BOURBONNAIS -- It wasn't too
many years ago the Bears were having a meeting
involving ownership and coaches and Virginia
McCaskey lamented the team's lack of production
from the tight end position.
So reported a member of the coaching staff at the time.
Ownership, no doubt, is in a much more comfortable
place when examining the depth chart now. The case
could be made it's the strongest position group on
offense. In fact, you would have a hard time arguing
otherwise.
While you cannot name the team's starting wide
receivers a week into training camp, the tight end
position is solid and you've seen more double-tight
formations than ever. There are a variety of ways it
can be used but one of the dominant ones in the passing
game has been the Ace package where Greg Olsen takes
the place of fullback Jason McKie.
It's an interesting formation because Olsen has been
lining up all over the place, at fullback, in the slot
and split wide. He and Desmond Clark are paired with
two receivers in a one-back formation and the
possibilities are numerous.
The idea is to get a favorable matchup with Clark and
Olsen on smaller or slower defenders but to make it
work the offense is going to have to prove it is not
only willing to run the ball out of the formation, but
can run it effectively in the package. In practice, the
defense initially was defending Ace with a nickel
package, taking strong-side linebacker Hunter
Hillenmeyer off the field in favor of defensive back
Danieal Manning.
The offense ran the defense out of the look and now
it's a matter of down and distance. Offensive
coordinator Ron Turner expects that is what will happen
during the season but Olsen is really a wild card for
opponents.
"We've got two real good tight ends," Turner said.
"We've got to get them on the field. We're working
those guys in a lot of different places and trying to
do some different things with them."
They have to be careful how they use Olsen, who
struggled blocking last season. He's not a fullback and
Turner can't get carried away trying to make him
something he's not. Fact is, Olsen fell to the Bears at
No. 31 in the 2007 draft in part because he was
considered one-dimensional as a pass catcher. But
spreading a defense into a nickel look will give the
Bears an edge running, and it could become an effective
weapon in the red zone also. Clark and Olsen combined
for six touchdowns last season. Wide receivers had 11.
"Greg is able to do all that stuff, coming out of the
backfield and lining him up at different positions all
over the field, lining him up in the slot, out wide and
in the backfield," Clark said. "Teams are not going to
be able to key on one particular thing he can do and we
can create matchups that way."
Olsen might be best utilized split wide. He's got the
speed of Muhsin Muhammad and he's a bigger target.
There's plenty of shifting and motion and the entire
offense remains a work in progress.
"We're expanding the package we touched on last year,"
Olsen said. "When we did it last year we were
successful so I think we are going to try to develop
from that and continue to grow. This gives us a lot of
different things we can do."
Clark, a model of durability having missed only three
games in five seasons, was rewarded with a two-year
contract extension worth $5 million in the off-season.
He posted 44 receptions for 545 yards and Olsen had 39
grabs for 391 yards despite missing the first two games
of the season and then barely playing in the next two.
The numbers exceeded those of most rookie tight ends.
"I think I just have to continue to earn time on the
field, continue to show that I can do a lot of
different things from the run game, blocking out of the
backfield, picking up things out of the backfield in
pass protection," Olsen said. "I feel I am much better
than I was last year in the all-around game. Hopefully
it carries through the season."
Position coach Rob Boras doesn't have any goals in mind
when it comes to numbers for his room. Rookie Kellen
Davis has been one of the pleasant discoveries thus far
and things are looking up for the tight ends. At least
there's one position on offense that's figured out.
(suburbanchicagonews.com)