The Mitch Trubisky debut against the Green Bay Packers did not go as planned for the Chicago Bears. It was a constant nightmare in fact. No Aaron Rodgers for the game, so no excuse right? Well in predictable fashion the team came out entirely flat. Green Bay were the aggressors from the opening gun. The Bears lacked discipline and they lacked urgency. Constant penalty issues killed drives and the defense showed zero fight.
The fact this happened with the Bears having 15 days to prepare in advance pretty much puts a stamp on head coach John Fox and his forgettable time with the team. Nobody wants to see him oversee Trubisky moving forward. He's too old, too conservative and too unwilling to tell the players what they need to hear.
At the same time, in the midst of that cringe-worthy afternoon something happened. Something that people likely didn't notice. In spite of another demoralizing defeat to the Packers, their young quarterback accomplished something nobody ever has in the past five decades.
Mitch Trubisky debut vs. Packers was best ever for a Bears rookie
Bears quarterbacks in general tend to get exposed by the Packers in their debuts. It's a fact of life many have grown to live with. However, rookie quarterbacks especially have gotten exposed. Go back through the entire era and it's a long list of ugly. Well that is except for Trubisky, who is the first rookie Bears QB in the Super Bowl era to ever throw a touchdown pass in his debut vs. Green Bay.- Virgil Carter: 5-of-14, 51 yards, 2 INTs
- Gary Huff: 10-of-27, 110 yards, 1 INT
- Bob Avellini: 9-of-25, 109 yards, 3 INTs
- Cade McNown: 2-of-5, 15 yards
- Kyle Orton: 6-of-17, 68 yards, 1 INT
- Mitch Trubisky: 21-of-35, 297 yards, 1 TD
- Jim McMahon: 20-of-38, 298 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT
- Jim Harbaugh: 16-of-30, 203 yards
- Rex Grossman: 10-of-18, 131 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT
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