Peelboy wrote:dice wrote:wasn't one of the worst O-lines. caleb holds the ball too long. agree on jenkins, though, and i think re-signing him is very unlikely
PFN o-line rankings:
17) Chicago Bears
Regular-Season Grade: 76.7 (C)
It has been exceptionally unfair that the Chicago Bears’ offensive woes were largely blamed on the offensive line. Sure, a 17th-placed ranking isn’t good, but it’s not horrendous. They had some bad outings, as did most offensive lines, but that doesn’t mean they are the main reason for Caleb Williams’ struggles as a rookie.
The Bears’ OL was asked to block for the fourth-longest time of any unit this season (3.09 seconds). That contributes heavily to a 10.7% sack rate (last in the NFL) because their 35.4% pressure rate is up to 18th. We see that replicated whether it’s against the blitz or not, suggesting it might be a general problem in Williams’ game.
Chicago also ranks 15th in PBWR, which is respectable. Similarly, the run-blocking numbers are fairly solid (0.91 RBYBC/rush, 15th), so it’s ambitious to blame the offensive line for this season’s collapse.
8) Washington Commanders
Regular-Season Grade: 83.5 (B)
Regular Season + Postseason Grade: 81.1 (B-; 7th)
On the season as a whole, the Commanders’ offensive line did a good job in pass protection, given just how long Jayden Daniels holds the ball (3.01 seconds; seventh). Whether it’s in the face of the blitz or not, he’s in the top 10 for both in time to throw (or be sacked).
Therefore, while the pressure numbers don’t look elite (34.4%), in the context of the time they are blocking, they’re respectable. That is reflected in a top-10 ranking in PBWR entering Week 18.
In the run game, the Commanders’ RBs only averaged 0.89 YBC/rush, but ESPN ranks Washington’s line as the second-best in RBWR.
The Commanders’ offensive line did not perform well in the NFC Championship Game (D+). They finished with two of the worst four performances in run blocking, with 0.53 RBYBC/rush against the Eagles’ front four. We feared this might be the case after Washington struggled in the Wild Card round, but their bounce back against Detroit offered some hope.
The pass-blocking numbers look fine on the surface, with a 34.5% pressure rate and a 5.8% sack rate. However, Daniels consistently got the ball in under three seconds, suggesting their quarterback helped salvage those numbers with his play.
The main concern came against the blitz, where they allowed a 57.1% pressure rate. Daniels did well in escaping pressure and getting the ball out, which means Washington’s line didn’t give up a sack against the blitz.
The Bears rank 24th in the PFF offensive line rankings.
"While Chicago’s offensive line failed to reach the potential many saw in it in the preseason, the unit was better than many people gave it credit for. Four of the Bears’ five projected starters earned PFF overall grades above 70.0, and all five topped 65.0. However, injuries and Caleb Williams’ pocket movement and awareness did the group no favors, resulting in the line allowing the most sacks in the NFL (37).
The Bears may have surrendered the most sacks in the league, but they were “only” the 12th-worst offensive line in PFF pass-blocking efficiency rating (84.1). The unit allowed 180 total pressures on 682 pass plays."
I agree Caleb holds the ball, although from watching, that really became more of an issue later in the year, and based on my armchair coach read, was substantially due to dropping eyes at the snap to watch for the rush up the middle. Which was a massive issue for most of the season.
I don't quibble too much with the PFF ranking of 24th, I'd have assumed somewhere near the bottom and in the bottom quarter of OLs would qualify. No clue how PFN is getting 17, that's inconsistent with what I saw (and apparently what PFF saw). I do note that PFN says "Intriguingly, this unit posted four games with a grade of B- or above, and three of its five wins came in those games. All three came before their bye week, though, and they only posted one game above a C+ after Week 7, when their schedule got significantly harder." So seems consistent with looking good when playing weak competition but bad against better teams.
All of which to me still says by far the priority for the offseason is a significant retool of the O Line. It's been a particular area of deficit under Poles (although he tried with Nate Davis it was a massive fail). And while it's armchair again, I could distinctly notice that as the season went one, Caleb regressed in keeping his head up, and it happened as the interior of the O Line got repeatedly bulldozed.
Happy to agree to disagree, but I would target 1-2 starter caliber OL in FA and 1-2 in the draft. I would similarly target the DL and don't disagree with your choices there. But if I had to choose, I'd 1000% pick OL over DL to give Caleb his best shot (and Johnson).