Coming off a four-year, $38 million extension that he signed in the preseason, Leno was steady on the left side. He’s on a consecutive-snaps streak of 2,903, and while he wasn’t perfect in pass protection, the offense didn’t provide him a lot of chip help; the same can be said for Massie on the right side. Leno was called for 13 penalties — six holding, six false starts and one ineligible man downfield. That is too many, but some of the false-start penalties can be blamed on the operation of the unit as a whole. The left tackle is trying to get off the ball quickly and with a rookie quarterback, that’s something that can take some time to iron out. The Bears should be better with the snap counts in Trubisky’s second season. It sounds basic and it is, but it still takes time. Leno can run into a little trouble when his hands get outside the frame of the defender, but that’s every offensive tackle. He has strong hands and should be reliable for the new coaching staff.