Dillon Thieneman arrived in Chicago with the kind of draft-day buzz that can make a pick feel inevitable, and the Bears are already looking at the rookie safety as a possible difference-maker right away.
That’s the picture Bleacher Report’s Alex Kay painted with a bold rookie forecast: 95 tackles and five interceptions in 2026. For a Bears defense that needed help at safety, that kind of production would make the No. 25 overall pick look like a sharp answer to a glaring need.
“The Chicago Bears secured a true impact player in Dillon Thieneman. The team had a clear hole at the safety spot and filled it by using the No. 25 overall pick on the former Purdue and Oregon player.
Thieneman entered the league with a wealth of experience as a three-year starter, a stretch that helped him hone his football IQ and playmaking talents. He can line up at any safety position and thrive, supporting the run and dropping into coverage with equal skill.”
“Given his natural athleticism, relentless motor and impressive instincts, Thieneman will not only open 2026 as a starter for the Bears, but also have a strong chance to lead all first-year players in interceptions while racking up a ton of tackles.”
If that stat line sounds ambitious, it’s also the sort of output that would instantly push Thieneman into the Defensive Rookie of the Year conversation. And for Bears fans, it wouldn’t come out of nowhere.
His college production already hints at that ceiling. At Purdue, he posted back-to-back seasons with more than 100 tackles, then followed that with 96 tackles in his lone year at Oregon. His best interception total came as a freshman with the Boilermakers in 2023, when he picked off six passes.
That turnover production fits right into what Chicago has been building. The Bears led the NFL last season with 33 turnovers forced, and Kevin Byard’s seven interceptions in 2025 were a huge part of that. With Byard gone, Thieneman is stepping into the space left behind, while Coby Bryant brings more of a play-disrupting style than a true ball-hawking profile.
Chicago also moved on from a chunk of the players who helped create those takeaways, including Byard and Nahshon Wright. That puts even more weight on Thieneman to help close that gap quickly.
There’s another layer to his fit, too. Thieneman isn’t just a coverage safety.
He can be used all over the field, including in the box, where he can get after the quarterback and create problems near the line of scrimmage. That kind of flexibility gives defensive coordinator Dennis Allen plenty to work with.
The Bears clearly believe they found the right piece. If Thieneman’s rookie year looks anything like the projection, they may be right.
In Other News...
Ranking The 4 Bears Under The Most Training Camp Pressure
Training camp usually clarifies a roster, but for the Bears it is also about sorting out who can handle a bigger burden as the 2026 season comes into view. Kalif Raymond is in the mix at receiver, Grady Jarrett is trying to steady a defensive role after a rough year, Austin Booker is being counted on for a larger edge-rushing presence, and Cole Kmet is looking to hold his place at tight end with more competition arriving behind him.
The pressure is different for each of them, but the theme is the same: this coaching staff is no longer treating any of those spots as settled. Raymond has a path to snaps, Jarrett needs to look more like a reliable interior force, Booker has to show he can turn promise into production, and Kmet is entering camp with the kind of depth chart reality that can change quickly if he does not separate himself early. [Read more 🡒]
Bears Suddenly Face A Huge Grady Jarrett Question In Camp
Grady Jarrett arrived in Chicago with a track record that suggested he could still be a steady force in the middle of the defense, but his first season with the Bears did not go the way anyone around the team hoped. Injuries and uneven play kept him from matching the impact he had long built with the Falcons, leaving the Bears with a veteran whose rsum still matters but whose 2025 production fell short of the standard they expected.
Now the conversation around camp is less about where Jarrett once was and more about what he can still become for this defense. The coaching staff is set to evaluate him closely in training camp, and if he does not come out strong, his role could shrink quickly. For a player the Bears brought in to matter right away, this summer may go a long way toward determining how long his future in Chicago really lasts. [Read more 🡒]
Bears Rookie Dillon Thieneman May Be Ahead Of Schedule Already
The Bears used the No. 25 pick on Dillon Thieneman to add flexibility and depth to a defensive backfield that needed both, and early signs suggest the rookie is already pushing for a meaningful role. During mandatory minicamp, Thieneman earned first-team reps while working through Dennis Allens defense, a notable step for a player who arrived with the kind of versatility Chicago values in the secondary.
What makes this development more interesting is how quickly Thieneman seems to be absorbing everything around him. The Bears see him as a defensive back who can move around the formation, and his early placement with the starters hints at a bigger plan taking shape before training camp even opens. If he keeps trending this way, Chicago may not have to wait long to find out just how much responsibility the rookie can handle. [Read more 🡒]
