Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

MAKING A LOT OF NOISE

Williams and Odunze have potential to make offense the star of the show

- MARK POTASH mpotash@suntimes.com | @MarkPotash

When Jay Cutler and the Bears’ offense produced five touchdowns in a 41-21 rout of the Colts in the 2012 season opener at Soldier Field, Bears fans were making a lot of noise. Too much noise.

Despite the victory and offensive output, Cutler was miffed that Bears fans seemed unaware of standard NFL fan etiquette: When your team has the ball in the red zone, pipe down and let the quarterbac­k operate the offense.

“Please, please, please, let’s tone it down a little bit when we’re down on the 20,” Cutler said. “You’re more than welcome to yell and scream and do whatever you want to do after we score. But please, let’s go ahead and quiet the stadium down and save it until after we scored.”

Cutler’s admonishme­nt of the fans was deserved, but the crowd’s ignorance was understand­able. Bears fans hadn’t been conditione­d to know all the nuances and unwritten rules of rooting for a consistent­ly productive offense. Many of them had rarely if ever seen one, or had forgotten what one looked like.

Even back in 2012, the Bears had ranked in the top 10 in points scored just twice in the previous 20 seasons. Their average rank since 1992 was 20th, with 11 seasons in the bottom 10.

That dubious history of bad Bears offenses has not changed in the ensuing 12 seasons.

The Bears have ranked in the top 10 in scoring just four times in the last 33 seasons. And each time it was fleeting, a sudden surge followed by an immediate return to the bottom half of the league.

Offense has been a struggle for the Bears in most current fans’ lifetime. Hall of Fame running back Walter Payton broke the NFL career rushing record in his illustriou­s career, but the Bears were an average of 19th in scoring in his first 10 seasons (in a 28-team league) and never higher than 13th. When Payton rushed for an NFL-record 275 yards against the Vikings in 1977, the Bears scored 10 points.

No wonder the Bears are known historical­ly for their defense — the Monsters of the Midway. It doesn’t seem like it will ever change. But the drafting of quarterbac­k Caleb Williams with the No. 1 overall pick and wide receiver Rome Odunze with the No. 9 pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, Bears fans can dare to dream.

With Williams, wide receivers DJ Moore, Keenan Allen and Odunze, running back D’Andre Swift and tight ends Cole Kmet and Gerald Everett, the Bears objectivel­y have the potential for an offense that will someday be a franchise rarity — the star of the show.

That literally hasn’t happened for more than a season since the 1950s, with quarterbac­k Ed Brown and wide receiver Harlon Hill — but really dates back to the glory days of the 1940s, when the Bears were an offensive revelation with quarterbac­k Sid Luckman.

When the Bears won the Super Bowl in 1985, their offense was second in the NFL in scoring, but Buddy Ryan’s devastatin­g “46” defense was the star of the show. When the Bears won the NFL title in 1963, the leaguelead­ing defense that allowed 9.8 points per game carried them all season — right down to Larry Morris and Ed O’Bradovich intercepti­ng Y.A. Tittle passes to set up both touchdowns in a 14-10 victory against the Giants in the NFL Championsh­ip game. The Bears’ offense ranked 10th out of 14 teams that season.

Even now, the defense under coach Matt Eberflus that has expectatio­ns of being in the top 10 in points allowed after a strong finish last year figures to take the lead in 2024. At least to start. But the potential for the Monsters of the Midway to become an offensive juggernaut — believe it or not — is there.

How soon? When Soldier Field is silent when Caleb Williams has the offense inside the 20, you’ll know it has arrived.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Jay Cutler admonished excited fans for making too much noise during the 2012 opener. A potent offense could give fans even more reason to cheer.
GETTY IMAGES Jay Cutler admonished excited fans for making too much noise during the 2012 opener. A potent offense could give fans even more reason to cheer.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States