Post-Tribune

Belly flop vs. Bucs

Struggles for Fields, offense in Week 7 loss were ‘all-encompassi­ng’

- By Dan Wiederer

If you win the coin toss and elect to take the ball with a stated desire of getting off to a fast start, then you best start fast. Especially against the reigning Super Bowl champions and an opposing offense led by the NFL’s all-time passing leader.

The Chicago Bears had the best intentions coming out of the gates Sunday at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Fla. But their opening series went nowhere. Zero net yards. Three plays and a punt.

Then Tampa Bay Buccaneers returner Jaelon Darden broke free for 43 yards, Tom Brady and his offense took possession at the Bears 32-yard line and in three quick snaps, the cannons on the pirate ship were firing to signal a 7-0 Bucs lead.

The smoke never cleared and the Bears never caught up. Instead they were heaved into the choppiest of waters with a 38-3 loss.

“It’s all-encompassi­ng,” Bears coach Matt Nagy said of his team’s breakdowns. Most of Chicago agreed. Honestly, an upset was never in the cards in this nightmaris­h matchup. So the result — a Bears loss on the road to a much better team — was fairly predictabl­e. But certainly Nagy’s team hoped to have a better showing than a 35-point defeat in which it never scored a touchdown. And the meltdown began on that first series.

First down: A Khalil Herbert run for no gain.

Second down: Justin Fields was sacked and fumbled when the Bears failed to pick up a safety blitz.

Third down: Fields threw a 6-yard checkdown to tight end Jesse James on thirdand-16.

Oh, well.

The Bears had their 19th possession this season without a first down and their 31st that didn’t cross midfield.

By game’s end, it was obvious they were broken. Their offense remains a total mess. Morale is dipping. The search for answers seems to have a malfunctio­ning GPS.

In a game in which the Bears trailed by at least 32 points for the entire second half, they somehow managed to pass for only 168 yards. They have yet to top 200 passing yards in a game this season.

Fields may be making modest growth, but little of it can be quantified at this stage. The rookie quarterbac­k may be gaining valuable experience each week and learning to decode how defenses are attacking. But he’s also grinding through pronounced failure and not used to this level of individual struggle or team disappoint­ment.

“I’ve never been in this position where I’m losing,” he said on the way out of Raymond James Stadium, “so I don’t know how to feel. My only reaction to this is just to keep working.”

That sets the stage for our Week 7 QB rewind.

Defining moment: For the second consecutiv­e week, Fields threw an intercepti­on on what he believed could have been a free play. This one came on third-and-5 from the Bears 40 in the first quarter. Fields said he heard chatter in his headset alerting him that the Buccaneers had 12 men on the field. He barked for a quick snap from center Sam Mustipher and tried to capitalize.

Only problem? His receivers weren’t ready and the penalty was far from a given. Fields appeared ready to throw a quick pass to Marquise Goodwin on a 2-yard hitch route, but he double-clutched and didn’t pull the trigger. With the pocket collapsing, he used his athleticis­m to slip away from Jason Pierre-Paul, slipping out of the pocket and rolling right.

In an attempt to make something happen, Fields launched a deep ball toward Allen Robinson. But Robinson slipped and the pass, a bit off target and possibly forced, dropped into the hands of cornerback Dee Delaney. Brutal.

Said Nagy: “You get to a point where you (should) throw the ball away or you run or something. Those are learning tools for him.”

That was Fields’ first of five turnovers. He threw three picks, lost two fumbles and was fortunate the Bears got the ball back on another fumble on the opening drive.

On that first pick, it’s hard to figure why the Bears were franticall­y seeking a 12-men-on-the-field penalty when the Bucs had only 11 on the field when Fields called for the snap. Somewhere in the process, there was a costly miscommuni­cation. It led to a turnover. And for the second time in the first quarter, the Bucs took over inside Bears territory.

Six plays later, Brady threw his first touchdown pass of the day. The Bears were cooked.

Uh-oh: That’s the kind of day it was for Fields and the Bears offense. The rookie’s second pick came on a pass over the middle that was a touch high, ricocheted off Darnell Mooney’s hands and found its way to safety Jordan Whitehead. Fields’ third intercepti­on was worse, another deep shot to Robinson he significan­tly underthrew.

Facing second-and-11 from their 1 on the first play of the fourth quarter, the Bears had little to lose with a deep shot. Against a disguised pressure, Fields let it fly. It just didn’t fly nearly far enough. Robinson did little to contest the pick, and cornerback Pierre Desir had an easy takeaway.

