Bears Center Battle Could Decide More Than Caleb Williams Protection

Garrett Bradbury's prior connection with a Bears veteran might just tip the scales in his favor in the center position battle.

Garrett Bradbury may have the cleanest path to the Bears’ starting center job, and the biggest reason has nothing to do with draft status or reputation. It’s Joe Thuney.

As Chicago gets ready for training camp, the center spot is one of the few places where the competition feels wide open. The Bears brought in Bradbury in the offseason after Drew Dalman retired, then added another option by drafting Logan Jones this year.

On paper, that sets up a real battle. In practice, Bradbury has one clear edge: he already knows the man lined up next to him.

Bradbury and Thuney spent two years together at NC State, and the two were roommates on road trips. That kind of built-in comfort matters, especially on an offensive line that Chicago wants to settle quickly. The Bears are trying to preserve the cohesion they had last season, and putting Thuney beside a former college teammate could make that process smoother from the start.

Bradbury also arrives with some strong recent production behind him. In his last season with the Super Bowl-contending New England Patriots, he didn’t allow a sack or a penalty.

Even so, there are still questions about his overall pass protection, since Pro Football Focus ranked him 23rd among pass blockers. He’s coming off a Super Bowl run in which he had to help protect a mobile Drew Maye, and that experience gives him a case to make as the steadier option.

That doesn’t mean the job is his by default. Chicago traded a fifth-round pick for Bradbury, but that doesn’t lock him into the starting role for the full season. Jones is in the mix for a reason, and the Bears clearly see a path for him to compete right away.

The rookie’s age is part of the argument. At 25, Jones is already physically ready for the league, and his college resume is no small thing.

He started 51 games at Iowa, was a Unanimous All-American, and won the Rimington Award. The Bears were also connected to another Iowa center before landing Bradbury, Tyler Linderbaum, which only adds to the sense that the program has produced high-end talent at the position.

If Jones can match anything close to that kind of production, he could force his way into the job.

Still, the fit with Thuney may be the tiebreaker. Chicago needs the center position settled, and it needs it settled fast, especially with Caleb Williams in the mix as a mobile playmaker. A dependable center is a must, and the existing chemistry between Bradbury and Thuney may be enough to give Bradbury the early advantage in the competition.

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