Friday, April 26, 2024

Bidding A Complicated Farewell to Justin Fields

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I’ll say this: Processing the Justin Fields departure has been quite a mixed bag of thoughts and emotions. Those of you who know me and follow my Twitter coverage of the Bears (and occasional rants and sarcastic bouts) know that I was one of the few folks who didn’t jump up and down with excitement the night the Chicago Bears traded up to select Justin Fields.

While the physical talent was undeniable and intrigued the hopeful fan in me, his process of playing the quarterback position at Ohio State didn’t elicit confidence in the analyst in me. I never bought in to the hype before the draft.

Yet when the news came in that Fields was the pick, the excitement from my friends and Bears fandom as a whole was something I hadn’t seen since the Jay Cutler trade. It was euphoria — everywhere. For me, though, the conflicting emotions were difficult to balance. On one hand, I wanted nothing more than to buy into the excitement. This is sports – it’s supposed to be fun! But on the other hand, I just didn’t feel this was going to end well. How do you celebrate when you think you just have to gut it out for a few years until the next swing at QB?

I remember posting this in the offseason after Fields’ tough rookie year that had a few moments of promise sprinkled in:

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Knowing what you know about Bears Twitter and their love for Fields (especially back in early 2022), how do you think this went?

Take a look at the replies and the quote tweets. It’s a fun (?) rabbit hole.

But I understood the vitriol towards me at the time – here’s a guy (ode to Cris Collinsworth) who is arguably the most unique physical talent the NFL has ever seen, with a new regime coming in to take over and unlock him. Fans were excited and defending their QB. Hell, I wanted nothing more than to be wrong!

But as 2022 and 2023 went on, it was clearer and clearer that Fields was basically an incredible hhighlight reel and a massive blooper reel all in one. There was too much variance in his play to be sustainable. And after three years, that simply wasn’t acceptable. Chicago had to go another direction.

What made this even more difficult was how genuinely likeable Fields was. The reports of his work in the Chicagoland community, his interactions with fans at training camp and at games, his dedication to honing his craft, and not a single negative thing about him off the field. His teammates loved him. Everyone loved him. He was almost everything you could want at the QB position.

Almost.

But fans – incredible as they are – still had Fields’ back. I remember the unbelievable scene on New Year’s Eve against Atlanta. Fields had one of the best performances of his career at a snowy Soldier Field. With the possibility of this being his last ever home game in Chicago, the fans united to chant “We want Fields!” loudly — a clear message to Ryan Poles, Kevin Warren, and Bears ownership. Despite having the #1 overall pick for the second straight year, fans wanted to see it through with Fields.

And even though I was thoroughly done with Fields on the football field, a small part of me wanted to see a redemption story here in Chicago. I remember when I was officially 100% out on Mitch Trubisky – after Week 1 of the 2019 season. I couldn’t wait for his tenure to be over. But with Fields… it remained difficult to root for.

Alas, after a total rollercoaster three years in Chicago, the Bears did finally cut bait over this past weekend, sending Fields to Pittsburgh for a conditional 2025 6th-round pick. The fact that teams weren’t falling over themselves to trade for him wasn’t surprising to me. But the Bears DID find a trade partner and officially paved the way for their next quarterback. A good day for the Chicago Bears – even though it doesn’t feel like a celebration just yet.

I’m excited for the next guy to come in here and take over a team that looks primed to compete in the NFC. Caleb Williams is the presumptive #1 pick. Drake Maye (my favorite QB prospect in this draft) remains a possibility if the Bears trade back to #2 to recoup some draft capital. But in either prospect, the Bears will enter 2024 with a higher floor than what Fields offered (and higher ceiling, at this point). The future is now.

But I wholeheartedly wish Fields well in Pittsburgh and wherever he ends up getting another opportunity (if he does). Hopefully he does. As someone who remains unconvinced about his abilities as a QB, I’ll always root for him and his success. He is absolutely exciting and is still must-see TV. Especially now that it’s for another team.

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jmscooby
Mar 19, 2024 4:40 pm

Will Luke Getsy grow from his experience? Will Justin Fields grow from his experience?
Maybe they plan a fishing trip together, but then get on the wrong side of the law. Maybe they flee to Mexico in a convertible ’66 Ford Thunderbird, but run in to a young Brad Pitt.

Time will tell. -Seneca Wallace

PoochPest
PoochPest
Mar 19, 2024 3:44 pm

I keep reading about “difficulty processing.” I know that many people are indecisive, but I tend to be impulsive. They seemed to me to be two sides of the same coin. How to decide and act, and how to know what you are looking at, and trust yourself. Once I figured it out, I’ve been speaking to people about these two issues. I just don’t see it as being difficult. Certainly not millions of dollars difficult, not even 20 dollars difficult. So if that was why Fields was traded, he was given away. I would have drafted whomever and made… Read more »

BearCub30
Mar 19, 2024 3:35 pm

Watching kipers mock on espn right now he’s got Turner to Atlanta and verse to Bears. All 3 WRs and Alt are gone already.

Last edited 1 month ago by BearCub30
jmscooby
Mar 19, 2024 2:38 pm

. I hear ya. Strictly as an NFL QB, ARod is an all time great. I’ll be the first to admit that. I work with ACLs, Achilles, and all those other injuries every day, so I would never really wish that on anyone. That being said, I wouldn’t mind him getting hit so hard that he shits himself.

Arnie
Arnie
Mar 19, 2024 2:13 pm

@jmscooby Not that it’s nice to root for a player’s injury, my perfect ending to Aaron Rodgers’ career, regardless of what game it happens in, would be to be facing the Bears and watch his career come to an end exactly like Brett Favre’s did…unconscious on a dimly lit, frozen field with the Bears defense standing over him. Now, if the Bears draft Caleb, I will just hope he sees the massive error in his ways and chooses a different idol when he realizes there is no level of talent or no massive total of passing yards that will offset… Read more »

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