When Mitch Trubisky stepped back in as the starter for the Chicago Bears after the bye, he had every right to be upset. Things had not gotten better from benching him. They got worse. It just took a few weeks to show. The offense was an absolute wreck with no signs of life. The defense seemed to lose its will to compete. It would've been so easy for him to vent his frustrations.
To his credit, that never happened once. Trubisky has remained classy and humble throughout what has been a difficult process. Now things may actually be looking up. After weeks of inactivity, the Bears offense has shown signs of life. They put up 25 points in Green Bay, had 30 against Detroit, and piled on 36 last week against Houston.
Trubisky has 7 TD passes and just two interceptions in that stretch.
So he's played quite well. What has really stood out though is how the offense has changed since he took over. The Bears have started to run the ball a lot more, they're using more play action and keep making a conscious effort to get him out on the move. There isn't nearly as much of him standing back in the pocket and trying to making throws. Where it gets interesting is what the quarterback said in his recent press conference. Apparently, this offensive scheme adjustment wasn't entirely the brainchild of the coaches. It came from weeks of Trubisky constantly asking them to. More rollouts, more running the ball, more play action, and more utilizing the younger playmakers. Specifically Cole Kmet.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7P81-Vb8TM&ab_channel=ChicagoBears







