Chicago Sun-Times

GOLDMAN READY TO GO

Nose tackle hoping to stay healthy, have big third year

- MARK POTASH

Coach John Fox looked at me like I had two heads when I asked him late in the 2015 season if the Bears would have been better off shutting down Pernell McPhee for a few weeks instead of having him play through a nagging knee injury.

“That doesn’t make much sense,” Fox said, almost incredulou­sly. “A football player not playing football.”

The idea actually was pretty simple: Why not give McPhee a few weeks off to get close to 100 percent. It’s better to have him play the final four games at 95 percent than six of the final eight at 75 percent, or whatever percentage he was.

Fox would have none of it. So McPhee struggled through the final half of the 2015 season with one sack and two tackles- for- loss and ended up having offseason surgery that lingered and eventually cost him the first six games of the 2016 season.

Maybe shutting McPhee down would have helped. Maybe it wouldn’t. Either way, his situation typified the difficulty the Bears have had in avoiding injuries and managing injuries in Fox’s two seasons.

A similar predicamen­t befell nose tackle Eddie Goldman last season after he suffered an ankle injury in a pile- up against the Eagles in Week 2. Goldman missed six games, but struggled when he returned in Week 10 against the Buccaneers.

The second- round pick in 2015 missed the following week, then played in three consecutiv­e games, then missed the Packers game in Week 15 before being put on in j u r e d reserve. He played in six games but never more than three in a row. “It was disappoint­ing,” Goldman said Tuesday after participat­ing in organized team activities at Halas Hall, “because I was coming into games trying to play and just ended up aggravatin­g it and then missing the next game and then playing again. So yeah, it was kind of frustratin­g.” Did he second- guess the decision to return while the ankle was still a problem? Would taking more time off to get it 100 percent have helped? “It might have. I really don’t know,” Goldman said. “But if I would’ve sat out more, I wouldn’t have helped the team in those games. It can go either way.”

Even if it’s just another case of bad luck, those situations have to start going the Bears’ way if they are going to become a relevant team in the NFC North.

In just 21 games over two seasons, Goldman has showed that he can be a difference- maker when he’s at full strength. The 6- 4, 325- pound nose tackle is a run- stopper who makes his teammates’ job easier and adds significan­t pass- rush ability. Goldman had at least a partial sack in three of the six games he played last year, and sacking the quarterbac­k is a small measuremen­t of his effectiven­ess.

Goldman isi doing extra work to strengthen thet ankle, but, other than keeping his fingers crossed, there’s not a wholew lot he can do to work on avo avoiding another injury. “There’s little stuff you can do, but at the same time,ti it’s a risky game,” he said.

Now the challengec­h for Goldman is to play a fu full season after missing three gamesgam as a rookie and 10 last season.

“He kind of understand­s his body now,” defensived line coach Jay Rodgers said. “He understand­s what he plays at. What works for him.”him

If Goldman is thinking big, he’s not talking big.b He laughed when told that “YearYe 3” in the NFL is when players like him often take off.

“That’s whatwh they say, man,” he said. “It’s defi definitely a year to come out. [ But] afterafte last year, I’ve got to re- establish m myself.”

Follow me ono Twitter @ MarkPotash.MarkPotash

“It’s definitely a year to come out. [ But] after last year, I’ve got to re- establish myself.” Eddie Goldman, Bears nose tackle, on players breaking out in their third year in the NFL

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