The Chicago Bears already have plenty to like on offense heading into the 2026 season, but ESPN’s Ben Solak thinks they could take a massive swing to fix the one spot that still leaves room for improvement.
Solak is predicting a blockbuster trade with the Indianapolis Colts for Jonathan Taylor, calling it a move that “makes perfect sense.” In his view, the Bears don’t need to keep waiting for D’Andre Swift and Kyle Monangai to become more than they are.
“The Bears make perfect sense,” Solak writes. “D'Andre Swift had a strong 2025 season, but he has not been reliable and has dealt with injuries for much of his career. Kyle Monangai is a likeable thumper but not for more than 10 or so carries a game.”
That’s the heart of the argument: Chicago’s passing game is already loaded with Caleb Williams at the center, Ben Johnson calling the shots, and a young group of weapons that includes Colston Loveland, Luther Burden, and Rome Odunze. The backfield, though, is where the upgrade could be dramatic.
Taylor would step in as the clear RB1 behind an excellent offensive line, and the fit is easy to picture. Williams, Johnson, the young receivers, and a star runner all on the same roster would give the Bears a chance to turn a good offense into something much bigger.
The cap side of it is part of the appeal, too. Taylor wouldn’t be overly expensive relative to other positions, and Chicago has the flexibility to make a deal work because Williams, Burden, Loveland, and Odunze are all on rookie contracts.
And Taylor’s production speaks for itself. The 27-year-old led the league with 18 touchdowns last season, piled up 1,585 rushing yards on a league-high 323 carries, and added 46 catches for 378 yards and two more scores. That gave him 20 touchdowns from scrimmage and 1,963 total yards on 369 touches, numbers that sat among the best in the NFL.
He’s also a three-time Pro Bowler and an Offensive Player of the Year runner-up.
So while Swift and Monangai give the Bears a workable tandem, Taylor would be a different level entirely. If Solak’s prediction comes true, Chicago wouldn’t just be upgrading the backfield - it would be adding one more piece to an offense that already has the look of something dangerous.
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