7 most intriguing position battles to watch at 2022 Bears training camp

We’re taking a look at the most intriguing position battles heading into Bears training camp later this month.

The Chicago Bears are set to report to training camp on July 26, and there will be no shortage of position battles to watch as camp and the preseason unfolds. There are not only starting jobs on the line but roster spots, as well.

With a new regime in place, there’s been some notable roster turnover this offseason, which includes a lot of players on one-year, prove-it deals. But there’s also plenty of young talent on the roster looking to establish themselves as long-term starters.

Here’s a look at the most intriguing position battles heading into Bears training camp later this month, from offensive line to defensive end to wide receiver.

Bears 2022 training camp preview: Quarterbacks

We’re taking a look at the Bears quarterbacks ahead of training camp and examining the biggest question facing the position group.

Chicago Bears training camp is less than a month away, which means it’s time to start looking ahead at the roster the team is bringing to Lake Forest.

It starts at the most important position: Quarterback, where quarterback Justin Fields has been the focal point this offseason. Aside from Fields, there were some big changes in the quarterback room, where Andy Dalton and Nick Foles are out and Trevor Siemian and Nathan Peterman are in.

This new regime under general manager Ryan Poles has been criticized for its handling of Fields this offseason, especially when it comes to the lack of unproven weapons and the state of the offensive line. But they also brought in new offensive coordinator Luke Getsy to put Fields in a position to succeed.

Let’s take a look at the quarterbacks heading into training camp:

California Dreaming: Cowboys announce 2022 training camp practice dates

West Coast fans will have 13 opportunities to watch the team practice in person during their 2022 stay in Oxnard. | From @ToddBrock24f7

It’s on to Oxnard.

The Cowboys have firmed up the details of their 2022 training camp, held for the 16th time in the seaside city of just over 200,000 halfway between Santa Barbara and Los Angeles.

Things will kick off with the team’s first practice on July 27. An opening ceremony for fans will take place Saturday, July 30. Thirteen practice sessions will be open to the public.

The team will depart Oxnard on Aug. 10 and head to Denver for a joint practice and preseason game with the Broncos. A trip to Costa Mesa to practice with the Chargers and an Aug. 20 preseason tilt in Los Angeles will follow before the Cowboys finally head back to Frisco, where they’ll wrap up the home portion of their camp.

Here is the full schedule, according to the team website. Events take place at the Residence Inn at River Ridge. All times listed are Pacific Time.

Date Event
Tuesday, July 26 All players report
Wednesday, July 27 11:30 a.m. First practice
Thursday, July 28 11:30 a.m. Practice
Friday, July 29 11:30 a.m. Practice
Saturday, July 30 10:45 a.m. Opening Ceremony
11:30 a.m. Practice
Sunday, July 31 No practice
Monday, Aug. 1 11:00 a.m. First padded practice
Tuesday, Aug. 2 11:00 a.m. Practice
Wednesday, Aug. 3 10:00 a.m. Practice/Mock Game
Thursday, Aug. 4 11:00 a.m. Practice
Friday, Aug. 5 11:00 a.m. Practice
Saturday, Aug. 6 10:00 a.m. Practice/Mock Game
Sunday, Aug. 7 No practice
Monday, Aug. 8 Heroes Appreciation Day
11:00 a.m. Practice
Tuesday, Aug. 9 11:00 a.m. Practice
Wednesday, Aug. 10 10:00 a.m. Final practice
Team departs Oxnard

Once settled back in Dallas following the Aug. 20 game in Los Angeles, the team will host one preseason contest at AT&T Stadium and several practices at The Star that will be open to the public.

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Ravens to hold 16 open training camp practices

The Baltimore Ravens announced 16 of their training camp practices in 2022 will be open to the public

The start of the 2022 NFL season is just a couple of months away, which means that the start of training camp is quickly approaching. The training camp report dates for the Baltimore Ravens were revealed by the NFL on Thursday. The rookies will report on Tuesday, July 19th, while veterans will report on Tuesday, July 26th.

This time of year is exciting for many, and some fans will have a chance to attend training camp practices held by the Ravens. Baltimore on Friday announced that 16 of their training camp practices in 2022 will be open to the public at the Under Armour Performance Center in Owings Mills. Additionally, the team will also hold a training camp practice at M&T Bank Stadium which will feature a fireworks and laser show.

Food trucks, activities for kids and sponsor activations will be available for those in attendance. Following each training camp practice, an autograph session for children ages 6-14 will be held.

