After further review, wide receiver Kevin White will have surgery for the fractured fibula he sustained in his lower left leg in Week 4.
"I think it's just the best medical treatment at this time vs. not (having surgery)," Bears coach John Fox said.
The 2015 first-round draft pick is on injured reserve, but he still could return this season, despite opting for surgery rather than letting the fracture in the non-weight-bearing bone heal on its own. It is hoped the surgery will hasten the healing process, but it's not guaranteed.
Best-case scenario, the earliest White could return is Dec. 4 against the San Francisco 49ers.
"We'll cross that bridge when we get there," Fox said. "To sit there and try to distinguish what would be the right thing is hard to say right now."
White missed his entire rookie season after having surgery for stress fractures in his left tibia, the weight-bearing bone in the lower leg. That is unrelated to his current injury, which also included a severely sprained ankle.
Before being injured, White led the Bears with 19 catches and was third with 187 yards.
After further review, wide receiver Kevin White will have surgery for the fractured fibula he sustained in his lower left leg in Week 4.
"I think it's just the best medical treatment at this time vs. not (having surgery)," Bears coach John Fox said.
The 2015 first-round draft pick is on injured reserve, but he still could return this season, despite opting for surgery rather than letting the fracture in the non-weight-bearing bone heal on its own. It is hoped the surgery will hasten the healing process, but it's not guaranteed.
Best-case scenario, the earliest White could return is Dec. 4 against the San Francisco 49ers.
"We'll cross that bridge when we get there," Fox said. "To sit there and try to distinguish what would be the right thing is hard to say right now."
White missed his entire rookie season after having surgery for stress fractures in his left tibia, the weight-bearing bone in the lower leg. That is unrelated to his current injury, which also included a severely sprained ankle.
Before being injured, White led the Bears with 19 catches and was third with 187 yards.
After further review, wide receiver Kevin White will have surgery for the fractured fibula he sustained in his lower left leg in Week 4.
"I think it's just the best medical treatment at this time vs. not (having surgery)," Bears coach John Fox said.
The 2015 first-round draft pick is on injured reserve, but he still could return this season, despite opting for surgery rather than letting the fracture in the non-weight-bearing bone heal on its own. It is hoped the surgery will hasten the healing process, but it's not guaranteed.
Best-case scenario, the earliest White could return is Dec. 4 against the San Francisco 49ers.
"We'll cross that bridge when we get there," Fox said. "To sit there and try to distinguish what would be the right thing is hard to say right now."
White missed his entire rookie season after having surgery for stress fractures in his left tibia, the weight-bearing bone in the lower leg. That is unrelated to his current injury, which also included a severely sprained ankle.
Before being injured, White led the Bears with 19 catches and was third with 187 yards.
No, it is not safe to say hes a bust. Either way, I wouldnt pin this one to Pace, this was pure bad luck for all of us.
I don't know, playing 3.5 games out of 32 is bust level. Having problems catching the ball and knowing his route tree is bust level. We have a QB who is playing WR and doing much better than White ever would.
It feels like Pace drafted this guy and thought we had the coaching staff to fix him. We didn't. Once Williams and Cooper went off the board we should of traded down.
Gonna have to give him another year, he started looking really good when Cutler wasn't throwing him the ball/not targeting him. The injuries are becoming bad, but he's got 2 years left before he's a bust.
No, it is not safe to say hes a bust. Either way, I wouldnt pin this one to Pace, this was pure bad luck for all of us.
We've had a few years of heartbreaking luck. It makes you wonder if it's time for it to turn around for us. We are overdue for something good to happen with the franchise.
Since he's brittle I'd rather not see him rushed back. If he does return this season then he should be very limited.
If they rush him back , in a worthless season , and he gets injured again , then that's just plain stupidity . Let him heal and bring him back next season with a clean slate . He's been snakebit so I don't see how that 'qualifies' as being a bust . However , if he doesn't perform next year if healthy , THEN we can start thinking about that word . He needs to be given a REAL CHANCE before slapping that label on him would be bona-fide .
Gonna have to give him another year, he started looking really good when Cutler wasn't throwing him the ball/not targeting him. The injuries are becoming bad, but he's got 2 years left before he's a bust.
How many years are we going to give him?
We already gave him 2 years and what has he done? 3.5 games out of 32. How many players rebound after missing that many games their rookie career?
When I see White playing I don't see this "Great" wr we drafted. I see a wr who has struggle catching the ball and who doesn't know his route tree. Meredith who was a QB seems to be better at WR than our 1st round pick. Let's not forget he was UNDRAFTED...
2 years is enough time to evaluate a 1st round player.
Call him bust and after this season, he stays healthy and gives us 7 years with 1100+ Yards per year. Still a bust?
3 Years before saying he is a bust. 4 years if he is injured by a Play on the field that could happen to every Player.
1100+ yards in 7 years each? Are you dreaming that? He has only had 1,000+ yard season in college and that was do to his limited knowledge on the route tree. This is the NFL we're talking about. You need to know how and where to run your route. You need to learn how to catch a ball.
2 years is enough time to see if a player is good or not. White is not. WRs are one of the easiest position to transition to the NFL unlike a QB.