Brian Urlacher isn’t a fan of the Bears signing Robert Quinn

The addition of EDGE Robert Quinn has been hailed by many as a great signing. But not everyone is happy with Quinn’s signing.

The Chicago Bears made one of the biggest splashes in free agency a couple of weeks ago when they agreed to a deal with veteran edge rusher Robert Quinn. The former Dallas Cowboy signed a five-year, $70 million contract with $30 million fully guaranteed.

The acquisition also saw the release of outside linebacker Leonard Floyd, who was drafted with the ninth overall pick in the 2016 NFL Draft.

Most fans were happy with the move, as Quinn will start opposite outside linebacker Khalil Mack to give the Bears a boost when it comes to pressuring the quarterback. But one Bears Hall of Famer was not among them.

Former Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher was a guest on ESPN 1000’s Waddle and Silvy show on Tuesday afternoon and revealed he didn’t think the team should have signed the former All-Pro.

“This isn’t a knock on the player, [but] I didn’t love the signing of Robert Quinn,” Urlacher said. “I liked him, he had a great season last year, really good football player. I just – you paid Khalil [Mack] all this money, he gets all this money. Akiem Hicks is a badass in the middle, making all this money. I understand you get rid of Floyd. But do you need to spend that much money on another guy up front?”

Urlacher went on to say he believes a healthy Hicks will greatly improve the defense and the front-seven would be fine without Quinn.

“I would think you could find someone to put pressure from that side,” Urlacher said. “Khalil is getting two guys no matter who is over there anyway, and with Akiem back, it’s going to be different. Once he’s healthy, we all saw how much he meant to their defense when he wasn’t in there.”

The former Bears’ great reiterated he thinks highly of Quinn, who had 11.5 sacks last year as a member of the Cowboys, but believes putting that much money into one part of the defense isn’t necessary.

Are you content with the amount of money the Bears reportedly gave Quinn? Or should they have spent that money on bolstering other positions such as the offensive line or wide receiver?

[lawrence-related id=441492,441494,441442,441481]

NFL Draft: Grading the first-rounders 20 years after 2000

The New England Patriots got Tom Brady at 199. How did players in the first round of the 2000 NFL Draft turn out and what did they grade?

The 2000 NFL Draft produced a memorable selection. It didn’t come in the first five rounds. Rather, it was the New England Patriots using a compensatory pick at 199 to select Michigan QB Tom Brady. How did teams do in the 2000 first round?

31. Rams: Trung Canidate

Ezra Shaw/ALLSPORT

Trung Canidate played four seasons, rushing for 1,095 yards. His best season was his final one with Washington. He rushed for 600 yards in 10 games in 2003. In three seasons with Arizona, he ran for 495 yards. Grade: D-minus

New Mexico Football: Danny Gonzales’ First Recruiting Class Turns Heads And Keeps Promises

The New Mexico Lobos 2020 Recruiting Class Is Complete With 24 Signings. Class is complete with a high school focus and southwest feel. Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire Danny Gonzales completes his first recruiting class in Albuquerque, and …

[jwplayer 18QegcJn-sNi3MVSU]


The New Mexico Lobos 2020 Recruiting Class Is Complete With 24 Signings.


Class is complete with a high school focus and southwest feel. 


Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire

Danny Gonzales completes his first recruiting class in Albuquerque, and it’s a good one. 

As we look towards the month of February and with National Signing Day officially in the rear view, coaching staffs can begin to regroup and look onward to spring practice. The Mountain West has welcomed four new head coaches to the conference this off season, some faces familiar and others not so much. But no matter the coach, job or school one thing remains and that’s national signing day.

Danny Gonzales is one of those familiar faces we mentioned earlier, an Albuquerque native who walked-on at New Mexico from near by Valley High School during the last years of Dennis Franchione’s tenure and in the Rocky Long’s first year in charge back in 1998. Long has had his own storied success with the Lobos as he has transitioned from player to head coach and now defensive coordinator almost fifty years later.

Gonzales has walked a similar path to Long’s and has enjoyed success in every role he’s taken while doing it. At New Mexico, San Diego State and most recently under Herm Edwards at Arizona State. Only failing to reach a bowl game in five of his 19 seasons on a collegiate coaching staff. Fans and administration are hoping he brings some of that winning pedigree to Dreamstyle Stadium this fall, everyone knows it’s overdue.

But the life blood of college football is still recruiting, and of course player development is another big component of on field success but still how do you mold that 6-4 210 pound kid from Lovington into that 6-4 255 pound NFL draft top-ten pick? Well you got to get him there first. And of course all eyes are on Danny Gonzales and his newly formed coaching staff to put together a strong first class and win down in Albuquerque.

Now let’s be a little realistic, Gonzales was hired back in mid-December. Right around the NCAA’s early signing period on December 19th. With only one player committed to the Lobos at the time in El Paso native Gabe Stonewall (a Bob Davie Commit, now commited to Lamar). It was a little hard to think he would put together a class to top the Mountain West recruiting rankings in just over a month and a half right?

But his first recruiting class at New Mexico is different, yes different in structure, origin and let’s say expectations than classes of years past. But you can attribute than directly to the man in charge and his former coach, mentor and boss who is now his employee.

