With the losses and injuries piling up, the Bears (5-4) host the
Baltimore Ravens (4-5) on Sunday in a matchup between teams trying
to stay in postseason contention.
For the Bears, the task is getting more and more difficult.
They're tied for second with Green Bay in the NFC North, a game
behind Detroit after dropping four of six. The Lions beat Chicago
21-19 last week to complete a two-game sweep, and beyond that, the
injuries continue.
Cutler suffered a high left ankle sprain in the second quarter after
sitting out a win at Green Bay with torn groin muscle, forcing the
Bears to go with Josh McCown on Chicago's final drive. McCown is
week to week.
Tillman suffered a torn right triceps muscle in the second half and
was placed on injured reserve/designated to return. He is eligible
to play again in eight weeks, but with only seven games remaining,
the two-time Pro Bowl cornerback is out for the rest of the regular
season.
That's just the latest blow for a defense that was already missing
three starters, with star linebacker Lance Briggs nursing a
fractured shoulder and defensive tackle Henry Melton (torn ACL) and
linebacker D.J. Williams (torn pectoral muscle) both on injured
reserve.
"You don't make excuses about it," coach Marc Trestman said. "(The
backups are) here because they're expected to play."
The Ravens are trying to stay relevant in the AFC playoff race and
get back to .500 after breaking a three-game skid with a 20-17
overtime victory over Cincinnati. It would help if they got their
run game going and more production from quarterback Joe Flacco. That
largely hinges on a struggling offensive line coming together,
something it hasn't done.
With that in mind, here are five things to know about this game:
MCCOWN ANSWERING CALL: So far, McCown has given the Bears all they
could ask for when they've turned to him.
The veteran is 42 of 70 for 538 yards with four touchdowns and no
interceptions in three games, including a surprising win at Green
Bay with Cutler nursing a groin injury.
He nearly pulled off the comeback last week, hitting Brandon
Marshall with a TD pass. But a 2-point conversion failed.
MAKING A RUN: Chicago can't stop the run and Baltimore can't get its
ground game going, so maybe something will give here. Both teams
have been strong in those areas over the years, but it's been a
different story this season, with the Bears 31st against the run and
the Ravens 30th in rushing.
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The Bears are allowing 129.4 yards per game.
Now, they'll have to contend with Ray Rice. But that suddenly
doesn't seem like such a daunting task even with a depleted
defense. Rice has just 289 yards and is averaging a mere 2.5 per
carry after four straight 1,000-yard seasons.
"I know once the opportunity comes and we rip off one of those
big gains, we'll be saying, 'Well there it goes,'" Rice said.
FEELING HEAT: Flacco has certainly been under pressure, and it
has nothing to do with that $120.6 million contract he signed
after leading the Ravens to the championship last season. It's
coming from opposing defenses.
Flacco's been playing behind a line with three different
starters — center Gino Gradkowski, left tackle Eugene Monroe and
guard A.Q. Shipley — and he's taking a beating. He's been sacked
five times in three of the past four games to bring his season
total to 30, and he has thrown about as many touchdowns (12) as
interceptions (11). By comparison, he had 11 scoring passes
without getting picked off during a postseason run last year
that culminated with a Super Bowl MVP and ultimately led to that
huge deal.
"(If) you're going to put guys up in there, you're going to
double-mug guys, and you're going to bring guys off the edge —
you're going to do all these things — you're going to play
one-on-one coverage, (then) we've got to make it hurt," Flacco
said. "And we just haven't been good enough to really have teams
feel the effect, or the negative effects, of them doing it."
ROAD WOES: While the Ravens are 3-1 at home, the road has not
been kind to them. They're 1-4, and their lone win was by three
at Miami. The Ravens gave up seven touchdown passes to Peyton
Manning in a 49-27 season-opening rout at Denver. Their other
losses were by six points or less: 23-20 at Buffalo, 19-16 at
Pittsburgh and 24-18 at Cleveland.
NOT QUITE READY: The Bears signed former Dallas Cowboys
defensive tackle Jay Ratliff two weeks ago to boost their line,
knowing he was two to four weeks away from being able to
contribute. He won't be in uniform Sunday.
"Right now I'm just following their game plan," said Ratliff,
who had a season-ending groin injury last year and was released
by Dallas a month ago.
___
AP NFL website:
http://www.pro32.ap.org/
[Associated
Press; ANDREW SELIGMAN, AP Sports Writer]
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