I ran a whole bunch of mock offseasons over the past couple of years. I generally tried to wait until the Bears were out of contention. Unfortunately, that time has likely come, despite the current 4-3 record. Matt Eberflus has lost seven road games in each of his two seasons at the helm. Here is the remaining road schedule for the Bears:
- Nov. 3 @ Arizona
- Nov. 28 @ Detroit
- Dec. 8 @ San Francisco
- Dec. 16 @ Minnesota
- Jan. 5 @ Green Bay
In order to avoid seven losses again, the Bears would need to find multiple wins against that slate. They'll be underdogs in every one of those games, and Flus is 3-17 on the road as a head coach.
This season is now exclusively about developing Caleb Williams and the young core around him.
Internal DecisionsFar and away, the most important internal decision is what to do with Flus. My thoughts on the matter have been clear for some time. Flus needs to go. If the Bears go 7-10 or worse in 2024, he surely will. Here's hoping he's gone.
Moving to the roster, there are a few easy choices. G Nate Davis is gone, leaving $2M of dead cap space behind.
There are some tougher choices. ILB Tremaine Edmunds has generally disappointed, but it's very difficult to find an ILB with his body to roam the middle of this defense; plus, cutting him only yields $4.3M of net cap space. He most likely sticks. S Kevin Byard has been very impressive, but cutting him only leaves $1.5M of dead space; still, he should come back unless he trails off. TE Gerald Everett has been a huge disappointment; with only $1M of dead space against $6.5M of cap space if he says, I think Everett is gone. DE DeMarcus Walker's cap hit drops under $6M but he leaves only $667K of dead space if cut. That was an easy choice last year, but he has been much more impressive this year, especially when sliding inside on pass rushing downs. He's not a winning team's DE2, but he's a great DE3 and a good DT2 on 3rd down. He stays. G Ryan Bates and his $4M cap hit stays, assuming his injury isn't a long-term one. S Jonathan Owens has only played 12 defensive snaps through seven games, despite injuries in the secondary. He's gone, leaving $375K of dead cap space behind him.
Lower on the cap table, some recent draftees find themselves in dicey situations, including WR Tyler Scott, DE Dominique Robinson, LB Noah Sewell, and even DT Zacch Pickens. I won't cut any of them for purposes of this exercise, but things look bad for Scott and Robinson in particular.
It seems likely that the Bears let G Teven Jenkins walk in free agency; he was drafted by the Ryan Pace regime, he hasn't ever been able to stay healthy, and his play peaked during his sophomore year. But I hope he stays; I love watching Teven.
The cuts above yield the following dead hits:
- G Nate Davis: $2M
- TE Gerald Everett: $1M
- S Jonathan Owens: $0.375M
Free Agency
The Bears have two massive needs in free agency with two additional target areas listed in order of my preference:
- Interior Offensive Line. After terrible play at the pivot for years, Coleman Shelton has been surprisingly decent after a dreadful start. Nevertheless, the Bears need an influx of talent in the interior, whether at G or C, and likely both through the draft and free agency. They could even consider signing at new LT and kicking Braxton Jones inside to G. Names to consider:
- iOL: G Trey Smith, C Drew Dalman, G Teven Jenkins, C Ryan Kelly, G Will Fries, G Aaron Banks, C Connor Williams, C Coleman Shelton, G James Daniels, G Kevin Zeitler
- OT: Ronnie Stanley, Garrett Bolles, Cam Robinson, Morgan Moses, Trent Brown, Alaric Jackson
- Defensive Line. The Bears need another impact player up front. It's probably better coming at DE, though a 1-tech or 3-tech DT could work, too, with some roster shenanigans.
- DTs: Calais Campbell, Milton Williams, B.J. Hill, Osa Odighizuwa
- DEs: Haason Reddick, Khalil Mack, Malcolm Koonce, Chase Young, Matthew Judon, Josh Sweat, Brandon Graham, Josh Uche, Derek Barnett
- #2/#3 Wide Receiver. Keenan Allen doesn't seem like a long-term fit, though he has been solid. Adding another piece to pair with D.J. Moore and Rome Odunze would be prudent.
- Tee Higgins, Chris Godwin, Amari Cooper, Stefon Diggs, Diontae Johnson, Marquise Brown, Keenan Allen, DeAndre Hopkins, Darius Slayton
- Tight End #2. Gerald Everett just hasn't delivered. A complementary piece to Cole Kmet would be so helpful.
- Mike Gesicki, Juwan Johnson, Tyler Conklin, Tommy Tremble, Zach Ertz, Austin Hooper
These contract projections are my own as PFF doesn't have any yet:
- Sign RG Trey Smith (4/$84M, $46M guaranteed)
- The top of the iOL market exploded recently. This is the cost of doing business there.
- Sign C Drew Dalman (4/$58M, $34M guaranteed).
