Chicago Sun-Times

As far as QBs, they’ll pass

Bears unlikely to pick one, but they could explore trading down

- PATRICK FINLEY pfinley@suntimes.com | @ patrickfin­ley

Part 5 of a 10- part series previewing the NFL Draft and analyzing the Bears’ needs.

In March 2015, two months after he was hired as the Bears’ general manager, Ryan Pace said he’d like to find a college quarterbac­k each offseason.

“I think it’s a good idea to add a quarterbac­k every year,” he said. “Sometimes that’s going to be in the upper rounds; sometimes that’s going to be in the later rounds or college free agency. I mean, I played with Tony Romo at Eastern Illinois, so I know what you can do with college free agency there.”

Through three draft cycles, though, Pace has selected only one quarterbac­k and signed another one — remember Shane Carden? No? — in the days after the draft. The draft pick, though, was the one that mattered — Mitch Trubisky, for whom he traded four picks to move up one spot last year.

This offseason, Pace surrounded him with backup Chase Daniel and third- stringer Tyler Bray, veterans who know coach Matt Nagy’s offense. The Bears seem set at the position — unless Pace and Nagy fall in love with a late- rounder. The Bears don’t need a passer beyond a camp arm, but Bray shouldn’t be the reason they shy away from a developmen­tal prospect, either.

More interestin­g, then, is how the teams that surround the Bears in the first round wade through this year’s quarterbac­k crop. The Browns and Jets are locks to each select one in the first four picks.

The Giants and Broncos, who have veteran passers set to start in 2018, will have to weigh the value of drafting a quarterbac­k of the future against players who could help them win now.

USC’s Sam Darnold and Wyoming’s Josh Allen have been tied closest to the Browns, who draft No. 1 and 4 overall. UCLA’s Josh Rosen and Oklahoma’s Baker Mayfield also could go in the top seven before the Bears draft eighth.

“That would be huge,” Pace said at the NFL’s annual meetings. “If four quarterbac­ks go in front of us, I’m all for it. I think you see the value of that position when you see people posturing to get up in the draft and get a quarterbac­k. It’s critical.”

Among those posturing teams, the Bills hold the 12th and 22nd picks, and the Patriots, who could eye Tom Brady’s backup, have the 23rd and 31st picks. The Cardinals, who draft 15th, could move up, too.

“The Bills, where they’re situated right now and with the capital they have and with this particular class of quarterbac­ks, I won’t say they’re pot- committed,” NFL Network analyst Daniel Jeremiah said. “But I think at this point you’ve got the ammunition to try to get up there. I think you have to do it.”

If one of the top four quarterbac­ks is available at No. 8, the Bears could explore trading down. Pace, who has traded up in the first round the last two years, would undoubtedl­y love to recoup draft capital after trading away this year’s third- rounder in the Trubisky deal.

In a top- heavy draft, though, it’s unlikely that a player in Pace’s top “cloud” lasts beyond the top dozen picks. Finding a match, then, would be tricky.

 ?? JENNIFER STEWART/ GETTY IMAGES ?? UCLA quarterbac­k Josh Rosen could go in the top seven before the Bears draft eighth.
JENNIFER STEWART/ GETTY IMAGES UCLA quarterbac­k Josh Rosen could go in the top seven before the Bears draft eighth.
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