Chicago Sun-Times

BACKUP QBS INVALUABLE TO MITCH

With experience in Nagy’s offense, Daniel, Bray can give Trubisky advice, encouragem­ent

- PATRICK FINLEY pfinley@suntimes.com | @patrickfin­ley

BOURBONNAI­S — Always fidgety, guard Kyle Long didn’t want to go sit in his dorm room when he finished his medical treatment earlier this week. So he walked into the Bears’ quarterbac­k meeting, where backups Chase Daniel and Tyler Bray were breaking down film of that day’s training-camp practice with starter Mitch Trubisky.

“It’s really awesome,” Long said, “because it’s no-holds-barred, and it’s honest. That’s what you need when you’re getting better.”

The Bears gave Daniel, a career backup, a two-year, $10 million contract in March. Two days later, they gave Bray a oneyear, $795,000 pact. Both boast experience in coach Matt Nagy’s offense — Daniel played for his Chiefs from 2013 to 2015 and Bray from 2013 to 2017 — but little game action. Daniel has started two NFL games in eight seasons. Bray has thrown one regularsea­son NFL pass.

But Daniel, entering his ninth season, and Bray, entering his sixth, already know Nagy’s offense, from the verbiage to the freedoms the quarterbac­k is afforded to change the play at the line of scrimmage.

Their value, then, lies in the meeting room. And on the sideline. And at the dinner table.

The Bears spent the offseason surroundin­g Trubisky with weapons — they spent $61.2 million guaranteed on receivers Allen Robinson and Taylor Gabriel and tight end Trey Burton — but none is more valuable, at this point in training camp, than the two backups in his ear.

“To the outside world, it’s hard to understand the whys of why you want to be able to have a Chase Daniel and Tyler Bray,” Nagy said this week. “And even people within our building are now seeing that and the importance of it.”

On July 17, the day after quarterbac­ks and rookies

reported early to training camp, the three passers went for burgers at Brickstone, a nearby brewery and restaurant in Bourbonnai­s.

“We’re together all day, but we’re also away from our families,” Daniel said. “So we’re trying to hang out as a quarterbac­k group as much as possible, and with other guys, too, to have that team bonding.

“That’s sorta what camp’s about. You go away. You wanna grow. You wanna bond.”

Asked if there were any tricks to developing that relationsh­ip, Daniel’s eyes twinkled.

“Just spend about 14 hours a day with each other,” Daniel said.

He’s not exaggerati­ng. Bray broke down his own typical day: After a 6:30 a.m. alarm and a quick dining-hall breakfast — scoop of scrambled eggs, two rashers of bacon and a grande iced coffee — he joins the quarterbac­ks to stretch near the locker room at 7:45 a.m. After practice and lunch, the team meets again at 2 p.m., goes through a walk-through and, after dinner, holds meetings that end around 9.

That’s a lot of time with his fellow quarterbac­ks.

“It’s your second family,” Bray said. “Team chemistry is a huge part. You can’t have a bunch of guys bumping heads and going at each other for a long time. You have to have a good bond. That’s what makes a great team.”

And makes for a comfortabl­e starter.

“I know exactly what I got to do, day in and day out, to be prepared for practice and in meetings with the install,” Trubisky said. “So I’m just taking very detailed notes, going over those notes, asking questions in meetings . . . . I’m just being an active learner and doing what I’ve got to do to be prepared each day, so I feel comfortabl­e where I’m at within this offense.”

At first, Daniel and Bray leaned on Dave Ragone, who was Trubisky’s quarterbac­ks coach last year, too, for cues about when to give advice. As they’ve gotten to know Trubisky better, the conversati­ons have become more organic. They’ll ask why he threw the ball where he did or his thought process before the play.

“I’ve been around some guys that probably take advice — but they don’t really take it in,” Daniel said. “Mitch truly cares. He wants to get better. He understand­s that we put a team around him who have been through this offense, who have been in this league . . . .

“I want to help Mitch. He wants to be helped. He’s like a sponge — he’s soaking it all in.”

Daniel and Bray, who have been friends since their Chiefs days, are impressed by the way Trubisky absorbs informatio­n — and criticism.

“Some guys take it as an attack on them — them not knowing or them making a mistake — but that’s not Mitch,” Bray said. “He shows with his leadership that he’s a great leader. The guy affects his teammates in a positive way. He’s going to be a great player.”

Nagy has spent half his life in quarterbac­k meetings — as a college and Arena League player, as a quarterbac­ks coach and as an offensive coordinato­r. He knows the value of giving his starter a support system.

“I’ve lived this room,” he said. “It’s nice because it didn’t happen overnight. It took some time, but it was pretty quick. That bond that they have going on right now in that room, I just step back and kind of . . . smile.”

That’s as important as any developmen­t this early in training camp.

“I think this camp is very important, not only for [Trubisky’s] overall growth but also for our relationsh­ip,” Daniel said. “Growing that relationsh­ip. Trusting each other more than we do now. Seeing how we work together. Bouncing ideas off each other.”

Want your Bears training-camp update without delay? Each day of summer practice, Sun-Times Bears beat writers Patrick Finley, Adam L. Jahns and Mark Potash will share exclusive insights on the workout and interviews in a livestream conversati­on at 1 p.m. daily through Aug. 12. Catch their live analysis and ask questions on Twitter @suntimes_sports or follow SunTimes Sports on Periscope to be notified of each live report.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP ?? Quarterbac­ks Chase Daniel (left) and Tyler Bray (center) are helping starter Mitch Trubisky get comfortabl­e in Bears coach Matt Nagy’s innovative offense.
NAM Y. HUH/AP Quarterbac­ks Chase Daniel (left) and Tyler Bray (center) are helping starter Mitch Trubisky get comfortabl­e in Bears coach Matt Nagy’s innovative offense.
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 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP ?? Backups Chase Daniel (left) and Tyler Bray say Mitch Trubisky absorbs everything and is going to be a great leader.
NAM Y. HUH/AP Backups Chase Daniel (left) and Tyler Bray say Mitch Trubisky absorbs everything and is going to be a great leader.
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