Bears May Have Left Their Biggest Defensive Problem Untouched

As the Chicago Bears face a pivotal season, concerns mount over a potentially costly offseason oversight in their defensive strategy.

The Bears spent the offseason patching holes, but one of the biggest ones is still staring them in the face.

Chicago had work to do across the roster and managed to solve some problems, yet the edge rush never got the kind of attention many expected. General manager Ryan Poles didn’t make any meaningful additions there, and that decision stood out in ESPN’s Seth Walder’s offseason grades. Walder gave the Bears a B+, but pointed to the lack of help at edge as the move he disliked most.

“The Bears' defense generated a ton of turnovers last season, but those takeaways helped disguise the fact that it was one of the worst defenses in the league on non-turnover plays.”

That line gets to the heart of the concern. Chicago led the NFL in takeaways with 33 in 2025, but turnovers can cover up a lot, and they don’t always show up when a defense needs them most. With major changes in the secondary, the Bears may be even more exposed if the pass rush doesn’t do more of the heavy lifting.

The front office did move on from Kevin Byard, Jaquan Brisker, and Nahshon Wright, then brought in Coby Bryant and drafted safety Dillon Thieneman. Thieneman looks like a player who could matter right away, and Bryant arrives with a Super Bowl ring on the back end. But none of that solves the bigger issue up front: a defense that can’t count on consistent pressure.

Chicago tied for 28th in the league with 35 sacks last season, and that kind of number is hard to hide forever. The Bears were able to get away with it because of all the takeaways, but as Walder noted, those plays are volatile. When the turnovers didn’t come, opposing offenses were able to move the ball.

That’s where the edge rush matters most. Pressure changes everything for a defense.

It forces quarterbacks off their spots, rushes decisions, and makes the whole operation feel less comfortable. Chicago just didn’t have enough of that from the outside.

Montez Sweat led the way with 10 sacks. Austin Booker was next among Bears edge rushers with 4.5. For a team trying to make a real postseason push, that’s not enough production.

And if Sweat misses time, the problem gets bigger fast. Chicago had been linked to possible help at edge, whether in the draft or in a trade for someone like Maxx Crosby, but nothing materialized. The Bears are still carrying that unresolved need into the season, and it’s the kind of omission that could loom large if the pass rush comes up short again.

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