Former Exec Believes Bears Found Their Velus Jones Replacement

-

The Chicago Bears have a terrific trio at the top of their wide receiver depth chart with D.J. Moore, Keenan Allen, and Rome Odunze. After that, things get murkier. Tyler Scott looks like the early favorite for the #4 slot. Then, it becomes a question of who has the most value for the final two. Initial projections will have Velus Jones getting one of them, thanks to his value as a kick returner. However, there is a strong possibility even that role is now threatened after what the team did in undrafted free agency.

Names like Keith Randolph, Austin Reed, and Jamree Kromah have gotten most of the attention among the Bears’ undrafted signings. Former scouting director Greg Gabriel says another among the group isn’t getting enough attention: Howard running back Ian Wheeler.

Granted, his stats as a running back don’t jump out, but when we watch him with the ball in his hands, he is very exciting. Wheeler is quick to the hole and is a slashing type of runner with patience and vision. He runs low and has the ability to break tackles and get yards after initial contact. What I like are his run instincts, as he can find a new opening and burst through it.

As a receiver, I have only seen him run shorter routes, but he catches the ball cleanly and has a quick burst to accelerate after the catch. He has that ability to turn a short pass into a long gain.

For the Bears, he will be a kick returner first, and going into camp, he may be the most talented kickoff returner on the roster. Still, he needs to show that he can be reliable if he has to play at the running back position. Based on what I have seen on tape, it should not be a problem.

Wheeler is a spark plug.

Over the previous three seasons at Howard, he amassed 1,183 yards and three touchdowns in 30 games. With the new NFL rule changes regarding kickoffs, it’s been said that the best returner options should have a running back background. Wheeler does, which makes him a dangerous threat to Jones.

The tricky part is not just replacing Velus Jones.

Wheeler is a running back. Jones is a receiver. If the Bears decided to swap the two, they might have to go heavy at one and light on the other. That means four running backs and five wide receivers. It isn’t a crazy idea, but not a normal one. Chicago could decide to switch Wheeler to wide receiver. He has pass-catching chops. Besides, that wouldn’t prohibit them from using him as a running back on offense in certain situations. Much of this will depend on what happens in training camp and the preseason.

Velus Jones isn’t about to give up his ambitions because the Bears signed a promising undrafted rookie. He is still a dangerous threat with the ball in his hands. He’s a capable returner and could take advantage of these rule changes as well. It depends on how wide open the window is for Wheeler to compete for the job. History says the Bears aren’t married to anybody on this roster. Ask Tyson Bagent. If you play well enough, they will give you a spot. Jones better be prepared for battle.

19 COMMENTS

Notify of
19 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
May 10, 2024 9:51 am

Dude, just go chill. Love it when you eat something that messes with you. Obviously this isn’t the real TGena. You know the one I mean: The one with a calm, intriguing demeanor who assesses everything with a competence, patience and carefully avoids unseemly or overused bromides.

I love your comedic work. Because taking you seriously would be as silly as the way you write your comments.

Oh, and by the way I have your “boy” in my trousers. Come get it.

Last edited 9 days ago by timgjerde56
TGena
May 9, 2024 9:36 pm

The first pick in the 2023 NFL draft could have been any eligible player — yeah? Bears GM, Ryan Poles could have selected: CJ Stroud, Anthony Richardson, Bryce Young, Will Anderson Jr., Devon Witherspoon, Jalen Carter, etc., etc. But Ryan Poles whipped out his Ouija board and some big Poles energy and willed the Carolina Pathers to finish a the bottom.of the NFL — Yeah sure! If you say so. And let’s permit Caleb Williams to take his first NFL snap.before we fit him for his gold HOF blazer. Maybe our “perpetual rookie” GM could find the time to calculate… Read more »

Rocketrider
May 9, 2024 8:27 pm

Gena no one cares what you think. Well maybe your daddy twty. If you were in charge we wouldn’t have had the first pick this year. We would still suck with Bryce Young as QB. And Poles didn’t luck into the first pick this year, it was a calculated move when he traded with Carolina. Your just not smart enough to understand the intricacies of the long term roster building. Every pick isn’t going to turn into a pro bowl player.

TGena
May 9, 2024 5:12 pm

Just a few question, boys: Who began the 2022 NFL draft with “just a few” picks; and then, ended up trading it all for a nickel bag of clowns (3 keepers; 8 not-so-much)? Who traded away two (2) “future” 2nd round picks; one for 2023 (#32, that became Joey Porter, Jr., for the Steelers) and the other for 2024 (#40, Cooper DeJean for the Eagles, through the Commanders)? And wasn’t it Ryan Poles who traded away two more 2024 picks; and netted a couple of “Lucas Patrick wannabes” and an aging oft-injured, warm-weather WR that the Bears will be paying… Read more »

May 9, 2024 4:31 pm

I have a quota of one comment per week that isn’t a shitpost. Here it is: Eberflus should switch Jones to RB. Just find a way to get the ball in his hands on offense five times per game and he’ll produce. If it works, they can listen to offers for Herbert.

Chicago SportsNEWS
Recommended for you

wpDiscuz
19
0
Give us your thoughts.x
()
x
Exit mobile version