Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

In line for yet another change

Continued shuffling up front has slowed offense’s developmen­t

- Brad Biggs On the Bears

Matt Eberflus dropped enough hints during the Bears’ review of the first six games that it wouldn’t be a surprise if they were to make a change on the offensive line against the New England Patriots on Monday night at Gillette Stadium.

The most likely scenario is Michael Schofield taking over at left guard with Lucas Patrick sliding over to center and Sam Mustipher heading to the sideline.

If so, it will be the fourth lineup the Bears have used on the line in seven games with the team needing to plug a hole while Cody Whitehair is on injured reserve with a sprained MCL in his right knee. Whitehair is sidelined for at least two more games, and the soonest he could return is Nov. 6 against the Miami Dolphins at Soldier Field.

Despite the ongoing shuffling the Bears have run the ball extremely well, ranking second in yards per game (170.8) and seventh in yards per carry (5.2) — numbers boosted by Justin Fields, who trails only Jalen Hurst of the Philadelph­ia Eagles in rushing yards by quarterbac­ks (293-282).

Conversely, the passing game has been a wreck, and there’s ample blame to go around.

The Bears are last in passing yards and completion percentage and rank 31st in passer rating. Fields, who is averaging 10.5 completion­s per game, has been sacked on 20% of his pass attempts, more than double 27 teams and a significan­tly higher rate than the other four clubs.

He’s tied with the Washington Commanders’ Carson Wentz for the most sacks in the NFL with 23, and Wentz has attempted more than twice as many passes — 232-115.

“We know we’ve got to get better and we’re working to do that,” offensive line coach Chris Morgan said. “It always starts with us, and we know that. We’re doing everything in our power to keep Justin clear. We know we have to improve.”

Pass protection has been a significan­t problem, especially in two of the last three games against the Commanders and New York Giants, and schematica­lly the Bears haven’t found a way to help rookie fifth-round pick Braxton Jones hold up at left

tackle. They’ve been beaten across the line, and it’s probably unrealisti­c to believe any reconfigur­ation would be a cure for all that ails the pass protection. If the coaching staff thought there was, a move would have been made sooner.

The difference between run blocking and pass blocking is striking.

“Pass blocking is one of the hardest tasks in this league,” offensive coordinato­r Luke Getsy said. “Defensive lines in this league … they’re amazing players. I would imagine most evaluators don’t even watch run blocking as much because pass pro is so hard.

“That’s why you have to run the ball. That’s why you have to use (the) play (action) pass to help alleviate some of that. And then when you get into the obvious passing downs, we have to find different ways to kind of keep them accountabl­e and not just let them run off the ball as fast as (they) can.”

Patrick has struggled playing both guard positions and on Thursday was critical of his performanc­e. Moving him to center would put him where the team originally slotted him when he signed a two-year, $8 million contract in free agency.

Patrick couldn’t play there to start the season after suffering a broken thumb on his right snapping hand that required surgery at the outset of training camp.

“If I knew (why I was struggling), I probably would be playing a lot better,” Patrick said. “Just going to keep working and keep checking my process and working things from a ground-up approach and try to build things the right way.”

Patrick rotated with Teven Jenkins at right guard at the start of the season before he was tabbed to replace Whitehair on the left side.

“It’s a different approach (playing different positions), but there’s no excuses,” he said. “If I’m in there playing, the guy I am going against doesn’t care whether I’ve had 1,000 snaps, one snap, playing left, right, whatever.

“I have to perform. I’m going to work at performing at a higher level.”

The Bears probably would like to look at Alex Leatherwoo­d at some point, but he has had only 10 practices since being claimed off waivers from the Las Vegas Raiders on Aug. 31 and then having a four-week stint on the reserve/non-football illness list with mononucleo­sis.

Leatherwoo­d hasn’t been activated to the 53-man roster, and the team has another weekand-a-half to do so. He dropped weight while sidelined so he’s getting back in shape.

The Bears said they had strong grades on Leatherwoo­d when they claimed him and his contract that included $5.9 million in remaining guarantees. Even if the Raiders overdrafte­d him at No. 17 in 2021, he still could have a bright future.

“He was a very decorated player (at Alabama),” Morgan said. “Big, strong, smart guy and a very productive college player. There was a ton of good stuff on tape to like.”

Schofield played briefly last week when Patrick and Jenkins were sidelined. The Bears signed Schofield just before training camp but cut him to help reach the 53-man roster. When Leatherwoo­d was sidelined, Schofield was re-signed during Week 2.

Schofield had a bumpy preseason but has 81 career starts.

“Mike has played a lot of ball,” Morgan said. “He’s an athletic guy, [a] smart guy, and he’s got a lot of starts. He brings a lot to the table for our group.”

With 11 days between games Eberflus laid down enough bread crumbs for a trail leading to a new starting lineup. Leatherwoo­d needs more time to get back into football shape, and the Bears have talked about the possibilit­y of Patrick returning to center since before his thumb healed. It stands to reason the team will keep Jenkins at right guard.

Mustipher has made 29 consecutiv­e starts at center and improved since last season, but he could be the odd man out.

None of what has happened up front is a surprise.

The Bears don’t have a lot invested in the line between draft capital and salaries. Morgan repeatedly talks about the process and maintainin­g focus on improvemen­t each day. Perhaps the line will be in a better place, or perhaps it will resemble what it did during the first six weeks.

Just know Fields, the receivers and the running backs are tied to the production of the passing game — and the Bears have been failing in every area.

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 ?? ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Members of the Bears offensive line help quarterbac­k Justin Fields (1) up after he was tackled during the fourth quarter Oct. 13 at Soldier Field.
ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Members of the Bears offensive line help quarterbac­k Justin Fields (1) up after he was tackled during the fourth quarter Oct. 13 at Soldier Field.

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