The Lions started the Week of the Quarterback one day early.
As the NFL was set to turn to a Super Bowl matchup pitting the best young quarterback of his generation, Patrick Mahomes, and the most accomplished passer of all-time, Tom Brady, the Lions agreed to trade their own signal-caller late Saturday night.
They sent Matthew Stafford, who’d asked for a trade, to the Rams for first-round picks in 2022 and 2023, a third-round pick this year and quarterback Jared Goff. The inclusion of Goff, who fell out of favor with the Rams, got the Lions more in return. His contract — worth $43 million over the next two years — made him a negative asset, not a positive.
The trade won’t be official until the new league year starts March 17.
While the Rams have upgraded the position, the Bears are still looking for their own quarterback. Here are five lessons they can learn from Saturday night’s blockbuster:
Deshaun Watson will cost a fortune
If Stafford was worth that haul, what would the Bears have to give up for Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson? Three first-round picks, the naming rights to Willis Tower and a lifetime supply of Al’s Italian beef?
Watson is in a different stratosphere than Stafford. He’s 7 ½ years younger, already better and, at 25, can be the face of a franchise for at least another decade. He’s signed through 2025.
The Lions got a draft haul for two reasons: they were willing to wait a year to cash in on first-round picks and they were open to taking on Goff’s onerous contract. Still, the strong return set the bar impossibly high for any quarterback trade — be it for Watson or a middle-class group of veterans that includes the Falcons’ Matt Ryan, the Raiders’ Derek Carr and the 49ers’ Jimmy Garoppolo.
Houston Chronicle reporter John McClain wrote on Sunday that the Texans don’t want to trade Watson — who has asked for a trade because of his frustration with his franchise — and will try as long as they can to convince him to stay. Should that fail, McClain suggested the Texans wait until around the draft to make a trade. He pitched a starting asking price: two first-round picks, two second-round picks and two young defensive starters.
The Bears have young defensive starters: second-team all-pro inside linebacker Roquan Smith, two-time Pro Bowl safety Eddie Jackson and rookie cornerback Jaylon Johnson. But the timing of a trade — and draft compensation — is bad news for the Bears.
For one, they need to fix their quarterback problem during the free-agent period, which starts about six weeks before the draft. For another, the Bears’ first-round pick — No. 20 overall — doesn’t have near the value of the same picks held by the Jets, who draft second, or the Dolphins, who draft third. The Bears can’t simply add more first-round picks to the haul, either — NFL teams are only allowed to trade selections from the next three upcoming drafts.
Creativity matters
To get the best possible return, the Lions agreed to an NBA-style trade that attached additional picks as incentive to take on Goff’s bloated contract. That part of Saturday’s trade was reminiscent of the Texans adding two draft picks to quarterback Brock Osweiler in a 2017 trade with the Browns. The Browns cut Osweiler before he could play a snap; the Lions will use Goff as a starter in 2021.
The Rams paid a steep price but were able to trade a contract that some around the league considered immovable. That’s a valuable lesson for Bears general manager Ryan Pace, who was vowed to be aggressive in acquiring a quarterback. The Bears, like the Rams, figure to be up against the 2021 salary cap. The Bears have their own veteran quarterback the league has soured on: Nick Foles, though his contract is more palatable than Goff’s.
Pace still can find a way to get a trade done.
It’s fair to wonder whether the Eagles would consider adding draft picks to move quarterback Carson Wentz, who was traded one spot after Goff and has a similarly pricey contract.
Supply still won’t meet demand
The Bears respect Stafford’s skillset, but the Lions were unlikely to ship him to another NFC North team. The Bears’ best hope was that Stafford would end up on a team whose starter represented an upgrade for the Bears.
Had he landed in San Francisco or Las Vegas, the Bears could have pursued Garoppolo or Carr immeidately. In the game of quarterback musical chairs, though, the Bears didn’t see any new space open up. Even worse: all the other teams will obvious quarterback needs — the Jaguars, Jets, Colts, Patriots and Panthers — still need a passer.
Where the QB wants to live, matters
Stafford and his wife Kelly own a home in Newport Coast, Calif., near Los Angeles. Last offseason, Kelly Stafford posted a story on Instagram speculating her husband could end up with the Chargers, writing “Well, if Detroit is done with us … I could stay in Cali.”
The Lions didn’t take less in return so they could satisfy the Staffords’ California dreams — the quarterback told the team he’d go anywhere but the Patriots, per NBC Sports Boston — but their willingness to go to the Rams certainly helped. Is there a quarterback who feels that way about Chicago?
Watson, of course, can control his own destiny with a no-trade clause.
The Lions are rebuilding
The Lions hinted at it when they gave new head coach Dan Campbell a six-year contract in mid-January, and confirmed it Saturday night: they’re rebuilding, and might be truly awful in 2021.
That means more for the Bears beyond a pair of walkover games next season. Drafting seventh, the Lions might join the ranks of teams that consider selecting a quarterback. Or, considering the length of their remodel, the Lions could push that draft desire a year into the future, when they may draft even earlier — and own the Rams’ first-round pick.
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