The silence from Halas Hall over the past 48 hours has been deafening, but the whispers coming out of Chicago right now are anything but quiet. Albert Breer of Sports Illustrated has dropped a bombshell that changes the entire calculus for the Chicago Bears as they enter the most critical phase of the Caleb Williams era, confirming that the free agency door remains wide open and two veteran edge rushers are squarely on the table. Cameron Jordan and Jadeveon Clowney are the names that no fan in navy and orange can afford to ignore, and the urgency behind this development cannot be overstated. Last season, the Bears finished with the second-worst pass rush win rate in the entire NFL, a staggering indictment of a defensive front that ranked second-worst in a conference loaded with the Eagles, the Rams, and the Lions. This is not a minor weakness or a footnote in a season recap. This is a structural crisis at the exact moment this franchise is supposed to be building toward a Super Bowl.
The numbers are brutal and they do not lie. The Bears tied for the seventh fewest sacks in the entire league last season, and that is not seventh best. That is seventh worst. The pass rush win rate was the second-worst in the NFL, and when you are competing in a conference where Philadelphia, Los Angeles, and Detroit are breathing down your neck, that is a recipe for disaster. Montez Sweat is over there trying to carry the entire load by himself, but he cannot do it alone. Dio Odenigbo is coming off a torn Achilles and managed just one sack in eight games last season. Austen Booker had four and a half sacks, a career high, but nobody actually knows if he can repeat that performance. Shamarko Turner is returning from a torn ACL. That entire group is one giant question mark, and questions do not win championships.
Cameron Jordan is 37 years old, and for a lot of people, that is a red flag. But the tape does not lie. Last season with the Saints, Jordan put up 10 and a half sacks. You know how many sacks he would have needed to lead the Bears entire edge rush group with that total? Exactly 10 and a half, because nobody on this current roster came close to that. That right there tells you everything about where this unit stands right now. And here is what makes this genuinely make sense for Chicago beyond the raw numbers. Dennis Allen, the Bears defensive coordinator, spent over a decade coaching Cameron Jordan in New Orleans. Jordan was the cornerstone of Allens defense for years. He already knows the system. He already knows the demands. He already knows the vocabulary of that meeting room. There is no learning curve. There is no adjustment period. This is a plug-and-play situation inside the exact scheme Allen runs in Chicago.

The only real issue is money. Jordan has not signed anywhere yet, and that usually means he is waiting for a number he feels reflects his value. For a guy still producing 10 and a half sacks in a season, that asking price is going to be significant. Ryan Poles has to weigh that against everything he has already committed to this offseason. But consider the alternative. Jadeveon Clowney is 33 years old and coming off eight and a half sacks last year in Dallas. He has an attitude that I personally love, because this man literally said, and I am quoting him directly, aint no scheme I cant play in. Three, four to four-three, to whatever down scheme, Ive proven I can dominate in all of them. That is not empty confidence. That is a resume. Clowney has played in basically every major defensive system in modern professional football, and Breer specifically points out that Clowney fits the prototype Dennis Allen looks for in an edge player. Big, long, physical, and effective against the run.
That last part matters a lot because the Bears gave up the sixth most rushing yards in the entire NFL last season. Sixth-worst against the run, second-worst in the pass rush. That is a pattern, and patterns do not fix themselves. The Bears defensive front is not just a weakness. It is a liability that threatens to undermine everything this offense is building. Caleb Williams has weapons. The offensive line is getting better brick by brick. The defense has young talent starting to emerge. But if that defensive front does not improve in a meaningful way, this offense could be the best in the NFL, and this team could still drop games they have no business losing. Cam Jordan is the perfect one-year stopgap. He knows the system. He still produces, and he brings veteran leadership into a room that desperately needs it. That stuff does not always show up on a stat sheet, but it matters. I would sign that deal today if I were Ryan Poles, today.

