Chicago Sun-Times

Bears won’t rule out giving Hunt a chance

- BY PATRICK FINLEY, STAFF REPORTER pfinley@suntimes.com | @patrickfin­ley

The Bears aren’t openly pursuing running back Kareem Hunt. But they could one day.

On Monday, coach Matt Nagy and general manager Ryan Pace left open the possibilit­y the Bears could sign Hunt, who was released by the Chiefs on Nov. 30 after video showed him pushing and kicking a woman in a Cleveland hotel last year.

While nothing is pending — “We’re not even close to that point,” Pace said — neither the coach nor the GM ruled out a signing when asked a total of six questions about Hunt.

Nagy said he spoke with Hunt, who played for him last year with the Chiefs, last week on the phone.

“We had a good conversati­on,” Nagy said. “Here’s a kid that I spent a year coaching on offense. It’s a tough situation. I wanted to make sure that he’s OK but understand­ing, too, that the situation that happened is unfortunat­e for everybody. He knows that.

“So the only thing I cared about when I talked to him was literally his personal life, and it was a good conversati­on. He sounded good. That’s it.”

Three days after the Chiefs released him for being untruthful about the incident, Hunt went unclaimed on waivers. He was put on the commission­er’s exempt list. He has no pending criminal charges, but it’s unclear if he’ll face league discipline.

“Obviously, there’s a lot of things off the field that he’s got to take care of,” Pace said.

Asked whether Hunt deserves a second chance, Nagy said he was “raised to give guys second chances, not third chances.”

Pace failed miserably with his last reclamatio­n project. At the suggestion of then-defensive coordinato­r Vic Fangio and with the blessing of chairman George McCaskey, Pace signed troubled 49ers defensive lineman Ray McDonald in March 2015. McDonald was arrested two months later on suspicion of domestic violence and child endangerme­nt and was cut.

Pace was asked what effect that move might have on him signing Hunt.

“I think every one of those is unique,” he said. “Everyone is different. All the circumstan­ces are always different. So we’re not even there yet.”

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