- Poles could consider staying at lower class free agency with Shelton; he has admittedly played reasonably well in the last month and would surely benefit from a infusion of talent next to him. But Dalman represents the biggest swing possible for Caleb Williams.
- Sign WR Diontae Johnson (3/$42M with $25M guaranteed)
- Sign TE Austin Hooper (1/$3M)
- Re-Sign OLB Jack Sanborn (2/$4M, $2M guaranteed)
- Re-Sign DT Chris Williams (RFA tender of 1/$1.5M)
- Re-Sign C Doug Kramer (ERFA tender of 1/$1M)
I not extremely confident that Poles will take multiple dips into the deep end given that the Bears finally have homegrown talent to keep in the form of CB Kyler Gordon, S Jaquan Brisker, and LT Braxton Jones. Those extensions could utilize a chunk of 2025 cap space. But even this spending spree doesn't create a cap crunch. The time is right for big forays before meaningful extensions are required.
Based purely on AAVs, the above spending spree would utilize $57M of cap space before accounting for lower first-year cap hits. This should leave plenty for the draft class and the aforementioned extensions, even with possible draft trades.
Based purely on AAVs, the above spending spree would utilize $57M of cap space before accounting for lower first-year cap hits. This should leave plenty for the draft class and the aforementioned extensions, even with possible draft trades.
Draft
This mock requires some assumptions. Namely, the the Pittsburgh pick for the Justin Fields pick is the Steelers' 4th, not 6th. As of now, Fields has played well more than 51% of the Pittsburgh snaps thus far, but with Russell Wilson now running the show, this is probably a toss up, with the result depending on Wilson's health status.
This mock requires some assumptions. Namely, the the Pittsburgh pick for the Justin Fields pick is the Steelers' 4th, not 6th. As of now, Fields has played well more than 51% of the Pittsburgh snaps thus far, but with Russell Wilson now running the show, this is probably a toss up, with the result depending on Wilson's health status.
The Bears have their own picks in the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 5th rounds, an extra 2nd from Carolina, the aforementioned Pittsburgh 4th, and a 7th from Cleveland from the Chris Williams trade. This mock was completed using the Pro Football Focus mock draft tool.
The draft class impacted my thoughts on free agency. The OL class is fine; the DE class is fantastic, so spending on the OL was more palatable than spending on DE.
#18: Penn State DE Abdul Carter
A dream scenario. Carter is a Swiss Army knife on defense given his extensive experience at DE and OLB, and his measurables are nearly identical to former Nittany Lion Micah Parsons. Adding Carter at DE gives the Bears a wave of pass rushers to employ throughout games.
#33: Penn State S Kevin Winston Jr.
I wanted to trade this pick and had some attractive offers to do so...but Winston is far too attractive to pass on here. He's a great addition to the 2025 roster, and he won't be forced into a starting role in his return from a missed year in 2024. The ceiling her is substantial as evidenced by Winston's superb 2023 season.
The draft class impacted my thoughts on free agency. The OL class is fine; the DE class is fantastic, so spending on the OL was more palatable than spending on DE.
#18: Penn State DE Abdul Carter
A dream scenario. Carter is a Swiss Army knife on defense given his extensive experience at DE and OLB, and his measurables are nearly identical to former Nittany Lion Micah Parsons. Adding Carter at DE gives the Bears a wave of pass rushers to employ throughout games.
#33: Penn State S Kevin Winston Jr.
I wanted to trade this pick and had some attractive offers to do so...but Winston is far too attractive to pass on here. He's a great addition to the 2025 roster, and he won't be forced into a starting role in his return from a missed year in 2024. The ceiling her is substantial as evidenced by Winston's superb 2023 season.
My other top consideration here was West Virginia LT Wyatt Milum, who came off the board at #34. Surely I'll take an OL at #50, right?
Bears trade #50 and a 2026 6th to Seattle for #80 and a 2025 2nd
This is my favorite type of trade, and the Bears have routinely been on the wrong side of it. Trade this year's 2nd for next year's 2nd and the benefit is that you turn next year's 6th into a mid-3rd this year? Yes please!
#80: USC C Jonah Monheim
Monheim's transition to C hasn't been the smoothest, but he was solid at LT in 2023 and superb splitting 2022 between RG and RT. He's an ideal backup OL who projects as a starting C.
#82: Penn State TE Tyler Warren
I know it looks like I'm an outrageous Penn State homer at this point, but I promise, this is just how the board broke. I do a couple of these each day and end up with about 0.5 Nittany Lions on average, hardly outrageous given the quality fit of their top players with these Bears.
Warren is a perfect fit in the NFL. I'll be floored if he's available here. If he is, it's a no brainer. If he's not, look for Bowling Green TE Harold Fannin Jr.
#126: South Carolina S Nick Emmanwori
What if Kyle Hamilton ran a 4.4 instead of a 4.6?
Emmanwori definitely isn't on Hamilton's level of production and his pedigree isn't close. But the starter kit is here. And at #126, it's worth the shot.
