Behind Enemy Lines: Previewing Week 11 with Bears Wire

Behind Enemy Lines: Previewing the Lions Week 11 matchup against Chicago with Bears Wire

The Detroit Lions kick off the home portion of their NFC North schedule in Week 11, welcoming the Chicago Bears to Ford Field on Sunday. It’s the first of two divisional home game in four days for Detroit.

The Bears have been an enigmatic team in 2023. On their way to a 3-7 record, they’ve dealt with injuries and a recent trade that bolstered their defense.

To help dive deeper into this week’s opponent, I called upon Bears Wire editor Alyssa Barbieri for some questions and answers about Chicago.

No ‘Sewell Bowl’ between Lions and Bears in Week 11

The Sewell brothers were set to play in Week 11, but Bears LB Noah was ruled out with a knee injury

The much-anticipated first NFL meeting between the Sewell brothers will have to wait a little longer. Detroit right tackle Penei Sewell and Bears LB Noah Sewell were set to face off in Week 11 in Ford Field, but an injury will keep it from happening.

The Bears ruled Noah Sewell, a rookie from Oregon, out with a knee injury. Big brother Penei, now in his third season with the Lions, will look to extend his impressive shutout streak in pass protection without having to block his little brother.

Noah Sewell has played sparingly as a fifth-round rookie. He’s been on the field for just 25 total snaps across 10 games. This will be the first NFL contest he’s missed due to injury.

The “Sewell Bowl” could still happen in Week 14 in Chicago, a game that the Bears will host after coming off their bye week. Their brother Nephi is a linebacker for the Saints as well; Penei and Nephi will square off in Week 13 if Nephi is active for the game. He was inactive when Noah’s Bears met the Saints in Week 9.

Lions final injury report for Week 11: Jonah Jackson and Isaiah Buggs OUT

Lions final injury report for Week 11: Jonah Jackson and Isaiah Buggs OUT against the Bears

As has been the case for most of the season, the Detroit Lions will play without their desired starting five on the offensive line on Sunday. Pro Bowl left guard Jonah Jackson will miss the Week 11 matchup with the Chicago Bears due to a wrist and ankle injury.

Jackson is one of two Lions ruled out for the NFC North matchup. Defensive tackle Isaiah Buggs will also miss the game due to an illness that kept him out of practice all week as well.

Beyond those two, the Lions are relatively healthy. Reserve defensive back Ifeatu Melifonwu is the only other player who has an injury status. Mlifonwu, who plays almost exclusively on special teams, is questionable with a hand injury.

The likely replacement for Jackson is to insert rookie Colby Sorsdal into the lineup. That could mean a shift from right guard to LG for Graham Glasgow, as Sorsdal has worked primarily on the right side at both guard and tackle. Expect rookie Brodric Martin to take Buggs’ spot in the DL rotation.

Film Review: Aidan Hutchinson is playing well and his pass rush is still there

Aidan Hutchinson is playing well and the game film how how well he’s rushing the passer in this tape breakdown from Russell Brown

To nobody’s surprise, Detroit Lions edge rusher Aidan Hutchinson is the team leader with 4.5 sacks. In addition to that, his 48 quarterback pressures are second-best in the NFL. Despite that production, Hutchinson hasn’t recorded a sack in four straight games.

In his young NFL career, it’s the longest streak he’s had without a sack.

That said, Hutchinson is still playing at a high level for the Detroit Lions defense. This week, he matches up against a Chicago Bears offensive line that has given up 30 sacks this year (7th-worst in the NFL).

When looking back at his last game against the Los Angeles Chargers, you can still see the motor running hot when he steps onto the field. Additionally, he’s very close to going off. Let’s jump into the film room to see how well Hutchinson is playing for the Lions.

Going back to the tape against the Chargers, one thing that immediately stands out with Hutchinson is that he was dropping into coverage more. That could be a sign for things to come but there’s also credit due to Aaron Glenn for trying anything and everything with his defense.

