Bears injury report: Trey Burton DNP, David Montgomery limited Wednesday

The Bears released their first injury report of Week 11, where RB David Montgomery was a surprising name that popped up on the report.

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The Chicago Bears (4-5) are preparing for a Week 11 primetime matchup against the Los Angeles Rams (5-4), and they’re starting the week off more banged up than usual.

After suffering a calf injury against the Detroit Lions last Sunday, tight end Trey Burton did not practice Wednesday. The Bears are thin at the tight end position, with Burton’s injury and Adam Shaheen’s benching.

Ben Braunecker scored a touchdown against the Lions last week, and he figures to get more looks heading into Sunday’s game against the Rams.

But the surprise name that popped up on Wednesday’s injury report is rookie running back David Montgomery, who was limited with an ankle injury.

After suffering a gruesome elbow injury in the first quarter against Detroit, Danny Trevathan did not practice Wednesday. Matt Nagy hasn’t given an official update on Trevathan, but Nagy didn’t seem optimistic and said it’s possible he’ll join defensive tackle Akiem Hicks on injured reserve.

Linebacker Isaiah Irving continues to nurse a quad injury that has held him out for the past two games. Practice squad linebacker James Vaughters has seen action against the Philadelphia Eagles and Detroit Lions as a result.

If Irving can’t go again Sunday, expect Vaughters to be elevated to the active roster.

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Players of Week 10 awards hit Cowboys with disheartening double-whammy

The Dallas defense has, for the third time in five games, allowed an opponent to collect Offensive Player of the Week honors.

It’s happened again. For the third time in ten weeks of regular season play, an opponent of the Dallas Cowboys has been named their conference’s offensive Player of the Week. This time, it’s Vikings running back Dalvin Cook, who compiled 97 ground yards and a rushing touchdown on Sunday night in Arlington, and then added 86 receiving yards for good measure.

Cook was his team’s leading rusher as well as its primary receiver; his 183 scrimmage yards on 33 touches accounted for over half of Minnesota’s total offensive output for the game.

Cook, in his third season after being drafted in the second round out of Florida State, is currently the league’s top runner with 991 ground yards after 10 games. Despite a reputation across his first two pro seasons for being injury-prone, Cook is suddenly on pace for a monster year in 2019 that could net him more than just the rushing title.

Cook is just the latest to have a breakout performance against a Cowboys defense that is proving to be barely a shadow of the unit that fans were promised coming into the regular season. Week 5’s loss to Green Bay resulted in NFC Offensive Player of the Week honors for Packers running back Aaron Jones, the first rusher to ever score four touchdowns against a Dallas squad in a single game. Jets quarterback Sam Darnold won AFC honors a week later, returning from mononucleosis to torch the Cowboys’ secondary in Week 6.

Over the Cowboys’ last five games, the defense has allowed the Offensive Player of the Week to emerge out of three of them. Lions stars like wide receivers Kenny Golladay and Marvin Jones, Jr. and rookie tight end T.J. Hockenson may be salivating right about now. Quarterback Matthew Stafford is likely lobbying Detroit’s medical staff hard to allow him to return to action after missing last week. But at this rate, even backups Jeff Driskel and J.D. McKissic have to like their chances should they step into a starting role once again.

If the news of Cook’s honor didn’t rub in a sickening loss quite enough for Cowboys fans, the Player of the Week announcements added an extra sucker punch on the AFC side.

Jets safety Jamal Adams, who the Cowboys tried unsuccessfully to acquire before the season’s trade deadline, went on to win the Defensive Player of the Week award for the game he had in Week 10. Adams racked up nine tackles, two sacks, two forced fumbles, and a fumble-return touchdown against the Giants.

A defensive stat line like that sure would have come in handy against Cook. Maybe it would been enough to make someone else the Week 10 NFC Offensive Player of the Week.

For a group that had its sights set on elite-caliber accolades, the Cowboys’ defense has become a clear league leader in letting their opponents shine on offense.

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All eyes are on Marshon Lattimore on first Saints injury report

The New Orleans Saints will travel to take on Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Week 11, but Marshon Lattimore and Andrus Peat are fighting injuries.

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The New Orleans Saints will travel to Tampa Bay to take on the Buccaneers in a Week 11 NFC South showdown. This will be the second matchup between the two teams, the first being a 31-24 Saints victory in Week 5.

The injury report this week will be crucially important as all eyes will be on cornerback Marshon Lattimore after a hamstring injury during Week 10. Lattimore has proven to be the best secondary player on the Saints defense, and with Buccaneer’s wideout Mike Evans lurking, an additional challenge has been wrinkled in to the Saints’ game plan.