#154: Kansas RB Devin Neal
Neal isn't an exceptional athlete, lacks exceptional size, and played in the Big 12, which makes me inherently skeptical of him. But he's plenty productive, athletic enough, and comes with significant experience as a pass catcher, something that is lacking with Roschon Johnson.
#222: UNLV CB Tony Grimes
Grimes had a great pedigree coming out of high school, but the 5* prospect's journey has been quite the twisting path, playing 36 games at North Carolina, transferring to Texas A&M but never playing due to injury, and ending up at UNLV for his final year. His tackling is terrible. This is a bet that a couple of years in one system would help him improve.
Looking to 2025, the Bears would hold the following picks:
1st (CHI)
2nd (SEA)
2nd (CHI)
3rd (CHI)
4th (CHI)
5th (CHI)
7th (CHI)
A Note on the Mock
Every other mock I've run includes drafting at least two offensive linemen. This is the first time I haven't done that in weeks...but that's because I have the benefit of knowing that both Smith and Dalman are aboard. If free agency only yields one impact starter on the OL, I'd say goodbye to Emmanwori or even Warren in favor of another OL.
Final Roster
New players added via free agency are underlined. Draftees are bolded. Here's the 53:
QB (3): Caleb Williams, Tyson Bagent, FREE AGENT
RB (4): D'Andre Swift, Roschon Johnson, Devin Neal, FREE AGENT
TE (3): Cole Kmet, Austin Hooper, Tyler Warren
WR (6): D.J. Moore, Rome Odunze, Diontae Johnson, Tyler Scott, FREE AGENT, FREE AGENT
Final Roster
New players added via free agency are underlined. Draftees are bolded. Here's the 53:
QB (3): Caleb Williams, Tyson Bagent, FREE AGENT
RB (4): D'Andre Swift, Roschon Johnson, Devin Neal, FREE AGENT
TE (3): Cole Kmet, Austin Hooper, Tyler Warren
WR (6): D.J. Moore, Rome Odunze, Diontae Johnson, Tyler Scott, FREE AGENT, FREE AGENT
OT (3): Darnell Wright, Braxton Jones, FREE AGENT
OG (3): Trey Smith, Kiran Amegadjie, Ryan Bates
C (3): Drew Dalman, Jonah Monheim, Doug Kramer
DE (5): Montez Sweat, DeMarcus Walker, Austin Booker, Abdul Carter, Dominique Robinson
DT (5): Andrew Billings, Gervon Dexter Jr., Zacch Pickens, Chris Williams, FREE AGENT
ILB (1): Tremaine Edmunds
OLB (4): T.J. Edwards, Jack Sanborn, Noah Sewell, FREE AGENT
CB (5): Jaylon Johnson, Tyrique Stevenson, Terrell Smith, Kyler Gordon, Tony Grimes
S (5): Kevin Byard, Jaquan Brisker, Kevin Winston Jr., Elijah Hicks, Nick Emmanwori
ST (3): Cairo Santos, Tory Taylor, FREE AGENT
This roster isn't perfect, but it's awfully damn good. The pass rush is hugely improved with Booker and Carter added to complement Sweat, especially given that they enable Walker to kick inside and improve the DT pass rush, too. Adding Warren and Johnson as receiving options ensures the Williams has plenty of receiving options available to him.
OG (3): Trey Smith, Kiran Amegadjie, Ryan Bates
C (3): Drew Dalman, Jonah Monheim, Doug Kramer
DE (5): Montez Sweat, DeMarcus Walker, Austin Booker, Abdul Carter, Dominique Robinson
DT (5): Andrew Billings, Gervon Dexter Jr., Zacch Pickens, Chris Williams, FREE AGENT
ILB (1): Tremaine Edmunds
OLB (4): T.J. Edwards, Jack Sanborn, Noah Sewell, FREE AGENT
CB (5): Jaylon Johnson, Tyrique Stevenson, Terrell Smith, Kyler Gordon, Tony Grimes
S (5): Kevin Byard, Jaquan Brisker, Kevin Winston Jr., Elijah Hicks, Nick Emmanwori
ST (3): Cairo Santos, Tory Taylor, FREE AGENT
This roster isn't perfect, but it's awfully damn good. The pass rush is hugely improved with Booker and Carter added to complement Sweat, especially given that they enable Walker to kick inside and improve the DT pass rush, too. Adding Warren and Johnson as receiving options ensures the Williams has plenty of receiving options available to him.
Most importantly, the offensive line looks absolutely fantastic. The tackle depth chart is encouraging with Jones at LT, Wright at RT, Amegadjie as the top OT backup, and Monheim as a second OT backup with recent experience out wide; heck, even Bates was a LT at Penn State. Inside, going Amegadjie-Dalman-Smith left to right is darn exciting with Bates and Monheim as quality backups.
The WR depth chart is a little scary, but the allocation of assets into the top three is massive.
Any new coach should be ecstatic to step into this situation!
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