That said, we want to focus on the play above where Hutch is aligned in a wide-9 technique (outside shoulder of a tight end). On this play, the Lions are only going to rush four defenders. One of the keys to watch is how much depth (pause at 7 seconds), Hutchinson is getting into the pocket. All of the other defenders are playing at the line-of-scrimmage.

When watching Hutchinson, he makes good initial contact where it looks like he’s trying to attempt some speed-to-power. His initial punch knocks the right tackle back. As the right tackle tries to fight back, Hutchinson counters inside with a terrific spin move. Even though he’s close to sacking the quarterback, he’s a step too late. However, this forces Justin Herbert to throw off a bad base and it causes the pass to be higher than it needs to be.

Moving to the next play, the Chargers come out in a shotgun formation with their 11 personnel (one tight end and one running back). Aligned in a 9-technique (outside shoulder of the tight end), you will see Hutchinson. On his rush, he uses speed-to-power and trusts that the combination will be enough to get the quarterback.

While he doesn’t bring the quarterback down, he forces Herbert out of the pocket. Unfortunately, the quarterback extends the play and just makes a great throw for the first down.

Particularly in this game, it felt like Hutchinson aligned much wider. I think part of that was to prevent him from getting chipped by the tight end and the hope was that he’d have more free releases to the quarterback. The only downside is that Hutchinson then has a longer path to get to the quarterback. As we saw in the game, he threatened the pocket but just seemed to be a step late almost every time. Sometimes that just how this game goes.

Moving to the last play, Hutchinson is once again aligned in a 9-technique (outside shoulder of the tight end). Rather than focusing on the pass-rush, I wanted to pay close attention to this run stop from Hutchinson.

Prior to the snap, the tight end exit motions to the right and with that, Hutchinson slides inside a step or two. Once the ball is snapped and the play starts to develop, it appears to be a quarterback zone read or potentially an inside zone run.

Either way, Hutchinson does a great job staying square to the line-of-scrimmage and bending to the football. He makes a great tackle on Austin Ekeler and it leads to a limited gain. This type of play and overall technique from Hutchinson will be key as the Lions get ready to play a team such as the Bears with Justin Fields at quarterback. In that game, he will have to be patient but also play disciplined football so Fields doesn’t get to hit the open field consistently.

Overall, Hutchinson is a key part to the Lions success this year. I know there are times that it feels like he’s hitting a spin move too frequently or is just getting doubled or tripled team. However, he’s still playing at a high level and it feels like he’s very close to having a big game. Potentially a statement game. It could be one of those games where he reminds everyone how good he really is. Could it happen this week against a Bears football team he’s had plenty of success against? I think so.

 

David Montgomery makes the Lions-Bears matchup special

David Montgomery makes the Lions-Bears matchup special in his 1st game against his old team

Players leaving a team through free agency is never a fun or easy task for the team or the player. In the case of most they are drafted to a team out of college, and become men in and around that team, before starting families of their own all while playing a game for a living.

In the case of David Montgomery, this game may be in Detroit but he will be facing a familiar uniform on defense for the first time in a while.

After spending a college career turning into one of the better college running back prospects in recent memory. His career at Iowa State was good enough to earn him being drafted in the third round of the 2019 NFL Draft. From there he and Tarik Cohen became a more than viable running back duo at a time when the Chicago Bears weren’t bottom dwellers of the division.

Fast forward to 2023 and Montgomery finds himself in another running back duo again but is the elder statesman this time.

What the Lions have built with Montgomery and first-round pick Jahmyr Gibbs could be something special. It took some time, and Montgomery missed of it, but the Lions staff has seen what they can achieve. Montgomery is using his bully running style to attack defenses up the middle once again while Gibbs uses his quick feet to work outside the numbers.

That bullying style is going to be on full display as Montgomery faces his former team on Sunday. The ability to play behind an offensive line that allows him to run with his style is not something he has overlooked since arriving either.

