Bears May Be Headed Toward A Familiar Secondary Problem Again

As the Chicago Bears face challenges with injuries and unproven talent, veteran Josh Blackwell emerges as a promising solution to fill the crucial slot cornerback role.

The Bears still don’t have a clean answer for their nickel spot, and that’s why Josh Blackwell suddenly looks a lot more important than he usually does.

Kyler Gordon’s soft tissue issues started almost a year ago, and the problems didn’t stop there. They kept piling up into the regular season, and Chicago went almost the entire year without its starting slot cornerback.

Even now, there’s no clear timeline for Gordon to practice in full. By the time training camp starts, it will have been nearly a full year since those injuries first surfaced.

That leaves the Bears staring at a real possibility: Gordon may not be ready, or may not be the same player once he is. If that’s the case, someone else has to handle the slot.

Blackwell is the name that keeps making sense.

He’s the guy who came through on the fourth-quarter onside kick against the Green Bay Packers, and he’s also been one of those steady, useful pieces the Bears have leaned on for four years. Most of the time, his job is tied to special teams, where he’s become a playmaker.

But he’s still a cornerback, and he’s got experience outside and inside. In a pinch, Chicago has turned to him before when injuries forced the issue, and he hasn’t embarrassed himself.

There are other paths, of course. Rookie fourth-round pick Malik Muhammad took some snaps in the slot in college, though he also looks like a possible future replacement for Tyrique Stevenson on the outside.

Free agent addition Cam Lewis is another option. But Blackwell brings something the others don’t: familiarity.

The numbers help his case, too. Blackwell has played 159 coverage snaps in the slot out of 219 total snaps there during his career.

In that sample, he hasn’t allowed a touchdown and has picked off one pass. He’s posted a positive PFF grade above 60.0 in three of four seasons, and on the remaining slot snaps he added four quarterback pressures.

That’s not nothing. It’s not a perfect long-term fix, either, especially if Chicago asks him to keep doing his special teams work while handling a bigger defensive role. But if the Bears need continuity, Blackwell offers that better than a total unknown.

Muhammad and Lewis could still enter the picture once training camp gets going. For now, though, Blackwell is the most believable emergency answer to a problem the Bears still haven’t solved.

In Other News...

Bears Suddenly Have An Uncomfortable Question About One Recent Draft Pick

Kiran Amegadjie entered Bears camp with the kind of profile that usually deserves a longer look, a versatile offensive lineman taken in the third round who was supposed to give the team another option up front. Instead, Chicago has spent the offseason stacking the room with veteran help and workable depth, especially at guard and tackle, which has made the path for a young lineman like Amegadjie look increasingly crowded.

The problem for the Bears is not just the numbers ahead of him, but how little runway he has had to catch up. He missed most of last season, and with several players already positioned in front of him on the depth chart, training camp is starting to feel less like an opportunity to carve out a role and more like a test of whether he can climb fast enough to stay in the conversation at all. [Read more 🡒]

Bears Just Got A Real NFC North Break Against Detroit

The NFC North picture just shifted a little in Chicagos favor after Detroit moved on from cornerback Terrion Arnold, thinning out a secondary that was already facing questions about its depth. With D.J. Reed now standing as the only proven starter in that group, the Lions have less margin for error in a division where every matchup tends to carry a little extra weight.

For the Bears, it is the kind of opening that can matter later in the season, especially in games where Chicago is trying to create an edge in the passing game. A weakened Detroit back end does not decide the division on its own, but it gives the Bears one more reason to like their chances in the matchups that usually shape the race. [Read more 🡒]