The Bears’ path through the NFC North just got a little cleaner, and it comes at a brutal cost for Detroit.
The Lions were forced to release Terrion Arnold in the middle of what the source describes as an alarming legal situation, removing a player who was expected to be part of their cornerback plans. From a football standpoint, that leaves Chicago with a clearer edge in a division that already had Detroit circled as the biggest obstacle.
Before the summer, the Lions were the obvious team to worry about for the Bears. Green Bay had collapsed in the playoffs against Chicago, and Detroit had taken both regular-season meetings against Ben Johnson. Now, with Arnold gone, the Lions’ secondary looks far thinner than it did a day ago.
D.J. Reed is now the only proven starting corner the Lions have on the roster.
Arnold had been slated to be the second answer, with the rest of the depth chart filling in the third starting job and helping the rotation. Without him, Chicago could be looking at a matchup against Detroit that features two unproven cornerbacks.
That matters for a Bears receiver group built around Luther Burden, Rome Odunze, and Zavion Thomas. It also gives Ben Johnson a better shot at getting his first win against the Lions. The former Detroit offensive coordinator has not beaten his old team in either of his first two tries.
The situation around Arnold is serious and, as the source notes, says nothing about guilt or innocence. But on the field, the impact is obvious: Detroit’s cornerback depth took a major hit, and Chicago’s grip on the North suddenly looks a little firmer.
It remains to be seen whether the Lions try to patch the position before the season starts. Either way, the Bears have a real opening now, and the loss of Arnold gives them an even better chance to repeat as division champions.
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