behind Glennon and ninth-year veteran Mark Sanchez until Sanchez’s recent knee injury temporarily moved Trubisky up one rung.

The Bears may not need Trubisky to start a game this coming season, but ideally he’d be ready if needed.

“The expectation is for him is to come in and develop as fast as possible,” offensive coordinator Dowell Loggains said.

“He gets a great opportunity to sit behind Mike Glennon. He gets a chance to learn and grow in the system. Those are the only expectations, that he gets better every day.”

Because he operated out of shotgun or pistol formations at North Carolina, Trubisky also has had to work on taking the snap directly from the center in the Bears’ offense. And even though the terminology is different, there’s some carry-over from the offense he knew to the one he’s learning.

“This is a progression offense as well,” Trubisky said. “So it’s all about getting to your first and second read, then getting to your third, fourth, (and) getting the check-down to the running back.

“You’ve got to be good with your feet, you’ve got to be good with your eyes, you’ve got to go through your progressions, and you’ve got to be decisive. Coming from the offense I did at North Carolina has helped me a lot, but I’ve still got a long ways to go.”

Trubisky is the only Bears draft pick who hasn’t signed a contract, but even if he had time to, he wouldn’t worry about that. There’s too much else going on.

“I’m here to play football,” he said. “I’m not worried about contracts.”

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