Mitch Trubisky, Roger Goodell

North Carolina's Mitch Trubisky, left, poses with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell after being selected by the Chicago Bears at No. 2 overall.

(Matt Rourke | AP Photo)

Maybe Mitch Trubisky will work out for the Chicago Bears.

But that doesn't mean folks around the NFL still aren't trying to piece together what happened Thursday night, when Chicago paid a hefty price to the San Francisco 49ers to move up one spot and grab the inexperienced quarterback.

For starters, why did the Bears offer so much -- a third- and fourth-round pick and a 2018 third-rounder -- to San Francisco? Was another team also in the bidding and trying to move up?

Apparently not.

Trying to track down the teams that might have competed with Bears for the second pick and have not found one--Jets never called 49ers — Michael Lombardi (@mlombardiNFL) April 28, 2017

The decision to trade up for a "franchise" quarterback -- and Trubisky has to develop into one to salvage this for the Bears -- is a big one. And a strange one for the Chicago, considering it just invested in Mike Glennon in the offseason.

So, maybe you would check in with your head coach first? Nah.

Wow. Per @mortreport, even @ChicagoBears coach John Fox didn’t know about plan to draft QB Mitchell Trubisky until a couple hours before. — Kevin Seifert (@SeifertESPN) April 28, 2017

Again, well done, John Lynch and San Francisco.

The 49ers still landed Solomon Thomas at No. 3 overall and used one of those "free" picks from the Bears to trade up and get Reuben Foster at the bottom of the first round.

Shanahan told Lynch, when they were trying to figure out if Bears were after Thomas, "That offer is not for a d-lineman. That's for a QB." — Jeff Darlington (@JeffDarlington) April 28, 2017