But there is another internal move on this roster that changes the entire landscape in Chicago, and nobody in the Windy City saw it coming. After the draft, reports started circulating that Cole Kmet could be available in a trade. I understand that sentence alone might trigger an immediate, visceral reaction from any real Bears fan, because Kmet is so much more than a player on a depth chart. He grew up in Arlington Heights as a Bears fan. He went to Notre Dame. He has been in navy and orange since he was drafted. And that touchdown he scored against the Rams in the playoff game back in January, that moment still gives me chills. This man is part of the soul of this team right now. But the NFL is a business. And the Bears just drafted Sam Rauch in the 2026 draft, making them one of the very few teams in recent memory with three legitimate tight ends on the same active roster. Cole Kmet and Loveland took a massive step forward as a rookie last season. Kmet is still a reliable blocker and a trusted receiver, and now Rauch is here.
Here is the tactical reality. Ben Johnson loves two tight end sets. He even uses three tight end sets. So in theory, there is room for all three of them. But here is the complication. Kmet is under contract through 2027. Any team that wants him has to absorb that contract. This is not a one-season rental. It is a real commitment for any potential trade partner. That makes the deal harder, but if the Bears get back something significant in return, like a top-tier pass rusher, then suddenly that trade closes a loop perfectly on the teams single biggest need. My honest opinion, the Bears are a better team with all three tight ends on the roster. Williams needs every reliable weapon he can get. Kmet is clutch when the moment is biggest. We saw it live. But if Rauch outperforms expectations and the pressure for an elite edge rusher becomes impossible to ignore, Kmet becomes the most movable asset on this roster.

And this connects perfectly to something that came out right after the draft. According to ESPNs Jeremy Fowler, the Bears were, quote, high on Tennessee cornerback Colton Hood, and seriously explored trading up to get him in the second round, but the price was too steep. Hood ended up going at pick 37 to the Giants. Had the Bears pulled that off, they would have landed a cornerback capable of starting from day one, competing directly with Tyrique Stevenson for the number two outside corner spot opposite Jaylon Johnson. Instead, the Bears kept their spot at 25 and took Oregon safety Dylan Thieman. Then on day three, they traded up to pick 124 and selected Texas cornerback Malik Muhammad, a player most draft boards had projected as a day two pick. Muhammad is a well-rounded corner with strong field vision and sharp instincts. Less dominant in press man coverage than Hood, but genuinely versatile in whatever coverage Dennis Allen calls. If Muhammad reaches his ceiling, that was a flat-out steal in the fourth round.
What this entire draft chapter tells us about Poles is simple. He always has a contingency. He moves when the price is right, and when it isnt, he finds a different path to value. That consistency is exactly what gives me confidence in this front office. This one I love because it validates something Bears fans needed to hear after years of offensive line turbulence. Logan Jones, the center out of Iowa selected by Chicago at pick 57 in the second round, was so coveted that Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta came out publicly and admitted he was prepared to trade up in the third round to grab him if he fell that far. And internally, DeCosta gave Jones a first-round grade, a first-round grade. That is not an average center. That is a player opposing front offices are actively trying to block the Bears from having. And the context here makes it even richer. The Ravens lost Tyler Linderbaum, who signed with Las Vegas in free agency, and were desperate for a replacement. Linderbaum was considered one of the best centers in the NFL. DeCosta said Jones could have been a week one starter for Baltimore. That tells you exactly what kind of player Poles landed with the 57th pick.
Jones himself said the Bears organization reminded him of Iowa in terms of culture and people, and that he always hoped this was the call he would get on draft day. That kind of cultural alignment matters. It matters a lot more than most people give it credit for. Now, to round out the picture from the final rounds of the draft, at pick 213, the Bears gave up both of their seventh-round selections to move up and take defensive tackle Jordan Vandenberg out of Georgia Tech. He was the only defensive lineman Chicago selected in the entire draft. Vandenberg is a pure athlete with high character marks and the teams national scout said the coaching staff had been pounding the table for him for the last two weeks of the process. A DNA match, they called it. That is the kind of language that tells you this pick was not a random name off a board. This was a targeted bet on upside. And one more name that deserves a mention in all of this, Caeden Barnett, the offensive tackle out of Wyoming who signed as an undrafted free agent. Six foot four, 316 pounds, logged double-digit starts at both guard and tackle in college, and Bleacher Report already has him as the Bears UDFA with the best shot at making the 53-man roster.
With Avi Trapasso dealing with an injury that cost him most of the 2026 season and the left tackle competition wide open, Barnett might genuinely surprise some people in training camp. This Bears draft class is deeper than the highlight reel makes it look. Bears nation, hear me out. This team is building something real. Caleb Williams has weapons. The offensive line is getting better brick by brick. The defense has young talent starting to emerge. And if Poles goes out and secures Cameron Jordan or Jadeveon Clowney to anchor that pass rush, this roster becomes something very, very serious in the NFC. The 2026 season is coming fast, and honestly, I cannot wait. If this breakdown got you fired up like it did me, drop a like right now and tell me in the comments, would you sign Cam Jordan or do you trust Poles to ride with Odell Beckham and Booker and see what happens because that debate is starting right here, right now. Bear down, Chicago.