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Chicago Bears (official thread)

BuckWrestler141

Legend
'18 Bowl Mania Champ
Urlacher and Brown injure Benson.

I'm more then pissed off right now. For those that haven't followed the Bears training camp. There are plenty of people on the team that don't like Benson for 'stealing' Thomas Jones spot. This was the cause of the first day of training camp, with no tackling allowed, a ton of Bears players taking hard shots on Cedric Benson. Sending a message is fine, the problem is this has continued the entire training camp taking cheap shots at him that viewers have claimed would receive fines if preformed in a game during NO TACKLE drills!

Well today Urlacher and Brown cracked him at the same time and he is out with a shoulder injury. Real smart guys Jones is already out (fake? who knows). I hope Lovie Smith finally steps up about this issue and starts fining the hell out of the players involved.

Edit: I'm aware this post is fairly 'bucknut' type, but the Pro boards here do have lower standards :wink:
 
Rumors of fractured shoulder are floating about the radio station 'The Score'.

They just showed the play on comcast sports, itactually falls a bit more under 'freak injury' than one of many cheap shots they have delivered, it just happened to come one play after Benson complained about them doing it.
 
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School of hard knocks
By Charles Robinson, Yahoo! Sports
July 31, 2006

Charles Robinson
Yahoo! Sports
BOURBONNAIS, Ill. – Lovie Smith sold the moments as good-natured defensive pride, but they looked a whole lot more like lessons in humility.

As if Cedric Benson needed more of those.

There were the handful of pile-driving tackles from linebackers Brian Urlacher and Lance Briggs that sent Benson tumbling into the sod. There was the smack in the middle of the field where he had the ball ripped out of his hands, and the bobbled pass followed by a little whack from a defender. And then there was the neck-high clothesline tackle by Ricky Manning, which probably would have been a fineable offense in today's NFL.

This is your training camp life, Mr. Benson.

"One did catch me off guard," Benson said, singling out Manning's mid-practice hook, which swept his feet out from under him and left him lying on his back as a handful of defensive players stomped around in celebration. "It was no big deal. I just didn't expect to get one like that."

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It's the embodiment of the "Be careful what you ask for" theory. Benson has his No. 1 job. Now he has to actually prove he deserves it.

And just because it was handed to him proves nothing. Not when No. 2 running back Thomas Jones had the title stripped from him for skipping a series of voluntary workouts this summer. Such workouts are voluntary in only one way – if you miss them, you are volunteering to lose your spot on the depth chart.

Jones made a mistake with the no-show, particularly when Benson is a No. 4 overall pick with $17 million in guaranteed money behind him. That kind of cash promises opportunity, and opening a window for Benson was bad judgment. That said, the promotion seems to smack of some hypocrisy, too.

Jones wasn't available for comment, but Smith sold Benson's high points on Friday, talking about how Benson buried his head in his playbook and had a diligent offseason. Yet in the same conversation, Smith also gave a mini-sermon on the importance of game day performance. Which begs the question: Why bench a No. 1 running back who played hurt for him last season – rushing for 1,335 yards and nine touchdowns – for a guy who has, as Smith put it, "studied hard" and "taken a step in the offseason."

Asked about the policy of demoting respected locker room guys like linebacker Lance Briggs (who went to the Pro Bowl last season) and Jones (who had Chicago's best rushing season since Walter Payton in 1985), guys like linebacker Brian Urlacher could only shrug.

"It's what the head coach says," Urlacher said. "That's what you go off of. If coach says you're going to be demoted for not being there, we have no control over that."

Certainly, it's hard to knock Smith's designs. In league circles, he's known for being a guy who can press the right buttons, and he did show some foresight in predicting the Bears would rise to the league's elite on defense last summer. So you can't say he doesn't know the temperature in his own locker room. But he's taking a gamble with Benson by naming him his No. 1 guy and not just labeling it an open battle for the running back spot.

Clearly, Jones is respected by many in the locker room – particularly on defense – something he earned from playing hurt last year and being the workhorse on an otherwise tepid offense. Meanwhile, Benson had a tarnished season with 272 rushing yards, an effort that was marred by a holdout and knee sprain that cost him six games. In the city, he lost a great deal in the court of public opinion. And inside the locker room, he earned the reputation of being a quiet guy who keeps to himself but never seems to waver in his own confidence.

As Benson put it Saturday, "I have never thought of myself as being anything less than a great player."

And he might be just that. But after watching the defense pound on Benson on Saturday night (when Manning's tackle took place), one had to wonder if some players on the unit were taking up for their guy (Jones). Smith said it was merely a prideful defense that wasn't willing to give an inch to anyone – and said it wouldn't have been different for Thomas.

