maximus
01-08-2005, 09:16 PM
Well, this sucks. :rolleyes:
http://www.chicagobears.com/news/newsDetail.jsp?id=6094
Ron Turner inherits a Bears offense that finished last in the NFL in most categories.
LAKE FOREST, Ill. - Former Bears offensive coordinator Ron Turner became the current Bears offensive coordinator Saturday when he was hired to replace Terry Shea.
Turner returns to the position he held from 1993-96 after spending the last eight seasons as head coach at the University of Illinois. He was fired in November after compiling a 35-57 record.
In Chicago, Turner inherits an offense that ranked last in the NFL in 2004 in scoring, total yards, passing yards, first downs and third down efficiency. Shea was relieved of his duties Tuesday after the Bears mustered just 19 offensive touchdowns in 16 games.
In his first stint with the Bears, Turner helped revive a woeful offense. In his first season working for head coach Dave Wannstedt, the unit generated 99 fewer total yards and 152 fewer passing yards than the 2004 team, ranking last in the NFL in both categories.
In 1995, the offense enjoyed one of the most prolific seasons in Bears history, establishing nine club records while averaging 24.5 points and 355 yards per game.
The only NFL quarterback to take all of his team's snaps, Erik Kramer set team marks with 315 completions, 522 attempts, 3,838 yards and 29 TD passes while being sacked only 15 times.
Jeff Graham (82 catches for a team-record 1,301 yards and 4 TDs) and Curtis Conway (62-1,037-12) became the first Bears receiving duo to each top 1,000 yards and Rashaan Salaam set team rookie rushing records with 1,074 yards and 10 TDs.
The defense was the problem in 1995 as the Bears finished 9-7 and failed to make the playoffs after losing games by scores of 27-24, 34-28, 37-34 and 35-28. The 2004 squad was 5-1 when scoring at least 17 points and 0-10 when compiling 16 or less.
I don't think Turner should have even been interviewd. The guy has proved nothing.
Turner returns to the position he held from 1993-96 after spending the last eight seasons as head coach at the University of Illinois. He was fired in November after compiling a 35-57 record.
^
Thats not very good at all. In fact, I did some research on his stats. It's not overly indepth but it shows you how good he isn't. I mean, does Jerry Angelo even want to win? Why Turner, what has he proved......
For those who do not remember who Ron Turner is, he was the Bears Offensive Coordinator for four years ('93, '94' 95 '96). Although he produced one good year (1995), he failed to reach the top 20 in total team offense 3 of his 4 years here at Chicago.
His Bio is listed below;
http://fightingillini.collegesports.com/sp...rner_ron00.html (http://fightingillini.collegesports.com/sports/m-footbl/mtt/turner_ron00.html)
Bears History in the Bio;
The Chicago Bears
In four seasons working with the Chicago Bears, Turner coordinated an offense that improved every season, breaking the club record for passing yards with 233 yards per game in 1995 and producing a 1,000-yard receiver and rusher in the same season. The diversity of the Turner offense in Chicago found success under four different quarterbacks in Jim Harbaugh (1993), Steve Walsh (1994), Erik Kramer (1995) and Dave Krieg (1996). In 1994, the Bears led the NFC Central Division for much of the regular season and defeated division rival Minnesota, 35-18, in a first-round playoff game.
Ron Turner Chicago Bear stats by year, by rank;
1993
Bears W/L Record 7-9
236 points scored on offense (24th in the NFL out of 28 Teams)
=14.6 points per game (0.22 points per game better than 2004 @ 14.4)
Ranked 28th in passing yards with 2,270
Ranked 19th in rushing yards with 1,677
Ranked 28th in total Team Offense (Which was last place. The NFL only had 28 teams in 1993)
1994
Bears W/L Record 9-7
271 points scored on offense (24th in the NFL out of 28 Teams)
=16.93 points per game (2.53 points per game better than 2004 @ 14.4)
Ranked 23rd in passing yards with 3,230
Ranked 15th in rushing yards with 1,588
Ranked 26th in total Team Offense (out of 28 teams)
1995
Bears W/L Record 9-7
392 points scored on offense (8th in the NFL out of 30 Teams)
=24.5 points per game (10.1 points per game better than 2004 @ 14.4 *NOTE: The Bears have not scored more than 392 points in a season since 1995. This is also thier highest ranking offense since that time.)
Ranked 13th in passing yards with 3,838
Ranked 9th in rushing yards with 1,930
Ranked 10th in total Team Offense (out of 30 teams)
1996 (Turners' Final Year)
Bears W/L Record 7-9
283 points scored on offense (26th in the NFL out of 30 teams)
=17.68 points per game (3.28 points per game better than 2004 @ 14.4)
Ranked 19th in passing yards with 3,350
Ranked 16th in rushing yards with 1,720
Ranked 22nd in total Team Offense (out of 30 teams)
Counter Production:
As you can see, the Bears offense dropped from 10th(1995) in the League to 22nd(1996). Season Points Scored dropped 109 points from 1995(392) to 1996(283). From 1995 to 1996, PPG (points per game) went down by nearly 7 points (from 24.5 > 17.68)
http://www.chicagobears.com/news/newsDetail.jsp?id=6094
Ron Turner inherits a Bears offense that finished last in the NFL in most categories.
