The Chicago Bears have typically been aggressive around the trade deadline, trying to fill at key positions. GM Ryan Poles isn’t afraid to take a swing. So far, he’s batting .500, missing on Chase Claypool but hitting on Montez Sweat. With the Bears 4-2, this feels like a good time to roll the dice against, loading up for a playoff run. What isn’t clear is who Poles could target on the market. Lately, it’s been wide receiver-heavy. The Bears don’t need help there. Pass rushers are typically too expensive. Offensive linemen make the most sense, but those are rarely traded.
Until now, it seems. Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero reported on NFL.com that the Jacksonville Jaguars may end up shopping two prominent names on their front line. One of them could be the exact solution Poles is looking for to solidify his own.
Jacksonville Jaguars OL Brandon Scherff: The Jaguars have already dealt one veteran this season — sending Roy Robertson-Harris to the Seahawks — leading teams to do work on others. Scherff, who is in the final year of his contract, has garnered interest if the 2-5 Jags can’t start a turnaround. Multiple teams have lost left tackles, so it wouldn’t be a surprise if Cam Robinson also garnered interest.
Ryan Poles can finally settle down right guard with Scherff.
Though 32 years old, the former Pro Bowler remains one of the NFL’s best. He has allowed only seven pressures on Trevor Lawrence in seven games this season. He is a smart technician with power and a mean streak. Those check all the boxes Ryan Poles looks for. The fact he is also a team captain means he’d bring much-needed experience and leadership to a largely young offensive line room. Given his age and contract status, it is unlikely Jacksonville can get more than a 5th round pick for him. The Bears do have one available for next year. Sending that to the Jaguars for Scherff and a 6th or 7th feels like the type of deal that makes sense for both sides. Chicago gets an excellent veteran to help with their playoff push. Jacksonville gets some cap space and a decent pick.
Much of this hinges on what happens on Sunday. If the Jaguars fall to the Green Bay Packers to reach 2-6, they are almost certain to sell at the deadline. A win may convince them to hold off.
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I hate these articles about “available” players in the horizon. The problem is: they can spend a ton of money on whomever, but if they can’t coach the players, discipline the players, or motivate the players when they get to Chicago, they’re throwing money away. . . . AND we’re all frustrated with a roster full of mistakes waiting to happen. Who cares who is on another team, available for another $40M or $100M? They have cheap coaches and coordinators who jump at decent money, but bring second rate coaching and coordinating – which will keep the Bears in the… Read more »
@Slippage I totally agree with both earlier times, but not sure about now.
Scherff was a guy the Bears should have drafted to begin with. I liked him in the draft. or maybe you could have outbid for him on his 2nd contract?
But why in the world would an OL GM bring the guy here on a 3rd contract? Great player don’t get me wrong. Just never worked out for Chicago to get him.
I could see them getting him for this year only and then letting him walk for a cheaper high draft pick. That will also tie into the compensatory picks for the 2025 draft.
The jaguars really wouldn’t be getting “cap space” because he’s in his last year right now. Sure they get a little back this year, but they also aren’t going to be buyers during the trade deadline either so they would only really be getting whatever picks they acquire.