Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

SILENCE IS GOLDEN?

Even with pumped-in noise, road venues are pretty quiet — a gift for Bears’ offense

- MARK POTASH mpotash@suntimes.com | @MarkPotash

Bears coach Matt Nagy noticed a homefield disadvanta­ge last week at Soldier Field.

Trailing 17-3, the Giants drove from their own 5-yard line late in the third quarter to inside the Bears’ 5 early in the fourth. On third-and-goal from the 1, Daniel Jones threw an incomplete pass. On fourth-andgoal from the 1, running back Dion Lewis scored to cut the Bears’ lead to 17-10.

“Our defense is standing there, backed up at the 1-yard line with the offense in the huddle getting ready to go,” Nagy said. “There’s a break [after the incompleti­on], and it’s dead quiet. Usually, the crowd’s going. It’s loud. The players feed off that. [It’s] completely advantage defense.

“[This] was like a scrimmage. That’s hard. I don’t know what it’s like on TV [with manufactur­ed crowd noise], but it’s certainly different at the game. So there’s no homefield advantage at all because no one’s there.”

The flip side of that scenario, of course, is that there’s no road-team disadvanta­ge this season, either. So when the Bears face the Falcons on Sunday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, they won’t have to deal with deafening crowds, communicat­ion issues in the offensive huddle or silent counts at the line of scrimmage.

Overall, that’s an advantage for the Bears, whose work-in-progress offense benefits from laboratory conditions as it tries to develop the timing, rhythm and chemistry Nagy is looking for. In fact, playing indoors as the visiting team in empty stadiums might be more beneficial than playing at Soldier Field as conditions in Chicago become more inclement.

The NFL instituted a rule that crowd noise pumped into empty stadiums must be at 70 decibels — no higher or lower — from kickoff to the end of the game. From their experience at Ford Field in Detroit, Nagy and the Bears know that won’t be nearly enough to disrupt offensive communicat­ion.

“It’s definitely a big advantage across the NFL for the offense, in my opinion,” Nagy said. “Because it’s actually the opposite [effect] in Detroit. It was super quiet — really, really quiet. So there was no effect of noise or music or anything like that.

“I do know, generally, when you’re in those domes — Atlanta and New Orleans and those places — it can get super loud and it’s advantage defensive line,” Nagy said. “Just from that first week and even last week [at Soldier Field], I feel like there’s more advantage to the offense being able to use your cadence and voice verbally.”

It’s only a two-week sample size, so take it for what it’s worth that visiting teams are averaging 26.6 points per game in indoor stadiums (domes and venues with a retractabl­e roof ). In the first two weeks of last season, it was 18.0 points per game. In their previous four trips to U.S. Bank Stadium, the Packers scored 23, 17, 10 and 14 points against the Vikings. In Week 1 of this season, they scored 43.

So Sunday’s game is more of an opportunit­y than a dreadful road trip. In fact, with no fans, the Bears’ early schedule is ideal for a team trying to develop an offense. Five of their first six opponents were in the bottom 10 in scoring defense in 2019 — the Lions (26th), Giants (30th), Falcons (23rd), Buccaneers (29th) and Panthers (31st). The Colts were 18th. If the Bears haven’t found their groove by the time they face the Rams at SoFi Stadium on Oct. 26, it’s on them.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Dion Lewis (33) scores on the Bears last week. Defenses are at a disadvanta­ge without roaring crowds.
GETTY IMAGES Dion Lewis (33) scores on the Bears last week. Defenses are at a disadvanta­ge without roaring crowds.
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