Bear Digest

For Bears, Who's at Tackle, What's at Guard?

The biggest Bears question remaining as camp approaches is how they keep Justin Fields upright with an unsettled line, but they aren't the only team with issues in the NFC North.
For Bears, Who's at Tackle, What's at Guard?
For Bears, Who's at Tackle, What's at Guard?

There are questions about every team in the NFC North, but probably more about the Bears than any team.

It's usually a status reserved for Detroit but the Lions have coaching stability for the moment and Bears coaches are just beginning. They'll soon see what a difficult challenge they face.

Their biggest remaining question heading to camp results from a new staff and a few new players on the offensive line: Can the Bears keep Justin Fields standing upright?

If a veteran line allowed 58 sacks last year, how many times can Fields expect to be thrown to the ground this year? 

The Bears are so unsettled on the line they are an Abbott and Costello routine for football: Who's at tackle, what's at guard, I don't know is at center.

They approach training camp with three tackles for two spots who have started 10 total NFL games and former center Sam Mustipher at right guard. He has never played there other than at OTAs and minicamp. 

Could rookie Braxton Jones start at left tackle? Will they move Mustipher back to center and start center Lucas Patrick at right guard, one of the positions he played with Green Bay?

Larry Borom started eight games as right tackle last year but lined up at left tackle through the offseason until Jones played left tackle to close OTAs and minicamp.

And Teven Jenkins was supposed to be a starter as their second-round pick last year but he could be on the bench if Jones and Borom man the tackles. Then again, they could also move Jenkins to guard. 

They did have Dakota Dozier playing guard but he suffered a knee injury at minicamp and is on IR.

There is no indication one way or the other what way they're leaning at any of those positions and that's the problem. A starting offensive line needs to be established as soon as possible to let them build as a cohesive unit. 

The Bears have four undetermined positions. Only Cody Whitehair appears a lock at his spot, but appropriately it's left guard and not center where he was once a Pro Bowl player.

The Bears are basing this offense on the running game and play-action passing. How they're going to run or protect Fields without adequate blocking is a total mystery. 

Fields' mobility might be his best asset this year.

Here are the biggest questions still facing the other NFC North teams in the opinions of FanNation's divisional websites.

Detroit Lions

Can the Defensive Line Drastically Improve?

The Detroit Lions defensive line has struggled mightily over the past couple of seasons pressuring the quarterback. Simply put, opposing offenses have had their way with Detroit's defense for far too long. Detroit's sack totals and pressure rates have been nothing to write home about, as Detroit's defense has ranked in the the bottom tier of the league in a lot of categories.

Defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn and the front office have made a concerted effort to revamp the defensive line, drafting young talent who possess a strong motor and are positive fits in the locker room.

Charles Harris had a career season in 2021 and will be looking to build off of the success he experienced his first season in Motown.

How fast Rookies Aidan Hutchinson and Josh Paschal adapt to life in the NFL will go a long way in determining how successful the defensive line can be.

The coaching staff is counting on veteran Romeo Okwara returning from a serious injury along with the development of second-year players Levi Onwuzurike and Alim McNeill.

If the switch to more of a 4-3 base look can produce more pressure, the secondary can also benefit and take steps forward, as the roster is still quite young on defense. The biggest question mark still revolves around who will step up along the defensive line to rack up sack totals. 

-John Maakaron, All-Lions

Green Bay Packers

Who's Going to Get Open?

Aaron Rodgers is coming off back-to-back MVP seasons thanks in part to All-Pro receiver Davante Adams. Over the last six seasons, no receiver in the NFL caught more passes, piled up more yards or scored more touchdown than Adams. With talent and incredible connection, they were unstoppable together.

The problem is the Packers didn’t add to significant assets to their receiver corps until it was too late. In the five drafts from 2016 through 2020, the Packers drafted six receivers. The earliest was J’Mon Moore with a compensatory pick at the end of the fourth round. None of those six are even on the roster today.

With the offseason trade of Adams, the Packers signed veteran Sammy Watkins, whose lone 1,000-yard season came way back in 2015, and drafted Christian Watson in the second round, Romeo Doubs in the fourth round and Samori Toure in the seventh round. Those four, along with veterans Allen Lazard and Randall Cobb and 2021 third-round slot Amari Rodgers will battle for their place on the depth chart in training camp.

Ultimately, the entire season will boil down to this question: Who will get open? Aaron Rodgers is a great quarterback and Matt LaFleur has a great scheme but, at some pivotal moment in a hugely important game, somebody is going to have to win their route and make a play. Will that be Lazard? Watkins? One of the rookies? Or will GM Brian Gutekunst have to go shopping?

-Bill Huber, PackerCentral

Minnesota Vikings

Will the Offensive Line and Secondary Be Good Enough?

I'm making this a two-part answer because, well, why not? As currently constructed, the Vikings have one key area on each side of the ball that's a relative unknown heading into the season.

As is the case seemingly every year, the offensive line is a potential weakness that could hold back an otherwise talented attack. The Vikings have a solid veteran quarterback, elite weapons at the skill positions, and a young offensive-minded head coach who appears to have a bright future. In order for all of those people to thrive, the line needs to provide adequate pass protection and strong run-blocking. Minnesota's tackle situation is actually quite promising with young building blocks Christian Darrisaw and Brian O'Neill, but it's the interior trio that remains a concern, particularly center Garrett Bradbury.

Defensively, the front seven looks stout. But this is a passing-driven league, so the Vikings' secondary might make or break their defensive performance as a whole. It's a unit relying on two of the oldest players on the roster—possible Hall of Famers Harrison Smith and Patrick Peterson—to play at a high level. In addition to those two, the Vikings will be counting on three of the youngest players on the roster, including two rookies, to provide quality play. That mix of post- and pre-prime talent could work well—or it could be a bit of a mess.

-Will Ragatz, Inside the Vikings


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Gene Chamberlain
GENE CHAMBERLAIN

Gene Chamberlain has covered the Chicago Bears full time as a beat writer since 1994 and prior to this on a part-time basis for 10 years. He covered the Bears as a beat writer for Suburban Chicago Newspapers, the Daily Southtown, Copley News Service and has been a contributor for the Daily Herald, the Associated Press, Bear Report, CBS Sports.com and The Sporting News. He also has worked a prep sports writer for Tribune Newspapers and Sun-Times newspapers.