Tickets will be available starting July 13 at 11:00 a.m. Those who wish to purchase tickets can go to the team’s website here or the Ravens’ mobile app. The tickets are per vehicle. Vehicles must be able to fit in a standard parking space.

Training camp open practice dates will be announced on the day tickets are made available. The stadium training camp practice is scheduled for July 30 at 7 p.m.

Bears training camp: See when rookies and veterans report to Halas Hall

The Bears kick off training camp on July 27. Here’s when rookies and veterans will report to Halas Hall.

The NFL announced the report dates and locations for all 32 teams’ training camps on Thursday. The Chicago Bears previously released their training camp schedule, which kicks off Wednesday July 27.

For the third straight year, the Bears will hold training camp at Halas Hall in Lake Forest, Illinois. Before that, they held camp at Olivet Nazarene in Bourbonnais, Illinois, for 18 years prior.

The Bears rookies will report Saturday, July 23 and veterans will report Tuesday, July 26. The team will hold 11 open practices, where a free ticket is required for entry. Tickets will go on sale Thursday, July 7 at 10 a.m. CT.

Chicago’s first preseason game — their lone home contest — will welcome the Kansas City Chiefs (and former head coach Matt Nagy) to Soldier Field on Saturday, Aug. 13.

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Bears announce 2022 training camp schedule

The Bears have announced their 2022 training camp schedule, which includes 11 practices open to fans.

The Chicago Bears have announced their 2021 training camp schedule, where they will welcome a limited number of fans back to camp for 11 open practices.

Chicago is set to report to Halas Hall on Tuesday, July 26 before the team’s first practice on Wednesday, July 27.

This will mark the third time the Bears will hold training camp at Halas Hall after 18 years practicing at Olivet Nazarene University in Bourbonnais. Training camp was closed to the public in 2020, but a limited number of fans were allowed last summer.

Here’s everything you need to know about Bears 2022 training camp:

‘Never done this’: Mike McCarthy lays out strategy for Cowboys’ joint practice schedule with Broncos, Chargers

The coach hopes to use August’s joint practices for his starters, so that the 3 preseason games can be spent evaluating younger players. | From @ToddBrock24f7

There’s always a workaround.

The modern NFL has clamped down significantly on what paces teams are allowed to put their players through during summer workouts. The number of practices, the duration of drills, how many sessions can involve pads and even physical contact- it’s all been reduced dramatically in the name of player safety. Even the preseason- long a traditional slate of four games- has been slimmed down to just three exhibition contests.

And it’s all good. Unless you’re a football coach. And then it’s time to get creative with ways to properly evaluate talent and get your players ready for the physical grind of the regular season.

To that end, the Cowboys plan to show up at two different clubs’ practice fields in mid-August for shared work sessions. While holding their own camp in Oxnard, head coach Mike McCarthy will take his troops for a joint practice with the Denver Broncos on Aug. 11, and then visit the Chargers in Costa Mesa for a pair of workouts on Aug. 17 and 18.

It’s new territory, even for the 58-year-old McCarthy.

“Never done this,” the coach explained to reporters this week at The Star. “This is a bit of a leap for me personally, but obviously, I think we’re doing it for the right reasons. I think it’s an opportunity to work against two AFC teams. You’re on grass, all of those things. I look at all of those factors; always have. It’s an opportunity go to Denver before [the teams’ Aug. 13 preseason tilt]. It’s really risk assessment, a lot of it, to work certain players in a practice environment as opposed to playing them in a game. So that’s the driving force for me in talking with the other two head coaches who have done this a lot.”

The Cowboys held a joint practice last summer with the Rams. And while McCarthy stressed ahead of time that he had warned his players against the extracurricular fights that typically come with inter-squad work, it took exactly two plays for Connor Williams and Aaron Donald to end up going at it.

McCarthy says he’s addressed the same concern with Broncos coach Nathaniel Hackett and Chargers coach Brandon Staley.

“We’re going there to work, and all three organizations recognize that,” he said Wednesday. “So I’m not interested in any of the other stuff that goes with it. It will be quality work, and Nathaniel and Brandon, we’ve had those conversations. But I think it definitely is something different. I think it’s good for you as a team.”

Much of the benefit will come from the coaching staff seeing their players compete against opponents as opposed to same-squad drills where everyone is a teammate wearing the same uniform.