The initial injury reports published by the Saints and the Buccaneers on Wednesday are the initial reports for the week. A second, updated report will be released on Thursday. The final injury report with game status for certain players will be issued on Friday. Daily changes in practice participation are noted in bold text.

From the Saints

  • KR/WR Deonte Harris (Hamstring) Did not participate
  • CB Marshon Lattimore (Hamstring) Did not participate
  • G Andrus Peat (Forearm) Did not participate
  • FB Zach Line (Knee) Limited
  • LB Demario Davis (Hamstring) Limited
  • CB Patrick Robinson (Hamstring) Full

From the Buccaneers

  • CB Carlton Davis (Hip) Did not participate
  • T Demar Dotson (Non injury related) Did not participate
  • OLB Anthony Nelson (Hamstring) Did not participate
  • CB M.J. Stewart (Knee) Did not participate
  • G Ali Marpet (Ankle) Limited
  • OLB Carl Nassib (Hamstring) Limited

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Cowboys to attend NFL-orchestrated workout for Colin Kaepernick

The Dallas Cowboys will send a representative to Saturday’s league-organized workout for QB Colin Kaepernick, a team insider says.

It’s been over 1,000 days since Colin Kaepernick last saw action during an NFL game. In five meaningful seasons as a San Francisco 49er, he amassed over 12,000 passing yards, 2,300 rushing yards, and was responsible for 85 touchdowns. At just 32 years old, he holds the league record for most rushing yards by a quarterback in a single game, 181. He also holds the record for the most rushing yards by a quarterback in a single postseason, 264. He led his team to six playoff games and an appearance in Super Bowl XLVII.

All those digits aside, though, it’s never really been about numbers with Kaepernick. His political activism made him radioactive in the eyes of the league’s owners once he opted out of his contract with the 49ers in 2017 prior to a team-conveyed imminent release. Now, three years later, when Kaepernick conducts a private workout – organized by the league without his input – for teams who are interested in auditioning the six-year veteran, the story will, in large part, be about numbers. Namely, how many teams send a representative to the cattle-call session?

The Dallas Cowboys will be among that number.

The workout is set to take place in Atlanta this Saturday and is open to all 32 teams in the league. Given the weekend timing and the travel schedules of teams playing road contests, it is thought that few (if any) head coaches or general managers will be present. Instead, most teams will likely be represented in person by lower assistants or scouts.

Coach Jason Garrett would not confirm the Cowboys’ attendance when asked for comment during his Wednesday press conference.

“I’m not really in-tuned to that situation very much,” Garrett said, per Charean Williams of ProFootballTalk. “We have personnel people who evaluate all guys who have an opportunity to hopefully help our team.”

Starting quarterback Dak Prescott is having a transcendent season for Dallas. But behind him, the club has Cooper Rush backing him up. Rush, an undrafted third-year player out of Central Michigan, has completed one pass for two yards on three attempts in his career. Many teams have managed to keep rolling despite losing their starting passer this season- Indianapolis, Carolina, New Orleans, and Kansas City, to name a few. The Cowboys’ season, though, would almost assuredly collapse immediately were Prescott to go down with an injury.

With his grievance against the NFL (accusing the league’s owners of colluding to prevent his employment on a roster) settled back in February, it has been widely thought that Kaepernick would eventually get another chance to latch on with a team. Kaepernick, for his part, has stayed ready during his entire time away.

There’s a lot to unpack about the way the one-man combine has come about. It’s a league-arranged affair. It came with terribly short notice, for teams as well as for Kaepernick. And while a list of the teams in attendance is not expected to be made public, it’s a virtual guarantee that note will be taken (by somebody, somewhere) of which teams do not send a representative, even if they weren’t seriously in the market for a quarterback anyway. And beyond all of that, there’s the simple fact that any team who wanted to kick the tires on Kaepernick could have done so at any moment of their choosing, at their own facility, without 31 other teams also participating.

It reeks of a dog-and-pony show. But with the Cowboys’ backup situation far more tenuous than most teams’, the organization appears ready to play along.

Half of the teams in the league have had to give meaningful snaps this season to a quarterback who was not their preseason Plan A. With that rate of attrition, it was literally just a matter of time before someone called the Nevada alum for a tryout. And even though they haven’t been what’s defined Kaepernick’s career, numbers may just be the thing that resurrects his NFL dream.

Because it only takes one team to give him a second chance.

NFL.com Week 11 Power Rankings: Bears’ win doesn’t change much

The Bears snapped their four-game losing streak with a win over the Lions, but they didn’t crack the top 20 in power rankings.

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The Chicago Bears snapped their four-game losing streak with a divisional win over the Detroit Lions in Week 10. But even a win wasn’t enough to change the minds of many when it comes to the Bears.

