PHOENIX — Next stop, draft season.
When the Chiefs beat the Eagles in Sunday night’s Super Bowl, the NFL calendar turned earnestly toward the offseason. That means the NFL Scouting Combine starting Feb. 28, followed by free agency and then the draft, which starts April 28.
With the most salary cap space in the NFL and the No. 1 overall pick, the Bears are in position to dictate the offseason. They appear committed to quarterback Justin Fields, a strategy many around the league agreed with during Super Bowl festivities here. That means the Bears are most likely to trade the top pick.
Here’s where the Sun-Times’ mock draft stands now that the Super Bowl is settled — complete with a Bears trade:
1. Colts (trade with Bears) — Alabama QB Bryce Young
Teams should be wary about putting too much stock into the NFL Scouting Combine, but Young’s official measurements will be a big deal. He’s currently listed at 6 feet tall, but he wouldn’t be the first player whose height was fudged by their college team.
2. Texans — Ohio State QB C.J. Stroud
Some teams will talk themselves into Stroud being a better prospect than Young. The Texans will be thrilled to find out if that’s true.
3. Cardinals — Georgia DT Jalen Carter
Either Carter or Alabama edge rusher Will Anderson will be a welcome addition for a team that gave up the second-most points in the NFL last year.
4. Bears (trade with Colts) — Alabama EDGE Will Anderson
The team that gave up the most? The Bears, who seem more likely to fill their glaring defensive tackle need via free agency. After trading down to get the Colts’ No. 1. draft pick in 2024, they’d be thrilled with either SEC defensive stud.
5. Seahawks — Ohio State WR Jaxon Smith-Njiba
One of the great shocks of the 2022 season was the emergence of quarterback Geno Smith into a building block. The Seahawks will give him a contract extension — and then give him help at receiver.
6. Panthers (trade with Lions) — Kentucky QB Will Levis
Levis running a pro-style offense at Kentucky — Liam Cohen, his offensive coordinator in 2021, came off the Sean McVay tree — makes him an easier projection than Young or Stroud, though with a shorter ceiling.
7. Raiders — Northwestern OT Peter Skoronski
The last time the Raiders drafted an offensive lineman in Round 1, they landed Alex Leatherwood, whom they cut within a year. The Bears tried to resuscitate his career; thus far it’s not going well.
8. Falcons — Ohio State OT Paris Johnson Jr.
Not wanting to overdraft the last remaining relevant quarterback, the Falcons instead turn protecting the one they’ve got.
9. Lions (trade with Panthers) — Texas Tech EDGE Tyree Wilson
They made huge gains last season — but not on defense. Drafting Wilson to put opposite last year’s No. 2 pick, Aidan Hutchinson, would be scary.
10. Eagles — Texas RB Bijan Robinson
It’s criminal the Eagles get to draft this high. A smart trade with the Saints last season gives the run-first team a chance to make the ultimate luxury pick.
11. Titans —Notre Dame TE Michael Mayer
After the Falcons took Kyle Pitts fourth overall two years ago, mocking a tight end to go 11th doesn’t seem so crazy.
12. Texans — Illinois CB Devon Witherspoon
DeMeco Ryans, the Texans’ defensive-minded head coach, makes Witherspoon the highest-drafted U of I player sine Kevin Hardy in 1996.
13. Jets — Georgia OT Broderick Jones
The Jets are looking for a veteran quarterback — and that quarterback will need help staying upright.
14. Patriots — Penn State CB Joey Porter Jr.
Bill Belichick will certainly be intrigued by someone with the pedigree of Porter, whose father went to four Pro Bowls in 13 seasons as a linebacker.
15. Packers — Florida QB Anthony Richardson
Aaron Rodgers is gone in this scenario. Jordan Love is unproven. And Richardson is the biggest boom-or-bust pick in Round 1.
16. Commanders — Alabama CB Brian Branch
Pairing a strong cornerback with the Commanders’ nasty defensive line is a smart formula in a division with the Cowboys, Eagles and Giants.
17. Steelers — Iowa EDGE Luke Van Ness
Maybe it’s seeing him in Hawkeyes black and yellow, but the Barrington native just feels like a Steelers pick.
18. Lions — Oregon CB Christian Gonzalez
Pro Football Focus graded out the Lions as the worst coverage team in the NFL last year.
19. Buccaneers — Florida G O’Cyrus Florence
The Bucs should get plenty of looks at Florence via their local pro day.
20. Seahawks — Georgia Tech EDGE Keion White
He could be the steal of the draft. If he’s merely good, he’ll still be an upgrade.
21. Dolphins (FORFEITED)
22. Chargers — TCU WR Quentin Johnston
Drafting a receiver will depend on whether the Bolts cut Keenan Allen.
23. Ravens — Tennessee WR Jalin Hyatt
No team in the NFL — not even the Bears — needs talent at the receiver position more than the Ravens.
24. Vikings — Georgia CB Kelee Ringo
The physical cornerback will fit well in new coordinator Brian Flores’ scheme.
25. Jaguars — Utah TE Dalton Kincaid
If tight end Evan Engram leaves via free agency, this fills an obvious need.
26. Giants — USC WR Jordan Addison
In the modern NFL, you either have a stud receiver or you’re looking for one.
27. Cowboys — Baylor DT Siaki Ika
Big D stays local — Waco’s an hour-and-a-half away — to add beef.
28. Bills — Texas A&M S Antonio Johnson
Is he a pure safety? A linebacker? The Bills will figure it out.
29. Bengals — Clemson DL Bryan Bresee
He could go much higher, but the Bengals are thrilled he slipped this far.
30. Saints — LSU EDGE BJ Ojulari
In his second season, defensive-minded head coach Dennis Allen gets a first-round defender.
31. Eagles— Maryland CB Deonte Banks
A lot of teams claim they’ll take the best available player. The Eagles, with depth across positions, can actually do so.
32. Chiefs — Boston College WR Zay Flowers
The best landing spot a receiver could hope for.