“It’s more of a blessing than anything, just being able to have such a profound group in front of me, I think even when I was in high school and sometimes in college, I never knew what that really felt like, but to have it here and feel it, super, super dope. I think also it gives like me an opportunity to showcase what I can actually do…”

Behind that offensive line, Montgomery has gained 501 rushing yards in five games and is averaging a career-high in yards per game so far. Against the Bears, Montgomery isn’t concerned about his stats, he wants to keep things simple.

“I’m just going to be me, man,” he responded when asked what he hopes to do against his former team. “I’m not going to try to play out of the lines of myself, I’m just going to be me. I think me being who I am is enough. So, I’ll just go out, play the way that I play, play the way that I know how and hope that we execute properly and walk out of there with a dub.”

Jahmyr Gibbs has a fantastic matchup advantage against the Bears defense

Lions RB Jahmyr Gibbs has a fantastic matchup advantage against the Bears defense

Jahmyr Gibbs is set to face the Chicago Bears for the first time in his NFL career. It could be a special Sunday for the Lions rookie running back.

Chicago’s run defense is very good. No team allows fewer yards per carry than the Bears and their 3.2 YPC figure. Over their last six games, the Bears allow under 50 yards per game on the ground.

However, teams that can throw the ball to their running backs have eaten the Bears alive. Chicago’s defense ranks at or very near the bottom in all of the following metrics:

  • Receptions by RB (60) – 30th
  • Receiving yards by RB (615) – 32nd
  • Yards per reception (10.3) – 32nd
  • Receiving TDs by RB (5) – 32nd
  • Missed tackles on RBs as receivers (28) – 32nd

Safeties Elijah Hicks and Jaquan Brisker each struggle in coverage against both TEs and RBs, but it’s most pronounced with LB Tremaine Edmunds. He’s bad at covering RBs, allowing a completion percentage over 90 percent— but even worse at tackling them after the catch. Both Edmunds (15%) and Hicks (30%) have very high missed tackle rates in the passing game.

Now factor in the emergence of Jahmyr Gibbs as one of the NFL’s most prolific receivers out of the backfield already. In seven games, Gibbs has caught 31 passes for 200 yards. Alvin Kamara of the Saints is the only RB who averages more catches per game than Gibbs.

Gibbs’ ability to quickly transition from receiver to runner should allow the rookie to capitalize on the receiving opportunities against Chicago. Gibbs has racked up 142 yards after the catch in the last three games on 17 receptions.

The Lions haven’t used Gibbs much outside of a safety outlet or a quick-hit target on designed short-yardage throws. He has seen scant action as a slot receiver, with just 17 snaps in his seven games. Those 142 yards after the catch are actually 12 more than the total receiving yards he’s gained.

Yet over the summer in training camp and joint practices, as well as in college at Alabama, Gibbs proved to be a very polished, dynamic route runner from the slot. He has enough receiving acumen to play outside WR, too. That’s something Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson can lean on in Week 11 against the Bears and their revamped pass rush of late.

Chicago might be able to slow down Gibbs on the ground. But he’s an absolute mismatch for the Lions as a receiving threat. Just for good measure, fellow Lions RB David Montgomery and Craig Reynold are both excellent (albeit low-volume) receivers, too.

All statistical data courtesy of SIS Sports

 

Sounds like the end of the Lions line for OL Halapoulivaati Vaitai

The Lions playing career of OL Halapoulivaati Vaitai has almost certainly come to an end with his back injury

Have we seen the last of Halapoulivaati Vaitai playing in Detroit? It sure sounds like it.

Vaitai was placed on injured reserve this week with a back injury. The move comes after Vaitai, the Lions’ starting right guard, was inactive for the Week 10 game against the Chargers coming out of Detroit’s bye week.

Head coach Dan Campbell acknowledged that this back issue is an extension of the same injury that caused Vaitai, 30, to miss the entire 2022 season. Vaitai also missed time earlier this season with a knee injury. Campbell left the door cracked open for a return later this year, but for all intents and purposes, Big V’s 2023 season is over.

“That’s hard to say. I think it’s probably unlikely, but I don’t want to ever – never say never,” Campbell said of a potential Vaitai return this season. “But I would say it’s probably unlikely.”

