Bears injury report: David Montgomery limited, Robert Quinn DNP on Wednesday

The Bears released their first injury report ahead of their Week 1 game against the Lions, and there are some notable names on the list.

The Chicago Bears released their first injury report of the season ahead of their Week 1 match-up against the Detroit Lions, and there are some notable names on the list.

Running back David Montgomery, who suffered a groin injury a couple of weeks ago, was limited in practice on Wednesday. Also limited were outside linebacker Khalil Mack, wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson, offensive lineman Jason Spriggs and wide receiver Javon Wims.

But perhaps the biggest concern on the injury report was outside linebacker Robert Quinn, who, after barely practicing during training camp, didn’t practice in the team’s first practice of the regular season. Quinn was listed with an ankle injury, which will definitely be a storyline to watch as this week develops.

Bears head coach Matt Nagy has insisted all training camp that he’s not worried about Quinn. But with Quinn missing the first practice of game week, it’s hard not to be concerned at this point.

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RB David Montgomery has bounced back quickly from groin injury

Tarik Cohen said the media made David Montgomery’s injury a bigger deal than it actually was, so he could be ready for Bears’ Week 1 game.

With the Chicago Bears preparing to face the Detroit Lions this Sunday, the status of running back David Montgomery has been a hot topic of conversation.

Montgomery suffered a groin injury during training camp practice on Aug. 26. Initial reports indicated that Montgomery would be out anywhere from two to four weeks, which left a possibility of him being ready for the Week 1 opener on Sept. 13.

Running back Tarik Cohen, who shares a backfield with Montgomery, told reporters Wednesday that the media made Montgomery’s injury a bigger deal than it actually was.

In fact, Cohen said that Montgomery has rebounded from his groin injury pretty quickly.

“It’s like it never happened,” Cohen said.

With the Bears set to release their first injury report of the week later today, there’s still a possibility that Montgomery could be a go against the Lions. Especially if the injury isn’t as serious as many believed it to be.

That would explain why the Bears didn’t sign a veteran running back in free agency. Matt Nagy has reiterated his belief in the depth of this running backs room, and they’ll be ready to roll with or without Montgomery. But, hopefully, it’s with Montgomery.

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Bears rookie CB Jaylon Johnson confirms he’ll start vs. Lions

Rookie CB Jaylon Johnson has been cleared to fully participate in practice as the Bears prepare for their Week 1 contest against the Lions.

After being limited and held out of team drills during open training camp practices, Chicago Bears rookie cornerback Jaylon Johnson has been cleared to fully participate in practice as the Bears prepare for their Week 1 contest against the Detroit Lions.

And it’s a good thing, too, considering that the rookie is going to get the start at right cornerback opposite two-time Pro Bowler Kyle Fuller. Johnson was listed as the starting right corner on the Bears’ unofficial depth chart, and he confirmed that he will indeed be starting against the Lions this Sunday.

Johnson managed to accomplish one of his goals for this season, which is starting as a rookie. His other two goals? Win Defensive Rookie of the Year and a Super Bowl championship. Lofty goals to say the least. But getting the start as a rookie is only the start for Johnson.

“I’ve prepared my whole life for this,” the second-round pick told reporters.

Funny enough, Johnson found out that he was starting at cornerback through Twitter.

Johnson will be challenged right out of the starting gate as he’ll face a talented trio of Lions receivers in Kenny Golladay, Marvin Jones and Danny Amendola. And Johnson expects Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford to target him early and often.

“I would expect every quarterback to go after the rookie,” Johnson said.

Johnson has impressed during the short time he was able to practice in training camp, and the Bears certainly feel confident in the rookie as he gets the nod against a potent passing game.

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Lions 2019 rewatch: Week 13 notes from the Thanksgiving loss to Chicago

The David Blough era kicks off with a tough loss on national television

Thanksgiving 2019 marked the beginning of the David Blough era as the starting quarterback for the Detroit Lions. Jeff Driskel had started the last three games, including a massive clunker of an effort in the Week 12 loss to lowly Washington. But Driskel is out for this one and in steps Blough, an undrafted rookie from Purdue acquired from the Browns after the preseason.

Blough’s performance in this matchup with the division rival Chicago Bears in the annual Thanksgiving national broadcast is the primary point of focus. We’ve reached the point of the season where the Lions, now 3-7-1, are playing more youngsters more frequently. It’s a chance to evaluate guys like Blough, RB Bo Scarbrough, CB Amani Oruwariye and TE Isaac Nauta in their more extensive playing time.

