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Nick Foles a perfect solution for the Bears — for now

Bears' long-term QB answer remains to be seen, but current options now much more promising

Mitch Trubisky’s ceiling is still quite a bit higher than Nick Foles’.

The problem with Mitch is that in his first three seasons with the Bears, he has yet to get within shouting distance of that ceiling, while Foles has touched his on a number of occasions.

The odds are still extremely high that Trubisky will be the Bears' Week 1 starter this season, and anyone who thinks he won’t be on the roster at all needs to get a clue.

What makes the Bears a better football team now than they have been at any point since kickoff of their wild-card game against Foles' Philadelphia Eagles is, in addition to the Robert Quinn signing, should Trubisky continue to stumble on his march to the top, they now have a legitimate Super Bowl MVP and Pro Bowl backup to push him up the climb or replace him if Trubisky is hindering the development of the rest of the offense.

When Ryan Pace and Matt Nagy told us last New Year's Eve at their season-ending press conference they needed competition for Mitch and an upgrade at No. 2 on the quarterback depth chart, all the job description had to read was Nick Foles.

Foles is the only QB in the game I can think of who has been a star at various points of his career but also a career backup.

Only three times in his career — 2014 in Philadelphia, 2015 in St. Louis and 2019 in Jacksonville — has Foles gone into a season as the No. 1 quarterback.

Foles will have no issues beginning this season as the Bears No. 2 — he is used to it and he knows the plan coming in.

His two greatest seasons — 2013, when he rang up a 119.2 passer rating, 27 TDs and only 2 INTs and was voted to the Pro Bowl under Chip Kelly, and 2017, when he started the final five games and won two playoff games before becoming the Super Bowl MVP under Doug Pederson — were both accomplished coming off the bench as the backup.

In 2013, his quarterback coach was Bears offensive coordinator Bill Lazor, and in ’17 his position coach was Bears QB coach John DeFilippo.

No quarterback in the game other than Alex Smith, Patrick Mahomes (playing for Andy Reid) and Carson Wentz (playing for Pederson) knows and has executed Matt Nagy’s offense as well as Foles.

He can help school Trubisky or take over in the blink of an eye.

Who says Pace didn’t have a plan?

Foles' contract is nowhere near as onerous as it was in Jacksonville with the Jaguars forced to eat most of the bonus portion, but while it is very rich for a backup, it’s a bargain if he becomes a starter.

If Trubisky’s play keeps him on the bench, and that’s still the best-case scenario for the Bears, Foles will likely void the final two expensive-for-a-backup years, letting the Bears off the cap hook.

However, there is one more dangling piece to the Bears QB formula. It is as critical as ever they still draft a developmental prospect this season with the traits to some day become an NFL starter.

I absolutely believe Trubisky still has the tools to be who Pace thought he was when he drafted him, but you’d have to be a fool at this point to be optimistic he will figure them all out.

We’ll see.

In his only three seasons as a starter, Foles ended up injured or a backup. He played just 13 games in 2013, 11 in 2015 and other than that has never played more than eight.

Foles could be a long-range answer the next 5-7 seasons, but it seems unlikely.

The right draft choice this year, you’d hope, could eventually be the starter, but even if not he could become the backup as soon as next year if Trubisky develops, or Foles’ No. 2 next year if he doesn’t.

Either way it is still an urgent need.

What we know today is an awfully bleak looking preview of the Bears 2020 season 48 hours ago is suddenly looking a whole lot brighter.

Hub Arkush

Hub Arkush

Hub Arkush was the Senior Bears Analyst for Shaw Local News Network and ShawLocal.com.