Training Camp Battles: QB2: Tyson Bagent vs Case Keenum

Training Camp Battles: QB2: Tyson Bagent vs Case Keenum
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Who will emerge as the guy immediately behind Caleb Williams?

Our next training camp battle is hopefully one that never matters for the Chicago Bears this season (or any season, really). Who will be QB2 behind Caleb Williams? Will it be Tyson Bagent? Or will it be Case Keenum?

I believe that both these players will be on the 53-man roster. I would suspect the odds are actually higher that Bagent isn’t on the roster this year more than Keenum (if the Bears decide to only keep two QBs on the 53), but that’s not going to be a talking point in this article, as I think both players remain on the 53-man roster this season.

I think the Bears are also in a unique situation where I think they have to stash all three of these guys on the 53-man roster. I think if they want to keep Austin Reed as a fourth QB, he can spend another season on the practice squad, but I think either of these players, if the Bears tried to stash that on the practice squad, would find other teams knocking on the door to bring them to their franchise.

Case Keenum will be on this roster because he’s not just a veteran QB; at this point, he’s practically an additional quarterback coach. CJ Stroud talked about how invaluable Keenum was to his development. Keenum is a mentor.

That’s not Tyson Bagent. Bagent is only entering year three and has only played significant time in four NFL games. Bagent is here because he’s a decent QB2 with a little bit of upside, and Ryan Poles found that out of a UDFA, which is rare.

If Bagent is on the roster because of his skills and potential development, and Keenum is on this roster due to his veteran presence, this conversation is about who will be active on Sundays, and who will be the emergency QB3.

Keenum was QB3 on the Texans roster last season and didn’t play in any regular-season games. The Texans' QB2 last season was Davis Mills. Many Bears fans may not agree with this assessment, but Mills is a superior quarterback to Tyson Bagent, so while Keenum didn’t beat out Mills for the QB2 role last season, he could do it this season vs Bagent.

But let’s be honest, the Case Keenum we have seen on the field the last few years is beatable. He’s 37 and not the same guy who went 11-3 in 14 starts for the Minnesota Vikings in 2017.

Since 2020, Keenum has thrown 4 touchdowns with 4 interceptions. He completes just 62% of his passes and has a paltry yards per attempt of 5.7. His QB rating has been 75.1. Keenum’s teams went 3-1 in his four starts over those seasons.

But if we’re being fair, Bagent’s on-field success hasn’t been any better. Bagent has also started four games. He completes passes at a higher percentage but threw fewer touchdowns, more interceptions, has a 6.0 yards...