Why I was wrong about Bears drafting Kyle Long
BY HUB ARKUSH September 3, 2013 11:01PM
San Diego Chargers v Chicago Bears
Updated: September 23, 2013 7:20PM
L isten up, please, everybody, because this is the last time I’m going to waste space on this. I’m the guy who somewhat famously said, the first night of the 2013 NFL draft, about 20 seconds after the Bears chose Kyle Long, that Phil Emery just blew that pick.
As I’ve already said a half-dozen other times since that night, I WAS WRONG! You cannot preach over and over, as I have over the last 30-plus years, that it takes at least two years to evaluate a draft and then condemn a pick 20 seconds after it’s made. This is important for two reasons. One, with all six draft choices and three undrafted rookie free agents making this year’s Bears roster, 2013 is going to be very much about the kids. Secondly, I really like Kyle Long. I am not on the Kyle for Canton bandwagon yet, and I won’t be for some time. He hasn’t been near as dominant or outstanding to date as some media and way too many fans have tried to paint him.
What I am most pleased about for the Bears and their fans, though, is that Long appears to be an outstanding young man, the kind of guy you want in your locker room. A rite of passage at Halas Hall is the rooks dress in the basement until the final roster is set. Labor Day was Long and the other rookies’ first day at the adult table, and Long was the proverbial kid in the candy store. He spoke sincerely about how grateful he is for the chance he’s been given and the support he’s received and even in a bit of awe about how far he’s come so soon. As for the rest of the kiddie corps, my best guess is Marquess Wilson and Jordan Mills will be the most productive the most quickly. We just haven’t seen enough to know if Wilson will ever be more than a three or a four. But Brandon Marshall most certainly will still command double-teams, and Alshon Jeffery could be the most improved player on the team. Defenses can only stalk so many targets, and Wilson will be the beneficiary. Mills does things naturally that players such as J’Marcus Webb can’t learn in three years. Whether he can handle the huge step up in competition will be an open question all year. Jon Bostic is a nice-looking prospect. But, unlike Long, he is only the starter because D.J. Williams can’t be. The Bears just need him to be adequate until Williams is ready. He’ll have all season to establish himself before the Bears have to decide next spring whether they need to acquire competition for him or an upgrade in the middle. There’s reasonable debate over whether Khaseem Greene and Cornelius Washington actually earned their roster spots or got priority because of their draft status. J.T. Thomas and Cheta Ozougwu could mount a real debate. It’s unlikely we’ll learn anything tangible about Michael Ford, Zach Minter or C.J. Wilson soon. It’s a really good thing the Bears have deemed this many of their own rookies worth developing. Now, all we can do is check back in two years to see if they were right.
Hub Arkush covers the Bears for Shaw Media and HubArkush.com.
