Numbers fail to support fears over Bears signing Trey Smith

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With so much cap space available to the Bears now and Kansas City guard Trey Smith expected to be there in free agency for the highest bidder, it only seems logical Chicago GM Ryan Poles will make this a primary emphasis.
While it's easy to make this assumption about Smith because he is the highest rated offensive lineman on almost every free agency analysis out there, there are also reasons to wonde if it's the right thing for the Bears to do.
It's not as clear cut of a decision when analytics alone are brought into the equation but applied math can make it more obvious.
Trey Smith's yellow flag
Smith is made to order for the Bears, who have had right guard as a problem area since they moved Teven Jenkins to left guard. Smith is a top blocker who has played right guard through his entire NFL career and did it well.
People looking at playoff PFF grades to nitpick.
— Trey² (@PeanutChillman) February 19, 2025
Pat got sacked 6 times in the Super Bowl.
Trey was only remotely “at fault” on one of them.
It’s Bears tax. We as a fanbase get scared of when the “right thing” is about to happen to or for us.
Time will tell. https://t.co/MOTZoRAGid
Those who dislike the analytics of Pro Football Focus will find it irrelevant but the site does detailed grading of offensive linemen and this isn't entirely common.
What they say about Smith isn't entirely complimentary, but there is another study suggesting Smith is the way to go.
Buyer beware with Trey Smith pic.twitter.com/64zEMtxFD9
— Steven Patton (@PattonAnalytics) February 19, 2025
Smith's grades for he Super Bowl and two playoff games this year were red flags, or at least yellow ones.
Out of the 34 guards who got into NFL 2024 postseason games, Smith graded out only 22nd. His run blocking was 22nd and pass blocking 25th.
How many times will this happen?
— NFL Junction (@NFLjunction) January 27, 2025
WWE takedown by Chiefs RG Trey Smith.
Once again no holding call.
Ridiculous.#NFL #NFLPlayoffs #BillsMafia #ChiefsKingdom #SuperBowl #BUFvsKC pic.twitter.com/eQeO2Tmp9p
Smith's Super Bowl performance earned a good deal of criticism but he was tasked with blocking Jalen Carter. Few succeeded at this in 2024, and he actually had his best blocking day of postseason against Carter. It was the first two playoff games where Smith really struggled. He had a 63.2 blocking grade in that game.
In the other two playoff games Smith was given 48.3 and 49.5 for overall grades, including a 29.6 as a pass blocker in the win over Houston. As the lower numbers suggest, that's bad.
Like him as a bridge at LG if we go OT at #10 and Trey Smith at RG.
— Nic Roti (@ChicagoNic) February 20, 2025
Reliable, consistent, and could teach the younger guys https://t.co/KYWsSLXZcI
Yet, Smith has been in 13 playoff games in his four years and only in one other game before 2024 did he have a PFF grade below 60.
In the regular season, Smith graded 14th among 50 guards who played the most. It actually was only four spots better than Jenkins, but Smith played 550 more snaps, tying teammate Joe Thuney for the most plays in the NFL among guards at 1,288. Smith was just two better than Jenkins in 2023, ranking 11th, but again with a lot more plays, 211 more.
Why are Bears fans not wanting Trey Smith all of a sudden? He’s one of the top guards in the league and just stonewalled Carter in the Super Bowl! Yes he had a holding call but all great players have the occasional plenty. Bring me Smith over any other potential free agent guard!
— Gary Ross (@gaross18) February 10, 2025
In 2022 Jenkins rated high above Smith, who was 18th. Jenkins was third that year, but again Jenkins had the injury factor and had only 576 plays to Smith's 1,039.
Dependability is part of the reason Smith is so highly thought of -- he has missed only one possible NFL start.
Hear me out.
— King’s Ivory (@It_Me_Who_Dis) February 21, 2025
Free Agency: Trey Smith, Drew Dalman, Khalil Mack
Follow that up with this for the first two rounds (no trades) and you are now cooking with gas. pic.twitter.com/vTeSIMBUJi
Smith does not excel as much as a pass blocker as he does a run blocker, even though he did not give up a sack this past season according to PFF. ESPN doesn't rate him among the top 20 interior linemen for pass blocking but he is sixth for run block win rate among all centers and guards (75%).
