The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Bears QB Mitchell Trubisky takes break from social media

- By Andrew Seligman

BOURBONNAI­S, ILL. » Mitchell Trubisky is tired of it all.

The Chicago Bears quarterbac­k has no use for the critics. And when it comes to social media, he’s taking a breather, too.

All Trubisky wants is to start training camp and see just how far the Bears can go in his second season after finishing last in the NFC North the past four years.

They came into their first practice Friday believing they are in a better position after a busy offseason. Whether they deliver largely hinges on the guy behind center.

“I’m tired of all the doubts, all the comparison­s,” Trubisky said. “I don’t really pay attention to that. I’m tired of waiting. I’m just excited camp is here and we’ll see what we can do for Year 2. So all of that stuff, I can’t control none of that. All I can do is control my attitude and my effort and go out there and play the game the way I know how.”

Don’t ask him about the improvemen­ts Carson Wentz and Jared Goff made from Year 1 to Year 2 last season. Trubisky isn’t all that interested.

The same goes for any outside critiques and distractio­ns, so he’s taking a break from social media.

“(I’m) going Zero Dark 10,” he said, referencin­g his jersey number.

Trubisky, who hasn’t posted on Twitter since July 2, said he and guard Kyle Long decided to lay off social media and focus on football, instead.

“I’m trying to put all my focus and energy into this game and what I have to do,” he said. “And whatever anyone else says on the outside, whether it be positive or negative or hype or just trying to tear me down, it really doesn’t matter to me. I know who I am, I know what kind of player I can be, I know my role on this team so that’s really what I’m looking forward to prove to myself and my team.”

Trubisky said he read a few too many comments from people who didn’t know what they were talking about. He saw no reason to “let that enter my head,” so he decided to block it out completely.

“For me it’s just eliminatin­g distractio­ns and putting all my time and effort into what’s important,” he said.

As Trubisky goes, so probably go the Bears.

General manager Ryan Pace went all in when he traded up a spot with San Francisco to draft him with the No. 2 overall pick in 2017, staking his reputation to a quarterbac­k with just 13 starts at North Carolina. The Bears also spent this past offseason surroundin­g Trubisky with the pieces they think will help him succeed, hiring an offensive-minded coach in Matt Nagy, signing former Pro Bowl receiver Allen Robinson and bringing in some more play-making targets.

“The kid genuinely cares about the game of football and his position,” Nagy said. “He wants to be the greatest teammate on this team and he knows that if he does that, he’ll make guys around him better.”

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