Brad Biggs at the Chicago Tribune addresses what the Super Bowl can teach the Bears. He highlights needs along the defensive line:
While it’s true that general manager Ryan Poles needs to address the defensive line beginning next month, it’s not like he didn’t make an effort last year. The Bears signed tackle Grady Jarrett and end Dayo Odeyingbo in free agency. They just didn’t provide the kind of high-level play the Bears got from the interior linemen they added on the offensive side. Jarrett battled through a right knee injury, and Odeyingbo suffered a torn Achilles tendon. Rookie end Shemar Turner, a second-round pick, was lost to a torn ACL.
Even with all three healthy, the Bears need some combination of upgrades and competition to elevate the profile of [defensive coordinator, Dennis] Allen’s defense. The timing is right because it’s a solid draft for defensive linemen.
There is a danger here for the Bears. With limited resources they might think that they fixed the defensive line last year and that injuries simply derailed the plan. But injuries are a part of the game and all that tells me is that they didn’t have enough depth.
Odeyingbo was a disappointment even when he was on the field. Turner, a second round pick from the 2025 draft, is still a mystery but the Bears haven’t had a good record of drafting defensive linemen in recent years. Gervon Dexter, drafted by Poles in the second round in 2023, hasn’t set the world on fire and Zach Pickens, drafted in the third round the same year, isn’t even on the team. Austin Booker, drafted in the fifth round in 2025, had a good year but it looked to me like he was schemed into the sacks he got with too many free runs at the quarterback. He hasn’t shown me the ability to beat an offensive lineman one-on-one with any consistency and that’s what the Bears need a lot more of.
With no cap space to spare this offseason, the Bears have to draft better or they’ll struggle to remain competitive with a tougher schedule and a considerably bigger challenge coming up next year.

