Bumbling Bears hard on selves

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LAKE FOREST – The way the Bears are struggling, Pro Bowl linebacker Lance Briggs can understand why fans around Chicago would have their doubts.

He just doesn’t think the team’s coaches are to blame.

Briggs pinned it on the players, saying they’re at fault for a stretch that has seen the Bears (4-5) drop four of five and struggle to stay in playoff contention. Considering they have to win six of their last seven to finish with 10 victories and a likely postseason berth, losing to Philadelphia on Sunday night would be a devastating blow.

The Bears didn’t make it at 9-7 last season, and this year, they’ve been plagued by inconsistent play on offense and defense. General manager Jerry Angelo and coach Lovie Smith have come under fire, as has offensive coordinator Ron Turner, and while thoughts of an unemployed big-name coach such as Mike Shanahan parachuting into Halas Hall dance through some fans’ heads, Briggs said the criticism is misdirected.

“People can talk about the scheme or the way we’re being coached or some of the play calls,” Briggs said Thursday. “But ultimately it comes back on the players.”

Briggs said Smith hasn’t lost the team. Linebacker Hunter Hillenmeyer agreed, pointing out the Bears’ past success, and insisted they still believe in the system.

“It’s been proven it works,” Hillenmeyer said.

He was referring to playoff runs behind a dominant defense in 2005 and 2006. It just hasn’t worked consistently this year.

“Most professionals know that there’s a lot of football left to go,” Smith said. “We’re definitely committed to everything we’re doing. There’s going to be a turnaround.”

It would help if the defense and offense played well together, something they’ve rarely done. The guys doing the tackling did enough against San Francisco last week, but Chicago lost 10-6 on a night when Cutler didn’t protect the ball. He threw five interceptions, giving him a league-leading 17, and the heat on Turner rose a degree or two.

It would help if the offensive line held its ground, but it’s letting opponents go by like cars at a toll booth after Angelo retooled that unit in the offseason.

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