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2026 Bears draft: Top QB/RB/WR to watch in Day 3 of Combine workouts

Day 3 of the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine is upon us. While it’s arguably the most exciting day of workouts to watch as the quarterbacks, running backs, and wide receivers hit the field, it’s also arguably the one the Bears need to pay the least attention to.

Rather, it’s more the positions that the Bears need the least amount of help at. That said, there’s plenty of opportunity for Chicago to find depth for their offense after a skill position-heavy approach to last year’s draft. There’s a chance somebody performing today ends up suiting up alongside the likes of Colston Loveland, Luther Burden, and Kyle Monangai this fall.

With general manager Ryan Poles and head coach Ben Johnson among Chicago’s representatives at the Combine, here’s a look at the state of each position on the Bears’ roster, as well as my top 10 prospects at each spot in the 2026 NFL Draft.

Quarterbacks

Top 10 quarterbacks

The Bears are in a fortunate enough situation to not need to spend significant draft capital on a quarterback. Caleb Williams is coming off a strong 2025 season, earmarking him as the future of the franchise for years to come.

Fernando Mendoza is a foregone conclusion to be the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, and Ty Simpson is really the only other quarterback worthy of being in first-round conversation. Much of the quarterbacks past that range fall into the backup territory, which could be a pool Chicago dips its toes into.

Teams appear to be doing their research on Tyson Bagent as a potential trade piece. Though the Bears have him locked down under contract as their backup quarterback, there’s an outside chance another team gets desperate enough for a quarterback that they offer up premier draft capital to acquire him.

From there, Chicago would likely look to draft a quarterback, in addition to presumably bringing Case Keenum back for another year. The sweet spot to me in this class at quarterback comes around Round 5. Players like Luke Altmyer, Cole Payton, and Cade Klubnik don’t project as much more than backups, but I like all of them for very different reasons.

Fernando Mendoza, Indiana

Ty Simpson, Alabama

Garrett Nussmeier, LSU

Carson Beck, Miami (FL)

Drew Allar, Penn State

Luke Altmyer, Illinois

Cole Payton, North Dakota State

Cade Klubnik, Clemson

Sawyer Robertson, Baylor

Taylen Green, Arkansas

Running backs

As free agency draws near, the expectation is that the Bears will stick with their running back tandem of D’Andre Swift and Kyle Monangai in 2026. The bounce-back from Swift and the breakout rookie year from Monangai provides a huge sigh of relief for Chicago, as that means they don’t have to spend big at the running back position this offseason.

Jeremiyah Love is the only running back worthy of taking in the first round in this class, and there’s practically no chance he falls to the Bears at No. 25 overall. Otherwise, you’re probably looking at a Day 3 selection as the form of investment Chicago makes at the position, if they draft a running back at all. They’re more likely to push Roschon Johnson and Travis Homer for competition than either of their two primary backs.

The 2026 draft is honestly a pretty underwhelming running back year. There are probably three backs I’d consider taking on Day 2 other than Love, but it’s mostly Day 3 flyers from there. As is the case at running back, there’s always a chance a few selections on Day 3 end up turning into starters, and there are a good handful of toolsy backs with starter-level traits, even if they haven’t put it all together yet.

Top 10 running backs

Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame

Jadarian Price, Notre Dame

Jonah Coleman, Washington

Emmett Johnson, Nebraska

Kaytron Allen, Penn State

Demond Claiborne, Wake Forest

Mike Washington Jr., Arkansas

J’Mari Taylor, Virginia

Adam Randall, Clemson

Nicholas Singleton, Penn State

Wide receivers

After the Bears’ selection of Luther Burden III in the second round of last year’s draft, they seem to have an intriguing young wide receiver duo between him and Rome Odunze. The latter missed time due to injury but demonstrated some strong flashes in Year 2, and the expectation will be for those flashes to materialize into more production in 2026.

Speculation surrounding the Bears trading veteran DJ Moore picked up closer to the Combine, and it’s a move that would make sense as the team looks to clear cap space to boost their defense. However, even as Moore’s production dipped in 2025, he’s still a solid starting option whose absence would be felt, as Chicago doesn’t have a proven third wide receiver on the roster currently.

The Bears could try to bring back Olamide Zaccheaus or try Jahdae Walker in a bigger role in the second year of his NFL career. However, don’t be surprised if they make another draft pick at wide receiver this year, too. The sweet spot of this year’s class is late in Round 2 and early in Round 3, where I see several strong options to blossom into complementary starting receivers. That may be a little steep for Chicago to invest at receiver again this year, but there should also be good value around Round 5 this year, too.

Top 10 wide receivers

Carnell Tate, Ohio State

Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State

Makai Lemon, USC

Denzel Boston, Washington

Kevin Concepcion, Texas A&M

Omar Cooper Jr., Indiana

Germie Bernard, Alabama

Antonio Williams, Clemson

Malachi Fields, Notre Dame

Zachariah Branch, Georgia

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