Recruiting classes under Bob Davie and Mike Locksley before him tried, but often failed to have a local feel and representation to them. Both brought in local players, on scholarship and as walk-ons during their time in Albuquerque but a majority of the roster was made up of players from around the country. Locksley had connections back in the DMV (D.C., Maryland and Virginia area), which is where he brought in a lot of his players from. Davie whose connections were a bit broader brought in recruits from a little bit of everywhere.

That was completely fine but the New Mexican community like most around the country enjoy seeing homegrown kids on the field. Which has been a goal for Danny Gonzales since day one. To recruit not only regionally but locally in his home state and to give local players opportunities like the one that he was given over twenty-five years ago.

The class stands at twenty-four players signed to NLI’s after national signing day, it includes 7 Texans, 10 Californians, 3 Arizonians, 1 Louisianan and of course 2 New Mexicans. Those New Mexicans are Dion Hunter a linebacker out of Rio Rancho (Cleveland HS) and defensive end Bryce Santana of Los Lunas (Los Lunas HS). Besides a very southwest feel the recruiting class also lists only one junior college player in offensive lineman Isaak Gutierrez of Butte College. It is yet just another difference between the recruiting styles of old and new. As Davie and Locksley both heavily recruited the junior college ranks.

Next, the list:

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1361]

By the numbers: Will Luke Kuechly’s get him into the Hall of Fame?

Kuechly’s trophy case looks awfully similar to one of the all-time great linebackers’ who is already in the Hall.

The Panthers lost perhaps the best linebacker in the NFL when 28 year old Luke Kuechly announced his retirement on Tuesday. The move leaves the team’s linebacker corps in shambles, with veteran Shaq Thompson the only remaining player with at least a season of experience as a starter.

Although he was undeniably on pace to make the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Kuechly’s surprise retirement after only eight years in the league leaves open the question if he will be voted into Canton.

Throughout his 118 game career, the star accumulated a slew of accolades, earning seven Pro Bowl nominations, five All-Pros awards, as well as the 2012 Rookie of the Year award and the 2013 Defensive Player of the Year award.

Kuechly’s trophy case looks awfully similar to one of the all-time great linebackers’ who is already in the Hall.

During Brian Urlacher’s 182 game career, the Chicago Bear earned eight Pro Bowl nominations, four All-Pro awards, and was a recipient of the 2000 NFL Rookie of the Year award, as well as the 2005 Defensive Player of the Year award.

A deeper dive into their career numbers (thanks to Pro Football Reference) shows they share even more similarities.

Through 118 games, Kuechly posted 1,092 total tackles to go along with 75 tackles for a loss, 12.5 sacks, 19 interceptions, seven forced fumbles and two defensive touchdowns. In Urlacher’s first 118 games, he had 947 total tackles, 95 tackles for a loss, 35.5 sacks, 12 interceptions, eight forced fumbles and one defensive touchdown.

Although Urlacher holds the edge on sacks and tackles for a loss, it would take him 24 more games to reach Kuechly’s 1,092 tackles, and 39 more games to reach his 19 career interceptions.

This is not meant to compare Kuechly and Urlacher’s careers against each other, rather, to show that they are in the same unique company of modern linebackers deserving of Hall of Fame honors.

Urlacher was enshrined in 2012. It will be interesting to see whether Kuechly will be chosen when he is eligible in 2025.

[lawrence-related id=617268,617172,617126]

[vertical-gallery id=617113]

Brian Urlacher: Hall of Fame candidates Lance Briggs, Olin Kreutz were snubbed

Bears HOF LB Brian Urlacher isn’t happy that former teammates Lance Briggs and Olin Kreutz not named Hall of Fame finalists in 2020.

The NFL Hall of Fame announced the modern-era finalists for Class of 2020 on Thursday, but there’s someone that wasn’t too happy with the list.

Bears Hall-of-Fame linebacker Brian Urlacher expressed his disappointment in the finalists that didn’t include two of his former teammates in linebacker Lance Briggs and center Olin Kreutz.

Briggs ended his 12-year Bears career with 16 interceptions, five defensive touchdowns, seven fumble recoveries, 16 forced fumbles, 15 sacks and seven Pro Bowls.

“He elevated not only my game but the entire defense — his enthusiasm was contagious,” Urlacher said in his Hall of Fame induction speech. “We’ll be back here in a couple years for your induction, ‘Big Time.'”

In his 13 seasons with the Bears, Kreutz was a six-time Pro Bowler and was named to the Hall of Fame’s All-2000’s second team. He holds the record for most games played by an offensive lineman in Chicago.

“Olin Kreutz is the epitome of a Hall of Famer,” former Bears running back Thomas Jones tweeted last March. “One of the most talented and ferocious interior lineman to ever play the game. The definition of a football player. This man needs to be in Canton now!”

Briggs and Kretuz were among the 122 modern-era nominees, but both failed to make the semifinalist cut in November. Still, Urlacher made it clear that he believes both Briggs and Kreutz belong in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

[lawrence-related id=434943,434927,434889,434895,434879,434861]