Nagy emphasized Monday that the turnover was, at least in part, a chemistry/communicat­ion issue between Fields and Robinson. That deep shot has different rules depending on whether the corner is playing off in coverage or pressing at the line of scrimmage. In that instance Desir was, per Nagy, in a bit of a gray area.

Where Fields threw the ball wasn’t where Robinson was. More film study is needed. More practice time is required.

Said Nagy: “When those two guys get together and

start watching that exact situation — that play and that route versus that defense — they’ll fix that. And they’ll be able to make sure that doesn’t happen. Worst case, it would be an incompleti­on. Those are probably some of the things we’ re going through where we need to make sure, ‘OK, hey, are we doing everything we can as coaches? And are they doing everything they can as players (to get it right)?’ ”

Fields’ three fumbles all came against the Bucs’ fierce pass rush. On the game’s second snap, safety Antoine Winfield came screaming off the edge to Fields’ left, hit the quarterbac­k hard from the blind side and knocked the ball loose. Running back Khalil Herbert, who owned up to being late in his blitz pickup responsibi­lities, pounced on the ball.

Fields fumbled twice more, once when Shaquil Barrett whipped right tackle Lachavious Simmons around the edge and hit Fields’ arm as he threw and again when PierrePaul blazed around Simmons and hit Fields at the top of his drop.

There was little Fields could have done on any of those fumbles. And it’s no wonder Simmons, who became a last-minute emergency starter in place of Elijah Wilkinson, lasted only 22 snaps before Alex Bars replaced him at right tackle.

As Fields experience­s his own growing pains, it won’t help his comfort level if his trust in his offensive line diminishes. That’s something to keep an eye on.

Whatever the reasons, five turnovers in a game is inexcusabl­e. From the first series, it seemed as if Buccaneers defensive coordinato­r Todd Bowles was drooling to come after Fields with a high volume of blitzes and a wide array of complex looks.

Said Bucs coach Bruce Arians: “Todd loves seeing rookie quarterbac­ks. (Our defense) had a great plan to get after him and really disguise coverages and utilize a bunch of different pressures. It was outstandin­g defense.” On the bright side: Brace yourself, Bears fans. This may not be exactly what you’re looking for. But Nagy highlighte­d the pass Fields threw into the first row of seats beyond the north end zone as one of the few encouragin­g moments during a rough afternoon.

As Nagy reasoned, that easily could have been a turnover if Fields had given in to the familiar rookie urge to force the issue. Instead, he stayed within himself and settled for an incompleti­on.

That throw came in the second quarter on the Bears’ only scoring drive. On secondand-goal from just inside the 10, Fields appeared ready initially to send a fastball to Damiere Byrd near the front pylon, but he recognized tight coverage and didn’t take the chance.

With Robinson coming across the back of the end zone later in the play, Fields didn’t feel he had enough of an opening, and as the Bucs rush closed in on him near the right sideline, he chucked the ball out of the end zone.

Nagy identified that as “a good moment,” praising Fields for not trying to throw across his body with congestion in the end zone.

“I know like hell he wanted to throw the ball into the end zone and wanted to try to make a play and throw a touchdown,” Nagy said. “And he threw the ball out of bounds. That, to me, was simple growth for him. He made a good decision. He let us get to third down. And he didn’t force the ball like many rookies and many quarterbac­ks do.”

The Bears eventually squeezed a 28-yard Cairo Santos field goal out of the series.

Sure, that was a positive show of discipline and poise from Fields. But the fact Nagy gave it special mention in the aftermath of a 35-point road loss indicates how few silver linings there were.

Of Fields’ 43 pass plays — 32 throws plus four sacks and seven scrambles — only three went for at least 20 yards, including 22-yard completion­s in the second half to Mooney and Cole Kmet.

On the play-action connection to Mooney, Fields had to retreat in his drop farther than expected but still saw an open window with Mooney beating Delaney for a big gain.

Those kinds of plays are encouragin­g. But they need to be coming once a quarter at minimum. The Bears need to unlock their passing attack as soon as possible. Otherwise, lopsided losses like Sunday’s will keep coming.

 ?? STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Bears quarterbac­k Justin Fields fumbles after being blindsided by Buccaneers outside linebacker Jason Pierre-Paul.
STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Bears quarterbac­k Justin Fields fumbles after being blindsided by Buccaneers outside linebacker Jason Pierre-Paul.

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