LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) — Chicago Bears coach Lovie
Smith rarely rips his team in public, so the shot he sent after that brutal
preseason loss to the New York Giants sure did resonate.
He took aim at his defense while talking about the
team's health, saying: "You've got to tackle a little bit better before
you start talking about injuries and things like that."
At least Monday night's 41-13 loss doesn't count.
Chicago has high expectations after making a run to
the NFC championship game, and is counting on a defense that ranked among the
best a year ago with Julius Peppers, Brian Urlacher and Lance Briggs leading
the way.
After a sharp performance against Buffalo in the
preseason opener, the defense was a dud against New York — no takeaways, no
sacks and no shortage of missed tackles.
"We didn't tackle well," defensive
coordinator Rod Marinelli said Thursday. "Some of the things are angles.
We kind of overshot the ball a little bit. Really, they're a good cut back
team. The backs aren't overly fast backs, but they are cutback guys. So that
was a big part of it. But we just didn't quite get that done."
New York ran for 218 yards against a team that
ranked ninth overall and second against the rush last season while going 11-5
and winning the NFC North.
"We've got to take that film and learn from
it," said safety Major Wright, who got faked out badly on an 18-yard
touchdown run early in the second quarter.
He took a bad angle and whiffed on a lunge,
crashing to the ground as Brandon Jacobs juked to his right on a run up the
middle on his way to the end zone as New York took a 10-3 lead.
Late in the half, Tim Jennings got beat by Domenik
Hixon on a lob to the corner of the end zone for a 5-yard touchdown. And in the
fourth quarter, the Giants' Da'Rel Scott broke off a 97-yard scoring run,
bumping into his own lineman and regaining his balance before bursting through
the line and racing for the score.
"When you go down and look at the breakdowns,
it was our fault," defensive tackle Marcus Harrison said. "It wasn't
anything they did in particular that we couldn't stop. It was just like gap
control and effort and assignment. You look for improvements each game. For us,
that was a setback. This next game will be very important as far as things that
we do."
Peppers and Urlacher didn't play much on Monday,
and Briggs and nose tackle Anthony Adams didn't at all. That's three Pro Bowl
players and four starters, so some perspective is in order. Keep in mind, too,
that the Bears know the system, and are not adjusting to a new coordinator.
They've been running the Cover 2 defense for years and have their core players
back.
They're just a little short-handed at the moment.
Briggs sat out with a bruised knee after playing in
the preseason opener, and Adams has missed both games because of a calf injury.
They will not play Saturday against Tennessee and could miss the final
preseason game, which doesn't exactly help as they prepare for the opener
against Atlanta on Sept. 11.
"It hurts every day that they're not out
here," Smith said. "But they have been around a while. They know what
we expect. They know the defense. They're veteran players. But there's a reason
why we practice. We would love to have those players out here as soon as we
can. Hopefully before long we'll get them out. But we're a better defensive
team with both of those players. I'm just banking on them being ready to
go."
He's also counting on more takeaways and more pressure.
That hasn't been there from the first unit.
"The first group hasn't had the look yet, and
as many as I would like to have right now," Marinelli said. "But,
it's just solid. I'm not going to jump over a fence and throw them bouquets
right now. We got a lot of work to do and they're working on it. But it's still
not good enough."
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.
(AP
Photo/Nam Y. Huh)






