Sizing up The vikings' competition in the NFC north
CHICAGO bears
2012 record: 10-6, third, missed the playoffs.
Key addition: Coach Marc Trestman. The quarterbacking guru has brought out the absolute best in players such as Bernie Kosar, Jake Plummer, Scott Mitchell and former league MVP Rich Gannon. Now, he teams up with Jay Cutler, a guy who's far more gifted physically than any of those players. Can the 57-year-old first-time NFL head coach bring his success from the CFL with him to Chicago? Who knows? But it will be fun to watch him try.
Key loss: Linebacker Brian Urlacher. The prototypical middle linebacker in the 4-3, Cover 2-based defense couldn't play forever. His leadership and presence will be missed. But his breaking-down body won't be. Rookie Jon Bostic has played well in the preseason. And D.J. Williams will help, too, once he returns from his calf injury.
Key number: 4. Number of Pro Bowlers (Charles Tillman, Tim Jennings, Julius Peppers, Henry Melton) who return from a defense that scored nine touchdowns and forced 44 turnovers.
Outlook: Trestman's up-tempo West Coast offense is Cutler's fifth different system in the past six seasons. From the outside, it doesn't seem like a real good fit. Then again, Cutler has some Brett Favre in him, and he did pretty well in a West Coast scheme. Plus, Trestman's track record with quarterbacks is impressive. And, well, let's face it, the Bears couldn't get much worse on offense than they were a year ago. Some wonder if Trestman can run an NFL team after five years and two Grey Cup titles with the CFL's Montreal Alouettes. That remains to be seen. But hiring Mel Tucker as defensive coordinator and having him basically keep Lovie Smith's system intact shows a lot of savvy and little ego. The Bears fired Smith after a 10-6 season, 84 career victories, three division titles and a Super Bowl appearance. Cutler, in the last year of his contract, could be the next one shown the door if the Bears don't return to the playoffs ASAP.
GREEN BAY Packers
2012 record: 12-6, first. Beat Vikings 24-10 in an NFC wild-card game; lost to 49ers 45-31 in the divisional round.
Key addition: Running back Eddie Lacy. When the Packers offense fell from No. 3 in 2011 to No. 13 a year ago, the reason was simple. Opponents had no reason to respect the running game. That probably changed at the draft when General Manager Ted Thompson took Alabama's Lacy in the second round and UCLA's Johnathan Franklin in the fourth.
Key loss: Left tackle Bryan Bulaga. The Packers simply cannot stay healthy. Losing Bulaga to a knee injury for the season derails coach Mike McCarthy's grand plan to flip the right side of last year's line to the left side. It also puts Aaron Rodgers' blind side in the hands of rookie fourth-round draft pick David Bakhtiari.