By Bill Smith
After a
particularly inept game by his offense, the first Coach of the Tampa Bay Bucs
John McCay was asked by a reporter about the execution of the offense. His response was “That's not a half bad
idea!” Fans in Chicago know how McCay felt. Their offense in 2007
was—well—offensive. As a result, job 1
was to rebuild the offensive line and replace the starters that had gotten too
old all of a sudden. Kirk Barton was
selected by the Bears with choice 247.
The Bears'
starters at tackle last year were terrible.
Left tackle John Tait struggled with any quick pass rusher and will
probably be moved to right tackle in 2008.
36 year old left guard Ruben Brown was hurt again last year and will
likely retire. Six year vet Terrence
Metcalf replaced Brown only to prove that he was neither the guard of the present
or the future. The Bears will likely not
continue to waste the 1.4 million dollars of cap room that cutting him after
July 1 will save. The third and last
contestant in the Chicago
version of “let’s try to replace a potential hall of fame Brown” was John St.
Clair. If that name rings a bell, yes,
it is the same St. Clair that was so bad in St. Louis (who was dying for help on the
O-line) that they cut him.
Things for the
Bear fans don't get much better at right guard.
Roberto Garza, the incumbent, is the second best lineman for the Bears,
but given the competition, that isn't saying much. The only bright spot is at center where
perennial all pro Olin Kreutz has held court for 11 years.
It is time for
massive changes for the Bears, and Barton will be a part of those plans. With the 14th pick in the first
round, the Bears took left tackle prospect Chris Williams from Vanderbilt. He will likely start in 08. Tait will most likely move to right tackle
and former starters St. Clair, Metcalf, and failed former right tackle Fred
Miller will be cut. Inside reserves from
last year Josh Beekman and Anthony Oakley will compete with Barton, and fellow
7th round choice Chester Adams from Georgia for roster spots. Barton's speed will give him a slight edge in
becoming a leading candidate for one of the reserve guard spots at the least.
Larry Grant was
selected by San Francisco
with the 214th pick. The
49ers are desperate to improve their pass rush from the linebacker position in
their 3-4 defense. Last years first
round draft choice, Manny Lawson, was lost for the season in the 5th
game with a torn ACL. He should return
at near 100 and start again on the strong side.
Weak side starter in 07, Tully Banta-Cain, generated just 3.5 sacks in
16 games and will likely be cut because of his cap value of over 2 million
dollars. He will be replaced by free
agent signing Dontarrious Thomas (UFA
Minnesota). Parys Haralson who replaced Lawson for the
rest of the season will likely be retained as a reserve on the strong
side.
Grant's best
chance to make his mark in 2008 will be as a back up and on special teams. He will have to beat out the other reserve
Roderick Green and undrafted rookie Gary Guyton from Georgia Tech who was
signed late Sunday night after the draft.
Special teams is a strength of Grant.
In JUCO, he blocked six punts and ran a fake punt 65 yards for a
touchdown at City College of San Francisco and won the 2005 California JUCO
Player of the Year award. Grant should
stick and eventually work his way into the regular rotation particularly on
passing downs due to his speed and pass rush ability.