Interesting article and thoughts on R.Pace.

dabears70

Well-known member
Joined:
Dec 31, 2013
Posts:
35,001
Liked Posts:
10,834
Location:
Orlando
My favorite teams
  1. New York Mets
  1. New York Knicks
  1. Chicago Bears
  1. New York Rangers
  1. Syracuse Orange


The Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Pace is on the hot seat by the media and many of the fans. Some, like myself and the owner, that seat might not be as warm. I have heard many say all of Ryan Pace’s first-round picks have been busts minus Roquan Smith. Since he failed by not finding a franchise quarterback, I have also heard that he should be fired.

This article intends not to debate my opinion versus the readers on Ryan Pace. However, there seems to be a lot of belief that Pace and head coach Matt Nagy will be targeting their win-now quarterback either in free agency, trade, or the draft. My question to everybody is, why do we believe this is the truth.

When Ryan Pace was hired back in 2015, he shared how he valued every draft pick, and getting more shots at players creates finding more talent. Ryan Pace was all about heavy upside players early (projects) over well-established college players.

This seemingly changed during the 2018 NFL draft when Pace choose Georgia linebacker Roquan Smith over Trumaine Edmunds. Ryan Pace then drafted 20-year old James Daniels with his second pick in the 2018 NFL draft.

Was Edmunds, who is bigger and just as fast and productive in college as Smith, a lesser-known product? In theory, Smith would be more of a projection coming into the NFL level with his lack of size.

Ryan Pace hasn’t had many draft-picks in the first couple of rounds since 2018 due to the Khalil Mack trade. We really do not know if he changed his mindset a lot for drafting from 2015 to now. Ryan Pace once said that if you do not have a quarterback in this league, the team won’t be competitive. He also mentioned how he would take a swing every year on a quarterback because it is worth it.

I addressed all of this with everybody at Bear Goggles On and asked, “Do you believe that Ryan Pace is going to make big moves to find a quarterback?” This is a serious question. Why do we think he would go out and trade for Deshaun Watson? Why do we believe that anybody from the organization tells the media the truth?

Matt Nagy said numerous times that David Montgomery needs more carries, Cole Kmet needs to be involved more, and Mitch Trubisky earned the right to start. All of which were essentially lies. No offense to anybody in the Chicago Bears organization, because I am beginning to believe that they intentionally keep everybody’s eyes in one direction while attempting to pull off something much different.
 

dabears70

Well-known member
Joined:
Dec 31, 2013
Posts:
35,001
Liked Posts:
10,834
Location:
Orlando
My favorite teams
  1. New York Mets
  1. New York Knicks
  1. Chicago Bears
  1. New York Rangers
  1. Syracuse Orange
What some reporters think the Bears should do.


Erik Duerrwaechter:
This is tough to answer as we do not know who’s getting tagged or re-signed. The priority needs to be bringing Allen Robinson back, no matter the cost. That being said, I think the Bears should then make a run at Taylor Moton to plug in at right tackle. Everybody else will likely say Dak Prescott. That’s a dream, and his injury scares me into any long-term commitments with him. Prescott’s situation is nowhere close to Drew Brees’s, where he had a Pro Bowl season right before hitting free agency in 2006. I would also look into the idea of signing Alex Smith as a mentor and backup for the young quarterback the Bears are eventually going to draft.

Ken Mitchell: Ryan Pace has proven much better at getting “one year-prove it” cheap players than the big splash guys. I say no big splashes, only cheap guys like we have seen a lot of success with. I think they should keep Allen Robinson. But I doubt they will with as good of a draft class as there is this year at receiver and money being tight.

Josh Sunderbruch: They should pick up a free agent quarterback with a passer rating in the mid-to-high 80s for around $5-7 million per year over two years. If this is Trubisky, that’s fine. I think Ryan Fitzpatrick would keep things fun during a rebuild. The team could and has done worse than Tyrod Taylor. Everybody else should walk to pursue a compensatory pick strategy and to mitigate the camp situation. The team should not chase a window that closed two years ago.

Lester Wiltfong Jr.: With the salary cap likely going down, there will be a lot of veterans taking pay cuts. Matt Nagy and Ryan Pace will need to sell them on the opportunity to play well and cash in in 2022 if the cap goes back up. As far as specifics, the Bears need quality depth at inside linebacker, offensive line, safety, and has anyone mentioned quarterback? I would also like to see Allen Robinson come back in 2021, but if the quarterback isn’t solidified there’s no point.

