Irish Boy wrote:
Take away defensive TDs and they drop somewhere into the 20-23 range. FO has them as the 26th best offense in the NFL (and Cutler as the 27th best QB). They need to improve some just to get to middle of the pack.Quote:
Now they've injected some new blood into the OL and TE spots
They've signed journeymen at market prices. They will be improvements. But they are still, by definition, players that their old teams were more than happy to see move on. Quote:
they've hired proven professionals on the offensive side of the ball
Unproven. We know that Trestman has had some success at some stops and not in others. The places where he's had success has been running other people's systems, or following behind proven offensive minds where he was put into place to continue their systems. He's pretty much been the Mel Tucker of offense. And he's been out of the NFL for half a decade. He could be an offensive genius. This could also be a situation where they score 13 points across three weeks in the middle of the season and everyone says "holy shit, the head coach is a former child actor from The Little Rascals."
I filtered the team stats on NFL.com by offense, so I'm not sure if the point total was inclusive of offense and defense or just offense only. Regardless, your point is taken.
I do hold that you can have several average to slightly above average players on your roster and be just fine. You just have sprinkle in, say, a Forte here, and a Marshall there, and so on. Take Earl Bennett for example. By himself, he's not impressive. But if Jeffery improves and Marshall remains Marshall, then you're happy you have Bennett around.
As for Bushrod, I think he was drafted by the Saints, made the Pro Bowl, and his acquisition was a mild surprise since the Saints did want to keep him. He's an example of what I am talking about: a fairly decent player, nothing spectacular, but the type of player the Bears have been lacking across the board on offense. Now that you've got competent guys in Bushrod, Bennett, and hopefully an improved Jeffery and healthy E. Bennett, you've given Cutler much more to work with. More than he's ever had in Chicago.
I think the questions you raise on Trestman's previous NFL stops are valid, but I think the least we can say is that he's successfully implemented the systems of his bosses. Any sort of similar, successful implementation of an offensive system in Chicago will be the first of its kind in....I don't know how long. Since it's worked before under his stewardship in the NFL and CFL, I don't know if there's a reason to doubt if his offense (winning the locker room is a separate challenge) can do it here.
I don't know if I put much into him not being around for the past five years or so. Even with the gap, he still has substantial NFL experience and is well regarded around the league. It's not the NFL, but his success in the CFL has to count for something. It's not like he went there and got lost in the crowd. He won at the highest level of that league despite being pitted against career CFL guys who've been there forever.