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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Sport
Jason Lieser

Bears notes: RB David Montgomery sets team’s season-high for total yardage

This 55-yard run by Montgomery was the Bears’ longest of the season. | AP Photos

Everybody knew the Bears would lean on their ground game against the Chargers after coach Matt Nagy got torched for calling just seven run plays last week, but Los Angeles still couldn’t lock down David Montgomery.

Montgomery was the best part of the Bears’ offense in an otherwise forgettable afternoon as they lost 17-16 to the Chargers. The rookie ran for 135 yards and a touchdown on 27 carries and chipped in 12 yards receiving for the most productive game by a Bears skill player this season.

“I tried to make sure I took advantage of every opportunity today and was sure to give God all the glory,” he said. “Everything was just clicking today in the run game. My o-line blocked their ass off. It just was going our way. But we came up short.”

The Bears put him in the I-formation with an extra lineman on the field for their opening play — the most overt possible signal they were going to run — and he powered through the line for a 10-yard gain.

Nagy stuck with the running attack even when it stalled. The Bears had 17 yards on nine carries midway through the second quarter, then Montgomery got going again.

He opened a drive with a 14-yard to jumpstart the Bears to an eventual field goal, then ignited another scoring drive by breaking loose for 55 yards with 1:59 left in the half. That run, behind right guard Rashaad Coward, was the Bears’ longest play from scrimmage this season.

“It was just him getting opportunities to make those plays happen,” said Tarik Cohen, who ran four times for 9 yards. “That big run we saw, that’s all about giving body blows, giving body blows, giving body blows. He was just waiting for that one run to break.”

Easing defense’s burden

Despite Mitch Trubisky’s turnovers and the Bears struggling on third down, they lightened their defense’s workload by holding on to the ball a season-high 38 minutes. It was the fourth-highest mark in the NFL this season.

As a result, the Chargers ran just 42 offensive plays. The Bears’ defense had averaged 67 snaps per game and hadn’t played fewer than 57. They were on the field 74 plays in the loss to the Saints last week.

Another pick for Fuller

All-pro cornerback Kyle Fuller did his best to spark the Bears’ offense when he intercepted Philip Rivers in the first quarter and returned it to the Chargers’ 4-yard line. The Bears couldn’t make any headway toward the end zone, but took a 3-0 lead a few plays later.

It was Fuller’s third interception this season and 18th of his career. Since the Bears drafted him No. 14 overall in 2014, the only players with more picks are Marcus Peters with 25 and seemingly retired safety Reggie Nelson with 20.

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