Chicago Bears sign 6 free agents to contracts after rookie minicamp

The Chicago Bears conducted rookie minicamp this weekend, where rookies (and some veterans) hit the practice field for the first time at Halas Hall.

Quarterback Caleb Williams and wide receiver Rome Odunze were the main attractions during the weekend, and their early chemistry shined during Friday’s practice. Unfortunately, Odunze was held out of Saturday’s practice due to hamstring tightness. But it’s clear Chicago’s top-10 selections are quickly building a rapport.

In addition to the Bears’ five draft picks and nine undrafted free agent signings, there were a handful of players there on a tryout basis. And it sounds like some of them made a strong impression.

Following two days of practice, Chicago signed six tryout players:

Nov 6, 2021; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Jayden Daniels (5) hugs USC Trojans wide receiver John Jackson III (80) during pregame warm-ups at Sun Devil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports

Experience: Rookie

College: USC

Height: 6-1

Weight: 215 lbs

Oklahoma’s Jayden Gibson (1) catches the ball for a touchdown over Arkansas State’s Leon Jones (2) during a college football game between the University of Oklahoma Sooners (OU) and the Arkansas State Red Wolves at Gaylord Family-Oklahoma Memorial Stadium in Norman, Okla., Saturday, Sept. 2, 2023. Oklahoma won 73-0.

Experience: Rookie

College: Arkansas State

Height: 6-1

Weight: 195 lbs

Nov 11, 2023; Pasadena, California, USA; UCLA Bruins quarterback Collin Schlee (9) is tackled by Arizona State Sun Devils defensive lineman Dashaun Mallory (0) on a scramble during the first half at the Rose Bowl. Mandatory Credit: Alex Gallardo-USA TODAY Sports

Experience: Rookie

College: Arizona State

Height: 6-1

Weight: 275 lbs

Dec 22, 2023; Tampa, FL, USA; Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets linebacker Paula Moala (13) celebrates his sack of UCF Knights quarterback John Rhys Plumlee (not pictured) during the second half of the Gasparilla Bowl at Raymond James Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

Experience: Rookie

College: Georgia Tech

Height: 6-0

Weight: 229 lbs

Oct 19, 2019; Columbia, SC, USA; Florida Gators wide receiver Freddie Swain (16) is brought down by South Carolina Gamecocks linebacker Ernest Jones (53) and South Carolina Gamecocks defensive back Israel Mukuamu (24) at Williams-Brice Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Blake-USA TODAY Sports

Experience: Veteran

College: Florida

Height: 6-0

Weight: 199 lbs

Sep 8, 2022; Inglewood, California, USA; Buffalo Bills tight end Tommy Sweeney (89) runs against Los Angeles Rams linebacker Justin Hollins (58) in the second quarter at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Experience: Veteran

College: Boston College

Height: 6-5

Weight: 244 lbs

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Even if New York Giants wanted Justin Fields, they had no shot

Many pundits, fans, and interested parties were lobbying for the New York Giants to take a shot at acquiring Chicago Bears quarterback Justin Fields.

Fields was traded to the Pittsburgh Steelers this past weekend for a conditional sixth-round draft pick, prompting a social media onslaught of people questioning their team’s effort to acquire the former first-round pick.

The answer was revealed in an article by Jaclyn Hendricks of the New York Post on Monday morning.

Former Bears quarterback Justin Fields wanted Pittsburgh alone as his next NFL home.

Before the Bears traded Fields to the Steelers on Saturday, four NFL teams inquired about the 25-year-old quarterback, whose camp “asked for him not to be traded there” as he “wanted the Steelers,” NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported Sunday.

The four suitors were not specified.

Again, no one is sure if the Giants made an inquiry, which is a moot point since Fields appeared to want to play in Pittsburgh no matter what.

The Giants signed Drew Lock on March 14 to a one-year, $5 million free agent deal. One has to wonder if they rebuffed on an attempt to trade for Fields before they made that decision.

Fields will earn $1.6 million with the Steelers this year and will play behind Russell Wilson in training camp barring anything unforeseen.

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Bears should learn from Giants’ mistake with Daniel Jones

The New York Giants selected Duke quarterback Daniel Jones with the sixth overall pick in the 2019 NFL draft.

Five years and hundreds of millions of dollars later, they still don’t know if he’s their “guy.”

