Browns free agent running back could wind up hitting the comeback trail in the NFC North but that doesn’t necessarily mean in Chicago.
If the Bears don’t sign running back Nick Chubb, perhaps they should get used to the idea of trying to stop him.
The former Cleveland Browns and four-time Pro Bowl running back is a free agent and much speculation arose earlier in the week the Bears would sign him when it was reported on the flagship station for Browns broadcasts that an NFC North team was interested in him.
They didn’t say which NFC North team but the obvious hole is in Chicago after the Bears failed to draft a needed back until the seventh round.
However, Pro Football Network suggests in an article about ideal teams for remaining free agents that it isn’t the Bears who should sign Chubb but the Green Bay Packers.
The reasoning is logical unless they want to see Josh Jacobs wear down.
“Josh Jacobs would still be the unquestioned starter,” PFN wrote. “However, Jacobs played the 10th-highest share of his team’s running back snaps (62%), so the Packers could improve their depth.”
With all of that workload for Jacobs, the Packers didn’t draft a running back.
Chubb was coming off a terrible knee injury last year and only had 102 snaps, averaging 3.3 yards a carry. It’s not unusual for backs coming off ACL injuries to recover completely and to struggle the first year back. However, the older backs who have had such injuries rarely bounce back from those.
Chubb turns 30 in December.
Chubb had four straight 100-yard seasons as Cleveland’s best runner but it probably didn’t help him that he suffered a season-ending broken foot late last year either.
He has been posting video of his workouts to prove he’s entirely healthy.
A power back, he would be ideal for the Bears or Packers if he was younger and healthy. But he isn’t younger and his health is something better left for team doctors to determine.
The Packers don’t have a long history of wanting to rush into signing unrestricted free agents. In Chubb’s case, the deciding factor in which NFC North team does sign him is one familiar to everyone in the league—money.
The Bears only have about $4 million in effective cash under the cap, according to Overthecap.com. The Packers have $31 million in effective cap space.
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