Chicago Sun-Times

TRASK OR TREASURE?

Draft expert Kiper says if Bears don’t trade up, best they can hope for at QB is Florida’s Trask

- JASON LIESER jlieser@suntimes.com | @JasonLiese­r

The Bears need to give up the dream of landing a franchise quarterbac­k at No. 20 in the upcoming NFL Draft. Although there are examples of QBs being taken there or much later and turning into stars, the odds are against it.

And waiting for one of the top five prospects to fall to them at No. 20 is completely unrealisti­c, ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper said Monday. He’s rarely at a loss for words but seemed genuinely stumped by the quarterbac­k puzzle that general manager Ryan Pace is trying to solve this offseason.

“I don’t think any of the [top] five will be there — that’s the problem,” Kiper said. “If [the Bears] move up, that’s the only option.

“They keep holding out hope, it seems like, that they can make a trade for Russell Wilson, but I don’t necessaril­y see that happening. And they didn’t make a move to try to get Carson Wentz. I don’t know where they’re gonna go for a quarterbac­k. Marcus Mariota’s name has been circulatin­g. But they’re a tricky team to try to figure out who the quarterbac­k’s gonna be.”

The Bears were rumored to be pursuing Wilson and Deshaun Watson, but there has been little evidence either player is legitimate­ly on the trading block. In Wilson’s case, not only would the Seahawks have to surrender their franchise quarterbac­k, but they’d also have to absorb a $39 million dead-salary-cap hit. They’d be blowing up their team, which seems extremely unlikely coming off a 12-4 season.

No other stars are expected to be available in free agency or by trade. The Bears would have to settle for another team’s backup, such as the Raiders’ Mariota, or a cheap veteran such as Alex Smith or Ryan Fitzpatric­k. The Bears also haven’t ruled out bringing back Mitch Trubisky.

Any of those quarterbac­ks would leave them still searching for a permanent answer, and again, they can forget about the five supposed gems of this draft class: Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence, BYU’s Zach Wilson, North Dakota State’s Trey Lance, Ohio State’s Justin Fields and Alabama’s Mac Jones. Kiper predicted all of them will be gone no later than the 12th pick, leaving Florida’s Kyle Trask as the top quarterbac­k the Bears could hope to land early in the draft.

Trask is viewed as a raw talent — does anyone employed by the Bears have enough job security to wait on his developmen­t? — but finished fourth in the Heisman Trophy voting after throwing for 4,283 yards and 43 touchdowns with eight intercepti­ons for the Gators.

“I mean, Kyle Trask, if you want to go to the sixth quarterbac­k in this draft . . . if you move off of No. 20 and get into the late first or early second, then I think [he] would make sense,” Kiper said. “He’s got a second-round grade . . . . If they like Kyle Trask, I would move down from No. 20 and get him in either the late portion of Round 1 or early in the second.”

That’s far from an enthusiast­ic endorsemen­t, and the Bears’ bleak chances of drafting a prized quarterbac­k raise further skepticism about their plans for the position. All they have at the moment are Nick Foles and a bunch of hypothetic­als, and there are limited options to fix that.

“IF [THE BEARS] LIKE KYLE TRASK, I WOULD MOVE DOWN FROM NO. 20 AND GET HIM IN EITHER THE LATE PORTION OF ROUND 1 OR EARLY IN THE SECOND.”

MEL KIPER,

ESPN draft analyst

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KEVIN C. COX/GETTY IMAGES
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Florida’s Kyle Trask will be as good as it gets for QBs by the time the Bears pick.
RONALD MARTINEZ/GETTY IMAGES AP Florida’s Kyle Trask will be as good as it gets for QBs by the time the Bears pick.
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