The Giants might outwardly state the oft-injured Jones, who has yet to post elite stats as a starter in this league, is their future at quarterback, but experts believe that the Giants should be moving on from Jones.

Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Kurt Warner, who now works as a studio analyst for the NFL Network, used the Giants’ situation with Jones as an example of how the Chicago Bears should approach their upcoming decision with quarterback Justin Fields.

“When you get to the point we are at in this league with quarterbacks — what you have to pay them and what that means for your organization — you better know that he’s the guy,” Warner told a select group of reporters at the Super Bowl, via the New York Post. “That, to me, is where teams get in trouble.

“The Giants go give $40 million [per year] to Daniel Jones. He hasn’t shown us he’s that guy. We’ve seen glimpses, maybe. The Giants are still behind the 8-ball because he’s still not that guy. Maybe he will be, but he’s not right now — and they paid him.”

The Giants have no choice but to roster Jones this season as they don’t have an ‘out’ clause in his deal until 2025. But paying and playing Jones in 2024 should not affect their future plans at quarterback if they are simply waiting for his clock to run out.

Ironically, the Giants own the sixth pick in this year’s draft and could very well use that to select Jones’ successor.

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Bears general manager taking calls for No. 1 pick

INDIANAPOLIS — The top pick in the NFL draft is available to the highest bidder.

Bears general manager Ryan Poles, who is committed to third-year quarterback Justin Fields, has engaged in “starter conversations” with teams interested in moving up to No. 1.

The Texans, Colts, Raiders, Panthers and Falcons all own top-nine picks and are in the quarterback market, scouting Bryce Young, Will Levis, C.J. Stroud and Anthony Richardson.

“Nothing specific about players, picks and all that,” Poles told reporters Tuesday at the NFL combine. “It’s just interest.”

First things first: The Bears have about $98.5 million in salary-cap space for free-agent shopping.

Even that wallet can’t fill all the needs on the roster, so a package of draft picks under affordable team control would accelerate the rebuild.

“It just depends how far back,” Poles said of trading. “But we need a lot, and that gives us more opportunity to bring in more players.”


Bears general manager Ryan Poles said the team is willing to trade the No. 1 pick in this year’s NFL draft.
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The Bears’ plans puts pressure on the Texans, who hold the No. 2 pick and must decide whether to pay a premium to trade up one spot and secure their top prize or risk settling for their second-ranked quarterback.

The idea of getting jumped is harder to stomach if it’s the AFC South rival Colts moving up from No. 4.

“We’re not necessarily worried about what other teams are doing,” Texans GM Nick Caserio said. “You try to make decisions you feel are best for your team.”


Texans GM Nick Caserio
USA TODAY Sports

It’s a chance to even out history for the Bears, who traded two third-round picks and a fourth-round pick to swap picks from No. 3 to No. 2 (and select quarterback bust Mitch Trubisky) in 2017.

“We have a trade-chart simulator,” Caserio said. “The issue when you are trying to do a trade is your model says one thing and their model says another thing, so we are speaking two different languages. How do we find a resolution? That’s a little bit more of an exercise when we get into April.”


Neither Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll nor general manager John Schneider denied the recent report by The Athletic that quarterback Russell Wilson made a power play with ownership to get them fired before he was traded to the Broncos last offseason.

“Honestly, water under the bridge,” Schneider said.

The Seahawks, who went to the playoffs with free-agent-to-be Geno Smith, got the last laugh (and a boatload of draft picks, including No. 5 overall) as the Broncos were a disaster during Wilson’s career-worst year.

“With the guys that I’ve coached, I’m always going to hang with them, and I’m never going to leave them,” Carroll said. “Regardless of what has happened or things that have been said at all, if you hang with them, it all comes back around. I like to demonstrate that faith in the relationship and the depth of what we did together.”


Bills safety Jordan Poyer is a free agent and recently said that he would like to play in a state “that doesn’t take half my money,” referring to New York’s income taxes.

Asked about that comment, Bills GM Brandon Beane quipped, “Can you call Gov. [Kathy] Hochul and get mine reduced, too?”


The Eagles have 10 starters who are free agents.

Even for master salary-cap manipulator Howie Roseman, that’s too many to re-sign.

“We’re not capable of getting all those guys back,” the general manager said. “We also understand we’re in a good situation in terms of picks and we have a lot of guys under contract, not just for this year but going forward.

