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Bears aren't head and shoulders above the league but I like their chances

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Other than Luck's Colts and Peyton Manning's Broncos, no team in the NFL is positioned to improve its passing game more this season than the Bears. They may not match the silly production of the Packers and the Saints, but a top-10 ranking isn't unreasonable. Nor is it unreasonable to think that improved passing production alone can add 2-3 wins to the eight the Bears had last season.

Assuming the Bears do make the playoffs — and in a loaded conference, I'll readily admit that's no cinch — they'll have to be able to outplay three or four playoff opponents in a row to hoist the Lombardi Trophy. I think they're about as likely as anyone else to be playing at that level in January.

There is no clear-cut superteam standing in their way. Green Bay is probably the closest, as the Packers won 15 games last season even with a defense that was terrible statistically. But the Packers already have a lengthy injury report and the season hasn't yet begun, and question marks remain in their defense, as well as in their offensive line and at running back. They might well be good enough to overcome it all, but they are flawed.

New England and New Orleans have serious defensive issues of their own, and the Saints are facing sanctions from their bounty scandal. The defending champion Giants can't run the ball, and the jury is out on whether they can cover anyone. San Francisco and Baltimore employ Alex Smith and Joe Flacco at quarterback. The Steelers' defense is old.

Pick a contender, and you can find a few flaws in it. The same is true of the Bears, who have major issues in their offensive line and their secondary. If Shea McClellin is a bust — many Bears fans seem resigned to that if being a when, but I'll reserve judgement until the real games start — they may not have an adequate pass rush. And nobody knows for sure what they'll get out of hobbled linebacker Brian Urlacher.

But other than Urlacher's health, all of those problems were problems in November of 2011, when I maintain the Bears were playing at a level that could very well have resulted in a Super Bowl win. They reached that level without Marshall, without Michael Bush, without McClellin and without Jeffery. Imagine the level they might reach with them.

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