The question isn't so much about Smith's skill set as it is about whether Poles should be signing free agent offensive linemen. It's usually considered a stop-gap approach.
Just image bears are knocking on the door for the playoffs vs GB in Soldier Fields and it’s a tie game snowing Jeanty breaks 7 tackles for a game sealing 45 yrd run touchdown. While Trey Smith and Donovan Jackson and Drew Dalman and Darnell Wright blocks . pic.twitter.com/JfYOrJJLqH
— (Drew) Bears draft (@CHITOWNDREW23) February 22, 2025
When PFF isn't doing subjective analytical work, they can come up with a fairly solid bit of good old-fashioned objective numbers crunching.
Ryan Smith, in an article looking at why building offensive lines through the draft is better, had to admit it's not entirely bad for a team to have one dominant free agent in the bunch.
The problem with the Bears is it looks like they'll be rebooting their line with at least two free agent starters because they badly need an experienced center like Drew Dalman.
Can the Bears pull off the daily double and sign both Trey Smith and Drew Dalman in free agency?!
— Harrison Graham (@HGrahamNFL) February 20, 2025
🐻⬇️ pic.twitter.com/qkksQaLlry
"The top OLs are built through the draft, and those teams have used premium early-round picks to do so," Ryan Smith wrote. "Addressing OL through free agency does have its value but more so in the form of a player filling a single hole, not multiple positions."
Smith took a look at the offensive lines for the Eagles, Lions and Buccaneers and called the three the league's best. The Lions drafted four of their original five starters for 2024 and three came in the first round.
To make it as clear as day, there is no graph, no #Bears fan, no #Chiefs fan, that can convince me Trey Smith should not be suiting up in Cook County next season.
— 🗽Sam (@PolesIsHim) February 19, 2025
He is easily the best FA Guard and we need him playing next to Darnell Wright. pic.twitter.com/lkp0o5aFSc
The Eagles and the Lions filled their right guard spots in free agency, like the Bears would be doing.
The Buccaneers had two first-rounders and two second-rounders but signed free agent left guard Ben Bredeson after he was a fourth-round pick, Ryan Smith noted.
Bears need patience with draft picks
One other interesting item in the story does involve PFF hocus pocus with grades, but that is how it takes a while for those drafted rookies to make headway.
Lot of Bears fans talking about Drew Dalman but I can see Evan Brown being the guy Poles signs. Plays both C/G and has a history with Ben Johnson at a much less $$. Especially more so if they sign Trey Smith
— Ryan James (@RJChicagoSports) February 20, 2025
On 43.9% of players drafted in Rounds 1-3 over the past five years had PFF grades above 65.0 as rookies. Only 58.7% of them had grades above that level by Year 2, but by Year 3 almost two-thirds (65.1%) had grades of 65.
So if the Bears did take the draft approach, they'll have to be content with watching players develop for a year or two before they get desired results and with Smith they would be getting what they want immediately.
It might be that way at center, too, if they chose to sign Drew Dalman or Ryan Clark.
Per Matt Bowen from ESPN, he says that the Bears are the best fit for Trey Smith and Drew Dalman.
— Caleb Williams Fan Club (@CalebFC18) February 18, 2025
Signing Smith and Dalman would improve the OLine immensely. pic.twitter.com/R6kxDEHg0K
The Bears are in good position to bolster their offensive line either way they choose, but if they go the draft route they might want to also consider bringing in veteran place holders at first because it could be a while.
In that respect, no one could fault them for throwing all of the money necessary at Smith, who whould hit the ground, running so to speak.
Doing this with more than one position can mean not becoming
Bears fans not wanting Trey Smith is hilarious
— irv (@_irv773) February 20, 2025
We really have the dumbest fanbase in the NFL
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Gene Chamberlain has covered the Chicago Bears full time as a beat writer since 1994 and prior to this on a part-time basis for 10 years. He covered the Bears as a beat writer for Suburban Chicago Newspapers, the Daily Southtown, Copley News Service and has been a contributor for the Daily Herald, the Associated Press, Bear Report, CBS Sports.com and The Sporting News. He also has worked a prep sports writer for Tribune Newspapers and Sun-Times newspapers.