Rome Odunze is treating this offseason like a reset button.
After a hot start to his second NFL year, the Chicago Bears wideout saw everything slow down once a lingering foot injury took hold. He wound up missing the final five regular-season games and, by the time the playoffs arrived, he was clearly not operating at full strength in two postseason outings.
That slump has been a big part of the larger story around Odunze’s first two pro seasons. Drafted ninth overall in 2024, he has not lived up to the billing yet. Caleb Williams has had his own accuracy issues, so not everything lands on Odunze’s shoulders, but last season brought too many plays that felt like missed chances - whether they officially counted as drops or not.
The numbers back up the concern. Odunze’s five drops were the second-most on the Bears last season, including the playoffs, according to Pro Football Focus.
Even more alarming was what happened at the catch point. At 6-foot-3 and 220 pounds, that should be a strength, but PFF had him at just seven catches on 20 contested-catch chances last year.
That was a sharp fall from what he showed when healthy. As a rookie, he went 13-for-18 in contested situations. And at Washington in 2023, ESPN noted he tied for the FBS lead with 24 contested catches.
Now, with both feet healthy, the expectation is that Odunze can get back to being the receiver Chicago thought it was drafting. It also matters that this is a pivotal year for him as he gets closer to being eligible for a contract extension.
Odunze recently talked about the players he’s studying as he works toward that next step, and the list makes plenty of sense.
"I looked up to guys like Davante Adams, Julio Jones, I was even watching some Puka (Nacua) film from last year, especially at the catch point,” Odunze said. “I want to be better at the catch point this year when it comes to contested catches, catching in stride, and all of those different things.
Making the quarterback look good when I need to… When it might be a go-make-a-play play, I want to make that play. I watch film on all of those guys and continue to study that and I’ll display that this season, for sure.”
Adams and Nacua are smart names to study for any receiver. Jones, though, is the one who jumps out most for Odunze’s frame and style. The size, the toughness, the willingness to attack the football like it belongs to him - that’s the kind of edge Odunze needs to bring more consistently.
Whether he’s studying those three or plenty of others, the point is clear: Odunze is digging for answers. And for the Bears, that search could define what his third season becomes.
In Other News...
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Training camp usually clarifies a roster, but for the Bears it is also about sorting out who can handle a bigger burden as the 2026 season comes into view. Kalif Raymond is in the mix at receiver, Grady Jarrett is trying to steady a defensive role after a rough year, Austin Booker is being counted on for a larger edge-rushing presence, and Cole Kmet is looking to hold his place at tight end with more competition arriving behind him.
The pressure is different for each of them, but the theme is the same: this coaching staff is no longer treating any of those spots as settled. Raymond has a path to snaps, Jarrett needs to look more like a reliable interior force, Booker has to show he can turn promise into production, and Kmet is entering camp with the kind of depth chart reality that can change quickly if he does not separate himself early. [Read more 🡒]
Bears Suddenly Face A Huge Grady Jarrett Question In Camp
Grady Jarrett arrived in Chicago with a track record that suggested he could still be a steady force in the middle of the defense, but his first season with the Bears did not go the way anyone around the team hoped. Injuries and uneven play kept him from matching the impact he had long built with the Falcons, leaving the Bears with a veteran whose rsum still matters but whose 2025 production fell short of the standard they expected.
Now the conversation around camp is less about where Jarrett once was and more about what he can still become for this defense. The coaching staff is set to evaluate him closely in training camp, and if he does not come out strong, his role could shrink quickly. For a player the Bears brought in to matter right away, this summer may go a long way toward determining how long his future in Chicago really lasts. [Read more 🡒]
Bears Rookie Dillon Thieneman May Be Ahead Of Schedule Already
The Bears used the No. 25 pick on Dillon Thieneman to add flexibility and depth to a defensive backfield that needed both, and early signs suggest the rookie is already pushing for a meaningful role. During mandatory minicamp, Thieneman earned first-team reps while working through Dennis Allens defense, a notable step for a player who arrived with the kind of versatility Chicago values in the secondary.
What makes this development more interesting is how quickly Thieneman seems to be absorbing everything around him. The Bears see him as a defensive back who can move around the formation, and his early placement with the starters hints at a bigger plan taking shape before training camp even opens. If he keeps trending this way, Chicago may not have to wait long to find out just how much responsibility the rookie can handle. [Read more 🡒]