The injury almost certainly closes the door on Vaitai’s playing career in Detroit. He’s a pending free agent, thanks to a reworked contract that leaves his 2024 season as a void year. Players over 30 with chronic back issues typically don’t find much of a market, not even with a team that genuinely appreciates all that Vaitai offers off the field.

Campbell might have hinted at a non-playing future in Detroit for Vatitai if he chooses to retire.

“I told him, we want him around here,” Campbell said of Vaitai. “He wants to be around and he’s still very much a part of us and what we are here.”

It was not said in the context of anything beyond this year, but it’s hard not to read between Campbell’s lines. Vaitai has been a fantastic mentor for young right tackle Penei Sewell, and Big V’s leadership and calm understanding of the game would seem to lend itself to a potential coaching future.

A graphic look at the contrast between Jared Goff and Justin Fields

Jared Goff and Justin Fields have a major contrast in passing style and effectiveness

Nobody would ever confuse Lions QB Jared Goff and Bears QB Justin Fields. They play the position about as divergently as two quarterbacks can. Those contrasting styles will be on display in Week 11 when Goff and the Lions host Fields and the Bears, presuming Fields returns to the Chicago lineup.

There is now a graphic representation of just how different Goff and Fields like to operate as passers. The percentage thrown to the middle of the field goes up to the right. The success rate scales with the higher values at the top.

You’ll find Goff on an island in the far upper right corner. No quarterback uses the middle of the field more than Goff and the Lions offense, edging past Miami’s Tua Tagovailoa for the highest rate of middle-of-field throws. Goff’s EPA, or expected points added, is near the top, too.

Fields is in the opposite corner. Only two QBs throw over the middle at a lower rate than Fields. Chicago’s success rate when Fields throws to the middle of the field is below average; the egregiousness of Daniel Jones skews the chart view.

This is more about style of play and offensive scheme than being inherently good or bad. However, Goff is really great at using the middle of the field and does it frequently, while Fields trends a lot closer to the bottom in both usage and effectiveness.

The data was compiled and put into handy table form by Judah Fortgang of PFF.

Lions 1st injury report for Week 11 vs. the Bears: 2 players sit out

Lions 1st injury report for Week 11 vs. the Bears: 2 players sit out and 3 more were limited in Wednesday’s practice

The first official Week 11 injury report from the Detroit Lions came out after Wednesday’s practice session.The first practice participation report ahead of Sunday’s matchup with the Chicago Bears reflects how well the Lions fared on the injury front in the Week 10 win over the Los Angeles Chargers.

Two players did not practice at all on Wednesday: left guard Jonah Jackson and defensive tackle Isaiah Buggs. Jackson was listed with a wrist injury as well as an ankle designation. Buggs was out with an undisclosed illness.

Three more Lions were limited:

WR Kalif Raymond (ankle)

S Ifeatu Melifonwu (hand)

DT Levi Onwuzurike (hip)

One player no longer on the injury list is guard Halapoulivaati Vaitai. Big V was placed on injured reserve earlier this week due to his ongoing back issues. Players on I.R. do not appear on the injury report.

Wide receiver Donovan Peoples-Jones practiced in full after missing his first week with the team due to a rib injury.

Lions officially sign Jake McQuaide, add Bruce Irvin to practice squad

McQuaide becomes the oldest player on the Lions roster

A couple of Detroit Lions roster moves that were widely anticipated became official on Wednesday. The Lions signed long snapper Jake McQuaide from the practice squad to the active roster. Detroit also added veteran EDGE Bruce Irvin to the practice squad to fill the spot opened by McQuaide’s promotion.

McQuaide played in the Week 10 win over the Chargers as a practice squad elevation. Regular long snapper Scott Daly went on injured reserve after Week 8. McQuaide, 35, is now the oldest player on the Lions roster. He’s in his 13th NFL season, the first 10 of which were with the Los Angeles Rams.

Irvin is technically older than McQuaide at 36, but the practice squad doesn’t count in the official tally. His addition was known on Tuesday after working out for the Lions, but did not become official until Wednesday’s practice.

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