After Myles Garrett was selected with the first overall pick in the 2017 NFL Draft by the Cleveland Browns, no one knew what was going to happen with the second pick since there wasn't a clear second-best talent on the board.After news broke that the Chicago Bears moved up one spot after a trade with the San Francisco 49ers, the general consensus was that a defensive player would have been selected.But, in typical draft fashion, the unexpected happened.Despite signing quarterback Mike Glennon to a three-year, $45 million deal earlier this offseason, the Bears selected quarterback Mitch Trubisky out of North Carolina No. 2 overall.According to Spotrac, Glennon is set to make $18.5 million in guaranteed salary, including a base salary of $8 million, a signing bonus of $3 million and a roster bonus of $5 million in 2017.Since Glennon was signed presumably to be the starting quarterback of the future, Chicago raised a ton of eyebrows with this selection, especially considering the fact that Trubisky has just one collegiate season as a full-time starter under his belt.

In 13 games for the Tar Heels in 2016, he was sensational, completing 68.0 percent of his passes for 3,748 yards, 30 touchdowns and six interceptions. But, it was a small sample size and many analysts, including ESPN’s Mel Kiper, repeatedly stated that he would have benefitted from another year at school throughout the draft process.

Now, heading into 2017, Glennon will have to treat his opportunity as likely a one-and-done scenario in which he will essentially try out for all other NFL teams, as the Bears made it obvious that they see Trubisky as their future franchise quarterback when they took him so high.

With the selection, Trubisky joins Jim McMahon as the only Bears QB’s taken this high in five decades.

He also joins Robert Griffin III, Marcus Mariota and Carson Wentz as quarterbacks who were taken at the No. 2 spot since 2012. 

He’s probably hoping his career doesn’t turn out like RG III’s.

Just two picks into the draft, there's already a quarterback situation worth monitoring. Since Trubisky is not seen as a prospect who can come in and produce right away in Week 1, Chicago will likely treat the 2017 season as a development year for him, especially since the bulk of Glennon's money is guaranteed early in his front-loaded contract.

While it's certainly a thrill for Trubisky to be selected so high in the draft, it leaves a sour taste in the mouth of Glennon, who was regarded as one of the best options in the free agent market this offseason and who had waited for a starting opportunity behind Jameis Winston with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in recent years.