Jaylon Johnson has spent most of the last decade as one of the Bears’ constants, and that matters now more than ever. The 27-year-old cornerback has lived through a long run of regime changes in Chicago and is still standing, still carrying real weight for a defense that has been rebuilt again this offseason.
That’s why Sports Illustrated’s Jerry Markarian recently put Johnson among the top Bears candidates to earn All-Pro recognition. It’s not unfamiliar territory for him, either.
Johnson was already in that conversation in 2023, when he landed on the second team. The question now is whether he can get back to that level after an injury-shortened year.
In 2025, a groin/core injury limited Johnson to seven games. Even after he was activated in November, he never looked fully right and finished with just 17 total tackles. That was a far cry from 2024, when he posted a personal best with 53 tackles, including 42 solo stops.
The Bears’ defensive overhaul has only sharpened the importance of veterans like Johnson. Dennis Allen has managed a defense that has been in constant flux, but the influx of young players this offseason makes experienced voices more valuable. Johnson should be more than just a steady presence in the secondary; he also has a chance to serve as a bridge for the rookies coming in and the older coaching staff around them.
Still, leadership alone won’t get him back into All-Pro territory. Johnson has to look like the player he was before the injury, and that means producing at a level that matches the reputation he already built. A strong start to the season could quickly put him back on the league-wide radar.
The good news for Chicago is that Johnson has already proven he can play at that level. If he gets back to full health and helps anchor a revamped Bears defense, his name should be right back where it was before: among the NFL’s best cornerbacks.
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Murphys value is tied less to any one position than to the idea that he can help wherever the Bears need a body, which is exactly the sort of trait that keeps an undrafted lineman in the mix deep into camp. The challenge is obvious: there are already favored options across the line, so Murphy may have to keep stacking solid days just to stay in the conversation, and his best chance could come from being the last man standing when the roster starts to take shape. [Read more 🡒]
Training Camp Could End The Bears Run For 3 Familiar Names
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For Chicago, that makes camp about more than just reps and conditioning. It is also a sorting exercise, with Kmets usage, Odeyingbos health, and Swifts contract situation all hanging over the next few weeks. The Bears do not need every answer immediately, but how those three look once the pads come on could shape decisions well beyond August. [Read more 🡒]
