The Bears spent the offseason reshaping a secondary that had already led the league in takeaways, and that kind of turnover puts a lot on general manager Ryan Poles. Finding the right replacements was never going to be simple.
That’s why Chicago moved for Coby Bryant on a three-year, $40 million deal. He arrived with a reputation as one of the more underrated defensive backs in the league, the kind of player who can get buried on a deep roster and still matter every snap. In Seattle, he was part of a stacked defense and helped fuel their Super Bowl run, even if the spotlight didn’t follow him.
Now, though, the Bears are starting to get some recognition for the move. In Jeremy Fowler’s annual position surveys, an unnamed NFL coordinator singled Bryant out as an honorable mention and didn’t hide the admiration:
"I love him. He's a corner by trade, so he has good feet and ball skills, but he will hit, too, now," the coordinator said.
Chicago’s bet on Bryant looks even better when you stack it against the rest of the secondary picture. The Bears landed Dillon Thieneman in the first round of the 2026 NFL Draft, and that was a major steal in its own right. But he’s still a rookie, and even if he’s ahead of schedule, Bryant is the one who’ll be carrying a heavy load early.
Bryant brings the kind of versatility that coaches love and offenses hate. He’s strong in coverage, and there’s a real argument that he would have drawn more attention if he had stayed at corner instead of moving to safety. In Chicago, he could spend a lot of time in the slot if Kyler Gordon can’t stay healthy.
Last season, Bryant started 15 games and put together a strong stat line: 66 total tackles, four tackles for loss, a career-high four interceptions, seven pass breakups, and one forced fumble. The numbers tell part of the story, but not all of it. He was also a sharp communicator and the kind of steady presence that holds a defensive backfield together.
That matters for a Bears defense that leaned too hard on takeaways last year. Forced turnovers are great, but they’re not a long-term plan.
Chicago needs to get offenses off the field more consistently, and Bryant is built for that job. He can battle tight ends, running backs, and quick slot receivers, and he makes every route feel crowded.
Defensive backs coach Al Harris has already built a reputation for turning his players into ball-hawks, and Bryant’s instincts give him a real chance to thrive in that system. It wouldn’t be a shock if he followed Kevin Byard III’s path and not only set a new interception mark, but ended up leading the league in picks.
With the Bears still a little thin up front, the secondary may need to do even more heavy lifting this season. That’s what makes a move for a player as overlooked as Coby Bryant look so important. It could end up being one of the defining decisions of the year.
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For Chicago, that matters because the depth chart beyond Sweat has not offered much proven production, which is why the idea of finding a developmental rusher after roster cuts had some appeal. If Detroit can keep its younger defenders in-house, the Bears may have one fewer avenue to chase help at a spot where the need is obvious and the pool of available options is already getting narrower. [Read more 🡒]
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The market around him has also shifted in a way that matters for Chicago. Baltimore losing Tyler Linderbaum and then moving quickly to Ethan Pocic took away one of the more natural trade destinations, which makes a Bradbury deal look less likely for now. Even so, the Bears do not have to rush anything, and Bradbury could still end up serving as the reliable starter until the next move becomes clearer. [Read more 🡒]