"Running backs never get that type of easy treatment early," he said. "You have to earn your way in. You have to take your licks. And Cedric is taking a couple."

That said, Benson should have his work cut out for him for the foreseeable future. For now, he's solidifying an already advantageous position, with Jones having yet to hit the field with his tweaked hamstring. But if he doesn't produce when Thomas returns, this isn't an offense that can afford to give him the time to work himself into a groove. Offensive coordinator Ron Turner even went as far as to affirm that it's still an open battle for the position.

"Yeah, I would say that," Turner said. "When Thomas gets back, we're going to work both guys a lot and let it sort itself out. That's not going to change. I've said it all along – the best guy is going to play."

And Benson appears game. Despite getting pounded in practice, he continued to grind and show a spark every now and then. At one point, in the first team's two-minute drill, he took a handoff inside the 10-yard line busted through the right side of the line, and absolutely pancaked (think: Earl Campbell) safety Chris Harris. Unfortunately, Benson thought he had made it into the end zone, and he spiked the football after wiping out Harris. The resulting fumble was recovered by the defense, much to Smith's dismay.

"There's good and there's bad with Cedric right now," Smith said. "It was good to see him try to get across the goal line like that. But we were in a two-minute situation, and we wanted to walk away with some points there before he spiked it away."

Smith stopped and took a little breath.

"He'll learn."

Charles Robinson is Yahoo! Sports' national NFL writer. Send him a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.
 
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Well, personally I'm glad they looked like crap against the 49ers...maybe now they'll realize they aren't just going to waltz on the field and lead the league in defense again...they'll put a lot more work in now.

If we can keep a running back alive until opening day, we should be OK. Only bad thing is it looks like Brian Griese will be the proverbial most popular player on the team for awhile as long as Grossman continues to struggle. I hope Berrian or Davis can be the #2 receiver...Bradley is still erratic, and Gage is a total waste.
 
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And it continues; I'm not sure I can remember a player who has received such hatred from his teammates for so long.

Benson: 'I'm afraid to let my guard down'

By John Mullin
Tribune staff reporter

August 22, 2006, 2:12 PM CDT

Cedric Benson could only shake his head. As debate swirled over a published report that he had left the sidelines of Friday's preseason game against San Diego and watched the game on TV under the stands, then missed a postgame meeting, Benson was grappling with the issue of trust.

The matter was handled by coach Lovie Smith at the time. But Monday's Sun-Times quoted two anonymous Bears players who said they believe Benson left the stadium before the game ended. Benson is used to looking over his shoulder at times for tacklers but not for teammates.



"I understand how everything goes," Benson said. "I just think it [stinks]. I was talking to Lovie once and he said, 'I know you don't trust people. But you should let your guard down a little because there are people you can trust.'

"But damn. I'm afraid to let my guard down because the moment I do is the moment somebody will . . . you know what I mean?"

Bears players were making Benson's training camp a little more difficult with occasionally harder hits in supposed non-contract work. But he has friends in the locker room, even if it sometimes doesn't always feel like it.

"Anything that Cedric Benson needs, he knows I will definitely be there for him and I know he would be there for me," said cornerback Nathan Vasher, a teammate at Texas. "I'm just lucky that the situation happened like this where we're both in Chicago and we can lean on each other if something happens."

Benson said he was still uncertain when he would be able to return to the playing field after suffering a mild shoulder separation in training camp.

"I'd like to get a preseason game in but with my shoulder, I'm just not sure," Benson said. "I just want to play football."

Benson was told that Chicagoans are generally pretty forgiving, want very much to love their Bears and are a city of second chances.

"I haven't used mine up I hope, have I?" he said, laughing.


Copyright © 2006, The Chicago Tribune
 
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THEWOOD;606813; said:
No love for the Bears shutout?? Come on guys. Hell of a game last week. I hope they destroy those pieces of shit from Detroit. keep running your mouth Roy.

I'd be talking about it a lot more had they beaten an actual NFL team...Green Bay no longer qualifies. This week will present a much more stern challenge than it appeared at the end of last year...I think Detroit will be good defensively. If we can get the ground and pound going, we'll be fine, but Seattle had a hell of a time running the ball, so we need to be on our toes. Defensively I'm not worried, because no player other than Williams is really a concern, and they'll bullseye his ass. I think Kevin Jones will be good in Martz's system, and I expect he'll have a good game in a losing effort. Shaun Rogers is a man-beast...we best keep a close eye on him.
 
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