Chicago Sun-Times

SECOND WAVE OR WAIVE?

HERE ARE FOUR QUARTERBAC­K PROSPECTS WHO MIGHT INTEREST THE BEARS ON THE 2ND DAY OF THE NFL DRAFT

- BY PATRICK FINLEY | pfinley@suntimes.com | @patrickfin­ley AP PHOTO (MOND), GETTY IMAGES, STOCK.ADOBE.COM

The Bears are watching Texas A&M quarterbac­k Kellen Mond. And he’s flirting back. “I definitely see a connection [with the Bears],” he said last week after his on-campus pro day. “I definitely don’t want to say any names — but you know I’m definitely excited, especially them being able to watch me in person and watch me spin and spin the ball in person.”

The Bears sent quarterbac­ks coach John DeFilippo to College Station, Texas, to see Mond — and to Palo Alto, California, to watch Stanford’s Davis Mills.

It’s a reminder that the list of quarterbac­ks in this year’s draft doesn’t stop after the top five. For the Bears, it may only start then.

The top three picks in the draft, which starts April 29, are expected to be quarterbac­ks: Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence first, likely followed by BYU’s Zach Wilson and Alabama’s Mac Jones or Ohio State’s Justin Fields third. North Dakota State quarterbac­k Trey Lance could go in the top 10, too.

That would leave the Bears, with the 52nd and 83rd picks, sorting through quarterbac­ks on Day 2. Drafting one in the second or third round, though, would go against type. The Bears haven’t taken a quarterbac­k in those rounds since Peter Tom Willis went 63rd overall in 1990. General

manager Ryan Pace has drafted only one quarterbac­k — Mitch Trubisky — in his six seasons. Since 2004, fourth-rounder Kyle Orton is the second-highest quarterbac­k the Bears have selected.

This year comes with an added degree of difficulty: no NFL Scouting Combine. Typically, coach Matt Nagy said, coaches get to see how the ball spins out of passers’ hands and how they move their feet when they throw at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapol­is. When the coronaviru­s scuttled the combine, the Bears sent representa­tives to virtually every relevant quarterbac­k’s on-campus pro day.

“It definitely helps,” Nagy said. “There’s only so many of those you can do and see with everything else going on. What’s fair is that every other team is doing the same thing.”

Here are four quarterbac­ks the Bears could consider on Day 2 of the draft:

DAVIS MILLS

STANFORD | 6-4, 217 POUNDS | AGE: 22

In one sentence: The former top high school quarterbac­k prospect — by Scout and Rivals — started only 11 college games.

The skinny: No quarterbac­k was hurt more by the shortened college season than Mills. He missed the 2020 opener because of a false-positive coronaviru­s test and played only five games for the Cardinal, whose conference didn’t begin games until November. At his pro day in the rain, he showed why recruiters fell in love with him in high school — he has zip and touch.

The big question: Can he stay healthy? Mills’ history of knee injuries dates to high school, when he hurt his left knee in the state title game.

He could be: The biggest mystery in the draft. If the Pac-12 had played a full season, Mills could have worked his way into the top tier of quarterbac­ks. That might have happened next year had he not turned pro, too.

KELLEN MOND

Texas A&M | 6-3, 205 pounds | Age: 21

In one sentence: The four-year starter quarterbac­ked the nation’s No. 4 team last year.

The skinny: Mond began his career as the country’s top dual-threat quarterbac­k. His completion percentage improved every season, and by the time he left College Station, he held most of the school’s passing records. He was the Senior Bowl MVP in January.

The big question: Can he adjust to the pro game? Mond spent almost all his college career out of the shotgun — which is why he worked exclusivel­y under center at his pro day. His athleticis­m is a plus at the next level, but there are questions about his accuracy.

He could be: Colin Kaepernick, a second-round pick 10 years ago with whom he shares special athleticis­m and less-impressive passing touch. The Bears just spent four years being frustrated by an athletic, inaccurate quarterbac­k, though, and might not want to go through that again.

KYLE TRASK

Florida | 6-5, 240 pounds | Age: 23

In one sentence: He went from not starting his first three years of high school — or his first three years of college — to a Heisman Trophy finalist.

The skinny: Trask led major college football with 4,283 passing yards and 43 touchdowns in 2020 — though that was partly a function of the SEC playing more games than the Big Ten or Pac-12. His production and height will land him an opportunit­y somewhere. If it’s Chicago, he’d have an ally waiting for him — Trask has been working out with Andy Dalton in California.

The big question: Are teams drafting lifelong backups this high? Trask’s experience playing second-string could prove helpful in the NFL, where he could carve out a decade-long career as a backup. That has value for teams — but probably not until Day 3.

He could be: The Steelers’ Mason Rudolph, who was also old — almost 23 — when he was drafted out of Oklahoma State.

IAN BOOK

Notre Dame | 6 feet, 211 pounds | Age: 23

In one sentence: No quarterbac­k in Notre Dame history won more games than the undersized Book’s 30.

The skinny: Book isn’t a Day 2 pick unless a team overlooks his measurable­s and sees a two-time captain who had more success than almost any passer in Notre Dame history. He’s probably at the top of the Day 3 quarterbac­k tier, which includes Texas’ Sam Ehlinger — Tom Herman, his former coach, now works for the Bears — and former Wake Forest quarterbac­k Jamie Newman.

The big question: He’s too small, isn’t he? Six quarterbac­ks 6 feet or shorter started at least one game last year. Four have special skills: Drew Brees, Russell Wilson, Kyler Murray and Tua Tagovailoa. The other two, Ben DiNucci and Phillip Walker, started one game each. Book’s skills skew more toward the second group.

He could be: A quicker Chase Daniel, maybe? Daniel, remember, went undrafted. ✶

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