The Bears have spent years searching for answers in the wrong places, but at kicker, they’ve had something rare: stability. Cairo Santos has been part of that run, and Sports Illustrated recently slotted him as the 14th most important Bears player heading into the 2026 season.
That kind of recognition fits the way Santos has operated in Chicago. Since 2020, he has been a dependable and clutch option through multiple head coaching changes, a constant presence while plenty of other pieces around him have shifted. For a team that has dealt with bigger issues elsewhere, Santos has quietly become one of the few sure things.
Chicago’s comfort at the position didn’t start with Santos, either. Robbie Gould owned Soldier Field from 2005 to 2015 and turned placekicking into something Bears fans barely had to think about. By the end of his run, he had become one of the most respected players in franchise history and had scored more points than anyone else in Bears history.
After Gould, the Bears cycled through other names, with Cody Parkey the most notable. Parkey was brought in as the hoped-for long-term answer, and for a while it looked like that might work. Then came the infamous double-doink, one of the lowest moments in modern franchise history, and Parkey was released.
Santos eventually stepped in as the answer in 2020 after an injury sidelined Eddie Pineiro, and he has held the job ever since. In a roster that has seen plenty of turnover, he has remained one of the few steady pieces.
The Bears enter the Ben Johnson era with plenty still to sort out, but kicker is not one of those concerns. If Santos keeps coming through in the biggest moments, Chicago can keep leaning on the kind of reliability it has enjoyed at the position for years.
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