Pregame notes

Chicago enters the game at 5-6, having won two of its last three games. That includes the Week 10 win over Detroit in Chicago. The Bears defense is hot, allowing the 4th-fewest points of any team over the last six games.

In addition to Stafford and Driskel, starters Rashaan Melvin (CB), Jamal Agnew (RS) and Damon Harrison (DT) are all out with injuries. Chicago is missing regular starting RT Bobby Massie, replaced by ex-Lion Cornelius Lucas. Linebacker Danny Trevathan and wideout Taylor Gabriel are the other key missing Bears.

The Lions are in the all-silver color rush uniforms while the bears are in the road whites with blue pants

First quarter

You know you’re in for a turkey of a game when the opening kickoff has to get redone thanks to offsetting penalties. You really know it’s going to be a clunker when referee Jerome Boger points the wrong way when making the official calls on the penalties. Not a good start…

It doesn’t get any better once Chicago gets the ball. Cordarrelle Patterson blows past several Lions up the left sideline and returns Matt Prater’s kick to midfield. Mitchell Trubisky comes out throwing, and specifically throwing at Tavon Wilson. The safety makes the tackle on the first three plays, targeted twice in coverage and once on a terrible run fit by LB Christian Jones.

Allen Robinson scores the touchdown, beating Darius Slay on a simple slant he sets up beautifully with a false step outside. Slay steps in the bucket and it was all the room Trubusky needed to fit it in before Tracy Walker’s help could close in. Way too easy of an opening TD drive for Chicago.

Chris Lacy fields the Bears kickoff and kneels. It’s his first time back as the return man in place of the injured Agnew.

Blough comes out without fear. He’s overzealous on his first attempt, a worm-burner to T.J. Hockenson up the right seam where the TE has a step on the coverage. He did not miss on the next play, a 3rd-and-10:

That’s how to take advantage of a blown coverage! Prater’s knuckleball of a conversion ties the game at 7-7.

Jarrad Davis keys the Lions D on the ensuing 3-and-out possession. Two nice stops from the LB including an open-field corraling of shifty RB Tarik Cohen. Slay had perfect coverage on Robinson on the other play. No pass rush up front but still a nice series.

It didn’t even take two full drives before Blough demonstrates he’s a better passer and has superior pocket presence and field awareness than Driskel showed in his three starts. Strikes to Marvin Jones and Golladay move the chain nicely. Blough is stepping up in the pocket and climbing the ladder nicely, not panicking at pressure and keeping his eyes down the field.

Blough hits Jones on a well-designed inside crosser from a bunch formation from the 8-yard line for a TD. The Bears, notably Prince Amukamara once again, get lost in coverage. Great pass protection by the offensive tackles this entire drive. The extra point puts the Lions up 14-7.

Prater gets tricky with the ensuing kickoff. He drills a hard grounder to the shortstop and it strikes a retreating Bears blocker. Jalen Reeves-Maybin comes out of the scrum with possession. The spontaneous, exotic onside kick works! Lions ball inside Chicago territory.

The teams trade 3-and-outs with both QBs making poor choices into coverage. Dee Virgin gets a big thumbs up for his exceptional punt coverage on Sam Martin’s nice boot deep into Chicago territory.

Blough’s initial buzz wears off. He missed Hockenson on a well-covered out route and then makes a terrible choice in forcing a high throw to Danny Amendola in traffic. Had Blough held just a count longer he had Hockenson up the right seam uncovered but he opted to throw to the sticks on 3rd-and-5. The ball nearly got picked off when Amendola tries to tip it to himself, a poor choice for a short receiver in a crowd.

Second quarter

Controversy strikes on a play where Trubisky narrowly avoids a Devon Kennard sack and throws to WR Anthony Miller on the run. Miller catches the ball and then get popped by Justin Coleman. Several players from both teams fail to recover it before it winds up in a pile.

Two officials signal Bears ball. Two others signal Lions ball at various points. The initial call from Boger gave the ball to the Bears, but as FOX’s Joe Buck quizzically notes on the broadcast, “I guess they changed their mind.” Lions ball.

Not so fast. After a lengthy review–more than double the allotted time–Boger decides the pass was incomplete. It wasn’t, but that’s how a bad official covers his inept tracks. Oh yeah, Boger also missed an obvious blow to the head of Trubisky by Wilson that Boger is staring at from five yards away. Oy.

