Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

A YOUNG QB’S BEST FRIEND

WR Allen will be of great service to presumptiv­e No. 1 draft pick Williams

- PATRICK FINLEY BEARS BEAT pfinley@suntimes.com | @patrickfin­ley

It’s a new era for Bears quarterbac­ks. Again.

When the Bears traded Justin Fields to the Steelers on Saturday for a 2025 conditiona­l sixth-round pick — it can turn into a fourth-rounder — they cleared the way for USC star Caleb Williams to be the No. 1 overall pick next month.

The trade brings an all-too-familiar feeling of failure for a franchise whose last great quarterbac­k, Sid Luckman, was born 105 years ago. But the pivot that comes with the move evokes a novel emotion, too — Williams figures to be the first quarterbac­k the Bears have ever taken first overall, karmic justice after losing the Terry Bradshaw coin toss in 1970 and the result of a bold trade of the 2023 No. 1 overall pick.

General manager Ryan Poles and his staff are still doing their homework on Williams, with whom he first met at the NFL Scouting Combine last month. The Bears will attend Williams’ pro day on campus at USC on Wednesday before later bringing him to Halas Hall, where they’ll get a better sense of his medical records.

It’s clear that the Bears are comfortabl­e enough with Williams, though, to move on from their last first-round quarterbac­k.

Williams wants to be an iconoclast. The best way to prove it is for him to succeed where so many others have failed. The Bears have had two Pro Bowl quarterbac­ks since the 1970 NFL-AFL merger — Jim McMahon and, as a last-minute replacemen­t, Mitch Trubisky. The NFL’s charter franchise has never had a quarterbac­k throw for 4,000 yards in a season; the Texans, founded in 2002, have done it six times.

Trubisky, who was drafted second overall in 2017, and Fields, who was taken 11th in 2021, went from being symbols of hope for the Bears’ future to backups elsewhere. Trubisky signed with the Bills to be their second-stringer in 2021, and Fields will back up Russell Wilson to begin 2024.

Former general manager Ryan Pace traded his first-round picks in 2021 and 2022 to move up to draft Fields. Less than three years later, Poles was forced to spin Fields into, at best, a fourth-rounder next year.

In recent weeks, it was clear the Bears were ready to move on. When new Bears wide receiver Keenan Allen gave his first news conference Saturday morning, not a single person asked him about Fields.

He was quizzed about Williams, though. Despite playing in the same city, the former Charger said he’d met him only once, describing him as a “down-to-earth, chill guy.”

But Allen knew all about his play with the Trojans. Williams won a Heisman Trophy in 2022, and he threw for 8,170 yards and 72 touchdowns and had 10 intercepti­ons the last two seasons.

“Hell of an athlete,” Allen said of Williams. “Obviously, he can make tremendous plays with his feet, with his arm. Looks like he knows the game really well. Really good.”

Adding Allen on Thursday was the latest sign the Bears were focused on building around the young quarterbac­k. The Bears are giving their next QB a chance to succeed that Trubisky and Fields — who started off as backups — never got.

Allen was an integral part of quarterbac­k Justin Herbert’s developmen­t. In 2020, Allen caught 10 balls for 96 yards in Herbert’s first game, 13 for 132 in his second and 11 for 62 in his third.

One of the league’s great route runners smiled when asked about being a friendly target for a young quarterbac­k.

“I know the ins and outs, I know the zones, I know how to beat man, I know pretty much how to play the game,” he said. “I’m friendly for the quarterbac­k because I’ll be in the right spots.”

NOTE: The Bears agreed to a one-year deal with defensive end Jake Martin. Martin, who figures to be a depth piece, has 18 sacks in six seasons.

 ?? RYAN SUN/AP ?? Former Chargers wide receiver Keenan Allen said USC quarterbac­k Caleb Williams (above) is a hell of an athlete who can make plays with his feet and his arm.
RYAN SUN/AP Former Chargers wide receiver Keenan Allen said USC quarterbac­k Caleb Williams (above) is a hell of an athlete who can make plays with his feet and his arm.
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