CHICAGO — The Chicago Bears are flat broke, and the clock is screaming. With a mere $245,000 in cap space—the lowest in the NFL—and Caleb Williams entering the critical third year of his rookie deal, GM Ryan Poles has no room for “safe” decisions. After shipping DJ Moore to Buffalo to claw back draft capital, the Bears sit at a crossroads that will define this decade of Chicago football.
The Exclusive Cap Space Club
Chicago isn’t just tight on cash; they are underwater. While the NFL pushed the 2026 salary cap to a massive $301.2 million, the Bears are the only team in the league with less than $1 million in wiggle room. Poles spent the spring plugging holes with budget-friendly veterans like linebacker Devin Bush and safety Coby Bryant. He even traded for center Garrett Bradbury to keep Williams upright. These moves brought stability, but they didn’t bring fear. To turn this roster into a Super Bowl contender, Chicago needs a defensive disruptor who changes the math for opposing coordinators.
Caleb Williams did his part in 2025. He racked up 3,942 passing yards and 27 touchdowns against just 7 interceptions. He’s elite. But the defense finished near the bottom of the league in sacks because Montez Sweat was essentially fighting alone. Opposing lines doubled Sweat on nearly every passing down, knowing the Bears lacked a terrifying bookend on the other side. That ends now if Poles pulls the trigger on the most aggressive trade of his career.
The Move: Targeting Rueben Bain Jr.
The “wild but brilliant” play is simple: Package the first-round pick (No. 25) and the second-round asset acquired in the DJ Moore trade to leap into the top 10 for Miami’s Rueben Bain Jr. On paper, it looks reckless for a team lacking depth. In reality, it’s the only way to maximize the current window. Bain is a 6’2″, 260-pound wrecking ball who took home the 2025 ACC Defensive Player of the Year honors after totaling 12.5 sacks.
Critics point to his 30-inch arms as a “tweener” red flag, but the tape tells a different story. Bain doesn’t just pass-rush; he bullies grown men. He led college football in quarterback pressures over the last two seasons. Pairing his explosive first step with Sweat’s veteran savvy creates a nightmare scenario for the NFC North. You can’t double-team both, and you can’t outrun a pass rush that closes the pocket in under 2.5 seconds.
“We know the window is now. Caleb is a superstar, but you can’t win titles if the other guy is comfortable in the pocket. We need another dog up front who makes quarterbacks check their shoulders.”— Anonymous Bears Veteran Defender
Draft Implications and the 2026 Outlook
Trading up for Bain creates a massive ripple effect. A dominant front four masks a secondary that lost veteran leadership this offseason. It allows Devin Bush to play more freely in the middle, and it hands Caleb Williams more possessions via turnovers. The Bears are currently slated to pick 25th, but staying there likely means settling for an offensive tackle like Kadyn Proctor or a WR3. While those are needs, they aren’t “foundation-shifters.”
Poles has shown he can swing a trade—the 2024 haul that landed Williams proves that. Now, he must use that same aggression to fix the defense. If the Bears stay static, they risk wasted years of elite quarterback play. If they move for Bain, they finally build a “Midway Monster” defense that matches their modern offense. The 2026 NFL Draft isn’t just another weekend in April; it’s the final piece of the puzzle.

