With two weeks close to transpiring since the start of NFL free agency, one thing is becoming clear. Ryan Poles will not be rushed into rash decisions regarding his roster. Nowhere is that clearer than at wide receiver, where the only moves the Chicago Bears have made involved Equanimeous St. Brown and Byron Pringle. Not exactly needle-movers who should be expected to help Justin Fields take a step forward this season. This is a reminder that Poles wasn't lying. He aims to build through the draft. Hence the apparent interest in Bo Melton.
Remember, the GM said that he would prioritize speed and athleticism on this team from the start. Especially the offense. It shouldn't be a surprise since he's coming from Kansas City. Melton checks those boxes in a big way. The Rutgers wide receiver is a classic draft conundrum. For somebody as physically gifted as him with 4.34 speed and explosive acceleration, it is difficult to understand his rather modest 2,011 yards receiving with 11 touchdowns in five years of college. Was he not making enough plays, or was the coaching or quarterback play the bigger issue?
That is what the Bears aim to find out.
This spring, Melton has already done a fine job of elevating his draft stock. He looked sharp at the Senior Bowl and then delivered a strong workout at the scouting combine. It feels like his pro day is a formality at this point. Initial projections had him going somewhere on Day 3 between the 5th and 7th rounds. After what he accomplished the past two months, it wouldn't be a surprise if he jumped into the conversation for the 3rd and even 2nd rounds.
This pick would come down to one thing for Poles. Whether he trusts the new Bears coaching staff led by Matt Eberflus can develop Melton properly. Right now, his overall game is incomplete. Critics cite his difficulty with press coverage and inconsistent route-running as reasons he couldn't take off in college. Those are things coaching can fix.







