Bears haven’t committed to attending Colin Kaepernick’s workout…yet

The NFL said that 11 teams have committed to attend Colin Kaepernick’s workout in Atlanta this Saturday. But the Bears aren’t among them.

The NFL has announced that 11 teams have committed to attend Colin Kaepernick’s workout in Atlanta this Saturday.

As the Bears search for stability at the quarterback position, you’d believe they were among those teams. But you’d be wrong.

Here’s the list of teams that will be in attendance, as of Thursday:

  • Cardinals
  • Falcons
  • Browns
  • Broncos
  • Lions
  • Dolphins
  • Patriots
  • Giants
  • Jets
  • Buccaneers
  • Redskins

Quarterback Mitchell Trubisky has struggled mightily in his third season in not just a mediocre offense, but a bad one. While the unit’s struggles don’t all fall on Trubisky, he’s a big point of contention.

While Trubisky will likely be on the Bears’ roster in 2020, Chicago is expected to bring in another quarterback, whether it’s a veteran like Andy Dalton or Marcus Mariota or a rookie in the NFL Draft, like Oklahoma’s Jalen Hurts or Georgia’s Jake Fromm.

Given the Bears are looking to improve at the quarterback position, they should do their due diligence in exploring every avenue, including Kaepernick. It’s just a workout. Not a commitment.

The Bears still have time before Saturday’s workout to change their minds.

[lawrence-related id=430810,430829,430795,430787]

Kirk Cousins moves up 3 spots in Week 11 QB rankings

Cousins is now 15-10-1 in 26 games with the Vikings.

After throwing for 220 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions in Sunday night’s 28-24 win over the Cowboys, Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins moved from 14th to 11th in NFL.com’s QB rankings.

The Vikings improved to 7-3 with the win and Cousins is now 15-10-1 in 26 games with the Vikings.

Here’s a snippet of what was written about Cousins:

Cousins made some big throws when the Vikings needed it on Sunday night, snapping his streak of losses in prime-time games against teams that entered the contest with a winning record at six. He enters this weekend’s tilt with the Broncos having thrown 142 consecutive passes without an INT (longest active streak), and his 124.4 passer rating since Week 5 is the NFL’s best in that span.

On the season, Cousins has thrown for 2,437 yards, 18 touchdowns and three interceptions. That puts him on pace for 3,899 yards, 28 touchdowns and just five interceptions.

Per Pro Football Focus, Cousins grades as the league’s ninth-best quarterback with a score of 82.7.

To round out the NFC North, Aaron Rodgers ranks fifth, Matthew Stafford ranks sixth and Mitchell Trubisky ranks 28th.

There is no timetable for Fox’s return, …

There is no timetable for Fox’s return, although he is not expected to need surgery. A Grade 3 sprain is the most severe of the sprains and includes a full tear of the ligament. Recovery time can take 6-12 weeks and it’s unlikely Fox will see the court again before the new calendar year hits. “I’m not going to get back out there until I know I can play and I know I’m 100 percent and I’m able to help the team,” Fox said.

Larry Bird talks the state of today’s NBA, player movement and more on local radio

Former Boston Celtics forward Larry Bird isn’t a fan of how free agency has changed.

Larry Bird may no longer be a regular fixture in the Boston sports world but he’s also never far away.

Recently, the former Boston Celtics forward — A Hall of Fame inductee in 1998 — made an appearance on the local sports radio show Ordway, Merloni & Fauria to talk all things Celtics and the broader state of the league.

As to the latter, Larry Legend had some thoughts on the evolution of the sport to rely so heavily on 3-pointers, which were introduced to the NBA just as he himself was coming into the league in 1979.

“Obviously, we’d be taking more 3-pointers because that’s where the game’s evolving,”, said Bird (via WEEI’s Nick Friar) of how he and players of his ilk would be approaching the modern NBA.

“You know back in the day, we wouldn’t even guard guys out beyond the 3-point line. And very few guys looked at the basket from 23 to 25 feet. But the game has changed and the game goes through periods where it changes and you just have to adapt to the changes.

And that’s what we would’ve done, we would adapt. I can remember back in the day Danny Ainge said we should shoot all 3-pointers every game.”

Looking forward to the present-day Celtics, headed by Ainge as president of basketball operations, the Indianian’s words ring true. This current iteration of Bird’s sole NBA team is well known for their propensity for the 3-ball — some nights last season, to a fault.

And speaking of Bird’s only team, the “Hick from French Lick”, as Bird is sometimes called, shared his feelings on the current trend of player movement around the league.

Despite his continued role as a front office consultant for the Indiana Pacers, the 12-time All-Star was surprisingly supportive of player movement — within a certain context.

“My problem with it, if you’re a free agent, you can go anywhere you want and join any team you want, but when you start forcing your way out of teams — it’s usually the small markets, too, that draft a guy, put all our time into developing him, and then when he gets good he wants to go somewhere else,” Bird said (via Friar).”

Whether this is a veiled reference to former Indiana star Paul George forcing his way out of that organization under Bird’s tenure as a franchise advisor, or perhaps the tedious saga that unfolded during Boston’s pursuit of Anthony Davis last season or simply a general dislike of the driving force behind both is unclear, unlike Bird’s preferred manner of player movement.

“[I]f you just wait until you’re a free agent and go somewhere, I have no problem with it. But it sort of bothers me when guys want to leave a team that they’re on (and) they still have a few years left and force their way out because it puts a lot of pressure on management and the franchise.”

And while on the topic of movement, why did Larry Legend depart from the region in which his career became gold, Bird is quite vocal about how much he still loves the city, emphatically stating that Boston is “the greatest place in the world to play any sport … You’ve got the best fans in the world in every sport” (via team reporter Taylor Snow).

The answer might surprise you. Unless, of course, you lived through the disaster Bird cites as a reason for escaping the area.

“I’ll tell you why I left: because the Big Dig was coming in when I was leaving,” says Bird. I knew that was going to be 20-something years.”

To those of us who have dealt with the headaches it caused, well — we forgive you, Larry; you weren’t wrong.