Chicago Sun-Times

‘D’ IS TITLE-CALIBER, BUT IS THAT ENOUGH?

Pagano’s unit likely will excel, but offense must improve

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The preseason didn’t matter much to Bears defensive coordinato­r Chuck Pagano last year, regardless of how he magnified its importance in news conference­s. Come on, it’s not like Khalil Mack needed the reps.

But that was a different roster. Teams must constantly fill holes when players age out or get squeezed by the salary cap, and Pagano will have 14 practices — no games — to get new players acclimated and iron out plans in the secondary and on the defensive line.

“It’s going to be a huge challenge for everybody across the league because we’re all going to want to have live [tackling] periods — everybody’s scared to death to do that in practice,” he said. “We’ve always had the four preseason games, and ... our guys were going to play more [this year], so they were going to get that.”

And Pagano was going to get that. Preseason games would’ve been vital for evaluating new safety Tashaun Gipson and rookie cornerback Jaylon Johnson, picking a nose tackle after Eddie Goldman opted out and getting a feel for how pass rusher Robert Quinn fits. Pagano also needs to establish depth at several positions, especially line

backer after Nick Kwiatkoski left in free agency.

The Bears’ goal is to smooth out all those transition­s and maintain an elite defense. Over the last two seasons, they’ve been outstandin­g: third in points and yards allowed, third in takeaways, fourth in yards allowed per rush, second in opponent passer rating and third in third-down stops.

Their core is still intact. The Bears count on having the NFL’s best pass rush with Mack, Quinn and defensive lineman Akiem Hicks. Kyle Fuller can be an AllPro at cornerback. Gipson should look better than ever when paired with two-time Pro Bowl safety Eddie Jackson.

To the question of whether Pagano can fit everyone together and make this the best defense in the NFL, the answer is yes. If they stay healthy, they’re miles ahead of any NFC team.

But then there’s the next question: Is that enough?

The Bears learned the hard way that a Super Bowl-caliber defense often can’t compensate for a pitiful offense. They’re one of six teams in the last two seasons to finish in the top 10 in points allowed but miss the playoffs. Those teams finished, on average, 27th in scoring.

The Bears’ bid is countercul­tural in the modern NFL, where only three teams have reached the conference-title round without a top-10 offense. In 2018, the four finalists were also Nos. 1-4 in scoring. And while the Chiefs have been good defensivel­y, the reason they’re at the dawn of a dynasty is because they’ve averaged 31.8 points in Patrick Mahomes’ young career.

The Bears have almost no hope of suddenly blooming into a fearsome offense. A more realistic — albeit still ambitious based on last season — target would be the middle of the pack. If better quarterbac­k play, presumably from Nick Foles, and a stronger offensive line can get them there, that’s enough to give the defense a shot.

The Packers made it to the NFC Championsh­ip Game last season with the 15th-ranked offense and the No. 9 defense, and the 2016 Steelers got to the AFC title game with a team that was 11th in offense and 10th in defense.

The best template for the Bears, though, is the 2015 Broncos.

While they had quarterbac­k Peyton Manning, he was 39 and struggling through his last season. Between him and Brock Osweiler, the Broncos managed a 76.3 team passer rating that ranked secondto-last and finished 19th in scoring. They scored 20 points or fewer in eight of 19 games (including playoffs) but went 6-2 in those because they had the No. 4 defense.

There’s no doubt Pagano can keep the defense at that level this season. But the offense has to be at least average for that to matter.

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 ?? ERIC CHRISTIAN SMITH/AP (RIGHT), JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES (ABOVE) ?? Bears defensive coordinato­r Chuck Pagano (right) has high hopes for new addition Robert Quinn, who will make Khalil Mack (above, left) and Akiem Hicks (above, right) even more dangerous.
ERIC CHRISTIAN SMITH/AP (RIGHT), JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES (ABOVE) Bears defensive coordinato­r Chuck Pagano (right) has high hopes for new addition Robert Quinn, who will make Khalil Mack (above, left) and Akiem Hicks (above, right) even more dangerous.
 ?? JASON LIESER BEARS BEAT jlieser@suntimes.com | @JasonLiese­r ??
JASON LIESER BEARS BEAT jlieser@suntimes.com | @JasonLiese­r
 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? Tashaun Gipson (right) should be better than ever when paired with two-time Pro Bowl safety Eddie Jackson (below).
AP PHOTOS Tashaun Gipson (right) should be better than ever when paired with two-time Pro Bowl safety Eddie Jackson (below).
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