Skip to content
Bears draft pick Shemar Turner speaks with the media after rookie camp at Halas Hall on May 9, 2025, in Lake Forest. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
Bears draft pick Shemar Turner speaks with the media after rookie camp at Halas Hall on May 9, 2025, in Lake Forest. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
Chicago Tribune Bears sports reporter Sean Hammond on April 9, 2025. (Peter Tsai/Chicago Tribune)
UPDATED:

Chicago Bears second-round draft picks Shemar Turner and Ozzy Trapilo have agreed to four-year rookie contracts, sources confirmed to the Tribune on Thursday. The news comes two days before Bears rookies report for training camp at Halas Hall.

Entering this week, Turner and Trapilo were two of 30 second-round picks who had yet to sign rookie contracts. Fellow Bears second-rounder Luther Burden III remained unsigned as of Thursday afternoon.

Drafted NFL rookies don’t have much say in how much money they will make. Their salaries are slotted based upon where they were selected. They can, however, negotiate certain aspects of a contract.

The holdup for second-round picks this year stems from the amount of guaranteed money in those rookie contracts. While it has become the norm for first-round picks to negotiate fully guaranteed rookie deals, that isn’t the case for players selected in the second round or later.

Bears first-round picks Caleb Williams and Rome Odunze signed fully guaranteed contracts a year ago. Tight end Colston Loveland, the No. 10 pick this year, signed a fully guaranteed contract worth $26.6 million about a week after the draft.

When Houston Texans second-round pick Jayden Higgins signed a fully guaranteed contract worth $11.7 million on May 8, it made history. He became the first player selected outside the first round to receive a fully guaranteed rookie deal.

Higgins’ contract triggered a leaguewide standoff among this year’s second-round picks and their new teams that has continued into this week, when rookies across the league are required to report for training camp. Rookies can participate in organized team activities and minicamp before signing a contract, but they aren’t allowed to participate in training camp without signing.

The prolonged wait, however, appears to be ending. The San Francisco 49ers and second-round pick Alfred Collins reached an agreement Wednesday night, possibly breaking the logjam.

The Bears this year had more second-round picks than any other team. Although all three remained unsigned entering this week, Turner and Trapilo are now poised to begin camp on time, and that could be a sign that Burden soon might follow.

The Bears selected Turner, a defensive tackle out of Texas A&M, with the 62nd pick. Based on where he was drafted, his rookie contract is expected to be worth $7.2 million. Trapilo, an offensive tackle from Boston College whom the Bears selected at No. 56, is expected to make about $7.7 million over the course of his rookie deal. It’s unclear how much guaranteed money their deals will include.

Burden, a wide receiver from Missouri, was the 39th pick. His draft slot would equate to a contract worth $10.9 million.

All five of the Bears draft picks outside of the second round have signed their rookie contracts. Rookies report for camp Saturday, while veterans report Tuesday.

Originally Published:

RevContent Feed