USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Trade possibilit­ies for Bears QB Fields

- Nate Davis

Justin Fields’ future was always going to be a primary plot line of the NFL’s 2024 offseason – however it seems the speculatio­n was ramping up before the annual scouting combine was taking measuremen­ts. Thank you, social media.

Fields found himself explaining on “The St. Brown Brothers” podcast with current Chicago Bears teammate Equanimeou­s St. Brown and his brother, Detroit Lions All-Pro WR Amon-Ra St. Brown, why he had unfollowed the Bears on Instagram.

“It’s something that I don’t want to spend my time on,” Fields said in part. “I’m about to go on vacation.”

Maybe a permanent one from Chicago.

After all, this chatter comes at a time when there’s rampant buzz that the Bears, who hold the No. 1 pick of the upcoming draft for the second consecutiv­e February, are poised to move on from Fields in order to select the 2022 Heisman Trophy winner, former Southern Cal quarterbac­k Caleb Williams. A year ago, Chicago stuck with Fields – he has shown numerous flashes as a run-pass threat despite an uneven supporting cast in the Windy City – and traded the top pick of the 2023 NFL draft to the Carolina Panthers, who played so poorly with rookie QB Bryce Young that the Bears wound up back atop the board.

Now, given Williams’ talent – frequently and unfairly likened to threetime Super Bowl MVP Patrick Mahomes’ – and the opportunit­y to reset their quarterbac­king pay scale with a half-dozen or more seasons of contractua­l control, the rumors around Chicago and its current quarterbac­k will likely persist much longer this year.

Said Fields: “I’m tired of hearing the talk. I just want it to be over.” Soon, Justin. Soon. Probably.

If the Bears do indeed decide to move on from the man they dealt up to draft in 2021, these seven teams could be logical trade partners:

7. Seattle Seahawks

Geno Smith has been an excellent bridge over the past two seasons, yet it still doesn’t appear like the 33-year-old is the ultimate destinatio­n – particular­ly after his production dipped and Seattle went from wild-card entry to out of the playoffs from 2022 to 2023. It would be easy enough financially to move on from

Smith. The question might be whether GM John Schneider – never one to shy away from a gutsy move – would potentiall­y turn over the 16th pick of the draft to Bears GM Ryan Poles given he has no second-rounder to offer.

6. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Though there seems to be momentum for a longer-term union with Baker Mayfield on the heels of a surprising NFC South title, the Bucs currently don’t have a QB1 under contract. However, their relative success in 2023 might cost (at least) the 26th pick of the draft if GM Jason Licht decides it’s sensible to pivot to a more athletic option like Fields, who certainly has more upside and less miles on him than Mayfield.

5. Las Vegas Raiders

They play in an exciting city fresh off a successful Super Bowl staging. They’ve got an exciting new coach in Antonio

Pierce, who galvanized the team after replacing Josh McDaniels midway through last season. What they don’t have is an exciting quarterbac­k and probably not one who’s the long-term answer ... unless you’re an Aidan O’Connell truther. Pierce and newly hired GM Tom Telesco – he enjoyed an 11-year tenure with the Chargers in large thanks to the relative stability provided by QBs Philip Rivers and Justin Herbert – might only get one shot at addressing the position in a meaningful way. Would they rather have a semi-proven player like Fields or, say, roll those Vegas dice on somebody like Michigan’s J.J. McCarthy with the 13th pick of the draft?

4. New England Patriots

It appears Mac Jones maxed out as a rookie – not that it was fair teaming him with two offensive coordinato­rs and a pair of substitute teachers during his three seasons to date. With New England picking near the top of every round this year, including third overall, Poles could request several potential compensati­on packages to send Fields, who was drafted four spots before Jones, to Foxborough as the Pats continue to seek Tom Brady’s long-term successor.

3. Washington Commanders

A team that picks second overall – which feels awfully rich for Fields, whose rookie contract runs two more years assuming his fifth-year option for 2025 is picked up – might have just that much more juice to outbid New England in the event a bidding war materializ­es. Fields’ skill set would certainly seem to fit new OC Kliff Kingsbury’s offense well enough while providing an apparent upgrade to intercepti­on machine Sam Howell.

2. Pittsburgh Steelers

They are unfailingl­y in the postseason mix with HC Mike Tomlin calling the shots yet haven’t actually won a playoff game in seven years. Diminished play, starting with now-retired Ben Roethlisbe­rger’s late-career descent to the effective demotion of Kenny Pickett (a firstrounder in 2022) late last season, suggests it’s time to reboot behind center. Significantly switching gears at quarterbac­k might cut against the DNA of an organizati­on that values stability so deeply. But with Mitchell Trubisky already released and 2023 savior Mason Rudolph, who’s never shown enough in six seasons to be considered Big Ben’s permanent replacemen­t, about to hit free agency, this could be the perfect time to take a big swing at remedying the problem – especially at a juncture when even talented young passers seem to move more freely around the league.

1. Atlanta Falcons

They’ve been shaping up as the ideal landing spot for Fields for some time. He is a Georgia native who could join a club with a popular new head coach, Raheem Morris, in place while inheriting an offense that’s loaded with weaponry and seemingly only devoid of a worthy triggerman. Imagine Fields hitched to WR Drake London, TE Kyle Pitts, RB Bijan Robinson and an underrated offensive line. Might even be worth the eighth overall pick for a club that was skewered for not pursuing Lamar Jackson a year ago but seems to be one bold move from becoming a perennial favorite in the eminently winnable NFC South.

 ?? JAMIE SABAU/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Chicago Bears quarterbac­k Justin Fields scrambles against the Atlanta Falcons at Chicago’s Soldier Field last season.
JAMIE SABAU/USA TODAY SPORTS Chicago Bears quarterbac­k Justin Fields scrambles against the Atlanta Falcons at Chicago’s Soldier Field last season.

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