LAKE FOREST, Ill. - Former Bears offensive coordinator Ron Turner became the current Bears offensive coordinator Saturday when he was hired to replace Terry Shea.
Turner returns to the position he held from 1993-96 after spending the last eight seasons as head coach at the University of Illinois. He was fired in November after compiling a 35-57 record.
In Chicago, Turner inherits an offense that ranked last in the NFL in 2004 in scoring, total yards, passing yards, first downs and third down efficiency. Shea was relieved of his duties Tuesday after the Bears mustered just 19 offensive touchdowns in 16 games.
In his first stint with the Bears, Turner helped revive a woeful offense. In his first season working for head coach Dave Wannstedt, the unit generated 99 fewer total yards and 152 fewer passing yards than the 2004 team, ranking last in the NFL in both categories.
In 1995, the offense enjoyed one of the most prolific seasons in Bears history, establishing nine club records while averaging 24.5 points and 355 yards per game.
The only NFL quarterback to take all of his team's snaps, Erik Kramer set team marks with 315 completions, 522 attempts, 3,838 yards and 29 TD passes while being sacked only 15 times.
Jeff Graham (82 catches for a team-record 1,301 yards and 4 TDs) and Curtis Conway (62-1,037-12) became the first Bears receiving duo to each top 1,000 yards and Rashaan Salaam set team rookie rushing records with 1,074 yards and 10 TDs.
The defense was the problem in 1995 as the Bears finished 9-7 and failed to make the playoffs after losing games by scores of 27-24, 34-28, 37-34 and 35-28. The 2004 squad was 5-1 when scoring at least 17 points and 0-10 when compiling 16 or less.
I don't think Turner should have even been interviewd. The guy has proved nothing.
Turner returns to the position he held from 1993-96 after spending the last eight seasons as head coach at the University of Illinois. He was fired in November after compiling a 35-57 record.
^
Thats not very good at all. In fact, I did some research on his stats. It's not overly indepth but it shows you how good he isn't. I mean, does Jerry Angelo even want to win? Why Turner, what has he proved......
For those who do not remember who Ron Turner is, he was the Bears Offensive Coordinator for four years ('93, '94' 95 '96). Although he produced one good year (1995), he failed to reach the top 20 in total team offense 3 of his 4 years here at Chicago.
His Bio is listed below;
http://fightingillini.collegesports.com/sp...rner_ron00.html (http://fightingillini.collegesports.com/sports/m-footbl/mtt/turner_ron00.html)
Bears History in the Bio;
The Chicago Bears
In four seasons working with the Chicago Bears, Turner coordinated an offense that improved every season, breaking the club record for passing yards with 233 yards per game in 1995 and producing a 1,000-yard receiver and rusher in the same season. The diversity of the Turner offense in Chicago found success under four different quarterbacks in Jim Harbaugh (1993), Steve Walsh (1994), Erik Kramer (1995) and Dave Krieg (1996). In 1994, the Bears led the NFC Central Division for much of the regular season and defeated division rival Minnesota, 35-18, in a first-round playoff game.
Ron Turner Chicago Bear stats by year, by rank;
1993
Bears W/L Record 7-9
236 points scored on offense (24th in the NFL out of 28 Teams)
=14.6 points per game (0.22 points per game better than 2004 @ 14.4)
Ranked 28th in passing yards with 2,270
Ranked 19th in rushing yards with 1,677
Ranked 28th in total Team Offense (Which was last place. The NFL only had 28 teams in 1993)
1994
Bears W/L Record 9-7
271 points scored on offense (24th in the NFL out of 28 Teams)
=16.93 points per game (2.53 points per game better than 2004 @ 14.4)
Ranked 23rd in passing yards with 3,230
Ranked 15th in rushing yards with 1,588
Ranked 26th in total Team Offense (out of 28 teams)
1995
Bears W/L Record 9-7
392 points scored on offense (8th in the NFL out of 30 Teams)
=24.5 points per game (10.1 points per game better than 2004 @ 14.4 *NOTE: The Bears have not scored more than 392 points in a season since 1995. This is also thier highest ranking offense since that time.)
Ranked 13th in passing yards with 3,838
Ranked 9th in rushing yards with 1,930
Ranked 10th in total Team Offense (out of 30 teams)
1996 (Turners' Final Year)
Bears W/L Record 7-9
283 points scored on offense (26th in the NFL out of 30 teams)
=17.68 points per game (3.28 points per game better than 2004 @ 14.4)
Ranked 19th in passing yards with 3,350
Ranked 16th in rushing yards with 1,720
Ranked 22nd in total Team Offense (out of 30 teams)
Counter Production:
As you can see, the Bears offense dropped from 10th(1995) in the League to 22nd(1996). Season Points Scored dropped 109 points from 1995(392) to 1996(283). From 1995 to 1996, PPG (points per game) went down by nearly 7 points (from 24.5 > 17.68)