Sports

/

ArcaMax

Chicago Bears had 'deep conversations' about keeping Justin Fields and drafting a QB, but trade was 'best for organization and best for Justin'

Colleen Kane, Chicago Tribune on

Published in Football

Tomlin hadn’t met Fields yet in a professional setting but spoke highly of his on-the-field abilities.

“Oh my gosh, he oozes talent and potential,” Tomlin said. “He’s worn the responsibility of being a franchise quarterback, but still he gets an opportunity to come into a community-like situation and learn from a guy who’s been doing it for over a decade. Man, there’s a lot of meat left on that bone. I’m just excited about working to be a part of extracting it.”

Now Fields will work to revive his career in Pittsburgh after what Poles acknowledged were tough circumstances in his first three years in the NFL.

Poles called Fields’ 2021 rookie year under former coach Matt Nagy – after former general manager Ryan Pace drafted him No. 11 overall – a “choppy start.” When the Bears shifted to the Poles-Eberflus regime in 2022, Poles said the Bears had “some cleaning up to do” with the roster, which delayed the team adding a more talented supporting cast to help Fields.

Fields made improvements in his third season when he completed a career-high 61.4% of his passes for 2,562 yards with 16 touchdowns and nine interceptions while going 5-8 in 13 games. But that improvement wasn’t big enough as the Bears neared a decision on Fields’ fifth-year option this spring and a potential extension after that. They felt they would be in a better position going with a rookie quarterback on a cheaper contract that would allow them to continue building the team.

“Just in terms of the game, I feel like he was making strides and improving,” Poles said. “The problem is, and that’s what I try to explain, it wasn’t Justin versus one of these rookies. It’s really the timeline and how much runway you have. To get a guy up off the ground, you need to support them with as much talent as possible. And then that flips because then they take so much cap space, which is a good thing if you get to that point. But then they have to be the reason you start winning. Then it’s harder to add the talent around them.”

Poles said the Bears had a lot of “deep conversations” about the possibility of keeping Fields and also drafting a quarterback. The team did its research on what that would look like before determining it wasn’t in their best interest.

 

“I got some really good guys on my staff to really dig into how that would play out in terms of the locker room, how would that play out with a young guy that needs a lot of reps, how would that play out with just the command and leadership that you need in that position,” Poles said. “And we felt like it was best to probably move on and allow a young quarterback to come in and work into that role.”

Fields hasn’t spoken to Steelers media yet, but Poles said the quarterback seemed to have a positive attitude in their phone call. Poles praised Fields for being a “class act” in how he dealt with all of the ups and downs.

The Bears made phone calls to their players about the trade because they wanted to be transparent about their decision. Poles said those called seemed to be understanding of the circumstances that led to Fields’ departure.

“They understand there is a business part to it and just because you trade someone, it doesn’t mean you don’t like them or appreciate them,” Poles said. “We thought it was the best move for where we’re at.”

_____


©2024 Chicago Tribune. Visit at chicagotribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus