
Brad Biggs at the Chicago Tribune answers your questions.
How do you explain the Bears going through free agency and the draft without adding an edge rusher to the mix? — Eric B., Lisle
I wish I had a really good answer for you, but it’s a little difficult to understand. The players in free agency — and there weren’t a lot of them — who could be potential difference makers were priced very high. Considering the salary-cap situation and not wanting to go overboard in kicking the can down the road to clear space, the Bears didn’t get involved with any of those guys.
Just like offensive coaches talk about scheming for matchups, defensive coaches do the same thing. It’s worth wondering if defensive coordinator Dennis Allen feels like he has enough to work with to create matchups consistently, especially on critical downs.
“We’re certainly going to coach better than what we did a year ago,” [head coach Ben] Johnson said of the pass rush. “It starts there. We’ve made a concerted effort with how we’re going to get that done. We were excited about the guys that ended up finishing the season on IR, the trajectory that they were on, both Dayo [Odeyingbo] and Shemar [Turner]. When you look at it from the start of the season to the point where they both got injured, we saw growth and we saw them trending the right direction in terms of what we want to see on game day.
“The combination of us being able to coach better and those guys taking the next step as part of this system, we’ve got some pretty good pieces to work with.”
Before the draft, I actually sent in a question to Biggs asking if there was any possibility that the Bears thought they filled the need at pass rusher by drafting Turner last year. It didn’t make it in, possibly either because Biggs thought it was a ridiculous question or because he didn’t know how to answer it.
Either way, although, like Biggs, I personally disagree with this notion, I’m not sure the Bears didn’t consider the defensive line situation to be a stable one before the draft for exactly that reason. The quote from Johnson above certainly backs that up.
As far as scheming pass rush goes, Allen could certainly do it. But if that’s the plan, it didn’t work out well last year. Perhaps that part of what Johnson meant by “coaching better than we did a year ago”.
The king in this regard is Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores. He’s very good at it, but despite all of the plaudits that are routinely thrown his way, there are major disadvantages to doing this. The things that you need to do to manipulate an offense into favorable pass rush situations leave holes in the defensive scheme. Good offensive teams can take advantage of these holes with favorable down and distances.
Finally, if you are wondering why the Bears didn’t do more in free agency to fill the need for defensive line help, look no farther than coming negotiations with quarterback Caleb Williams. Williams is now entering year 3 of his rookie deal. The Bears will be looking to lock him up with a long-term contract before he enters year 5.
Assuming Williams continues to develop to reach his full potential, my guess is that everything short of stock in the team is an option in those negotiations. That would include a fully guaranteed Deshaun Watson-type deal. The Bears wouldn’t like it. And the rest of the NFL really wouldn’t like it. But record setting or not, if Williams stays healthy and develops to be at least better than average from the pocket, I think they’d do it.
Whatever they do, it will require that they plan to have a lot of open cap space. There are a lot of veteran options that can be signed to one-year contracts out there right now, but they won’t be cheap, and the Bears don’t have a lot of cap space. Opening up more means kicking the cap money down the road. I just don’t think they can afford to do that.
In any case, between good coaching and better injury luck, the Bears evidently think that they can get by with the players they have. Like it or not, we might have to consider the need for a pass rush to be filled.






