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Brad Biggs: Options at 'premium positions' give Bears GM Ryan Poles confidence at No. 9. Now he just has to nail the pick.

Brad Biggs, Chicago Tribune on

Published in Football

Poles spoke earlier this spring about dividing staff members into groups to make cases for players with this second first-round pick, and he believes that process will pay dividends Thursday.,

“From the work that we’ve done, I feel pretty good about just being flexible,” he said. “That’s why we did that project with some premium positions with O-line, with D-line, receiver. All of that feedback was outstanding. It gave you a really good feeling.

“There’s different championship-caliber teams that have built their teams in different ways. And it really solidified (that) those premium positions are important. I’d say those three are three. It matches up with this draft pretty well.”

You can make a strong case for the Bears to use the ninth pick on a receiver, an offensive tackle, an edge rusher or Texas defensive tackle Byron Murphy II. If a small cloud of players with similar grades is available when the Bears are on the clock at No. 9, a slight trade down might make sense with an appropriate offer. The Bears have done extensive work on a handful of players who would fit in a range for trading back.

Two league sources said the Bears have indicated to other teams they are open to conversations, although that’s not a surprise. It would be more newsworthy if the Bears told teams they were locked in at No. 9.

Another source said the Atlanta Falcons have gotten a lot of chatter about trading the No. 8 pick. That might be more about finding a landing spot for the fourth quarterback to come off the board than trying to jump the Bears. The more quarterbacks selected before No. 9, the better things set up for Poles, and it’s possible four are gone before No. 8.

 

Whether it’s staying put, moving down to add depth to a class that currently includes only two more selections (No. 75 in Round 3 and No. 122 in Round 4) or even moving up, the one thing Poles has to do is nail the high picks. There’s depth with talent throughout the top half or two-thirds of Round 1, depending on whom you talk to from different teams, and Poles and the Bears figure to be the talk of the NFL on Thursday.

It has been a bumpy ride at times. There were tense moments in the building when the team came off a 4-13 season in 2022 and then started last season 0-4 and sat at 2-7 after the first week of November. That wasn’t enjoyable. That wasn’t part of any master plan.

“We have had those conversations and it does put a smile on your face in terms of the work that we’ve done,” Poles said. “I feel like we’ve done a good job getting the roster where it is. It makes me feel really fortunate about some of the things that happened to allow us to build the roster maybe a little bit more efficiently than if everything was kind of flat.

“So it’s something to be proud of, but at the same time, the job’s not done. I’ve talked about it before, it’s on paper. You’ve got to play and you’ve got to win games in this league. That’s what it comes down to, but we have taken the time just to — for a second, not long — but we’re proud of where we’ve come from.”

The Bears will be prouder of where they’re headed if all of this comes together. Poles and assistant GM Ian Cunningham seemed at ease discussing what’s ahead without really saying anything. They are in a great position. Now they have to deliver.


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