The Province

Chicago talking about Trubisky

Bears quarterbac­k stars in pre-season debut while team’s starter struggles

- GENE CHAMBERLAI­N

BOURBONNAI­S, Ill. — Chicago Bears coach John Fox paused to recall when he last had a quarterbac­k whose debut created a stir as great as Mitch Trubisky’s.

“Real recent, the first time we threw Tim Tebow out there in Denver it was pretty similar,” Fox said. “The awareness on the outside that was mentioned — that brought quite a bit of attention.”

Mike Glennon remains the Bears starter, and there is no change in the team’s quarterbac­k depth chart after the Bears’ 24-17 loss to open the pre-season Thursday against Denver.

Yet, it’s obvious Trubisky’s performanc­e put public pressure on both Glennon and injured backup quarterbac­k Mark Sanchez.

“There’s a reason why we drafted him with the second pick of the draft,” Fox said. “I think for the first time people got to see that in a Bears uniform, which I think is exciting.”

The quarterbac­k controvers­y the Bears sought to squash when training camp started seems to have broken out anyway thanks to interest in seeing their first-round draft pick, his first performanc­e and Glennon’s poor start against Denver.

“It kind of leaves you with a sour taste in your mouth,” Glennon said Sunday about his first pre-season effort. “So it’s good to get out here at practice and it’ll be good to get to Arizona on Saturday.”

Glennon went 2-for-8 for 20 yards with an intercepti­on returned for a touchdown, while Trubisky went 18-for-25 for 166 yards and a TD against Denver. Social media lit up with pleas for Trubisky to be more than the developmen­tal project he’s been labelled by Fox and general manager Ryan Pace.

“I just really don’t get online,” Glennon said. “I watched the pre-season games, but I just avoid the possible distractio­n of hearing what people may say.

“The only thing that matters are the coaches and the players in the locker-room and what they have to say. That’s where my focus is.”

Glennon must keep an even keel because he’s designated as the starter, while Sanchez is the backup. Sanchez had only two series Thursday and left so Trubisky could run a two-minute drill before playing the entire second half.

As if to answer any critics, Glennon came out Saturday in the first practice after the pre-season opener and threw a deep ball on the opening play of scrimmage to Kendall Wright for a touchdown. He proceeded to have one of his sharpest practices.

“I thought really right out of the gates yesterday in practice, I thought we did a good job.” Glennon said Sunday. “Guys responded well.

“A lot of time on those (first days after games) the energy level is down, but I thought the first offence came out, executed and moved the ball well.”

It’s in the Bears’ plan to get Trubisky as many repetition­s in practice as possible, and it was expected to be a difficult task heading into camp because they had three other quarterbac­ks including fourthstri­ng Connor Shaw.

But Shaw had a minor surgical procedure to remove a screw in a leg he fractured last year, and Sanchez missed Sunday’s practice with a bruised ankle.

So on Sunday Trubisky had even more snaps.

“The key is just getting him reps,” Fox said. “You saw Thursday night that we kind of hold that in high regard, getting him opportunit­ies to play. I’ve watched a lot of young quarterbac­ks starting, going back to (Dan) Marino and (John) Elway, how they did it, how they progressed.

“We got a good plan. A big part of that plan is getting him playing opportunit­ies.” Fox meant in pre-season. The Bears’ coach said he is unaware of the public groundswel­l behind Trubisky, but wasn’t about to douse the excitement.

“You know we’re excited about him, so I imagine that people on the outside are excited,” Fox said.

The Bears aren’t alone in getting excited about Trubisky. Players immediatel­y took notice.

“I think it’s an amazing thing,” rookie guard Jordan Morgan said. “Just to go out here and see him perform like that, that’s a great feeling. And then seeing him play so well, that’s awesome.

“That’s the type of stuff we talk about in our rookie meetings: teaching each other to hold each other accountabl­e and be able to raise the bar for one another.” Glennon was impressed, as well. “There’s no doubt about that, I was impressed for his first time in a real NFL game setting,” Glennon said. “He played well. He moved the ball well. He ran it, had a touchdown to Victor (Cruz). He definitely played well.”

Fox said more goes into quarterbac­k decisions than statistics in pre-season games.

“We evaluate every practice,” Fox said. “Games do hold some weight, for sure, but we evaluate everything.”

Fox anticipate­s continue improvemen­t from Glennon after his Game 1 struggles.

“If you haven’t dropped a ball, haven’t missed a pass, you haven’t thrown a pick, you haven’t played,” Fox said. “It’s how they respond. We feel good about how he’ll respond.”

“There’s a reason why we drafted him with the second pick of the draft.” — Chicago Bears coach John Fox, speaking about Mitch Trubisky

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Quarterbac­k Mitch Trubisky, selected second overall in the 2017 NFL draft, made a memorable first impression on the Chicago Bears, throwing for 166 yards and a touchdown in a 24-17 loss to the Denver Broncos in the team’s first pre-season game.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Quarterbac­k Mitch Trubisky, selected second overall in the 2017 NFL draft, made a memorable first impression on the Chicago Bears, throwing for 166 yards and a touchdown in a 24-17 loss to the Denver Broncos in the team’s first pre-season game.

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