Will Robinson: Seeing as quarterback is the team’s biggest need (and has been for the better part of 60 years), Dak Prescott has got to be on the top of that list. Will he be expensive? Yes. Is 2021 a low cap year? Yes. Are the Bears in a bad cap situation as it is? Yes. They can still make it work. It’ll take losing some talent on the defense (and or letting Allen Robinson walk, which I’d prefer to avoid if finally bringing in a good passer). But if you can back load a ~$30 million a year contract, it’s doable, and you don’t have to give up draft capital to make it work. (This is unlike swinging a trade for Deshaun Watson, who while a better player, will cost a king’s ransom in draft capital as well as a hefty contract).

Another guy I wouldn’t mind seeing the Bears pursue would be Lavonte David. Sure, he’s in his 30s, but he’s still playing well, and they could use another athletic linebacker to pair with Roquan Smith. Danny Trevathan did get better as 2020 went on, and was still effective in stopping the run, but his coverage skills are not where the Bears need them to be to work in this defense. David’s are. With Trevathan’s contract, he’s not likely going anywhere. Using a situational rotation of he and David would keep both fresh, however, and would allow you to use them both to the best of their abilities. Cost is the big issue, but if the Bears address quarterback and tackle in the draft rather than free agency, they can afford to spend to shore up a position of need on the defense.

Speaking of addressing quarterback in the draft, if the Bears do go that direction, while I’m far from excited about it, I wouldn’t hate seeing someone like Ryan Fitzpatrick or Tyrod Taylor brought in as a veteran bridge. Yes, Nick Foles isn’t going anywhere, unless some crazy trade happens. I’d feel better with Fitzpatrick or Taylor starting out the year before bringing in a Mac Jones or Trey Lance, or whoever. Pace is on the hot seat. He’s probably going to want to eek out as many wins as possible. I doubt he trusts Foles to get those for him until the rookie is deemed ready to start. As long as it’s a similar deal to what Fitzpatrick and Taylor got this year ($5.5 million), I’m fine with it. I guess.

Robert Schmitz: First off, they should ensure Allen Robinson never leaves Chicago by any means necessary. Your No. 1 receiver is key to breaking down defensive coverages. Unless the Bears plan on having Darnell Mooney (who they certainly talked up in their end-of-season presser) take over duties as the primary option, or want to take another spin at drafting a No. 1 while letting your former leave the team (shades of Kevin White and Brandon Marshall), Robinson needs to be tagged at a minimum, and extended if possible. Yes, he’ll be expensive, but he’s well worth the contract he’ll command. He’s the kind of player you create cap room for.

Outside of Robinson, the Bears won’t have much room to maneuver. I could see a cheaper add at offensive line coming (David Andrews, Austin Reiter, Matt Feler, Kelvin Beachum) but that’s about it. Ryan Pace has made the cap’s bed over the last few years, and the 2021 season is his time to sleep in it. Thankfully ~$90 million gets freed up in this season alone. The 2022 off-season should be better.

Bill Zimmerman: Well, isn’t this cute. Free agents? Ha! The Bears have no money.

Yes, Ryan Pace will kick some money down the road (again) and create future cap problems (again), but the Bears simply will not be players in the free agent market this year. Of course they’ll bring in some low-key free agents, but there should be no aspirations that this team will be spending big in the free agent market.

They should tag Allen Robinson and hopefully find the quarterback that will elevate Robinson to the next level. Imagine how good he could be if he didn’t have Blake Bortles, Mitch Trubisky, and Nick Foles throwing to him his entire career.

The only way the Bears should be trying to play the free agent market is if somehow a top tier quarterback becomes a free agent. Otherwise, the prudent move is to move as little money around as possible and open themselves up to be free agent players in the 2022 off-season. But because George McCaskey has basically given Ryan Pace and Matt Nagy an ultimatum to win now, Pace will be manipulating money any way he can to squeeze in an additional player or two onto the roster.

Jack Salo: The Bears are tight against the cap for 2021. I hope they aren’t big players in free agency because the contracts would have to be structured in such a way that they become tight against the cap in 2022 as well. If Dak Prescott is there, then cut everybody and their brother and bring him in. Yes the team will be bad in 2021 in that scenario, but it at least solves the quarterback problem. That’s something the Bears haven’t been able to do in the Super Bowl era. If that’s off the table, running back Carlos Hyde could come cheap. Deon Bush can be brought back along with Karl Joseph to compete for the other safety spot. Tight end Mo Allie-Cox could be your jump-ball guy in the end zone and allow you to cut Jimmy Graham. Josh Woods should be brought back for linebacker depth. Meanwhile kicker Cairo Santos should be given a long-term contract. If Jason Spriggs is willing to come cheap, then give him another deal. Transition tag Robinson and let the market decide how much you’re paying him.
 

Top