The level of play quickly descends to the level of officiating. Wilson badly misses an open-field tackle, another in-the-box attempt, and has an illegal contact penalty (he was guilty) declined. The Lions pass rush isn’t nearly as effective as Trubisky would have you believe it is, and his impatience and lack of accuracy bail out Oruwariye and Coleman in coverage on separate throws.

Troy Aikman’s not having a great game on as a color commentator, either. He enthusiastically notes that “this Bears offense is the same one Kansas City runs” and “they’re capable of scoring from anywhere”.  Going back to the Week 10 matchup, the Bears offense has gone 3-and-out on seven of its last 10 drives against the Lions defense, which entered this game ranked 30th. Chicago is 29th in scoring entering the game, 30th if you strip out defensive and special teams scores. He says the latter as it’s 1st-and-32 after two dumb penalties on the OL. But I digress…

The Bears opt to go for it on 4th-and-5 from the Lions 32, eschewing a 50-yard FG attempt. Trey Flowers surges past LT Charles Leno and Trubisky flings the ball at the feet of a receiver short of the sticks. The Bears also had an illegal formation but the Lions decline it and celebrate the nice stop. Davis was effective on a couple of A-gap blitzes on this drive and was in nice position in coverage on the final play too.

Some really nice run blocking from Frank Ragnow, Graham Glasgow and Taylor Decker gets the Lions rolling. Ty Johnson and Scarbrough are both effectively running downhill, not hesitating or dancing through the hole and it’s working. Boger’s crew once again interferes with the game with a truly baffling offensive pass interference call on Marvin Jones that wipes out an intentional defensive pass interference call against Buster Skrine on Golladay in the end zone (Skrine got beat and knew it). Boger quickly gives a make-up call, flagging (now Lions DT) Nick Williams for roughing Blough. It’s a flag that not even Aaron Rodgers gets most of the time.

The red zone offense sputters badly. Two Blough throwaways under pressure (rough set for Rick Wagner) and a pointless J.D. McKissic run smack into a stacked box stall the drive. The Lions kick a 25-yard field goal to surge out the lead to 17-7 with 3:00 to play in the half.

Poor containment on the kick return by Patterson sets the Bears up near their own 40, thanks in part to an egregious missed holding call on the player blocking Dee Virgin. The drive quickly becomes “let’s pick on Justin Coleman” as Trubisky targets him in coverage on his first three passes. Two are complete, the third (technically the first of the series) Coleman broke up nicely. Quick-hit completions on slants against Oruwariye (who missed the tackle too) and Slay set the Bears up in FG range.

Jarrad Davis is playing really well and there’s a play at the end of the drive here that needs appreciation. Trubisky takes off from the pass rush and is poised to get a first down with his legs. Davis explodes into the path Trubisky wants to take and it scares the QB enough that he veers sideways. That gives Walker time to close in and make a very nice open-field tackle. Davis doesn’t get any credit in the box score but he’s absolutely the reason the Bears’ drive fizzles and results in a field goal and not a TD. Lions lead 17-10 at the half.

Lions open as slight favorites over Bears in Week 1 odds

Lions open as slight favorites over Bears in Week 1 odds

The Detroit Lions did not land a single prime-time game on the 2020 NFL schedule. The Chicago Bears maxed out with four dates under the national spotlight.

Yet in the first week of the season, the lowly Lions are favored to beat those popular Bears. The Week 1 matchup in Ford Field in September features an opening line with the Lions favored by 1.5 points over the visiting Bears. That’s the line at BetMGM and most sportsbooks in the first few days after the schedule release.

Some of that might stem from the Bears’ uncertainty at quarterback. Nick Foles has the best odds to start ahead of returning incumbent Mitchell Trubisky. The Lions have no such QB issues with Matthew Stafford returning for his 12th season at the helm.

Maybe if the Lions win convincingly the NFL can kill the Bears hype machine…

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship, and there is no influence on news coverage.

Bears looking to snap 6-year opening game losing streak

Believe it or not, the Bears haven’t won a Week 1 game since the start of the Marc Trestman era in 2013.

When the Chicago Bears’ 2020 schedule was officially unveiled, many saw the Week 1 opponent and immediately chalked it up as a win. The Bears head into Detroit to play the Lions when the season kicks off and on paper, the Bears appear to have the advantage.

After all, they boast a 4-0 record under head coach Matt Nagy against their division rivals, and the Lions are coming off a 3-12-1 record last season. But if you peel back the curtain, you’ll see the Bears haven’t exactly stormed out of the gate in recent years.

