Bears QB Justin Fields is No. 2, with a bullet

The Bears want their prized rookie to serve an apprenticeship under Andy Dalton, but giving Fields second-team reps ahead of Nick Foles is a sign the Bears will give themselves a chance to see if Fields might be ready sooner than they think.

SHARE Bears QB Justin Fields is No. 2, with a bullet
Bears quarterback Justin Fields throws a pass during OTA practices.

Bears rookie quarterback Justin Fields (1) has been a quick learner, coach Matt Nagy said.

Nam Y. Huh/AP

When coach Matt Nagy was asked after rookie minicamp in May if quarterback Justin Fields will get a chance to prove he’s ready to start sooner than the Bears think, he basically said, “We’ll know it when we see it.”

But it didn’t answer the question: Will he give Fields the opportunity for them to see it? If Fields is buried behind Andy Dalton and Nick Foles in training-camp practices and the preseason, would Fields even get the chance to open their eyes?

It’s still unlikely that Fields will be in a dogfight for the starting job in training camp — let alone be the Week 1 starter. But Nagy gave the first indication he’ll be more open-minded to that possibility when he said at Wednesday’s OTA practice that Fields would get second-team reps and Foles the third-team reps in minicamp and presumably training camp.

With the Bears concerned about pulling the rug out from under Dalton after signing him in free agency to be the starter when he had other options, Fields’ rise up the depth chart — barring an injury — is likely to be incremental, if not subtle. Getting second-team reps ahead of Foles is a significant first step.

When Mitch Trubisky was in a similar position in 2017 — expected to spend a year of apprenticeship under Mike Glennon — he was behind Glennon and Mark Sanchez at the start of training camp. And even when Trubisky jumped ahead of Sanchez and took second-team reps in the sixth practice of camp, coach John Fox was quick to say, ‘‘Don’t read too much into it.’’ Still, Trubisky started the season as the No. 2 quarterback and replaced Glennon in Week 5.

Nagy is just as resolute that Dalton is — and will be — the starting quarterback in Week 1. But it already seems like this will be a more fluid situation than it was with Trubisky in 2017 — that Nagy, offensive coordinator Bill Lazor and quarterbacks coach John DeFilippo will give themselves a chance to be intrigued by the prized rookie and perhaps set the bar higher for Dalton. In 2017, Glennon only had to be standing to keep the job. If Fields shows anything in training camp, Dalton will have to actually be good.

Dalton worked with the first-team offense and Fields with the second-team offense Wednesday. It wasn’t revealing at all. It’s almost like the Bears are practicing just for show on media-access days during OTAs and saving the real work for Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Be that as it may, Nagy was typically and expectedly encouraged by Fields. It’ll be interesting to read between the lines as mini-camp and training camp ensue, but for now, it’s pretty standard.

“[Fields has] done a really good job at just trying to digest everything we’re teaching in this offense right now,” Nagy said. “The one thing you learn with Justin is that he does everything really well in a group setting. He listens. He observes Andy, Nick, coach Flip, Bill Lazor, myself when we are in there. But when you have one-on-one conversations with him, sometimes those settings are easier, and you can be a little more specific with him — you really see him open up.”

But already, there’s a little bit of intrigue for Nagy.

“It will be cool to see him once he really starts understanding what we do in this offense,’’ Nagy said, ‘‘to see him continue to grow and open up and ask good questions, which he has done. Everything that we thought he was going to be when he got here with learning and being obsessed with everything that we teach him and then being able to be himself on the field — he’s doing things in a really good way.”

It’s still June. Things won’t pick up steam until training camp in late July. That’s when we’ll get a better idea of just how much Nagy is looking at this situation with open eyes and an open mind.

The Latest
The mayor says the parade, dubbed ‘Sweet Home Highland Park,” and a celebration will restore the community’s spirit while helping the city as it moves forward with compassion and respect from the tragic events of 2022.
Both Andre Drummond (left ankle) and Ayo Dosunmu (right quadricep) were sidelined at the end of the regular season and heading into the play-in game. By game time against Atlanta, however, both were cleared, giving coach Billy Donovan some much needed depth.
Chicago police and community organizations gathered at Richard J. Daley Academy to provide information about available services to people affected by violent crimes.
Sox go 1-for-16 with runners in scoring position, score 4 runs, but pull out doubleheader split
The proposed legislation is the latest and most significant backlash to a declaration in December by Mayor Brandon Johnson’s Board of Education that it would no longer prioritize selective schools and would refocus resources to neighborhood schools that have faced years of cuts and underfunding.