On the one hand Chicago Bears fans are beyond excited. It marks the first time in eight years the team will in all likelihood go hunting for a new quarterback. At the same time, there are plenty who remain utterly terrified. Few NFL franchises have a worse track record at finding quality quarterbacks than this one.
One Pro Bowl appearance since 1985? One representative in the Pro Football Hall of Fame? It's really not that hard to understand why this team is no longer considered one of the bedrock franchises in this sport. It has become a league driven by quarterbacks. So nobody will respect a team that has no earthly idea what the good ones look like. Until it's too late anyway.
Now here they are again, facing their latest end-of-semester exam. Have they learned anything? Based on some strong rumors of what they're about to attempt, it's hard to think they have. At least according to what the history says.
By their very nature trades are exciting. It really doesn't matter the sports. Football, baseball, basketball or hockey. Fans love trades because they represent something special. The potential of a franchise being turned around with a single stroke. It's the ultimate high-stakes poker game. Did a team play the right hand or did they get caught bluffing?
No position brings that excitement to a higher fever pitch than the quarterbacks. Drafting or signing a great one is well and good. Trading for one? Nothing else in this business can feel quite like a true heist. The Bears should know this better than most teams. They've been trying to pull it off for decades.
The long and short of it is....well....not good. Here are the four major deals they've swung since the start of the Super Bowl era in 1966.
- Jack Concannon (1967)
- Cost: TE Mike Ditka
- Mike Phipps (1977)
- Cost: future 1st round pick
- Rick Mirer (1997)
- Cost: 1st round pick
- Jay Cutler (2009)
- Cost: 1st round pick, future 1st round pick, 3rd round pick, QB Kyle Orton







