LAKE FOREST, Ill. –
Whoever first said that “a life without
difficulties is a classroom without lessons”
no doubt wasn’t talking about dealing with
adversity on a football field. But Greg Olsen can
relate.
After losing the first two fumbles of his NFL career in
last weekend’s 20-17 loss to the Carolina
Panthers, the Bears tight end is eager to bounce back
in Sunday’s home opener against the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers.
“I’m sure if you asked the top guys in the
league if they’ve had those kinds of days where
things didn’t go their way, I’m sure every
single one of them would say, ‘Yeah, I’ve
had a few of them,’” Olsen said.
“That’s just part of playing at this level.
Things are going to happen and you’ve just got to
learn from it and move on.”
Having committed the Bears’ only two turnovers of
the season thus far, Olsen will focus more on tucking
the ball away, something that was never a problem when
he played at the University of Miami.
“My whole career I think I had maybe fumbled one
time my freshman year of college and didn’t lose
it,” Olsen said. “It’s not something
I’ve had a history with in the past, so maybe
sometimes you take it for granted, and sometimes things
like this refresh your mind that, ‘Hey,
don’t take anything for granted. Just get back to
doing what you’ve done your whole
life.’”
Although Olsen knows that opponents study tape, he
doesn’t think that his two fumbles will cause
tacklers to go after the ball more aggressively than
usual when he’s carrying it.
“They want to strip the ball no matter who has
it,” Olsen said. “I think probably every
guy in the league at one point has fumbled the ball, so
that would mean everybody has a target on their backs.
I don’t worry too much about that.
“I think they have to worry more about
game-planning to stop our offense and stop the tight
ends and me personally from what we can do making plays
and don’t worry about that other stuff.”
While Olsen can’t recall ever fumbling twice in
one game, he did rebound from a poor performance at
Miami.
“I had one game where I dropped two passes that
were fairly routine passes and that was pretty much the
first time I had dropped a pass in a game,” Olsen
said. “That time I moved on the next week and had
a real good game. You just get back to focusing on the
week of practice, and that’s the same approach
I’m going to have this week.”
Offensive coordinator Ron Turner gave Olsen a pep talk
after the Bears returned from their road trip.
“I talked to him Sunday night when we got off the
plane and said, ‘You’re a great player.
You’ve made a lot of great plays for us.
You’re going to make a lot of great plays for us.
We’re going to come to you. You made two mistakes
in that game. I made some mistakes in that game, too.'"
Turner said.
“It wasn’t one play that lost the game. It
wasn’t two plays. It was several plays; several
opportunities we had and several things that we did.
Greg’s a competitor. He’ll bounce back. No
one feels worse than he does about it. We have talked
to him and he knows we believe in him.”
Teammates have been supportive, but Olsen doesn’t
need to hear any words of encouragement from them to
know what he did last week and how he must overcome it.
“What are they going to say?” said Olsen,
who has caught four passes for 43 yards in two games
this season. “They know I was disappointed and
not happy with those two plays. They know I hold myself
to higher expectations than that and that I was harder
on myself than anybody else could be.
“At this level in professional sports, things
happen. You’re not always going to be 100
percent. Mistakes happen; that’s why a team
loses. If everyone did every play right, every play
would be a touchdown on offense and a three-yard loss
on defense. Things don’t always go the way you
planned. You’ve just got to not let it happen too
often and just move on and get better.”
(chicagobears.com)