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Nowhere to go but ... New-look Bears still at the bottom, looking up
The Chicago Bears, the worst team in the tough NFC Central last season, opened training camp on July 22 in Platteville, Wis. Here are a few questions from Sports Illustrated's Dr. Z, followed by CNNSI.com's perspective on some of the issues facing the Bears this season. SI's season previews will be posted August 24. Dr. Z wants to know : 1) New coach Dick Jauron shocks the world by axing his quarterback, Eric Kramer, after assuring everyone that Kramer's the man -- for now. How do we read this? Is it: a) Still more Bear wackiness; b) Jauron making sure he's got his kind of people in place; or c) Jauron sending it all in on rookie Cade McNown? (Sorry, but Jim Miller, Moses Moreno, Doug Nussmeier and Shane Matthews don't thrill me.) 2) Flash: The Bears were shut out of the Pro Bowl for the fifth consecutive season in '98. Is there anything here to like, in terms of personnel? Is there, say, any unit you could call better than average? O.K., running back, with Curtis Enis, if he stays healthy. Anything else? Nope, I can't find anything, either. The Bears can make the playoffs if : Everything -- and we mean everything -- goes right. Coming off back-to-back 4-12 seasons, no Pro Bowlers in the last five seasons, in the difficult NFC Central, with a new coaching staff and new front-office boss ... all now seems stacked against the Bears. Curtis Enis has to run well, coming off his ACL tear, and the defense (28 sacks, worst in the league last season) has to buckle down.
Pivotal games : Oct. 10 at Minnesota, Dec. 5 vs. Green Bay. The Bears lost seven of their last eight last season. They need to get off to a strong start. And they need to do better than their 1-7 record in division last season. On the hot seat : Wide receiver Curtis Conway, maybe the only real offensive weapon on the team, is in the last year of his contract and will be catching passes from his ninth different starting quarterback going into his seventh year in the league. He's had problems, but he has to get open -- and make the catch -- if the Bears stand a chance. Up-and-comers : If Conway can't, maybe Bobby Engram, in his fourth year in the league, can. The little (5-foot-10) wideout showed he's not just a possession guy last season with a team-high 64 catches.
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