The Bears moved up one spot to No. 21 in NFL.com’s Week 11 Power Rankings, where they rank just three spots ahead of the Lions.

Things got more interesting than they should have in the final minutes, but the Bears held on against a Lions team missing Matthew Stafford. The Bears offense managed just 20 yards total in their first four possessions, a funk that summoned memories of Week 9, when Chicago managed just 9 total net yards in the first half against the Eagles.

The turning point Sunday came on Chicago’s final possession of the first half: A 10-play, 80-yard march that ended when Mitchell Trubisky found Ben Braunecker in the end zone for the go-ahead score. Trubisky threw two more touchdown passes in the third quarter, taking control of the game and releasing the pressure valve at Soldier Field.

Though the Bears’ attack remains The Problem in Chicago, you can see a few beams of sunshine breaking through the clouds in the last two weeks. Can they build on it?

While the Bears remain “in the hunt” for the playoffs, they’ll have to prove that they can beat a team with a winning record before deserving a higher ranking.

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Bears have highest drop rate in NFL through Week 10

Nothing has been working for the Bears’ offense this season. So it’s no wonder why they lead the NFL in the highest drop rate.

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When you have a struggling offense, there’s little room for error. Unfortunately for the Chicago Bears, there have been plenty of errors over the first 10 weeks of the 2019 season.

And it doesn’t just fall on third-year quarterback Mitchell Trubisky, who deserves a fair share of the blame for the offense’s struggles.

When your young quarterback is struggling, you need to do everything you can to help him. Establish the run game (which has been inconsistent and suspect this season), give him a clean pocket (which hasn’t always been the case this season) and have your playmakers come down with the ball.

Given that most of these factors — including the quarterback’s play — haven’t been working, it’s no wonder the Bears boast the NFL’s 29th-ranked offense.

In fact, the Bears have the highest drop rate in the NFL at 7.36 percent. Of 299 attempts, Bears receivers have 22 drops, which also ranks highest in the league. They’re the only team that has a drop rate greater than 7 percent.

The Bears have two players that rank in the top 35 in the NFL in drops: running back Tarik Cohen (6) and receiver Allen Robinson (3).

This certainly doesn’t let Trubisky off the hook, who needs to do a better job of giving his receivers a chance to catch the ball, for the offense’s struggles.

But Trubisky would certainly benefit from better pass protection from his offensive line, which ranks 22nd in the league with 27 sacks allowed through the first 10 weeks.

Which isn’t to say that Trubisky hasn’t had a hand in several of those sacks. You could argue that most of his five sacks last Sunday against the Detroit Lions were on him.

Simply put, the entire offense needs to do better. It’s not just one guy. It would be easier if it were.

Second-half Saints schedule sets up for a strong playoff push

The New Orleans Saints strength of schedule is mediocre. The Green Bay Packers have it easy but the San Francisco 49ers are in for a shock.

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The second half of the NFL regular season is upon us, and it couldn’t have started worse for the New Orleans Saints. They air-balled what should have been an easy win over the Atlanta Falcons last Sunday, losing their grip on the second playoff seed in the NFC as the Green Bay Packers beat the Carolina Panthers and the top-ranked San Francisco 49ers suffered their first setback of the year to the Seattle Seahawks.

But Saints fans should feel optimistic about their fortunes moving forward, and their team’s chance to recover. New Orleans has just four games against opponents with winning records, including the 49ers (8-1), Panthers twice (5-4), and Indianapolis Colts (5-4), as well as the middling Tennessee Titans (5-5). There’s plenty of time for correction and improvement ahead of them.

According to NFL Research, the Saints’ second half schedule ranks near the middle of the pack, with their remaining opponents sharing a combined record of 33-31-0 (.516). Here’s how they rank among their peers:

Compare that to what other NFC playoff contenders are facing. The San Francisco 49ers are set to play the second-toughest schedule down the stretch, with their future opponents having gone 40-25-1 (.614); their odds of holding onto the top playoff seed in the conference are slim. However, the Green Bay Packers are in good position to maintain their one-game lead on the Saints in playoff seeding, with a relatively weak strength of schedule of 25-30-1 (.455) ahead of them. That’s the ninth-easiest second half schedule in the NFL.

As for the two-team race in the NFC South: the Carolina Panthers are still a few games behind the Saints, but their remaining strength of schedule at 32-32 (.500) is slightly easier to navigate than what New Orleans will see. If Carolina handles its business and the Saints continue to play down to their competition, it’s not impossible to see a path for the Panthers to steal a divisional title in the season’s final weeks. If New Orleans plays like they did last Sunday, they could be in for a rude awakening no matter how favorable their schedule looks on paper.

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Will Week 11’s Saints-Buccaneers game be broadcast in your area?

