After an uplifting sophomore season with the Chicago Bears, quarterback Mitchell Trubisky had a downright depressing junior year during the 2019 campaign under center. However, the 25-year-old has one believer in former two-time NFL MVP and Super Bowl champion Kurt Warner.

Warner is not out on Trubisky, the former second-overall pick of the 2017 NFL Draft, just yet (via Bears Wire).

“All you see with Mitch is a lack of consistency,” Warner told Lou Canellis of Fox 32. “You see big moments, you see big throws, you see big plays where you go, man, bottle that up and we’re going to be just fine.”

“I didn’t become the quarterback I was until 28 years old,” Warner said. “I had to play a lot of football, and it wasn’t in the NFL. But I played a lot of football in that time to learn how to play quarterback.”

“There’s no timetable on how this thing works,” Warner said.

Warner's own NFL trajectory is one of the more intriguing ones in the league's history, as he famously went from undrafted to playing in the AFL to becoming a Super Bowl MVP and regular-season MVP. All of that happened when Warner surpassed Trubisky's current age, so the current Bears signal-caller isn't done developing and evolving as long as he has a chance in the league.

After throwing over 3,200 passing yards for 24 touchdowns and leading the Bears to an NFC North division title in 2018, Trubisky followed up with a slightly less impressive 2019 campaign at 3,138 passing yards for 17 scores and 10 picks, along with a 63.2 completion percentage and 8-7 record starting under center.

According to Kurt Warner, Mitchell Trubisky's story isn't sealed shut just yet.