Heading into the 2020 season, the Bears are on a six-game losing streak to open the season. Their last victory in Week 1 came in 2013 when they hosted the Cincinnati Bengals to begin the Marc Trestman era, beating them 24-21. Since then, they’ve dropped each opener to begin the season 0-1.

The Bears also haven’t won an opener on the road since 2008, when they beat the Indianapolis Colts 29-13. They have only played three road openers since then, losing at Green Bay in 2009 and again in 2018, as well as at Houston in 2016.

Fortunately, the losses have not been blowouts. The Bears’ Week 1 opponent’s margin of victory is 5.6 points since 2014, and all but one loss was a one-score game. The Lions, meanwhile, have stayed around .500 in their openers since 2014, going 3-2-1 over their last six openers, their tie coming last season against the Arizona Cardinals.

Could this be the year the Bears finally snap their losing streak and start the season on the right foot? History may not be on their side, but a new season always brings hope and promise.

Check out game-by-game score predictions from around the NFL Wires network:

Buf / Mia / NE / NYJ // Bal / Cin / Cle / Pit // Hou / Ind / Jax / Ten // Den / KC / LV / LAC //// Dal / NYG / Phi / Was // Chi / Det / GB / Min // Atl / Car / NO / TB // Ari / LAR / SF / Sea

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The Bears are early 1.5-point underdogs vs. Lions in Week 1

With the Bears’ 2020 schedule released, Bet MGM already has the Bears as underdogs against the Lions in Week 1.

Bet MGM has been quick to put a betting line on the Chicago Bears’ first matchup in the 2020 season. Yesterday, we learned that they will travel to Detroit in Week 1, and the Bears are reportedly 1.5-point underdogs against the lowly Lions.

I am confident that this line will change – likely a few times – as we approach the season. However, the Lions are coming off a three-win season, and the Bears, despite their struggles at the quarterback position, finished with eight wins.

I see eight wins being the floor again, given how talented the Bears’ defense is on paper. Add to that the trade for quarterback Nick Foles, and the Bears are in an excellent position to exceed their 2019 win total.

Still, 1.5 points is indicative that Vegas purely set the line based on where the game is being played. If the Bears were hosting, the line would be reversed. Bet MGM has also established the over/under scoring total for both teams at 44.5.

And based on the last four contests, the two teams have only once exceeded that number, coming in Week 10 of the 2018 NFL season. That was also the game where former Bears kicker Cody Parkey hit the upright four times.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

Check out game-by-game score predictions from around the NFL Wires network:

Buf / Mia / NE / NYJ // Bal / Cin / Cle / Pit // Hou / Ind / Jax / Ten // Den / KC / LV / LAC //// Dal / NYG / Phi / Was // Chi / Det / GB / Min // Atl / Car / NO / TB // Ari / LAR / SF / Sea

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2020 Bears’ Schedule Breakdown: Detroit Lions

With the exact times and dates for the 2020 Bears schedule now released, let’s break down their first opponent in the Detroit Lions.

Now that the Chicago Bears know the order of their opponents, we just have to hope that the coronavirus pandemic doesn’t hinder the games from being played. The Bears will open the season in Detroit, which is the start of five-of-six games against teams that finished with a losing record in 2019.

The Lions finished a 3-12-1 record last season and have finished in last place in the NFC North in back-to-back seasons.

Key Additions:

OT Halapoulivaati Vaitai, LB Jamie Collins, DT Nick Williams, QB Chase Daniel, DT Danny Shelton, CB Desmond Trufant

Key Losses:

CB Darius Slay

2020 NFL Draft:

CB Jeff Okudah (1), RB D’Andre Swift (2), DE Julian Okwara (3), OG Jonah Jackson (3), Logan Stenberg (4), WR Quintez Cephus (5), RB Jason Huntley (5), DT John Penisini (6), DT Jashon Cornell (7)

2019 Offensive Rankings:

Total Offense (17), Rushing Offense (21), Passing Offense (10)

2019 Defensive Rankings:

Total Defense (31), Rushing Defense (21), Passing Defense (32)

Season Series:

Bears 100-74-5

What have you done for me lately?

The Bears have won the last four, including two Thanksgiving wins in Detroit.

Key Stats:

Mitchell Trubisky has a career record of 3-2 against Detroit to go along with 11 touchdowns. The next closest is Tampa Bay, which all came in their matchup in 2018. Trubisky has averaged 272 yards-per-game and a quarterback rating of 106.3 in his career against the Lions.