Week 11 should be a rebound game for the New Orleans Saints against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Will the game broadcast be available for you?

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The New Orleans Saints are coming off of one of their worst performances in recent memory, having been steamrolled by the lowly Atlanta Falcons last Sunday. The Saints played poorly as an entire unit, looking more like how the almost-winless Falcons were expected to perform. A stagnant offense and self-inflicted defensive penalties kept the Saints far from reach of a victory against their NFC South archrival.

Week 11 should be a rebound game for New Orleans, as they travel to take on the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Their matchup earlier this season aside, Tampa Bay has always proven to be a tricky opponent for the Saints, especially when the Buccaneers get to play in Raymond James Stadium.

New Orleans raised a lot of questions last week about specific weaknesses within the offense, especially along the offensive line. A solid performance from quarterback Drew Brees and the rest of the offense would go a long way in assuaging any fears and questions that arose in their Week 10 outing. You will not want to miss the Saints take on the Buccaneers as they try to rebound back into the top spot in the NFC.

The broadcast map from 506 Sports highlights the coverage for each of the games during the early slate on FOX. The markets in orange will show the Saints-Buccaneers game, with Thom Brennaman and Chris Spielman on the call. The late afternoon slate, highlighted in blue, will feature the Arizona Cardinals and San Francisco 49ers. This also means that if you are in a blue zone , you will not receive any game during the early slot on FOX. Those areas in green will catch the week’s other NFC South matchup between the Atlanta Falcons and the Carolina Panthers. Finally, the majority of the country will receive the Dallas Cowboys and Detroit Lions kickoff, as denoted in red.

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Bears S Eddie Jackson is feeling the stress as he searches for first takeaway this season

Bears S Eddie Jackson was known for his ballhawking ability in 2018. But that hasn’t been the case in 2019, and he’s feeling the pressure.

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Last season, Chicago Bears safety Eddie Jackson was considered a turnover machine. At one point in 2018, Jackson had forced turnovers in three of the first four games.

Jackson capped an All-Pro season with six interceptions, two forced fumbles and amassed five touchdowns in his first two seasons.

But 2019 has been a different story for Jackson, who has failed to notch a single takeaway in nine games. Why is that?

“You know I really can’t even answer that,” Jackson said Tuesday, via NBC Sports Chicago. “We’ve just got to continue flying around and try to make plays on the ball.”

“That’s like a trick question – I really don’t know how to answer that. You’ve got to fly around. Guys got to make plays on the ball, strip the ball, or get in position to make plays and try to intercept it and things like that. Really don’t know.”

In fact, it’s approaching the one-year mark since Jackson last scored a touchdown. That came last Thanksgiving against the Detroit Lions, where Jackson intercepted Matthew Stafford at a critical moment in the fourth quarter that gave the Bears a lead they wouldn’t relinquish.

But it’s now been 12 games since his last takeaway, and Jackson is feeling the pressure.

“This is the longest it’s ever been in my life , playing football, without an interception, without a touchdown – ever,” he said. “So it’s getting stressful. I’m just happy we won the last game, but just being that type of competitor, you want the ball. It’s going to come, that’s all I can tell myself.”

Over his first two seasons, Jackson has established a reputation for always being around the ball, something that hasn’t been true this season. While he’s not making excuses, including learning Chuck Pagano’s scheme, he also knows that he needs to put himself in better situations to make plays.

“I’m one of my biggest critics, so I just feel like I need to get in more positions to make plays, if that makes any sense,” he said. “Like I said, it’s a different system, there are different things, so you’ve just got to buy in and control what you can control. And that’s dominating my square and my man. Wherever I’m in, just got to dominate that.”

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Chicago vs. Los Angeles: Which Rams player would you want on the Bears?

The Bears will play the Rams in a primetime matchup, which features a ton of talent. But which Rams player would you want in Chicago?

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The Chicago Bears (4-5) will travel to Los Angeles to take on the Rams (5-4) in a rematch of last season’s defensive showdown.

But make no mistake, these two teams are far from the teams they both were a season ago. The Bears, who were deemed Super Bowl contenders, just broke a four-game losing streak and while they remain “in the hunt,” their chance at the playoffs are slim.

Then there are the Rams, who are coming off a Super Bowl appearance but appear headed in the wrong direction. While their defense continues to be a solid unit — led by reigning Defensive Player of theYear Aaron Donald — it’s their offense that has been struggling of late. The offensive line is a mess, and quarterback Jared Goff has looked as bad, if not worse, than his buddy Bears quarterback Mitchell Trubisky at times.

But there’s still a ton of talent on the Rams — both on offense but especially defense.

Which begs the question — which Rams player would you want on the Bears?

VOTE!

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