LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) -Suddenly, Kyle Orton’s play is as difficult to ignore as his beard.
Quarterbacks who throw for 334 yards as he did for the Chicago Bears in a 34-7 win at Detroit last week tend to attract attention, and he certainly turned a few heads with that performance.
That jittery rookie who left fans clamoring for Rex Grossman three years ago? He’s all grown up now.
“This is how I expect to play,” he said. “I expect to get better. Hopefully, this week that continues.”
He’ll have a hard time topping what he did against the Lions.
While Atlanta’s defense ranks just 23rd, Orton will have to keep an eye on John Abraham, who leads the league with seven sacks. There were no such issues with Detroit.
ball.
No one passed for more yards last week than Orton, who set a career-high for the second time in three weeks, and only Eli Manning had a higher rating than his 121.4.
This is Kyle Orton?
A few years ago, photos of Orton at bars and parties circulated on the Internet and it’s still not hard to find pictures of him holding a bottle of Jack Daniels. But lately, his exploits on the field are attracting attention, which is one reason the Bears are 3-2 and lead the NFC North.
“You see him progressing every week,” Atlanta linebacker Keith Brooking said. “At the beginning of the year, he was relying on his running game and his defense. This past week he was really throwing the ball over the field.”
Orton’s passes sailed on a couple deep attempts, but more often than not, he showed pinpoint accuracy against the Lions – like on this one to Rashied Davis in the second quarter. He dropped it between two defenders for a 34-yard gain.
There was also a 30-yard completion in the third quarter to Marty Booker, who picked the ball away from Lions cornerback Travis Fisher.
He showed poise under pressure and offensive coordinator Ron Turner showed his faith in the quarterback by calling for passes on 14 of 30 first downs before Grossman came in at the end.
trying to do defensively,” Turner said.
The days of simply managing the offense are over.
Which is exactly what Orton’s role was three years ago when Grossman’s broken ankle thrust him into the starting role in 2005.
A fourth-round pick out of Purdue, he went 10-5 running a scaled-down offense.
His job was to hand the ball off and not turn it over. He completed just 190 of 368 passes (51.6 percent) for 1,869 yards and threw more interceptions (13) than touchdown passes (nine).
Even so, the Bears won eight straight following a 1-3 start. But fans couldn’t wait for Grossman after a loss at Pittsburgh in December, and when they got their wish in the second half against Atlanta a week later, the crowd at Soldier Field erupted.
Orton played in the final game of the 2005 regular season but stayed stuck on the sideline until the final three games last season, when a left knee injury knocked out Grossman. Orton completed 43 of 80 passes for 478 yards with three touchdowns and two interceptions as Chicago won two of the final three games, and that was enough to persuade the Bears to open up the competition.
He then beat out Grossman in the preseason and has been opening eyes the past few weeks.
thrown. The Bears rarely asked him to throw long in the past, but now, he’s looking downfield.
He already has 18 completions for 20 or more yards, after managing 26 coming into this season.
“I think he’s getting better at it,” Turner said. “He needs reps, he needs to play. He needs to get the timing and get in sync with the receivers. … It takes time to get that feeling, but we’re very confident with Kyle. He has the ability to throw it and he has improved it over the years.”
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AP Sport Writer Charles Odum in Flowery Branch, Ga., contributed to this report.
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