
Sean Hammond and Phil Thompson at the Chicago Tribune note that new Bears defensive tackle Neville Gallimore wanted to be a quarterback when growing up:
“See that’s the thing, that arm — that arm wasn’t cutting it,” Gallimore laughed. “When I watched David Garrard, (he was) a dominant player. (He) was one of the bigger quarterbacks who could run. So I thought, ‘Hey, man, that could have been me.’ I could run.
“That arm, though. That arm wasn’t where it needed to be. So I was like, ‘I’m just going to stay on the line.’”
That’s where Gallimore made an impact for the Indianapolis Colts last season, recording career highs of 3½ sacks, 13 quarterback pressures and 38 tackles.
The Bears let Andrew Billings sign with the Arizona Cardinals and inked Gallimore to a two-year, $12 million contract. That marks a notable change in approach. At 6-1, 340, Billings was a space-eating bulldozer. Gallimore signals a willingness to get more athletic in the trenches. His mentality, going back to when he was emulating Garrard as a kid, is all about athleticism.
Fair enough. The article emphasizes that the Bears got faster during free agency and Gallimore will undoubtedly contribute to that.
You don’t have to be a huge mountain of a man to stop the run. But I can say that when Billings was unavailable due to injury, the Bears’ ability to do that suffered greatly.
According to play-by-play data from the NFL, analyzed via nflfastR, in 2024 during the first half of the season with Billings, the Bears allowed 3.6 yards per carry up the middle with a success rate of 38% and an EPA per play of -0.3166 (favoring the defense). After Billings suffered a torn pectoral muscle against the Cardinals in week 9, those numbers increased to 4.3 yards per carry with a 62% success rate and a 0.1975 EPA per play (favoring the offense). That’s a huge swing.
Though Billings’ impact is harder to evaluate from 2025 when he was available all year, it is evident that Billings has had a huge impact on the run game that is going to be difficult to replace.
It all starts up front in the NFL. That’s where games are won and lost. The challenge now for the defensive line, both new free agent signings and draft picks, will be to penetrate and disrupt in a way that will replace Billings’ impact on the run game. If they do that, the Bears will be better. If, like the current players, they don’t, it’s going to be a long year defensively in 2026.