“It’s hard to make offers that’s not really in the range of what a player is going to get. Our players … and the success they’ve had, we’re just going to be honest with them on the range, and we understand that they’ve put themselves in this position.”

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Jets look ready to finally in play meaningful December games

The Jets don’t play this Thursday. Thursday will be a practice day, Day 2 of their preparation for a critical game in Minnesota three days later. But in so many ways, Thursday will have profound meaning for the Jets.

Thursday, midnight, the calendar flips from November to December.

It will be Dec. 1. The Jets will be 7-4. They will be in position to make the playoffs for the first time in a dozen years, but best of all they will play games that matter in December. In some NFL precincts that would induce a yawn and a ho-hum.

Around here, it’s big news.

So, sure, disparage Sunday’s opponent, the woeful Bears, as much as you like. Yes, they are a bad team with an abysmal defense. Yes, they were absent the one player who makes them remotely watchable, quarterback Justin Fields, down with a bum shoulder.

But the Jets beat Chicago soundly, 31-10. They shrugged off an uncharacteristically slow start by the defense. They shrugged off the weather, the sky spitting rain from opening kickoff to final gun. They shrugged off a boisterous week in which the fair-haired quarterback of tomorrow became the street-clothes-wearing third-stringer of today.

“We ignored all the noise,” Jets coach Robert Saleh said about 15 minutes after his giddy players sloshed off the MetLife Stadium field. “The guys did a great job executing.”

Mike White
Bill Kostroun

They did. They spotted the Bears a 10-7 lead even after Mike F. White led them on a 75-yard touchdown march on their first series of the game, the defense looking like maybe they still had a bit of a Thanksgiving hangover.

But the moment White hooked up with Garrett Wilson on a 54-yard scoring play with 4:57 left in the second quarter to give the Jets the lead back, the tenor and the feel of the game changed permanently. The defense allowed no more points. The offense worked as efficiently as it has in years, White piling up 315 yards and scattering his 22 completions to 10 different receivers.

Jets running back Ty Johnson (25) celebrates his touchdown with a spike during the third quarter.
Bill Kostroun

“That was too much fun, and it was reflected in the score,” crowed Elijah Moore, a forgotten man for much of the season who caught two balls, one for 42 yards, one a 22-yard touchdown that pushed the Jets’ lead to 24-10 in the third. “That’s real New York Jets football. That’s the definition of team football.”

Moore would get no argument from the other 52 men clad in green or any of the 77,963 inside MetLife who enjoyed a good three-hour soaking but still seemed to be having a hell of a time, chanting both for their J-E-T-S and for their quarterback, presently the leader in the clubhouse for the office of mayor of Florham Park.

“It’s awesome to go out there playing football with your friends,” White said. “It was a complete team win.”

The most encouraging part of Sunday is that the Jets, almost to a man, enjoyed their win without getting carried away by it, with the underlying understanding that there is still work to do, and a lot of it.

Playing meaningful December games is a lot different than winning them, and the assignment next week — against the 9-2 Vikings, at Minneapolis’ U.S. Bank Stadium — kicks off a stout two-week gauntlet that will include a return date with the Bills at Orchard Park.

Jets tight end C.J. Uzomah (87) and guard Laken Tomlinson (78) celebrate the win over the Bears.
Bill Kostroun

“Our guys don’t flinch,” Saleh said, and what’s also clear is they don’t much carry things over week-to-week — positively and negatively — from week-to-week, either. Part of that was undoubtedly the presence of White, who didn’t only play a terrific game but by his mere insertion as QB1 reflected a simple yet essential part of the meritocracy Saleh is trying to establish.

You perform well, you play.

You don’t, you sit. No matter your draft-day pedigree.

It is a fine lesson to teach a young quarterback like Zach Wilson, and it is an even greater message to send to the other folks on the team who have pushed the Jets to where they are, to the doorstep of December, to the precipice of a playoff push. The season stopped being about moral victories months ago. Only the real ones will do now.

“We need to keep the main thing the main thing,” said C.J. Mosely, the soul of the defense who had an interception, repeating a mantra he instills in his teammates often. “We haven’t scratched the surface of how great we can be.”

The best part of that? If he’s right, the Jets have the opportunity to back up those words. Next week in Minnesota would be wonderful place to start.

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