The Chicago Bears weren't exactly an offensive powerhouse during the 2017 NFL season. The struggling franchise was 30th in the league in yards and 29th in points per game at 16.5 per contest leading to a five-win season.

Improving the offense has seemingly been the team's top priority during this NFL offseason. Chicago has gone all in with quarterback Mitchell Trubisky being their franchise player and they hope he takes his game to another level in 2018. Trubisky recently talked about the changes the team has made under new head coach Matt Nagy and how he's handling the complexity moving forward, via Patrick Finley of the Chicago Sun-Times.

“It’s more complex, but it’s easier [to execute], as opposed to simpler but more difficult,” Trubisky said. “That’s how I would describe it last year. Last year, there were probably less words, but they didn’t necessarily fit together. Or it was just more difficult to process. This year, it’s more complex but it’s easier to execute and memorize and remember because everything builds on something. You start with a base concept, and it gets more and more complicated.”

Last season, Trubisky played in and started 12 games for the Bears. The North Carolina product was more of a game manager in his rookie season as he had only 330 attempts under center passing for 2,193 yards, seven touchdowns, and seven interceptions.

Although his rookie campaign left something to be desired from a potential franchise quarterback, the Bears seem intent on shaping him into the leader they want him to be in 2018.