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blueleopard Member
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blueleopard
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I don't think anybody realizes the next time we face them is Week 17.

I don't know about you, but to me, I hope when the time comes--that game won't matter.
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Rockmolder Honored Member
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Rockmolder
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"blueleopard"I don't think anybody realizes the next time we face them is Week 17.

I don't know about you, but to me, I hope when the time comes--that game won't matter.


Like the Cardinals game last year.

I think that we'll go after them pretty hard, anyway. McCarthy likes to keep his team in a rhytm. We're playing a division rival. I think it'll just be a regular game, regardless of our, or their, position.
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Greg C. Registered
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Greg C.
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"GOPACKGO1225"The funny thing is the Packers clearly beat the Packers yet the media will continue this Bears are a great team hoopla.


That's what winning does for you, no matter how you win. The Bears were able to get to a Super Bowl a few years ago by winning these kinds of games. If they can keep it up, all the power to them. I don't think they will, but we'll see what happens from here on out.
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millertime Member
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millertime
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"Greg C."
"GOPACKGO1225"The funny thing is the Packers clearly beat the Packers yet the media will continue this Bears are a great team hoopla.


That's what winning does for you, no matter how you win. The Bears were able to get to a Super Bowl a few years ago by winning these kinds of games. If they can keep it up, all the power to them. I don't think they will, but we'll see what happens from here on out.


I really haven't heard that from the media, It seems like everything I have heard involves how GB lost this game and the Bears were lucky. This feeling makes me sick... but imagine being a Chargers fan. Their team gives games like this away all the time (including this weekend to Seattle).

Hopefully this will light a fire under our guys so that they will play better from now on.
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musccy Veteran Member
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musccy
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Nothing kills me more than watching the pack lose a game when I'm confident they were the better team.


Granted, I believe the bears are a pretty good team, and every single game you can say "the refs screwed us, if it weren't for turnovers, blah blah blah" but...

-18 penalties
-Finley TD called back due to Taush hold
-2 ints called back due to penalty
-Dropped Int in 4th quarter and blown early call on woody fumble
-30 + yards gifted to bears on drives

and on and on and on...the size of the bullet hole in the team's foot is almost unprecedented!

It's like having a 40 pound musky throw the hooks boatside...it's such a mind-numingly frustrating and empty feeling!

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gbpfan Registered
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gbpfan
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it is disheartening
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musccy Veteran Member
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musccy
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The bears had their shot-in-foot moments.

-missed fg
-dropped TD pass on 4th and 1
-cutler int near fg range

but compared to the packers' self inflicted wounds...
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dfosterf Veteran Member
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dfosterf
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Don Banks summed it up pretty well.
si.com article


Five things we learned from watching the Bears pull out a rather-improbable win over the error-prone Packers at Solider Field ...

1. I'm still not sure how the Bears have found their way to 3-0 for the first time since 2006, but I do know they're the last and most unlikely team to be perfect in the NFC. This Chicago team is living something of a charmed existence so far in 2010; and in its own way, this game deserves to be right there alongside the Week 1 win over the Lions, in terms of winning with good fortune. It's true that Chicago hasn't played a complete game yet, but it's also true the Bears haven't lost yet, either. Would you rather be lucky or good?

Chicago quarterback Jay Cutler was his team's poster child for this peculiar game. He threw one interception against Green Bay, but it could have easily been five. The Packers dropped two passes that were right in their hands (Nick Collins and Charles Woodson) and penalties wiped out two other Green Bay picks. When you add in Green Bay's team-record 18 penalties for 152 yards (breaking a record set in 1945), and the Packers' special-team lapses, this had the feel of a self-inflicted Green Bay loss more than an impressive Chicago victory.

Relax, Bears fans. I applaud Chicago's resiliency and its opportunistic style of play against the more talented Packers. The Bears made the most of what they had to work with Monday night. But I still can't see Chicago keeping this kind of mojo going throughout the season, looking downright outmatched in some parts of every game, but still finding a way to win. It happened against Detroit, in Chicago's shaky second half. It happened at Dallas, where the Bears started the game looking overmatched on the offensive line. And it happened against Green Bay, a team that dominated Chicago statistically for most of the night.

But at 3-0, the Bears look to be in pretty good shape for turning this streak into an even longer run. In the next six weeks, Chicago plays at the Giants, at Carolina, Seattle, Washington and at Buffalo, with a bye thrown in, as well. That's the makings of a 7-1 first half, maybe 6-2 in a worst-case scenario. The Bears don't face another NFC North foe until Week 10, when Minnesota visits. Lucky may be prevailing over good right now in Chicago, but I have a feeling the Bears will take it and offer no apologies.

2. If Green Bay's Super Bowl dreams are to come true this season, Monday night's showing simply can't happen again. I'm still convinced the Packers are the class of the NFC North and their dominance will show over the course of a 16-game season. But Green Bay self-destructed in so many ways against the Bears, and maybe getting this kind of early season wake-up call will wind up ensuring that overconfidence doesn't seep into the Packers' locker room.

On top of all the penalties and missed interceptions, Green Bay's special teams contributed mightily to the loss. Chicago blocked one Packers field goal attempt, and both Bears touchdowns were either set up by or scored by punt returner Devin Hester. Throw in the critical fourth-quarter fumble by Packers receiver James Jones, and Green Bay seemingly did everything in its power to make this NFC North showdown a down-to-the-wire thriller.

