Post-Tribune

Will Bears let Montgomery run away?

Agent says RB, a pending free agent, epitomizes what team has become

- Brad Biggs

Asked to name a signature moment this season for David Montgomery, a week after he scored two touchdowns in a loss to the Eagles, running backs coach David Walker paused and thought about it.

“Some of my favorite plays are when he’s able to make something out of nothing using a combinatio­n of power and agility,” Walker said. “There’s a run versus Houston I can remember on the sideline, a short-yardage play where he runs through a guy. In New England, dragging defenders after contact. The first Green Bay game, we run a power and he rips it off, makes a guy miss and finishes. Those types of runs are the ones that come to my mind in terms of his value to our team.

“He epitomizes what we have become throughout the course of the year.”

Montgomery has endeared himself to Matt Eberflus’ coaching staff much the same way he did with Matt Nagy and his assistants after the Chicago Bears traded up to draft him in the third round in 2019.

It’s not premature to wonder what the future holds for Montgomery, who will be an unrestrict­ed free agent at season’s end. Saturday’s game against the Buffalo Bills at Soldier Field could be part of his last stand with the organizati­on.

The running back position is loaded with talents set to reach the open market. Topping the list are Josh Jacobs of the Las Vegas Raiders, who leads the NFL with 1,495 rushing yards, and three other backs who are among the top eight in yardage: Saquon Barkley of the

New York Giants, Miles Sanders of the Eagles and Tony Pollard of the Dallas Cowboys.

Point out to Montgomery that it is a talented, crowded group and he nods.

“Mine being one of them,” he said.

Montgomery has 694 rushing yards with five touchdowns and is averaging 4 yards per carry. He has 28 receptions — 13 in the last four games — for 282 yards and two scores. Quarterbac­k Justin Fields leads the Bears with 1,000 rushing yards and Khalil Herbert, due back Saturday after missing four games with a hip injury, has 643 rushing yards and is averaging 6 yards per carry.

The Bears are the only team in the league with three players to have more than 100 rushing attempts, and it will be fascinatin­g to see how general manager Ryan Poles prioritize­s personnel moves on offense that will shape the roster.

“He’s a rock,” offensive coordinato­r Luke Getsy said of Montgomery. “He’s comes to work every single day. He can handle a lot mentally, so we do a lot of different stuff with him.

... He’s awesome, tough as nails. You see the way he finishes every run. He’s one of those guys that you love having at the forefront of your program.”

Second contracts for running backs have been rare for the Bears. They signed Tarik Cohen to a three-year, $17.25 million extension in September 2020, one week before he blew out his right knee returning a punt against the Atlanta Falcons. The only lead running back the team has re-upped since 2000 is Matt Forte, a second-round pick in 2008. He received a four-year, $32 million extension in 2012 to avoid playing that season under the franchise tag, a wise investment as he finished out that deal, playing eight seasons for the Bears. He ranks second in club history with 8,602 rushing yards, is second with 486 receptions and seventh with 4,116 receiving yards.

The only other back since 2000 to play beyond a rookie contract with the team is Adrian Peterson, a sixth-round pick in 2002 who was kept around for his value on special teams. The glut of productive running backs headed for free agency could make it a buyer’s market at a position teams sometimes prefer to fill through the draft. The Bears found Herbert in the sixth round in 2021, a nice discovery by former GM Ryan Pace. Surely they have big plans for him in the future.

Getsy likes having a

1-2 punch at the position with running backs that have different strengths, so whether it’s re-signing Montgomery or finding a back that complement­s Herbert in free agency or the draft likely looms as a priority.

An AFC personnel evaluator listed Jacobs, Barkley and Kareem Hunt of the Cleveland Browns as the top-three pending free agents at the position. He added a caveat with Hunt, explaining some teams might not consider him because of past off-field issues. Hunt was suspended for eight games in 2019 after a disturbing video surfaced showing him attacking a woman.

Pollard has been more productive than Ezekiel Elliott this season but there are questions about whether the 6-foot, 209-pounder can handle the load of a true workhorse back.

“I like Montgomery but he’s not a breakaway speed guy,” the personnel man said. “He’s more quick than fast. I don’t think he has a ton of value on third down. He’s more of a base-down guy with a degree of thirddown value.”

Montgomery has proved to be a reliable receiver out of the backfield. He caught 54 passes in 2020 and is averaging 10.1 yards per reception this season. He has been targeted 33 times and caught 28 passes with Fields just starting to use the running back position more in the passing game.

The Bears are on pace for 3,177 rushing yards, which would rank third all time. The 1948 San Francisco 49ers rushed for 3,663 and the 2019 Baltimore Ravens 3,296. The Bears are averaging 186.9 rushing yards per game, which would be a franchise record. The 1984 team, led by Walter Payton, averaged 185.9 rushing yards.

“That’s super dope, especially being a part of it with Justin and Khalil,” Montgomery said. “It’s super cool.”

The reaction epitomizes Montgomery’s priorities. He references teammates when talking about achievemen­ts for an offense that has pounded the ball on the ground. In the months to come, we’ll learn how Poles and his staff feel about him.

 ?? CHRIS SWEDA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Bears running back David Montgomery runs for a touchdown Sunday against the Philadelph­ia Eagles at Soldier Field.
CHRIS SWEDA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Bears running back David Montgomery runs for a touchdown Sunday against the Philadelph­ia Eagles at Soldier Field.
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