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Column: After passing on Jalen Carter, the Chicago Bears doubled down on DTs Gervon Dexter and Zacch Pickens. Now they must develop.

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There is nothing Ryan Poles could have said about Jalen Carter on Thursday night that would have been more telling than his actions — passing on the Georgia defensive tackle in the first round.

The Chicago Bears GM declined to talk about Carter, whom the Philadelphia Eagles selected at No. 9 with the pick Poles traded to them. Poles also didn’t say he had a plan to start rebuilding the interior of the defensive line the next night.

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That is what the Bears began Friday, choosing Florida’s Gervon Dexter in Round 2 at No. 53 and South Carolina’s Zacch Pickens to begin Round 3 at No. 64. In between, the Bears traded up five spots to No. 56 to add Miami cornerback Tyrique Stevenson.

Carter might go on to a career full of accolades in Philadelphia. Some scouts considered him the best player on tape in the draft. You can make a case the defending NFC champions and Eagles general manager Howie Roseman are shrewd operators, but the locker room has a culture on an entirely different level than the Bears’ with a host of veterans and former college teammates that can aid Carter.

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Picking Tennessee offensive tackle Darnell Wright, who figures to get a first crack at right tackle, can be viewed as a risk-averse move at No. 10, a player with an established floor the organization believes has high upside. The Bears raved about Wright being a tone-setter and having some nastiness to his game while being a quick learner, true plusses for offensive line coach Chris Morgan.

Wright is a fit for the outside-zone scheme because of his athletic ability and provides help for quarterback Justin Fields, a clear franchise initiative this offseason. Those are all good things, but he does nothing to help a run defense that was 31st in the NFL (157.3 yards per game), allowing a team-record 2,674 yards, or a pass rush that was 32nd with only 20 sacks.

Florida defensive lineman Gervon Dexter Sr. sets up for a play against Eastern Washington on Oct. 2, 2022, in Gainesville, Fla. (Phelan M. Ebenhack/AP)

That is where the focus turned on Day 2 to beef up a defensive front that has more placeholders than anything. Enter Dexter and Pickens, who should compete for playing time immediately and help improve the pass rush and run defense.

The Stevenson pick is intriguing from the standpoint the Bears gave the Jacksonville Jaguars their fifth-round pick at No. 136 to move up only five spots and get Stevenson, a pretty high price. That signals the Bears were fearful someone was about to grab him and lets you know he’s going to be put in a position to battle for a starting role immediately.

[ [Don’t miss] Chicago Bears in the 2023 NFL draft: 3 prospects, including DT Gervon Dexter, are added to the defense on Day 2 ]

But back to the defensive line, at which the Bears did not get a lot done in free agency. The biggest additions in March were end DeMarcus Walker and nose tackle Andrew Billings. Walker is on his fourth team coming off a career-high 7½ sacks in Tennessee last season when he was a situational player, getting 37% of the playing time. Billings is also on his fourth team and he logged 52% of the playing time for the Las Vegas Raiders last season, more of a regular player when considering he’s just a two-down defender.

Billings could be a sneaky-good addition and he figures to be the nose tackle in the base scheme. That leaves Dexter and Pickens opportunities to compete for playing time with veteran Justin Jones. They’re both high-end trait prospects from the SEC, and what Poles and his staff essentially are telling the coaching staff is, “Here are a couple of players with a ton of physical tools, make them into reliable pro players with upside.”

Raiders defensive tackle Andrew Billings (97) lines up during a game against the Steelers on Dec. 24, 2022, in Pittsburgh.

Raiders defensive tackle Andrew Billings (97) lines up during a game against the Steelers on Dec. 24, 2022, in Pittsburgh. (Tyler Kaufman/AP)

Dexter and Pickens went on Day 2 because they’re splash players — guys with juice off the snap. They make highlight moves and then you keep watching tape and you’re waiting and waiting to see the next one. It’s not consistent football. At the core, this is what the draft is when you get out of Round 1. Teams are drafting players with traits, upside and experience in major programs and trying to see who develops.

If the Bears can turn one or both of these tackles into consistent players, Day 2 can be viewed as a success and there won’t be worries about what Carter is doing in Philadelphia, especially if Wright is a foundational piece for the offensive line. Poles wants them to be interchangeable, calling them “hybrid” defensive tackles.

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When the opening wave of free agency concluded and the Bears’ big hits were on linebackers Tremaine Edmunds and T.J. Edwards and guard Nate Davis, I asked Poles how realistic it was to make some major improvements to the defensive line — tackles and edge rushers. It was a glaring area. He said with more to come in free agency and the draft, there was reason for confidence. But …

“There are going to be some weak spots on our roster,” Poles said on March 16. “We can’t fix everything, but we are going to stay flexible to do the best we can to get better.”

[ [Don’t miss] New Chicago Bears OT Darnell Wright embraces expectations that come with being the No. 10 pick: ‘He played at an elite level’ ]

This is offered as a reminder a weak spot remains at defensive end, a position that wasn’t addressed Friday. Maybe Poles was eyeing a potential trade up early in Round 2 that didn’t materialize. Three of the first seven picks in the round were traded. Derick Hall (Auburn), Isaiah Foskey (Notre Dame) and B.J. Ojulari (LSU) were edge rushers selected in a span of five picks from Nos. 37 to 41.

If Walker is the starter at one end, pick among Trevis Gipson, Dominique Robinson, Rasheem Green and Terrell Lewis to choose the other. The Bears no doubt will be on the lookout for pass-rushing help Saturday, when they have the first pick of Round 4 at No. 103. Maybe they will sign a veteran to a one-year deal in the coming weeks. But the rookie tackles should aid the rush.

“I think we got better,” Poles said. “This rotation of guys on the inside, to penetate but also to dent the pocket and create shorter edges on the outside for our D-ends should help them. We’re younger, more athletic, faster. Close to burst is going to be way better. We’re heading in the right direction. We gotta see it in action and let it play out.”

But it’s instructive to remember Poles told you six weeks ago holes on the roster were going to be there when this season begins. The Bears needed a cornerback and got one in Stevenson, who is physical and can play press man and zone coverage. They took a shot on two tackles, and Matt Eberflus has called the three-technique the engine that makes his defense go.

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It has been a long while since the Bears really hit on defensive linemen in the draft. Nose tackle Eddie Goldman was a second-rounder in 2015 and was very good through his rookie contract. Turning traits and athletic skill into production would be a big step for Poles and Eberflus.

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