Light Drizzle
55°
Crystal Lake, IL
Light Drizzle|Forecast »

MUSICK: It’s all on the O-line

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

For more Bears coverage:

See more articles and follow the Northwest Herald's Bears coverage for the latest information.

(Continued from Page 1)

It’s possible that the Bears could turn mostly to familiar faces on the offensive line.

That seems as if it would be fine with Trestman.

“It’s our job to develop these players to the best of our abilities,” said Trestman, who coordinated top offenses with the San Francisco 49ers and Oakland Raiders before heading to Montreal. “We think we’ve got the coaches to do that. Development is a big part of coaching in our league, and we expect to do that.”

Trestman will spend much of his time focusing on the quarterbacks – see: Cutler, Jay – as he tries to improve a group that finished No. 28 in total offense in 2012. Unless Trestman figures out a way to clone himself, he won’t be able to be in the quarterbacks meeting room and the offensive line meeting room at the same time.

That’s why Trestman hired Aaron Kromer from the New Orleans Saints to be his offensive coordinator and offensive line coach. It’s also why he brought Meyer with him from Canada.

Together, the group hopes to lead a disciplined, dependable offensive line.

No matter who starts, Kromer said, he wanted a unit that far exceeded five individuals.

“The personality would be a mentally tough unit that would be accountable to each other,” Kromer said. “That’s what you’re looking for.

“There are all different styles of talent and types of talent that people have, but it’s an accountability to each other, and it’s a mental and physical toughness that they become tougher as five than they were as one.”

So far, the coaching staff has been allergic to discussing individual players.

Webb is a question mark at left tackle, and he didn’t help his cause by being arrested downstate on drug charges that later were dropped. Brown was a 2012 undrafted rookie who was the definition of raw, and Carimi’s career path is anyone’s guess at this point.

Kromer said he had success with starting rookies in the past and would be willing to do so again. He said he considered only a player’s on-field ability, not their college résumé.


Reader Poll

How often do you go boating?

As often as possible
A few times a season
Once in a while
Never