The Commercial Appeal

Winners, losers of Bears-panthers trade

- Nate Davis

A trade the NFL community had been eagerly awaiting went down late Friday afternoon. (No, not an announceme­nt from Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers ...)

The Chicago Bears did the expected, offloading the No. 1 pick of the 2023 draft to the Carolina Panthers and getting, according to multiple reports, the No. 9 pick this year, a second-rounder this year (No. 61 overall), a first- and second-rounder in 2024 and WR DJ Moore.

The move will certainly have massive ramificati­ons on the draft and, perhaps, the quarterbac­k market at large, not to mention free agency, which officially kicks off next week.

Here’s a look at who stands to gain ... and who doesn’t:

WINNERS

Carolina Panthers: They’ve been in search of a new franchise quarterbac­k since Cam Newton was in his prime. Teddy Bridgewate­r wasn’t the answer. Sam Darnold wasn’t the answer. Baker Mayfield wasn’t the answer. Deshaun Watson didn’t come. But now, at significan­t cost, a new era. GM Scott Fitterer and new coach Frank Reich will have their choice among highly regarded draft prospects like Alabama’s Bryce Young, Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud, Florida’s Anthony Richardson and Kentucky’s Will Levis.

Chicago Bears: A team that ended the 2022 season with what was arguably the worst overall roster in the league – and almost definitely in the NFC – suddenly has a brand new lease on life, coupling its newfound draft capital with copious salary cap space.

Justin Fields: In his second NFL season, the young quarterbac­k almost served as a one-man offense in the Windy City, passing for 2,242 yards and 17 TDS and rushing for 1,143 yards and eight scores. He’s now got Moore to throw to with what should be premium reinforcem­ents in tow in what could now be a very quick rebuild centered around Fields’ estimable talent.

Lamar Jackson: With the Panthers and Houston Texans, who own the second overall selection, almost certainly locked in on quarterbac­ks atop the draft, the Baltimore Ravens’ franchised superstar may suddenly find a market develop despite reports that several teams would not engage him in negotiatio­ns after he was tagged Tuesday. But it certainly appears the QB supply-demand pendulum could be swinging in his favor.

Aaron Rodgers: Seems his flirtation with the New York Jets is getting down the road quickly ... but who’s to say Friday’s

news won’t entice another team to make a run at him?

Geno Smith: The newly re-signed Seattle Seahawks quarterbac­k gets just a little bit more security with his team, which picks fifth in the draft, now apparently further removed from the leading passing prospects as the top of the board evolves. Coach Pete Carroll and GM John Schneider now have an even better shot at obtaining one of the draft’s best overall prospects, namely Alabama DE/OLB Will Anderson or even (still) Georgia DT Jalen Carter, and either would indirectly benefit Smith, too.

LOSERS

Indianapol­is Colts: With the Panthers and division rival Texans ahead of them, Indy is now basically looking at taking the quarterbac­k rated third or fourth on GM Chris Ballard’s draft board. And the Colts may still have to climb up from the No. 4 spot to get the third pick from the Arizona Cardinals to ensure getting the rookie QB they’re most comfortabl­e with, after years of treading water with veterans who never managed to really fill the breach following Andrew Luck’s stunning 2019 retirement.

Las Vegas Raiders: Head coach Josh Mcdaniels expressed a desire at the scouting combine to find a long-term answer under center following the team’s release of Derek Carr last month. But the Silver and Black, who choose seventh overall next month, now find themselves in an even more precarious position than the Colts as it pertains to drafting a quarterbac­k this year.

Atlanta Falcons: Ditto the Colts and Raiders – except ATL selects eighth. Barring a big move up to Arizona’s spot, they’ll have to hope 2022 third-rounder Desmond Ridder really blossoms next season ... or reconsider their supposed reluctance to make a play for Jackson even though they certainly have the cap space to do so, not to mention those seats that need filling in Mercedes-benz Stadium.

Chase Claypool: The young receiver did little to distinguis­h himself – 14 catches in seven games – in Chicago after being acquired from the Pittsburgh Steelers at last year’s trade deadline in a move that already has aged poorly from the Bears’ perspectiv­e, given Pittsburgh ultimately netted the 32nd overall pick. Now, with Moore on board – he’s not only a better wideout than Claypool, he’s also under contract through 2025 – the former Notre Dame standout isn’t likely to be Fields’ primary option in 2023 ... which will consequent­ly make it harder for him to broker a big payday in free agency a year from now.

 ?? MATT MARTON/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Bears QB Justin Fields should have a lot more help at his disposal in 2023.
MATT MARTON/USA TODAY SPORTS Bears QB Justin Fields should have a lot more help at his disposal in 2023.

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