4. Mitchell Trubisky
While there is still some hope for Trubisky to solidify himself as the Chicago Bears franchise quarterback, the addition of Nick Foles leaves his future in a state of limbo. Head coach Matt Nagy has stated that there will be an open competition at the quarterback position in camp this year, so we’ll have to wait and see if Trubisky even gets his starting job back.
In 2018, Trubisky looked like he was well on his way to becoming a solid starting quarterback in this league, completing about 66 percent of his passes while tossing 24 touchdowns to just 12 interceptions.
He was trending in the right direction, and then everything came crashing down once 2019 rolled around. Trubisky’s production dropped in every single major passing category. From passing yards, to completion percentage, Trubisky struggled a lot last year.
Only time will tell if last year was the norm for Trubisky. But as of right now, he’s clearly the worst starting quarterback in this division.