I'm not sure why Green Bay even gambled and kicked to Hester, but he burned the club, big time, twice. His 28-yard return in the second quarter seemed to rejuvenate the struggling Bears, and set up a 9-yard Cutler scoring pass to tight end Greg Olsen. Later, Hester's 62-yard punt-return touchdown in the fourth quarter electrified the Soldier Field crowd and gave Chicago its first lead of the night, at 14-10. It was Hester's first score on a punt return since the final game of 2007, the eighth punt-return TD of his career and 12th return touchdown (kickoffs or punts) since breaking into the league in 2006.

"(Eighteen) penalties, that doesn't cut it,'' Packers head coach Mike McCarthy said in his postgame press conference. "You can't play football like that.''

Not winning football, at least. If the Packers are to fulfill their potential this season, Monday night's meltdown has to provide a reminder their own mistakes might be the greatest enemy they'll face this year.

3. The "new and improved'' Jay Cutler looked a lot like the old Jay Cutler to me at times. I listened and watched all last week as many of my fellow NFL analysts lined up to hail the job Cutler was doing with the surprising 2-0 Bears, identifying him as the biggest reason for Chicago's success. And he was the league's leading passer, entering Week 3.

But that sure looked like the old, careless Cutler against Green Bay. The Bears quarterback sailed some passes, missed some easy throws and took several unnecessary risks. By his own admission, he didn't play anywhere near his best game in finishing 16 of 27 for 221 yards, with one touchdown and one interception.

But thanks to the sloppy Packers, Cutler didn't wind up paying for most of his mistakes. Cutler had some very pretty throws -- his 21-yard completion to Olsen on 2nd-and-20 in the fourth quarter was a thing of beauty -- and made some big plays when in clutch moments. But you can't live that dangerously every week in the NFL and survive. At the minimum, he threw three passes that should have resulted in Green Bay interceptions, and that would have been enough to get him beat on most nights. It was last season, when he led the NFL with 26 interceptions.

Despite some obvious strides at making better decisions, Cutler remains a work in progress in new coordinator Mike Martz's offense. He still trusts his strong right arm too much, throws off his back foot almost habitually and has too much of a gunslinger's mentality to consistently succeed.

4. Julius Peppers makes an almost obscene amount of money, but he earned it against Green Bay. The stat sheet said the Bears' handsomely paid defensive end finished with just two tackles, no sacks, and that block of a Mason Crosby field goal attempt. But if you watched the game, you know that really doesn't begin to tell the story.

Green Bay knew Peppers had to be accounted for on every play, and he gave Packers tackles Mark Tauscher and Chad Clifton fits throughout the game. Tauscher held him twice, once wiping a Jermichael Finley touchdown catch off the board. And the Packers offensive line had so many pre-snap movement penalties, owing to the presence of Peppers, his pass-rush skills and the crowd noise.

Entering Week 3, Peppers had totaled just one tackle, one sack (of Detroit's Matthew Stafford in the opener), with a forced fumble and a couple passes defensed. That doesn't look like much return on Chicago's huge investment, but Peppers clearly influences the game even when he's not showing up on the stat sheet. Both the Packers and the rest of us got another vivid reminder of that Monday night.

5. Neither of these teams can run the ball worthy of the NFC's Black and Blue division. You know it's a not a rushing-dominated game when the respective quarterbacks are the best runners. Cutler paced the Bears with three scrambles for 37 yards, running for gains of 16, 11 and 10 yards, some in key situations. Aaron Rodgers wasn't the Packers' leading rusher, but he had two carries for 20 yards (10.0 yard average), with a 17-yard jaunt and a tough, 3-yard touchdown run to the right front pylon midway through the fourth quarter.

Other than that, the running games were mostly an afterthought. Green Bay, clearly missing the injured Ryan Grant, had just four rushing first downs and 63 yards on 15 carries. The lumbering John Kuhn led the way for the Packers with 31 tough yards on six carries, but Brandon Jackson continues to be a near non-factor, gaining just 12 yards on seven rushes.

The Bears got just 29 yards on 11 carries from Matt Forte, who for once, didn't make much of an impact in the passing game either (2 catches, 14 yards). And as much fanfare as the Chester Taylor signing got in the offseason, the Bears' No. 2 back ran just three times for nine yards against the Packers, giving him a paltry 44 yards on 16 carries through his first three games in Chicago.

On offense, both the Packers and Bears will apparently go as far as their passing games this season. Neither team has threatened anyone on the ground so far in 2010.




Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/don_banks/09/28/packers.bears.5things/index.html#ixzz10pd5zmDy


Exasperated.
:cussing:
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TwinkieGorilla Member
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TwinkieGorilla
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:cussing:

Morning After Thoughts.

Never in my life has a game put me in such a tense and sour mood. Not Brent's loss in the NFC Championship game in 07, not even the loss against the Cards last year. Why? Because while I am ALL for a close game, a tough game, a good game--I am not for what happened last night.

This was one of the sloppiest piles of shit I've ever witnessed. 17 or 18 penalties? Are you fucking kidding me? A team which makes this many penalties in one game deserves no spot in the NFL. It's a goddamn embarrassment and when you couple that with the piss-poor special teams and coaching last night you've got me where I am right now: completely disinterested in continuing to watch this team embarrass itself. So yeah, go beat the pitiful Lions next week. That'll be redemption, right? We can clobber pathetic teams but we can't even compete against another decent team because we're so busy digging our own grave.

For the first time in my life, I think I'll be finding something else to do next Sunday.
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Packers_Finland Registered
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Packers_Finland
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"TwinkieGorilla"

For the first time in my life, I think I'll be finding something else to do next Sunday.


YES! YES! I can't believe how much happier my life has become!
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