Recently, the idea of the Bears making a run at Jonathan Taylor started to gather some steam. The thought was simple enough: if the Indianapolis Colts ever decided to move on, Chicago could try to land a superstar back and drop him into Ben Johnson’s offense. It would have been the kind of move that feels almost unfair.
But Johnson didn’t leave much room for that conversation to breathe.
Ahead of the 2026 season, he spoke with Gabby Hajduk about Chicago’s running back situation, and his message was clear: D’Andre Swift remains central to what the Bears want to do. Johnson didn’t frame Swift as a placeholder or a nice piece to have around. He called him a major part of the plan.
“He’s a dynamic player,” Johnson said. “I’ve known that about him since he came into the league, firsthand up there in Detroit, and certainly last year I wasn’t surprised about the year he had.
So, is he capable of more? Absolutely.
He absolutely is. He’s a vital part of what we do here.”
That’s not exactly the kind of language that suggests a big swing at another running back is coming.
And it makes sense. Swift was a key reason the Bears finished with the NFL’s No. 3 rushing attack last season.
He ran for 1,089 yards, stayed mostly healthy, and paired well with Kyle Monangai to give Chicago a productive one-two punch. He’s 27, not some veteran on the back end of his career, and there’s no obvious reason to think his production has to fall off this year unless injury gets in the way.
Johnson also ended up touching on a topic that has lingered around Swift since the day Chicago signed him in 2024. At the time, plenty of fans weren’t sold.
The contract felt rich for a back who had never really locked down a true lead role. In Detroit and Philadelphia, Swift had benefited from strong offensive lines, and that skepticism was loud.
Now, though, the numbers say the Bears got a good one. Over his two seasons in Chicago, Swift has rushed for 2,046 yards, added 685 receiving yards, and scored 16 touchdowns. Those are strong totals by any measure, and two of his three best seasons as a pro have come with the Bears.
The larger point is hard to miss: paying running backs can still work if the player fits and the offense supports him. Johnson seems to understand that. The old idea that teams can’t win unless they find some rare, elite back doesn’t really match what Chicago just did on the ground.
If the Swift signing needs a Bears comparison, Thomas Jones is the obvious one. When Chicago brought Jones in as a free agent in 2004, he wasn’t greeted like a savior.
He had been solid in Arizona and Tampa Bay, but not a headliner. Then he became one of the league’s most underrated starters, powered the 2006 Super Bowl team, and eventually left behind a case that trading him away was one of the franchise’s biggest mistakes of that decade.
Swift has followed a similar path. He came in without much buzz, wasn’t viewed as a true star, and then settled into a role that fits the offense. With Johnson and Caleb Williams working the backfield together, he helps keep everything balanced.
So yes, Jonathan Taylor would be fun. But the Bears don’t need to chase that dream to be dangerous on the ground. They were already excellent without a marquee name, and Swift is proof that with the right coaching and a strong front five, a good back can be enough.
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