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Ranking the top 20 Bears games of the decade

On the eve of a new decade, we’re counting down the Bears’ best games of this past decade — including some real blasts from the past.

Between January 1, 2010 and December 31, 2019, the Chicago Bears played 164 games, including three playoff games, compiling a record of 78-86. Surprising playoff runs in 2010 and 2018 were sandwiched around lengthy stretches of mediocrity from 2013-2017, and fans were treated to a below-average product for much of the decade.

Still, there were quite a few bright spots for the NFL’s charter franchise during the last 10 years, including memorable games that provided thrilling victories. As a disappointing 2019 season concludes, let’s look back on some of the better games and moments the ’10s had to offer.

To kick off the next decade as we enter 2020, here are my top 20 Bears games from the 2010s.

20. 2019, Week 14, Cowboys at Bears

Bears 31 – Cowboys 24: Easily the best game of an otherwise disappointing season, the Bears offense came alive in primetime against the Cowboys, with quarterback Mitchell Trubisky accounting for all four touchdowns with his arm and legs in arguably his best game as a Bear. On defense, despite not creating a turnover, the unit frustrated the Cowboys offense all evening with QB pressures and excellent play from their secondary. The matchup was a pseudo-playoff game, with the Bears keeping their hopes alive for one more week in a complete-team win.

19. 2018, Week 8, Bears at Bills

Bears 41 – Bills 9: While the Buffalo Bills weren’t a powerhouse in 2018, the Bears defense still made their offense look completely inept in a blowout. Forcing four turnovers, including three interceptions from quarterback Nathan Peterman, the Bears scored twice on defense thanks to outside linebacker Leonard Floyd’s pick six and safety Eddie Jackson’s fumble recovery, and limited the Bills’ offense to just 264 yards. The reason this game isn’t higher on the list is due to the Bears offensive performance, as they gained just 190 yards.

 

18. 2011, Week 1, Falcons at Bears

Bears 30 – Falcons 12: No, this wasn’t the Bears-Falcons matchup that saw the debut of quarterback Mike Glennon, this was the first game following the Bears heartbreaking loss to the Packers in the NFC Championship game. Led by quarterback Jay Cutler, who threw for over 300 yards and two touchdowns, the Bears won convincingly against the reigning NFC South champions and held the Falcon offense to just six points. This game also featured an impressive performance from Hall of Fame linebacker Brian Urlacher, who had an interception and a fumble recovery for a score. The defense had a total of three takeaways and started the 2011 season with a bang.

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5 takeaways from Bears’ 24-20 comeback win over Lions

The Bears defeated the Lions 24-20, as they improved to 6-6 on the season. There was plenty to digest from this Thanksgiving game.

The calendar may have said Thanksgiving, but it was beginning to feel a lot like September as the Chicago Bears have a winning streak for the first time in two months, beating the Detroit Lions 24-20 to improve to 6-6 on the season.

Both teams landed blows on their first two drives, scoring touchdowns to make the score 7-7. The Lions attempted to pull away but never led by more than 10 points. Bears quarterback Mitchell Trubisky then led his team to touchdown drives in the third and fourth quarter, putting the Bears ahead for good, while the defense survived a last-ditch effort from rookie quarterback David Blough, making his first NFL debut on the national stage.

Like sides at a Thanksgiving dinner, there were many different takeaways from this game, such as the continued strong play of inside linebacker Roquan Smith, what’s going on with special teams and Chris Tabor, how the referees could miss a blatant roughing the passer call on Trubisky, or how valuable wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson is to this team. But here are my 5 takeaways that stuck out to me most during this latest Bears win.

1. Mitchell Trubisky finally played like it was 2018

Raj Mehta-USA TODAY Sports

Ever since he suffered his shoulder injury back in 2018 when the Bears defeated the Vikings, Trubisky simply hasn’t been the same. Prior to the injury, he had been on a heater, throwing for over 300 yards four times in six weeks and averaging a quarterback rating of 112.3 during that span.

After over a year, he finally returned to that form, at least for one game, throwing for 338 yards and three touchdowns with a 118.1 quarterback rating. For the most part, Trubisky looked sharp, leading the Bears to their first opening-drive touchdown since Week 4 and orchestrating a 90-yard scoring drive late in the fourth quarter that ended up being the game winner.

His day wasn’t perfect, as he did look timid at times while running and under-threw wide receiver Allen Robinson on a crossing route, resulting in an interception, but it’s clear this was easily his best game since last year’s win against the Lions at Soldier Field. The question is, can he build on it and string together these types of performances to mount one final playoff push?

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