National Post

HOW ABOUT THAT BEAR DEFENCE?

DISMANTLIN­G OF RAMS OFFERS HOPE FOR EXTENDED PLAYOFF RUN

- JohN KryK JoKryk@postmedia.com Twitter.com/ JohnKryk

To put into perspectiv­e how awful the Chicago Bears defence made Jared Goff look on Sunday night, consider this: The Los Angeles Rams quarterbac­k committed more turnovers and completed fewer passes, for fewer yards, for as few touchdowns and a worse passer rating than Nathan Peterman of the Buffalo Bills did against the same defence five weeks earlier.

Chomp on that one a while.

Goff’s stat line on Sunday: 20-of-44, 180 yards, four intercepti­ons, one lost fumble, 19.1 passer rating. Peterman’s stat line on Nov. 4: 31of-49, 188 yards, three intercepti­ons, 45.3 passer rating.

Conclusion? None of us know anything about everything when it comes to the NFL this season.

Never mind, Peterman didn’t have the added, substantia­l burden of having to face NFL defensive player-of-the-year candidate Khalil Mack, who chews up quarterbac­ks and spits out sacks and fumbles, in Buffalo on that Sunday. Mack was out of the Bears’ lineup with an ankle injury.

That any defence could make one of the league’s brightest young quarterbac­k stars look more feeble than the historical­ly bad Peterman only weeks apart says a lot more about Mack and his cohorts than it does Goff.

It was the first time Goff in three NFL seasons had thrown more than two picks. Yes, it was a cold Sunday night in the Windy City, and the Rams are a warm-weather team. That’s but a small asterisk on Chicago’s defensive performanc­e.

People are starting to equate this defence with Chicago’s 1985 maulers, who led the Bears to their lone Super Bowl championsh­ip.

After rookie linebacker Roquan Smith’s first career pick against the Rams, 11 different Bears defenders now have an intercepti­on this season. Cornerback Kyle Fuller is tied for the league lead with seven.

Chicago is far and away the league leader in picks, with 25. Miami is next with 19, and no other team has more than 15.

As for the Rams, their 214 net yards offensivel­y was the lowest output in the two years Sean McVay has been the head coach. And it was the first time one of his L.A. teams failed to score an offensive touchdown. Did he think that could ever happen?

“I’d like to say no,” McVay said afterward per TheRams. com. “But certainly this is a humbling league.”

McVay and the Rams have three weeks to make adjustment­s before the playoffs begin. But they won’t face another team anywhere approachin­g Chicago’s ilk until the playoffs next month, as each of their last three opponents has a losing record: Philadelph­ia (6-7), Arizona (3-10) and San Francisco (310).

Will this loss, then, linger at the backs of the minds of everyone connected with the Rams until the playoffs? Probably. And deservedly so.

There’s now a logjam of teams vying for — er, trying to avoid — a last-place overall finish, thereby earning the No. 1 overall draft pick at the April draft in Nashville.

Here’s the current draft order, based on the top tiebreaker (strength-of-schedule, not head-to-head):

1. San Francisco, 3-10

2. Oakland, 3-10

3. Arizona, 3-10

4. Atlanta, 4-9

5. New York Jets, 4-9

6. Buffalo Bills, 4-9

7. Jacksonvil­le Jaguars, 4-9

The likeliest race for the top pick ought to come down to San Francisco vs. Arizona.

Each is unlikely to win again. The Niners play three teams with winning records, at home against Seattle and Chicago before finishing on the road against the Rams. The Cardinals play at Atlanta, at home against the Rams, then at Seattle.

Should they wind up with identical strengths of schedule (the first tiebreaker), then San Francisco would get the top pick based on record against division opponents. The Cardinals are currently 2-2 vs. NFC West foes, thanks to their sweep of the Niners, whereas San Francisco is 0-4.

This race for the bottom ought to be captivatin­g during the season’s last three weekends.

The drama! The tension!

The Oakland Raiders on Monday fired GM Reggie McKenzie. McKenzie effectivel­y became a GM in title only once owner Mark Davis hired Jon Gruden as head coach and czar of the football operation. Reports since September suggested McKenzie and many of his scouts were not on board with Gruden’s decision to deal elite pass rusher Mack to Chicago and elite wide receiver Amari Cooper to Dallas.

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 ?? STEPHEN BRASHEAR / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Minnesota Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins lets a pass fly against the Seahawks in the first half of the NFL game Monday night game in Seattle. For a full report on the game and more on the NFL, go to nationalpo­st.com.
STEPHEN BRASHEAR / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Minnesota Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins lets a pass fly against the Seahawks in the first half of the NFL game Monday night game in Seattle. For a full report on the game and more on the NFL, go to nationalpo­st.com.

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