veganfan21 wrote:
When you say they could be in "trouble," I was hoping you'd make a finer distinction: are they in trouble all over the place, or on just one side of the ball? For me, it's obvious the trouble is on defense, while they have something promising going on with the offense.
They are in trouble as a team. They have a few younger pieces to build around on offense but there are just too many bad drafts in a row to expect it to be sustainable. The Bears have stayed competitive by getting a lot of production from players that are either gone or on the way out or declining. I think you are a little bit too optimistic about the offense. It has some pieces to build around but so does pretty much every team but the Jaguars.
veganfan21 wrote:
Cutler may not like having what is essentially his potential replacement as a teammate, but too bad. I think it's in the Bears' interest to keep Cutler for a year while drafting a QB. Assuming Cutler returns and plays decent for the rest of the season, why not go into next year with Cutler as a starter, and knowing exactly what he can do, and seeing where that takes you? If it becomes clear that things are not going well that season, then you drop him Schaub-style and go with the rookie. Of course the best case scenario is that Cutler is the Alex Smith to the hypothetical rookie's Colin Kaepernick. The best problem to have is a competent QB on whom you can rely, and a talented backup ready to take over if the older guy gets injured or falters.
How much of a difference can Cutler really make? It's been pretty much established that Cutler needs a lot of talent around him to be a difference maker.
I'd rather see what a rookie QB can do which is now the norm in the NFL. I'm concerned if they franchise Cutler, that we'll have a situation where we have a coach entering his third year, and a GM entering his fourth year, and THEN we finally accept a rebuild with a new quarterback when Cutler isn't brought back after next year. Get moving going forward. The Bears aren't winning the Super Bowl this year or next year and any rationalization of "any team can win it any year" doesn't really change that thought since that means it is just as likely that they do with or without Cutler.