the field. Just watch him stick his nose in there and tell
me he doesn¡¯t play like Fuller!That¡¯s going to wrap it up for part 2 of the
Quarterly Rookie Report on the Bears Link Film Study. I have some fun topics
planned for future episodes, so stay tuned for those.Until next time....Bear
down!As always, feel free to share your thought below!Chicago Bears at Miami
Dolphins Preview: Which Players to Watch For The Chicago Bears are coming off of
the bye and sitting atop the NFC North at 3-1. On Sunday afternoon, they will be
taking the field in South Beach against the Miami Dolphins. This game presents
possibly the biggest test of the season for the Bears new-look offense. The
Dolphins secondary is a far cry from the undermanned and overwhelmed secondary
of their Sunshine State companions. The better news
is
https://www.thebearsfanshop.com/Khalil-Mack-Jersey ,
this Dolphins offense is probably the worst they have faced outside of the
Arizona Cardinals, so the defense should have fun. The Dolphins¡¯ offensive line
is banged up and poor. Ryan Tannehill has a bum throwing shoulder, which could
mean we see Brock Osweiler at some point. Either way, I would expect another
banner day from this stellar Bears defense. Here is my list of players to keep
an eye on Sunday afternoon.Who to WatchCharles Leno Jr. & Bobby Massie: The
pass protection is going to be the absolute most important thing for the offense
this week. With Cameron Wake likely not playing, I would guess that the Dolphins
are going to blitz heavily, as they did last week. Robert Quinn was also very
destructive in the first half against the Bengals. I am not as worried about
Leno because he has the feet to cut off a speed rusher, but does Massie? If the
Dolphins move Quinn around the defense to get match-ups, keep an eye on him, as
he is by far the biggest threat in their front-7.Anthony Miller: I am curious to
see how much Miller ends up playing this week and how he is used. If he is
indeed full-go, then I would expect to see him utilized more as a downfield
threat than he has been so far. His average depth of target is 5.7 yards, which
ranks 118th in the NFL. Nagy has played the chess game within the gameplan and I
would expect to see him exploit that this week. Roy Robertson-Harris & Bilal
Nichols: Akiem Hicks might be the best defensive lineman on the team, but he
won¡¯t line up across from former Bear and current Dolphins left guard Ted
Larson. In passing situations, that pleasure figures to go to RRH and Nichols.
RRH has been very solid as a pass rusher and Nichols has steadily improved as
the season has gone along, including a much larger workload against the Bucs.
With the extra help likely going to the right side where Hicks and Khalil Mack
line up the most, there should be opportunities for both players to really
shine. Roquan Smith: I am still waiting for the Roquan Smith breakout game, and
I predict that it comes this week. Smith has been playing excellent football, he
just isn¡¯t making splash plays. The bye week will be the first time that he has
had to catch his breath and really dive into his strengths and weaknesses after
an extended contract impasse. Like Eddie Jackson last year, Smith is just a hair
late on making some plays, and on others, just a bit too out-of-control. I think
with these 3.1 games under his belt, the game slows down a bit and we see some
more impact plays from the rookie inside linebacker. What are your thoughts?
Which Bears players are you keeping an eye on this Sunday afternoon against the
Dolphins?Stay tuned for my Three Keys to the Game tomorrow morning and in case
you missed it, here is my What to Watch For from earlier today.