If the Cowboys’ first-stringers, for example, can line up for a handful of plays against the Chargers’ A-team on back-to-back days in a very controlled environment, then there’s less reason to have them do so in a meaningless preseason game, where the risk of injury is likely greater.

Not that injuries can’t happen in practices, too, despite a reduced work schedule that’s a far cry from what McCarthy used to see in the old days.

“When something is taken away from you, you have to find a more efficient way to utilize the time that you do have,” the coach offered. “We still have a 90-man roster. But for example, you’re able to go 16 padded practices in training camp. There’s not a chance in hell you can get 16 in without running your team in the dirt. So you’re probably going to come in around 11 or 12 or 13 if you’re practicing, in my opinion, the right way and make sure you have the rest and the recovery in there… In the old days, we had 12 padded practices the first week.”

Based on McCarthy’s comments, his main objective for the joint sessions is to let his starters shake off the rust against another team (last year, he described the level of contact and physicality as “professional thud”), saving the preseason games as evaluation events for bubble players.

Plus, he believes mixing things up with the joint practices will be an opportunity to throw “a little more of the unknown” at his players, right down to getting them used to extra travel and giving them a change of scenery.

“To be honest with you, once you get past that second week in training camp,” the coach said, “you’ve already gone through your installs. The guys have been competing against each other for two weeks. It’s a good change-up. The Rams practice last year, I liked the practice… I think really the key thing it does give you is an opportunity to risk-assess and play your younger guys more in the preseason games.”

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NFL owners approve roster reduction schedule; Cowboys’ first cuts due Aug. 16

As was the case in 2021, teams will go from 85 to 80 to 53 players; cuts will coincide with each week of the preseason schedule. | From @ToddBrock24f7

From this, the first day of Cowboys OTAs, forward, it’s all about the numbers. Dallas coaches will need to trim the roster periodically over the next 14 weeks to reach specific player totals.

And now we know the actual numbers and dates.

League owners approved the roster cutdown schedule; it will follow 2021’s, which was instituted under COVID-19 restrictions. The news was reported Tuesday by ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler.

Teams must reduce their rosters to 85 players after the first preseason weekend, with a deadline of 3 p.m. Dallas time on August 16. A second wave of cuts will take each team to 80 players following the second preseason contests (Aug. 23), and final cuts that set each roster at 53 players are due after the third preseason games (Aug. 30).

As was the case last year, any player intended to be brought back to eligibility during the season must be on that final 53-man roster. Teams may then, after a day, move injured players to short-term IR (as the Cowboys did in 2021 with defensive tackle Neville Gallimore and tight end Sean McKeon). That bit of housecleaning generally requires an agreed-upon cut or two, only to have the player re-signed immediately after the shuffle. (This happened last season with long snapper Jake McQuaid.)

For the Cowboys, first cuts will come after their Aug. 13 preseason opener at Denver. The roster will need to be thinned to 80 following an Aug. 20 visit to the Chargers, and the final 53-man roster will be due in the days after the team’s Aug. 26 preseason finale at home versus Seattle.

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Cowboys News: Will Dallas’ offense remain top notch? Can they kick it?

Expectations for the Cowboys’ stars; realistic turnover production in 2022 and the UDFAs that Dallas might turn into key players. | From @CDBurnett7

The kicker position has been a carousel in Dallas since Dan Bailey began to falter, but UDFA Jonathan Garibay is looking to change that trend and can earn the starting role during the 2022 training camp.

And while the 2021 defense relied on turnovers,  can the 2022 version recreate the same production given the departure of starting defensive end Randy Gregory? Could Dallas go looking for a big name on the interior to boost the defensive line by committee?

After a disappointing end to last season, what can be expected from the Cowboys’ stars? On the offensive side, NFL.com has the offense remaining in the top-10 despite Amari Cooper’s departure.

Could UDFA defenders Aaron Hansford and Isaac Taylor-Stuart turn into diamonds in Dallas, or will it be a rough transition to the pros? Here’s the latest collection of news and notes.

What’s next for the Bills following the 2022 NFL draft?

What’s next for the #Bills following the 2022 NFL draft?

The Buffalo Bills and NFL finished the 2022 draft. It’s one of the marquee moments during the league’s offseason.

While perhaps the biggest of all events that happens during this time of the year, it’s not the only thing that goes down. There are still plenty of things to come until September’s regular season rolls around.

Here’s what’s next for the Bills, post-2022 draft: